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Our 43nd Year
FOR THE MEETING TUESDAY, Meets Fourth Tuesday, January-November Founded March 1964 Fletcher Branch Library, H
& Buchanan
(East of University Ave.),
Little
Rock
Program at 7 p.m. Online: www.civilwarbuff.org VOL. XLIII, No. 4, rkelley225@aol.com / milhistory@aristotle.net Dues $15 Per Year VISITORS WELCOME! VISIT THE BATTLEFIELDS WHEN YOU CAN... WHILE YOU CAN |
Speaking
of Ladies
19th Century Women of
Historical
presentation by "
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The common woman was NOT at the battlefield or in camp. Civilians
were not commonly found around the military. However, some women were nearby
performing accepted civilian occupations for women. Such as:
Laundress: Beginning early in the war nearly every army had at least one laundress per 20 men. They were generally women trying to support themselves or were traveling with a male family member. |
Cook: same as laundress in clothing is prepared to cook all
weekend.
Nurse: Most nurses were not in close contact with the actual camps. There were usually hospitals of some sort where the nurses were set up. However, you could be a field nurse if you were so inclined. |
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Women performed espionage, as unconventional soldiers, and in humanitarian efforts. As a part of your trivia for this meeting, members can identify the terms Vivandier/Cantineer. Our speaker is available to speak to other groups. 870-814-5646 mail@speakingofladies.com ![]() THE DEATH OF A
CONFEDERATE COLONEL
Civil
War Stories and a Novella
They tell of a Confederate woman’s care of and growing
affection for a wounded Union soldier, a plantation mistress’s singular love
for a sick slave child, and an eight-year-old girl’s fight for survival
against frigid cold, injury, starvation, heartbreak, and lawlessness. |
The Death of a Confederate Colonel triumphs in its portrayal of desperate circumstances coated in the patina of the Civil War era, the complexity of ordinary people confronting situations that change them forever. “Intensely imagined, elegantly and efficiently told, the
eight short stories and the powerful novella comprising Pat Carr’s The Death
of a Confederate Colonel gracefully summon up for us our past. . . .
“ Pat March 2007 $14.95 paper |
We Who Study
Must Also Strive To Save!
![]() MEMORIES OF THE CIVIL WAR Usually horseracing and especially the Arkansas Derby have
very little to do with the historic studies of the civil war. However, this
year’s the winner of the
The winning horse “Curlin” was named for Curlin raised his family in As the Arkansas Derby winner,
"Curlin" now is on the road for the Triple Crown of horseracing.
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PROGRAMS 2007 Women during the War Between the States May 22, 2007 "Selected Campaigns of the 3rd June 26, 2007 - W. D. Honnoll M. TBA August 28, 2007 TBA September 24, 2007 TBA October 23, 2007 TBA November 27, 2007 TBA &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& Visit
www.civilwarbuff.org Register to receive your newsletter on-line. ********************************** 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 **************************************** &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& |
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A link on the civilwarbuff
website takes you to Australia This
website is a dedication to the Australian
Hundred of thousands of individuals from all over the world participated in the American “War Between the States”; many in the north forcibly and against their will, inducted into Union service right off ships as they immigrated to America seeking a better life. Many others volunteered for what they thought would be a very short conflict, in a war that was deemed by the U.S. Constitution to be both illegal and without merit. Men of the southern states, however, white and black, all served voluntarily in defence of their “states rights”, brought on by aggressive northern governmental taxation, and in the protection of their homes and property from total destruction. What ever the reason for their participation, no matter what their nationality, no matter what their race and no matter for which side they fought; all served gallantly as honourable soldiers in a war that took thousands of lives needlessly. As such, all American Civil War Veterans, Many veterans after the war was over left |
Major
Arthur W. John, who today lives in Cheltenham, Victoria, Australia, is the 99
year old son of Confederate veteran Joseph John, 54th
Virginia Infantry, Company K, who is buried in Fulham, London, England.
Everyone attending the Roundtable meeting this month will receive
a booklet from the
Every page of this catalogue showcases new and recent books,
along with classics, that will fascinate anyone interested in the Civil War.
From collections of essays to
regimental histories to comprehensive histories to nineteenth-century
memoirs, there’s something for
everybody here for the Civil War Buff, the academic, the reenactor, or
anyone
with a love for history. Many of these books are from the Press’s
distinguished
Civil War in the West series, edited by
These titles are marked with a ![]() Be sure to look for our sale books, as much as 80 percent
off until
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Here is a reminder of
one of the popular books from the past that is reminisent of this month’s
subject.
CIVIL WAR Written by (website http://www.wildrosebook.com/)
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
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
“I am a Southern woman, born with revolutionary blood in my
veins,”
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She married well, bore eight children and buried five, and,
at the height of the Gold Rush, accompanied her husband
But with the outbreak of the Civil War, everything changed.
Overnight,
Indomitable,
“This is a
fascinating tale of intrigue and suspense. Blackman has discovered some truly
remarkable, never-before-published papers that reveal how deeply involved
–Cokie Roberts, National Public Radio commentator, author of Founding Mothers |
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POEM FOR CONFEDERATE MEMORIAL
by Oliver Reeves
How many springs have gone since they
Who wore the uniform of gray Last looked upon summer snow of dogwood, blooming below Their southern skies and friendly sun, Or watched the winding rivers run Or knew when spring wind's gentle hand Stretched forth to heal their wounded land. They sleep where the azaleas spread Their glorious colors, where the red old hills And mountain peaks Stand listening while nature speaks. And from the woodlands sound the strains Of memories; where coastal plains Run down to join the ceaseless tide Ebbing and flowing as they died. Let us remember them as time And tide move on in endless rhyme. When spring is wearing her bouquet For the lost legions of the gray. While bud and blossom, hill and tree Remember them, so shall we. ( ![]() ![]() |
CONFEDERATE MEMORIAL Author Unknown
The marching armies of the past Along our Southern
plains,
Are sleeping now in quiet rest Beneath the Southern rains. The bugle call is now in vain To rouse them from their bed; To arms they'll never march again-- They are sleeping with the dead. No more will With blood our heroes shed, Nor To our noble warriors' tread. For them no more shall reveille Sound at the break of dawn, But may their sleep peaceful be Till God's great judgment morn. We bow our heads in solemn prayer For those who wore the gray, And clasp again their unseen hands On our Memorial Day.
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for GOD
BLESS
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