A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE 3RD
Known
as the "Ashley Volunteers", the 3rd Arkansas Infantry Regiment was
organized July 5,
1861
and mustered into Confederate service for the war in July 1861. The
regiment
contained men from Ashley, Drew, Desha, Hot Spring, Union, and Dallas
counties.
They surrendered at Appomattox
Court House, Virginia,
on April 9, 1865.
The unit was assigned to H. R. Jackson's
command and
took part in Lee's Cheat
Mountain
Campaign, then moved to Winchester
and served under General Thomas J.
"Stonewall" Jackson.
Later it
was assigned to General J. G. Walker's, J. B. Robertson's, and Gregg's
command and became part of the Texas Brigade.
The unit was part of the Texas Brigade from November 1862 until it
surrendered
at Appomattox. After fighting the Seven Days' Battles, the 2nd Arkansas
Battalion was merged into the regiment.
It went
on to
participate in the
many conflicts of the Army of Northern Virginia from the Maryland
Campaign to
Cold Harbor, except when they were with General Longstreet at Suffolk,
Chickamauga, and Knoxville. The 3rd Arkansas was active in the long
Petersburg siege north
of the James River and later in the Appomattox Campaign. In December
1861 it
totaled 756 men, reported 182 casualties during the Maryland Campaign.
Of the
479 engaged at Gettysburg, 35% were disabled. Out of 1,500 men in the
regiment,
only 15 officers and 130 men surrendered at Appomattox.
The field officers
were Colonel Albert Rust, Colonel Van H. Manning, Colonel Robert S.
Taylor, Lieutenant Colonel Seth M. Barton, Lieutenant Colonel William
H. Tebbs, Major J. Hickson Capers, Major John W. Reedy, Major Samuel W.
Smith, and Major W.K. Wilkins.
OUR SPEAKER
Cal
Collier, will join us again
this year to tell us more of the story of the 3RD
Arkansas. Cal was a member of the Arkansas Civil War Centennial
Commission in the early sixties, and
is a Founding Member of our Round Table. He is a recipient of our
group’s
Patrick Cleburne Award, an etched Staff Sword. Renamed as the Jerry L.
Russell Award it is given for significant contributions to Arkansas
Civil War history,
Battlefield Preservation, and the safekeeping of Arkansas’ rich
History; he
joined Ed Bearss, Jerry L. Russell, Don Hamilton, and Bill O’Donnell,
who were
the previous recipients. Since that time, former Sen. Dale Bumpers, Dr.
Bobby Roberts, and Carl H. Moneyhon have also become recipients.
Perhaps
one of the
former recipients will bring their sword to the meeting for display.
Cal
served in the U.S. Air Force, spending
some of his time at LRAFB. A native of Virginia, he grew up on the
Civil War,
and, while he was in Arkansas, became interested in the activities of
Arkansas’ Confederate soldiers. This resulted in his writing of three
books:
“They’ll Do To Tie To”,
a history of the
Third Arkansas Infantry, which served in the Army of Northern Virginia;
“First In, Last Out”, a
history of the
Capitol Guards (First Arkansas Infantry), which served in the Army of
Tennessee;
and
“The War Child’s Children”, a history
of the Third Arkansas Cavalry, which served under Forrest and Gen. Joe
Wheeler (called the war child because of his slight stature).
He and Melba moved to
Baltimore several
years ago, to be near his children in the Washington, D.C., area. He is
an
active member of the Baltimore CWRT and has made several talks to that
group.
He has also spoken to the National Congress of Civil War Round Tables
and the
Confederate Historical Institute on several occasions.
Each May, Cal and Melba
return to Little Rock for his Air Force squadron re-union, and we take
advantage of those visits to
add an outstanding program to our schedule.
His
program last year was about "The
Third Arkansas at Antietam”. In the autumn of 1862, the 3RD
joined Brig.
Gen. John Walker (Walker’s Brigade) and decided to take a little stroll
with General Lee to visit Maryland. The 3RD and the 27th North Carolina
stopped along an old sunken road separating
the Roulette and Piper farms.
You
won’t want to miss Cal’s dynamic presentation (Cal’s presentations are
always dynamic), this year he continues
to follow the 3RD on to Gettysburg.

Among the
files of the CWRT of
Arkansas. Can you identify all of these men?

DAMAGE
AT BAYOU
FOUCHE
A Note from Don Hamilton
Fence
damage near the monument
happened a few days ago when an air conditioning contractor's
white pick
up truck going east approaching the bridge hauling a black trailer
carrying two air conditioners jackknifed and ended up in the split
rail
fence.
A witness
said that he
thought the trailer was going in the river, but it stopped in the
fence,
breaking it up. There is a red reflector on the ground
near
the fence apparently from the trailer. Don sent a
copy of the
report to Matt Gardner of the City Parks and Recreation, let him know
what
happened in case he wants to turn this information over to the police
or pursue
the matter further. It is lucky that no one was out there
to be
hurt.
It
appears that three of the split
rails (in the background of the picture) needed to be replaced.
Ron
Kelly and his brother spent some time at the site and fixed the fence.
Big thanks to both.

COMING THIS FALL
Keep your eye out this
fall for a
couple of special events:
1)
“If
All of Arkansas Read the Same Book” is a program that brings an author
into the
state for a book tour. In the fall of 2005, they are trying to schedule
Jeff Shaara and his book “GODS AND GENERALS”. We are working on a
special event for CWRT members
and will keep you informed as his visit nears.
2)
Ed Bearss’s first book will be out in October 2005.
“FIELDS OF HONOR’ Pivotal Battles of the
Civil War” Culled from recordings of his wildly popular battlefield
tours.
Bearss recounts twenty of the war’s most significant battles in lively,
detailed prose.
STAY
TUNED TO YOUR
CWRT
NEWSLETTER
FOR
DEVELOPMENTS ON
BOTH OF THESE FRONTS.
COMING
PROGRAMS
June 28, 2005
–
Don Hamilton –
The Tullahoma Campaign
July 26, 2005
– TBA
Don Nall –
Helena on the Mississippi
August 23, 2004 – TBA
September 27, 2005 –
Terry Winschel,
Historian - Vicksburg NMP –
“A Tragedy of
Errors: Failure of the Confederate High Command in the Defense of
Vicksburg”
October 25, 2004 –TBA
November 22, 2005 –
Dave Gruenewald –
Pat Cleburne's Ireland
and
Election of
Officers
December 2005
–
No meeting
Scheduled in December
We Who Study Must
Also Strive To Save!
THE OFFICERS
Randy Bladwin, President
rbaldwin63@comcast.net
Don Hamilton, Vice President
don.hamilton@lrwu.com
Brian Brown, Treasurer
BrianB1578@aol.com
Brian Brown is still accepting
dues of $15.00
Chas. Durnette, Secretary/Editor
milhistory@aristotle.net
National
Military Park
Master Of History
Dies
At 41
By Rebecca Stills
The
Morning News
PEA
RIDGE -- A flag at Pea Ridge National Military Park flew at half-staff
Tuesday in memory of one of the park's
most knowledgeable employees.
Doug
Keller, who had
worked at the park since 1991, died Sunday in his sleep of an apparent
heart
attack. He had turned 41 on Friday.
People
who cannot recall
his name likely will remember the historian's humorous, sharp wit
booming from
his 3 1/2-foot tall body, as well as his vast knowledge of the 1862
Battle of
Pea Ridge.
"Doug
had the ability to tell a historical story and make you feel like you
were there,"
said John Scott, park superintendent, as he and others reminisced about
Keller's life.
Keller
became interested
in the Civil War and other military battles as a child, said his
sister-in-law Pat Keller of Wisconsin.
The
Colorado native began
his Park Service career at what is now Little Bighorn Battlefield
National
Monument in Montana. He gained permanent status in 1988, after five
summers on
the Montana high plains, and returned to Colorado as a museum
technician at
Bent's Old Fort National Historic Site.
He
came to Pea Ridge in
1991 as an interpretive specialist, becoming park historian last year.
"Please
do not think
that this has given me license to do research, write books or do other
history
stuff!" Keller joked in 2004 in a Museum Marquee column he wrote for
The
Morning News.
Keller
did a lot of
research but he also made sure projects such as clearing trees and
reroofing
Elkhorn Tavern didn't adversely affect the restoration of the park to
its May
1862 appearance.
He
also was on hand
adding color and history tidbits to almost every celebration,
commemoration or
living history event at the park, co-workers remembered. And he was
always
willing to strike up a conversation and pique the interest of someone
who was
not a battle enthusiast.
People
can observe Keller's dedication at the park's visitors' center. He was
instrumental in creating the
30-minute orientation video of the battle that people see when they
arrive,
said Steve Black, chief park ranger.
Keller
also initiated the
contact with a museum in Connecticut to obtain two uniform coats, one
worn
during the battle of Pea Ridge, by Union Brig. Gen. Samuel Curtis. The
park is
raising $30,000 needed to buy the coats, which are displayed in a glass
case in
the visitors' center lobby.
Keller's
family has asked
that donations made in lieu of flowers to the park's foundation be used
toward
purchase of the coats.
"Doug
became the master of the Pea Ridge story and was a much sought after
commodity," Black wrote in a news release. People from around the world
came to Keller with
questions about the battle, Black wrote.
Some
would also come to Keller just to talk, said Damon Jackson, owner of
Ozark Mountain Propane Co. in Garfield.
Jackson,
who volunteers
at the park, knew Keller for 10 years.
"There
were days I'd
stop in just to say 'hi,'" Jackson remembered as he sat at his business
Tuesday. "We'd talk about families, trips, whatever. I'd stop by to see
Doug just as a pick-me-up. If I was feeling down, I'd think of Doug and
all he's been
through."
Keller
was born with
multiple broken bones in his body, a genetic disorder called
osteogenesis
imperfecta, and had rods put in his legs to help him stand, his
coworkers and
sister-in-law said.
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Wild Rose
Written by Ann Blackman
A unique observation of an all too familiar war
from the
seldom-viewed perspective of a spy behind the Yankee lines. It is
interesting
that, in the early days, everyone seem to accept what Rose Greenhow was
doing,
perhaps because they considered the rebellion in the south as a mere
annoyance. Ann Blackman has provided an interesting biography of a
person and an era.
... COD
For
sheer
bravado and style, no woman in the North or South rivaled the Civil War
heroine
Rose O’Neale Greenhow. Fearless spy for the Confederacy, glittering
Washington hostess, legendary beauty and lover, Rose Greenhow risked
everything for the
cause she valued more than life itself. In this superb portrait,
biographer Ann Blackman tells the surprising true story of a unique
woman in history.
“I
am a
Southern woman, born with revolutionary blood in my veins,” Rose once
declared–and that fiery spirit would plunge her into the center of
power and the
thick of adventure. Born into a slave-holding family, Rose moved to
Washington, D.C., as a young woman and soon established herself as one
of the capital’s
most charming and influential socialites, an intimate of John C.
Calhoun, James Buchanan, and Dolley Madison.
She
married
well, bore eight children and buried five, and, at the height of the
Gold Rush,
accompanied her husband Robert Greenhow to San Francisco. Widowed after
Robert died in a tragic accident, Rose became notorious in Washington
for her daring–and
numerous–love affairs.
But
with the
outbreak of the Civil War, everything changed. Overnight, Rose
Greenhow,
fashionable hostess, become Rose Greenhow, intrepid spy. As Blackman
reveals,
deadly accurate intelligence that Rose supplied to General Pierre G. T.
Beauregard written in a fascinating code (the code duplicated in the
background on
the jacket of this book). Her message to Beauregard turned the tide in
the
first Battle of Bull Run, and was a brilliant piece of spycraft that
eventually
led to her arrest by Allan Pinkerton and imprisonment with her young
daughter.
Indomitable, Rose
regained her freedom and, as the war reached a crisis, journeyed to
Europe to plead the
Confederate cause at the royal courts of England and France.
Drawing
on
newly discovered diaries and a rich trove of contemporary accounts,
Blackman
has fashioned a thrilling, intimate narrative that reads like a novel.
Wild Rose is an unforgettable rendering of an astonishing woman, a book
that will stand with the
finest Civil War biographies.
Ann
Blackman is the author of Seasons of Her Life: A Biography of Madeleine
Korbel Albright and
co-author of The Spy Next Door, about the traitorous FBI agent Robert
Hanssen. In her long career as a news reporter with Time magazine and
the Associated
Press, Blackman covered American politics, social policy, and the
powerful
personalities that make up Washington society. She is married to
Michael Putzel. They have two grown children and live in the nation’s
capital.
Format:
Hardcover, 400 pages
Pub Date: June
2005
Price: $25.95
ISBN:
1-4000-6118-0
Also
available as an eBook.
“This is a
fascinating tale of intrigue and suspense. Blackman has discovered some
truly
remarkable, never-before-published papers that reveal how deeply
involved Rose Greenhow was in the Confederate cause.”
–Cokie Roberts, National Public Radio commentator, author of Founding
Mothers
Confederate Courage on Other
Fields
Four Lesser Known Accounts of the War Between
the States
Mark J. Crawford
ISBN 0-7864-2227-0
Cost $29.95
Description
While many soldiers in the army of the Confederate States of America
fought on famous fields like Gettysburg and Antietam, others
demonstrated equal valor in
lesser known places. Here are collected, for the first time, the
accounts of
four little known pieces of Confederate history. These four pieces are
important components in understanding Confederate life in both small
and large
scale.
The first
section
concerns the
battle of Dinwiddie Court House on March 31, 1865, the last significant
Confederate victory and the prelude to the battle of Five Forks the
next day.
The second section chronicles the experiences of Col. Charles C.
Blacknall of the 23rd North Carolina Infantry, whose letters offer
insight into the life of
an officer and his personal struggles before his death from wounds
received at
the battle of Winchester. The third section examines a tragic and
bloody series
of conflicts and retaliations in southeast Missouri that demonstrated
the
revenge and violence against civilians that often erupted during the
war.
Finally, the history of General Hospital Number One, at Kittrell
Springs, is
analyzed, including accounts from the hospital’s chaplain and its chief
surgeon, and many of the last words they recorded in the performance of
their
duties.
These
four accounts illustrate
very personal experiences of war by Confederate soldiers, in their own
words
from letters and diaries, period and contemporary photographs, and
maps.
About the Author
Scholarly author,
novelist and
songwriter Mark J. Crawford lives in Madison, Wisconsin. After a
career
as an exploration geologist, his writings have specialized in Civil War
history, the environment, and science.
POETS
OF THE CIVIL
WAR
Editor: J. D. McClatchy
Publication date: April 2005
Price: $20.00
This
moving anthology traces the advent,
progress, and legacy of the Civil War as revealed in the works of
famous poets
such as Walt Whitman, Herman Melville, John Greenleaf Whittier, and
Emily
Dickinson, as well as less well known writers, including combatants on
both sides.
Included as well is a selection of hymns, spirituals, and marching
songs
indelibly associated with the war. Here is a collected verse epic of a
nation’s
struggle with itself.
Writers on
both sides of the American Civil War "brought to the crisis" (in editor
J. D. McClatchys' words) "poetry's unique ability to stir the emotions,
to
freeze the moment, to sweep the scene with a panoramic lens and
suddenly swoop
in for a close-up of suffering or courage." This vibrant collection
brings
together the most memorable and enduring work inspired by the conflict:
the
masterpieces of Whitman and Melville, Sidney Lanier on the death of
Stonewall
Jackson, the anti-slavery poems of Longfellow and Whittier, the
front-line
narratives of Henry Howard Brownell and John W. De Forest, the anthems
of Julia
Ward Howe and James Ryder Randall. Grief, indignation, pride, courage,
patriotic fervor, ultimately reconciliation and healing: the poetry of
the
Civil War evokes unforgettably the emotions that roiled America in its
darkest hour.
J. D.
McClatchy has written
several books of poems and essays, most recently American Writers at
Home
(2004). In 2003 he edited Edna St. Vincent Millay: Selected Poems, the
inaugural volume in the American Poets Project. He teaches at Yale
University.We Who Study Must Also Strive To Save!
SEE
YOU TUESDAY EVENING
for
our annual visit from Cal
Collier