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Join Us for Our Next Program...
Wednesday, May 14, 2008 @ 7 p.m. |
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Mel Maurer Presents
"Jesse James: The Last Rebel"
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Jesse James
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Jesse James is considered the most
famous outlaw in American history. His is surely one of the best known
names to have come out of the Civil War era. Jesse’s life - from farm boy
to southern guerilla to outlaw to a symbol of ongoing rebellion to legend
during the most tumultuous times in our history - is one of great drama,
real and imagined.
In his talk, past Roundtable President Mel
Maurer will touch on a number
of facets of James’s life and character, digging for truth in the often
mythological tales of the bandit’s adventures during the war and its
aftermath.
Come ride with Jesse, his brother, Frank
and the James gang as they spread terror, rob banks and stagecoaches –
killing anyone that stands in their way – while Jesse becomes a political
activist representing resistance during heavy handed reconstruction.
Call the Playhouse Club @ 216-861-5588 to make your reservations no later than the
Tuesday prior to the meeting.
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New On the Bookshelf
Recent Additions to
the Civil War Literature |
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The Madness of Mary Lincoln
By Jason Emerson
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Mary Todd
Lincoln in mourning dress following the death of her son Willie
in February, 1862.
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On Wednesday April 12, 1865,
President Abraham Lincoln wrote a playful yet tender note to his
wife notifying her that he would join her daily carriage ride on
Friday the 14th. It was a pleasant spring day and the Lincolns, who
rode alone at the president’s request, discussed their plans for
life after his presidency. They would travel across America to visit
California, then to Europe, and Lincoln wanted to visit Jerusalem.
They considered whether or not they would return to their house in
Springfield, Illinois or live in Chicago upon Lincoln’s retirement
from the White House. “During the drive he was so gay,” Mary said,
“that I said to him, laughingly, ‘Dear Husband, you almost startle
me by your great cheerfulness,’ he replied, ‘and well I may feel so,
Mary, I consider this day, the war, has come to a close.” The
Lincolns continued the blissful closeness of their afternoon
carriage ride at Ford’s Theatre that night, watching a performance
of Our American Cousin in the company of Clara Harris and Major
Henry R. Rathbone. Mary was supremely happy, and smiled and leaned
onto her husband several times. “What will Miss Harris think of my
hanging on to you so?” she whispered contentedly to her husband.
“She won’t think anything of it,” the president replied. When John
Wilkes Booth fired the fatal shot into Lincoln’s brain during Act 3
Scene 2, Mary Lincoln was holding her husband’s hand.
CONTINUE
ARTICLE>>
Note: Jason Emerson
is an independent historian living in Fredericksburg, VA. This
article is excerpted from his latest book, The Madness of Mary Lincoln (2007,
Southern Illinois University Press),
recently named "Book of Year" by the Illinois State Historical
Society, and
appears here through the courtesy of the author and his publisher. Mr. Emerson
will be speaking on his book at the
National First
Ladies Library in
Canton, Ohio on June 14. (See
CCWRT Events Calendar for more details.)
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From the May Charger
Newsletter of
the Cleveland CWRT |
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The Fox and the Hedgehog;
The Hampton Roads Conference
By Mel Maurer
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Alexander Hamilton
Stephens
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Just east of Petersburg Virginia -
near the rim of “The Crater” on Sunday, January 29, 1865 - a white
flag appeared on the Confederate side of the lines. A delegation of
commissioners from Jefferson Davis (Alexander Stephens, vice
president of the Confederacy, John A. Campbell, a former U. S.
Supreme Court Justice - now assistant secretary of war, and Robert
Hunter, president pro tem of the Senate) had arrived to be taken to
a meeting with Union representatives to discuss “issues and options
for peace.” Hopeful rumors the war was ending soon circulated on
both sides of the lines. The ensuing meeting on February 3rd aboard
the steamer River Queen became known as the Hampton Roads
Conference.
This last hope
for some sort of negotiated end to the war was arranged through the
friendship of Francis Preston Blair Sr. with Abraham Lincoln and
Jefferson Davis. Blair was an anti-slavery Missouri politician and
advisor to presidents back to Andrew Jackson. With a stagecoach
version of shuttle diplomacy between Washington and Richmond in
January, Blair was able to get both presidents to send
representatives to try to discuss a way to end hostilities. Since
Davis, in his authorizing letter referred to “two countries” while
Lincoln referred to “one country,” in his letters, the odds were
against any success.
CONTINUE ARTICLE>>
A Review of 'Lost Triumph:
Lee's Real Plan at Gettysburg - and Why It Failed'
By Dave Carrino
"Union artillery and rifle fire
brutalized the nine attacking brigades of Pickett's Charge. By
three-thirty, they reached the Clump of Trees, but could not hold.
They retreated, bleeding, back across the open field, and Lee, it
is said, was there to receive them, loudly telling one and all,
'It's all my fault!' But was it really?"
This passage from the book Lost Triumph: Lee's Real Plan at Gettysburg--And Why It Failed by Tom
Carhart succinctly captures the question addressed in the book.
Carhart's thought-provoking and provocative book explores the issue
of Robert E. Lee's battle plan for the third day at Gettysburg. The
author is a graduate of West Point and a Vietnam veteran. He
received a law degree from the University of Michigan and a Ph.D. in
American and military history from Princeton University.
To give credit where due, the book
was brought to my attention by Dr. David Burke of Holden Arboretum
and Case Western Reserve University, who professes a deep interest
in the Gettysburg battle. As the title of the book implies, Lee's
plan entailed more than merely Pickett's Charge. Carhart's book
presents the author's argument that Pickett's Charge was only one
component of a planned three-pronged attack on the Union Fishhook
defenses on Cemetery Ridge, Cemetery Hill, and Culp's Hill. The
specific details of Lee's real plan as articulated by Carhart have
been intentionally omitted from this review to avoid spoiling the
book for those who have not read it. Suffice it to say that Lee's
real plan at Gettysburg required the kind of timing and coordination
which characterized his battle plans in the Kanawha Valley and in
the Seven Days battles earlier in the Civil War.
CONTINUE ARTICLE>> |
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