Category: quickPost/Pix

side notes

  • Interview with John Banks

    Thanks to John Banks for conducting and publishing a fine interview with your AotW webmaster over on his Civil War Blog. John’s a noted journalist, author, photographer, and of course blogger. He focuses on Connecticut soldiers in the War, especially those at Antietam.

    I’ll let you decide, but I think he overstated my wizarding skills.

  • AotW on FB


    (photo from Facebook)

    I don’t know why it took me so long, but I’ve finally put up a Facebook page for the Antietam on the Web site. This gives readers another channel for communication and comment, and is an opportunity for me to easily highlight the latest content on AotW. And maybe some new folks will find us this way.

    If you’re on Facebook, please do stop by and say hello!

  • Kentucky Confederates at Sharpsburg

    AotW Member Greg Walden has contributed the first new Featured Article for Antietam on the Web in many moons. It’s a fascinating look at a small unit from Kentucky without a home until it joined forces with volunteer companies from Arkansas passing through Nashville on their way to Virginia in June 1861.

    Confederate First National Flag, c. 1861

    Confederate First National Flag (c. 1861, Museum of the Confederacy via G. Walden)

    Greg introduces the subject by saying that [m]ost of the Southern states were represented by units in the Army of Northern Virginia at Sharpsburg, but Kentucky is not usually thought of as one of them.  However, a Kentucky unit was present at Sharpsburg; the only outfit from that state in Lee’s army.

    He explores the origins and personalities of the unit and their role in action  with the 3rd Arkansas Infantry at Sharpsburg on 17 September 1862.

    I invite you to enjoy Kentuckians in Lee’s Army at Sharpsburg: The Blackburn Guards now online in the Articles & Exhibits section of Antietam on the Web. Thanks Greg!

  • Generalsandbrevets is back

    Some Generals (Buford, Huger, Imboden, EK Smith, Zook)

    Update, Final: Generalsandbrevets.com was alive again briefly in 2012. For some years after that it was just a link farm for various commercial ads and most of the underlying content was gone. I recommended you not go there – it was shady. Now, though, is now truly and effectively gone.

    As at least one commenter below observed, you can find Generalsandbrevets available in original (2008) format via the Wayback Machine at the Internet Archive.
    ____________

    Original post of 30 Jan 2010, “Generalsandbrevets Gone”: As I’m sure you know by now, the excellent web gallery Generals of the American Civil War is offline. The site was a comprehensive online collection of photographs of very nearly every Confederate and Union General (about 1,000 individuals) – plus most of the 1,400 Federal officers who were made General by brevet. It had operated since 2001 as generalsandbrevets.com, and I remember it being up under another url for at least a couple of years before that.

    When I first noticed the loss back in March 2009, I asked site owner and collector Mikel Uriguen about it by email. He could only tell me that he could no longer keep it going. I asked if I could help in any way. I also offered to host and maintain the site on his behalf, but have no further reply.

    On the original site he wrote:

    I’d like to introduce myself. My name is Mikel Uriguen and I live in Bilbao, a city in the Spanish Basque-Country. I’m a long-time enthusiast of the American Civil War. On this site I’ve tried to collect pictures of every general officer of the War. It’s usually interesting to put a face with a name.

    In another section of this site you’ll also find the pictures of those officers appointed to brigadier or major general by brevet.

    I realize that this type of site might be a little dull to some visitors. But we have to remember the real value of data-base sites: they assemble related material (in this case pictures) in an organized way and offer it to those who are interested.

    He’s absolutely right about the tremendous value of his online collection. For that reason, I’m having trouble simply accepting that it’s gone. I think it’s too useful to too many people to let it go extinct.

    As an experiment in PHP programming I’ve prototyped a database-backed site that might reprise the concept of generalsandbrevets. I have excess capacity on my own server and I could make some time over the coming months to re-gather and index the photos and push them into the database. It wouldn’t be difficult with a good picture “scraping” script – or help from online friends. Given that all the pictures he so carefully collected and posted are in the public domain, there’s no legal reason I couldn’t build another website home for these Generals’ faces.

    The problem, of course, is that it was Mikel’s site – and his image collection – and he’s chosen (or been forced) to take it down. The reasons are none of my business, and his privacy is key. I feel I’ve already intruded enough and don’t want to badger him again.

    So. What to do, what to do. Swoop in like some kind of vulture? Just let it drop?

    Either of my readers have a thought?

  • First Minnesota at Antietam

    I’ve been enjoying a fine online resource on the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry from Wayne Jorgenson and Chuck Barden. They’ve accumulated a considerable database which looks to cover all the members of the Regiment and shares the significant information they’ve found about each from service records and other documents. They display war-era photographs of more than 250 of the men. Phenomenal.

    Sam Bloomer, Color Sergeant, 1st Minn Infy (1862, Minn Hist Society)
    Color Sergeant Sam Bloomer, 1st Minnesota Infantry (c. 1862, Minnesota Historical Society)

    Of particular note for students of the Battle of Antietam is a specialized search which returns links to pages for each of the more than 100 men from the First Minnesota wounded in action there. Sergeant Bloomer, above, was one of those – shot through the knee in action with Sedgwick’s Division in the West Woods.

    This is fantastic material, and I’ll be mining it for AotW as I have the chance. I highly recommend a visit.