THE
LIFE OF PRESTON JOHNSTON
THE
SON OF ALBERT SYDNEY JOHNSTON
By
Mark
L. “Beau” Cantrell
William Preston Johnston (1831-1899)
William
Preston Johnston was born
in Louisville, Kentucky, the son of General Albert
Sidney
Johnston. His mother, Henrietta (Preston)
Johnston) died when he was four and General William Preston, a relative
of his
mother’s raised him. He graduated from Yale in 1852, studied law at the
University of Louisville,
and took up the practice of law in Louisville.
In
addition to his vocation of
sonneteer, Johnston
was a Confederate soldier, lawyer, and educator. Johnston became a colonel in the
Confederate
army at the beginning of the Civil War and served on the staff of
Jefferson
Davis. After the war, Johnston became a
professor at Washington and Lee University,
and was offered a chair of history and English literature by the
university's
president, Gen
Robert
E. Lee. Johnston
chaired the Department of History
and English Literature from 1867 to 1877. While at Washington and Lee,
he
authored a biography of his father, The Life of Gen. Albert Sidney
Johnston
(1878).
In
1880, he became president of Louisiana
State University at Baton
Rouge, which he resigned three years later
to become the first
president of Tulane University of Louisiana in New Orleans, in 1884. In his Louisiana days, Johnston
published several volumes of poetry and contributed to the periodicals
of the
day. He died at Lexington,
Virginia; he
was the father of six children.
This
is our annual meeting with
the North Pulaski Roundtable. This year we will hear Mark L. Cantrell,
historian, of El Reno,
OK. In
addition to being a Litigation &
Appeals lawyer, Mark is Commander of the Trans-Mississippi Army
of the
Sons of Confederate Veterans.
DUES
FOR 2005
The dues
are $15.00 for a family
membership. We generally publish a list of those who had paid their
dues (at
least what our records show), to help us keep track.
If
you have paid your dues and
your name is not on the list, contact Brian Brown at the meeting. If
you would
like to pay, your dues contact Brian at the meeting or:
Brian Brown, Treasurer
Civil War Roundtable of Arkansas
P.O. Box
25501
Little Rock,
Ark. 72221
We already have paid members for
2005.
Marian Hodges
Robert F. Shaver
Michael T. Lewis
In
addition, it is time to think
of about your officers for this coming year. Elections will be held at
the
November meeting. Remember if you are absent, you might be elected to
something.
Colonel William
Preston's report
Of the Battle
of Shiloh
and the death of A. S. Johnston
Confederate General Albert Sidney
Johnston
hoped to strike a surprise blow at Grant's Army of the Tennessee in
its camp at Pittsburg Landing.
Grant was awaiting the arrival of Don Carlos Buell's Army of the Ohio. Once
combined, the
Federals planned to attack and capture the major rail center at Corinth, Mississippi.
Johnston
hoped
that he could defeat Grant's force before Buell's could arrive to
reinforce
him. The result was the Battle of Shiloh.
The fighting
was fierce throughout the day, but the Confederates were achieving some
success. Johnston
led several charges himself, and was hit by Federal fire in the
afternoon. This
was his Aide-de-Camp, Colonel Preston's account of the battle and his
death.

PROGRAMS
FOR 2004
November
23, 2004 --
Drew
Hodges, speaking on
“A.
P. Hill”
Election
of Officers
December,
2004 –
No
meeting Scheduled in December
January
25, 2005 –
Mark
Christ –
J.
O. Shelby’s Summer of ‘64
February
22, 2005 - TBA
March
22, 2005
Brian
Brown – TBA
April
26, 2005 –
Tom
Ezell - Jenkins' Ferry
May
24, 2005 – TBA
We
Who Study Must Also Strive To Save!
REMEMBERING HIM
Gaylord Northrop former Civil War
Roundtable of Arkansas president died this past month. Although, he had
been
diagnosed with a terminal illness he continued to attend meetings and
presented
a program to us last July. He will be missed. Below is the obituary as
it
appeared in the paper.
Dr. GAYLORD M. NORTHROP, 75, passed away Friday, Oct. 1, 2004, at his
Sherwood
home following a lengthy battle with leukemia.
Dr. Northrop was born on Dec. 15, 1928. He was graduated from North Little Rock High School in 1946 and enlisted
in the United States
Marine Corps, serving until 1948. Following his military service, he
attended
the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville,
receiving his B.S. in Electrical Engineering in 1952. He worked briefly
in the
aerospace industry in California
before continuing his education. He was awarded a Master of Engineering
in 1955
and his Doctorate of Engineering in 1961, both from Yale University.
During his postgraduate work, he taught at both Yale and New Haven College
and simultaneously performed work for several aerospace companies.
In 1960, Dr. Northrop joined the RAND Corporation in Santa Monica, Calif.,
doing research in the fields of Command Control, Communications, and
Data
Processing. In 1967, he returned to Connecticut,
joining the Center for Environment and Man, where he rose to the
position of
vice president. While there, he also served as Adjunct Professor and
Chair of
the Environmental Science and Technology Master's Program at the Hartford Graduate Center.
In 1982, he received an Associate Professorship at the University of
Bridgeport, Conn. He left that position in 1986 to return to Arkansas to
care for his mother. He joined
the UALR Graduate Institute of Technology, was named Interim Director
in 1988,
and became Director in 1989. At about the same time, he was also
appointed
Associate Dean for Research in the College of Engineering
Science
and Technology. He retired from the University in 1997 as an Emeritus
Associate
Professor.
Retirement slowed him but little. He expanded his interest in Civil War
history, touring battlefields, attending and giving lectures, and
building a
library of books related to the Civil War, particularly relating to Arkansas. He
was a past
president of the Civil War Round Table. He was the current president of
the
Arkansas Academy of Electrical Engineers and past president of the Arkansas
chapter of the
scientific research society Sigma Xi. He was also an active member of
the
Rotary Club of Little Rock, in which he was a Paul Harris Fellow. In
his
boyhood, he rose to Eagle Scout, and in his retirement maintained his
dedication to the Boy Scouts of America by being active in the Quapaw
Council
and Troop 045, a group of former Arkansas Scouts from the 1940s. In all
of
this, he somehow found time to maintain the family land on which he was
born
and died; removing trees that had become a danger, scraping and
painting the
myriad buildings that dot the Northrop homestead, and keeping the
park-like
grounds pristine.
Gaylord's long list of service and accomplishments underline the most
important
characteristics of his life: an enormously inquisitive and intelligent
mind
coupled with his love of sharing his keen interests and observations
with those
who were open to his expansive view.
He was preceded in death by his father and mother, Guy and Gladys
(Hilsmeyer)
Northrop, and a brother, Guy Northrop Jr. He is survived by his wife,
Marjorie
Northrop of Sherwood ; daughter, Melanie Northrop of Wellesley, Mass.;
son,
Dana and wife Kristin of Camillus, N.Y.; stepchildren, Betsy and Ed
Thomas of
Bergton, Va.; Sandra and Jeff Kunz of Ayer, Mass.; Jonathan and Maura
Wallace
of Westminster, Mass.; and his 14 beloved grandchildren.

Letters
to the Editor
I own a farm southeast of Holly
Grove known as Big Slash Farm. My research has revealed an extant
road
across the farm that has a close connection to the Battle of Helena of
July 4,
1863.
"When I
purchased the farm
in 2001, the locals referred to this old road as the 'Marvell to Little Rock Road'.
I have now learned the road begins in Helena
and is known there as the 'Little
Rock Road'.
"Perhaps
you could point me
to additional materials or resources from which I can glean more about
General
Fagan's passage through Monroe
County
and the Big Slash
Farm.
"The
State of Arkansas
has shown
interest in purchasing this property because of its ecological and
biological
significance. I now know the farm has historical significance as
well. Pine
City
is immediately east of the
farm. Historically, a 500 square mile region in Monroe County
contained the only substantial area of loblollies pine in the entire Mississippi River Valley at the time of
settlement.
The area around Pine
City
is the best remnant
of the remaining Delta pine ecosystem. The Pine City/Big
Slash area
includes nine rare plant communities and three rare plants and animals,
including the federally endangered red-cockaded woodpecker which
was
identified as a conservation priority by several cooperating
organizations and
agencies in the Mississippi River Alluvial Plain Ecological
Assessment.
The Arkansas Forestry Commission has identified through DNA testing
that the Pine
City
area loblollies are genetically distinct from all other loblollies,
earning the
Big Slash and neighboring pines the name 'Lost Pines of Arkansas'.
"Whether
we strike a deal
with the state or not, I would like to be able to know more about the
historical significance of the Little Rock Road which passes
directly by the tractor shed
and transverses the farm east to west. I want to erect a bronze
historical marker with the image of General Fagan and a brief narrative
of his
passage along the Little
Rock Road.
Hopefully, our visitors to Big Slash Farm will
hear the wagon wheels creak, taste the dust, and smell the sweat of men
and
mules as they forced their march 34 miles in a single day toward Helena.
"I would
appreciate any help
you could give to me."
Michael T. Lewis
LEWIS & LEWIS
519 First Street
P.O. Drawer 1600
Clarksdale,
Mississippi 38614-1600
(662) 627-4477
Historic Fort Blakeley,
Alabama
POSITION
OPEN:
DIRECTOR
OF BLAKELEY
STATE PARK
Scene of Last
Major Battle of the Civil War. Just hours after the surrender of
General Robert
E. Lee miles away in Virginia, the
Battle of
Blakeley was fought at Fort
Blakeley
on April 9, 1865
at 5:30 p.m. It was a major news event in the ongoing coverage of the
Civil War
depicted in "Harper's Weekly". "Probably the last charge of this
war, it was as gallant as any on record," Harper's reported.
Historic Blakeley
State Park
was created in 1981 to preserve the National Register Site and its 5
1/2 miles
of pristine breastworks.
JOB
DESCRIPTION DUTIES:
To
develop, operate, promote,
protect, preserve, and maintain Historic Blakeley
State Park.
For more information:
http://www.blakeleypark.org/
Please submit resume' and
references in writing to the following address:
Historic Blakeley State Park
RE:
Position of
Director
P.O. Box
7279
Spanish Fort, AL 36577
Soldier's Pay
In
The American Civil War
Union
privates were paid $13 per
month until after the final raise of 20 June '64, when they got $16. In
the
infantry and artillery, officer was as follows at the start of the war:
colonels, $212; lieutenant colonels, $181; majors, $169; captains,
$115.50;
first lieutenants, $105.50; and second lieutenants, $105.50. Other line
and
staff officers drew an average of about $15 per month more. Pay for
one, two,
and three star generals was $315, $457, and $758, respectively.
The
Confederate pay structure was
modeled after that of the US Army. Privates continued to be paid at the
prewar
rate of $11 per month until June '64, when the pay of all enlisted men
was
raised $7 per month. Confederate officer's pay was a few dollars lower
than
that of their Union counterparts. A Southern B.G for example, drew $301
instead
of $315 per month; Confederate colonels of the infantry received $195,
and
those of artillery, engineers, and cavalry go $210. While the inflation
of
Confederate Money reduced the actual value of a Southerner's military
pay, this
was somewhat counterbalanced by the fact that promotion policies in the
South were
more liberal.
As for
the pay of noncommissioned
officers, when Southern privates were making $11 per month, corporals
were
making $13, "buck" sergeants $17, first sergeants $20, and engineer
sergeants were drawing $34. About the same ratio existed in the
Northern army
between the pay of privates and noncommissioned officers.
Soldiers
were supposed to be paid
every two months in the field, but they were fortunate if they got
their pay at
four-month intervals (in the Union Army) and authentic instances are
recorded
where they went six and eight months. Payment in the Confederate Army
was even
slower and less regular.
Source: "The
Civil War Dictionary" by Mark M. Boatner
Visit
www.civilwarbuff.org
Register to receive CWRT
information on-line.
**********************************
Civil War -Histories-Battles-People-Current Events
PLACES of interest
Searchable Chronology Database
DISPATCHES Current
Info-Monthly Newsletter
LINKS major historical and
preservation source
RESOURCE for historical Civil War
information
GROUPS list contacts for today's
information
PEOPLE of history
http://www.civilwarbuff.org
****************************************

SPECIAL
RECOGNITION
To call attention to the extensive collection
of
history related links, the Old State House Museum gives out a History
Website
of the Week Award.
They have chosen The Civil War in Arkansas as our
winner for the week
beginning October 18 and running through October 24.
Symposium on the 19th Century Press, the
Civil War, and Free Expression
2004
Place:
University of Tennessee
at Chattanooga
http://www.utc.edu/homenews/civilwar.html
Thursday, Nov. 11, 2004
The Sheraton Read House Hotel
7:00-10:00 p.m.
* "Voices" Dr. Kit Rushing, University
of Tennessee
at Chattanooga
* "History and Children's
Fiction" Fran Bender, University
of Tennessee at Chattanooga
* "The Development of Narrative Art in
the Civil War Fiction of F. Scott Fitzgerald" Marcia Noe, Fendall
Fulton,
UTC
* "I Undertook to Write You a Letter
for Publication: The Social Functions of Soldiers' Letters to Indiana
Newspapers During the Civil War" Stephen Towne, Indiana
Univ. Purdue Univ. Indianapolis
* "Greeley
at Salt River: Whig Radicalism and
the
Collapse of the Second Party System" Gregory Borchard, UNLV
* "Slavery in the Florida Whig Press:
A report on how three Florida Whig papers covered slavery and the1850
Compromise from 1848-1852" Sherrie Farabee, Lorain County
Community College
Friday, Nov. 12, 2004
Raccoon
Mountain Room of the UTC University Center
Luncheon and Dinner in the UTC Chickamauga
Room
(2nd Floor of the University
Center)
9:00-10:30
* "A Brief History of the Confederate
Press" Deborah Reddin van Tuyll, Augusta State
University
* "No Turning Back": The Official
Bulletins of Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton, Summer of '64" Crompton
Burton, Ohio
University
* "Drawing Civil War Soldiers:
Volunteers and the Draft in Harper's Weekly and Frank Leslie's
Illustrated
Newspaper, 1861-1864" Martin Kuhn, University
of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
10:40-12:10
* "Hollywood Themes and Southern
Myths: An Analysis of Gone with the Wind" Bill Huntzicker, St. Cloud State
* "Gone With The Wind: It's The
Copyright, Not Tara, That's Worth Fighting For" Robert Spellman, SIU, Carbondale
* "The Fugitive Imagination: Robert
Penn Warren and Southern Biography"
Robert
Gilpin, Yale
University
12:10-1:30 Luncheon in the Chickamauga
Room, University
Center
* "Cameras, Sketchbooks and
Combat:
Visual Communication During the American Civil War" Charles Lewis, Minnesota State
University, Mankato
1:30-3:30
* "John L. O'Sullivan and the Tragedy
of Radical Jacksonian Thought" Robert Sampson, University of Illinois
* "Assignment Liberia:
'the boldest adventure in the history
of Southern journalism'" Patricia McNeely, South Carolina
* "The Darlings Come Out to See the
Volunteers Drilled": Depictions of Women in Harper's Weekly During the
Civil War" Kate Edenborg and Hazel Dicken-Garcia, University of Minnesota
* "Lawyer/Editor Alexander K. McClung:
the South's Most Feared Dueler" Alex Nagy, MTSU
3:45-5:45
* "This Wicked World: Masculinities
and the Portrayals of Sex, Crime, and Sports in the National Police
Gazette,
1879-1906" Guy Reel, Winthrop
University
* "The Liberty
to Argue Freely: Nineteenth-Century Obscenity Prosecutions and the
Emergence of
Modern Libertarian Free Speech Discourse" Mary Lamonica, Bridgewater College
* "Race, Reconciliation, and
Historical Memory in American Newspapers During the Centennial Year"
Robert
Rabe, Wisconsin-Madison
* "Journalism in Civil War Indiana:
Technology, the Party Press, and
Suppression" David Bulla, Iowa
State University
6:00-8:00
Dinner in the Chickamauga Room
* Panel:"Words,
Images, Destiny:
Native Americans in the 19th Century Press" Barbara Straus Reed, Rutgers, moderator
* "Portrayals of Native Americans and
African Americans in the Journalism of Jane Grey Swisshelm: Heretical
or
Conventional?" Mary Ann Weston, Northwestern University
* "Tough Words and Savage Pictures:
Images of American Indians in Harper's and Leslie's" Bill Huntzicker, St. Cloud
* "Business, Politics, and War:
Relations Among American Indians and Whites as Portrayed in the
Frontier Press
of Mankato, 1857-1868" Charles Lewis, Minnesota State
University, Mankato
* "Constituting the present: Lessons
for today from newspaper coverage of the Indian Land Severalty Act of
1887" Debra Schwartz, University
of Maryland
Saturday,
November 13, 2004
9:00-12:00
* "The Failure of
a Moderate Southern
Voice: Andrew Jackson Donelson's Tenure as Editor of the Washington
Union, 1851-1852" Mark Cheathem, Southern New Hampshire University
* "The Intersection of Mid-Nineteenth
Century Black and White Community in Hartford,
CT as presented in the
letters of Addie Brown" Tami
Christopher, Teikyo
Post University
* "Fighting the Demon Rum: The Murder
of a Virginia Prohibition Party Newspaper Editor" Stephen Bird, Radford
* "Immersion and Secession: Mixing
Religion and Politics in the Mississippi
Baptist, 1860-61" Nancy Dupont, Loyola
* "Checking Financial Power: Newspaper
Coverage of the New York Stock
Exchange's Bid
to Control the Ticker, June 1889" Cynthia Mitchell, Central Washington University
* "A Survey of the Newspaper Industry's
First Professional Trade Publication, The Journalist (1884-1907)"
Jennifer
Moore, University
of Minnesota
12:00-6:00
p.m.
Discussion
continues while the group
visits Chattanooga's
historic Civil War Sites (includes lunch and dinner)
Sponsored by
the West Chair of Excellence, the UTC Communication and History
departments,
the Chattanooga Times Free Press, and WRCB-TV Channel 3. All paper
sessions are
free and open to the public.
Please direct
comments and questions about the Symposium to Dr. David Sachsman,
david-sachsman@utc.edu
CIVIL WAR
READING LIST
The
purpose of the Arkansas Civil
War Reading List is to provide the beginning reader with a short guide,
to
books on the war as it affected our state.
General Histories of the Civil War
James McPherson, Battle
Cry of Freedom. 1988.
A
comprehensive history of the United
States from about 1845 until Appomattox. About 40% of
the book is on the prewar years, the rest on the war. This book is up
to date,
reflects most (though not all) of the historical research on the war,
and is a
single volume which is well written, easy to read, and accessible to
the
non-historian. It also has an excellent bibliographic note at the end
that
refers to most of the scholarly literature on issues relating to the
war. If
you read only one book on the war, this one should probably be it.
Bruce Catton, The Centennial History of the
Civil War. New York,
Doubleday Books, 1963. Three volumes:
published separately as The Coming Fury,
Terrible
Swift Sword, and Never Call Retreat. One of the best-written histories of the war,
by a man associated primarily with the Union side of the war. This
series,
however, presents equal coverage of both sides. First volume covers
prewar
material through First Bull Run, second volume Bull Run to Antietam,
third volume the rest of the war.
Shelby Foote, The Civil War: A Narrative.
New York,
1958. Three volumes. Published
separately as Fort Sumter to Perryville,
Fredricksburg to Meridian, and
Red River to Appomattox. A history of the War, focusing on the
history of the Confederacy more than on Union operations. Until
McPherson's
book, the most popularly read history of the War. It’s
still the most popular and most widely
available Down South.
Robert Johnson and Clarence Buel,
editors. Battles and Leaders of the Civil War.
Four volumes. 1887.
Reprinted 1959. A series of articles on the various battles of the
Civil War,
written by generals from both sides that had fought in the battles. A
troublesome book: like most firsthand sources, it tends to be
inaccurate on the
details, especially of the opponent's actions, and tends to reflect the
author's needs to justify himself more than what actually happened. However, an excellent, and comprehensive,
collection of first-hand descriptions of the battles by the men who
fought
them.
Ken
Burns, The Civil War. 1991. An
11-hour motion picture documenting the war. First shown on PBS and
highly
acclaimed, now available from Time Life Video on nine VHS tapes. There
is also
a companion book, "The Civil War: An Illustrated History" which you
can get.
----------------------------------------
Civil War Genealogy
These are periodicals for the
general reader which deal with the Civil War and are likely to be found
at your
newsstand.
J. H
Segars, In Search of Confederate
Ancestors: The Guide (Southern
Heritage Press, 1996).
Bertram Groene, Tracing
Your Civil War Ancestor
Brian A.
Brown, In
the Footsteps of the Blue and Grey, A Civil War Research Handbook. (Two Trails Genealogy Shop, 1996).
Desmond
Walls Allen, Index
to Arkansas Confederate Soldiers In
3 volumes. (Arkansas
Research,
1990).
Desmond
Walls Allen,
Arkansas’s Damned Yankees (Arkansas
Research, 1990).
Janet
Hewett, The
Roster of Confederate Soldiers (Broadfoot Publishing, 1994).
----------------------------------------
Causes of the War and History to 1861
William
W. O’Donnell, Why
the “Civil War”? (Civil War
Round Table of Arkansas, 1985)
James M. Woods, Rebellion
and Realignment: Arkansas’s Road to Secession (Univ. of
Arkansas Press,
1987).
(Also see
Dougan’s
Confederate Arkansas, listed above)

We Who Study Must Also Strive To Save!
SEE
YOU TUESDAY NIGHT
For “Beau”
Cantrell
GOD
BLESS AMERICA
Copyright ©1997 Civil War Round
Table of Arkansas
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