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29

Sep

10

White Hall School – Camp Hill, PA

Posted by sailerd  Published in Civil War (1861-1865), Images, Places to Visit

On Thanksgiving day in November 1863 two children whose fathers were killed during the Civil War went to the executive mansion in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania and asked for food. Apparently this experience inspired Governor Andrew Curtin to ask the Pennsylvania legislature to establish an organization to care for orphans of Union soldiers. While legislators did not […]

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7

Aug

10

A Battle of the Bands

Posted by hardyr  Published in Civil War (1861-1865)

This weekend, Northfield, Minnesota, has been host to the 2010 Vintage Band Festival.  The four-day festival draws brass bands from as far away as Helsinki, Finland.  One of the highlights of the weekend was a reenactment of a Civil War “battle of the bands,” with two bands in historical costume facing off across the Cannon […]

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2

Aug

10

A Greek Professor in the Civil War

Posted by hardyr  Published in 19th Century (1840-1880)

“The war was a good time for the study of the conflict between Athens and Sparta,” Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve (1831-1924) wrote in 1897.  “It was a great time for reading and re-reading classical literature in general, for the South was blockaded against new books as effectively, almost, as Megara was blockaded against garlic and salt… […]

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24

Jul

10

The Courtship of James Garfield

Posted by hardyr  Published in Antebellum (1840-1861), Letters & Diaries

In 1847, Zeb and Arabella Rudolph decided that their daughter Lucretia needed more of an academic challenge than the local Garrettsville, Ohio, schools could offer.  The fifteen-year old was sent twenty miles away to board at the Geauga Seminary, where she would have the benefit of a classical curriculum.  The Geauga Seminary was coeducational, and […]

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20

Jul

10

An Antebellum Gladiator

Posted by hardyr  Published in Antebellum (1840-1861), Images

The most popular American play of the antebellum period was the historical melodrama The Gladiator (1831), by the Philadelphia physician-turned-playwright Robert Montgomery Bird (1806-1854).  Bird wrote the play, but actor Edwin Forrest owned it—literally.  Bird sold Forrest (1806-1872) the rights to the play for $100, and Forrest performed the title role of Spartacus to sold-out […]

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19

Jul

10

100 Years of Louis Maurer

Posted by solnitr  Published in 19th Century (1840-1880), Images

Louis Maurer (1832-1932) lived to be 100 years old—fulfilling one century’s worth of accomplishments. The New York Times described Maurer in his obituary as a “lithographer, painter, cabinetmaker, shell expert, wood and ivory carver, anatomist, crack shot, winner of a blue ribbon in the first New York horse show, and the first to ride a […]

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15

Jul

10

Joshua Chamberlain, College President

Posted by hardyr  Published in 19th Century (1840-1880)

In 1873, a decade after his heroic defense of Little Round Top, Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain faced another rebellion.  Upon taking office as president of Bowdoin College in 1871, Chamberlain had instituted mandatory military drill for all Bowdoin students.  Students complained about the military discipline and the expense of a military uniform (six dollars added to […]

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14

Jul

10

General Howard’s Ordeal

Posted by hardyr  Published in Antebellum (1840-1861)

When he was fifteen years old—before his right arm was shattered at Fair Oaks, before he saw action at Antietam and Chancellorsville and Gettysburg and Chattanooga, before he marched to the sea with Sherman—General Oliver Otis Howard faced the the trial of his life: the entrance examination for Bowdoin College.  “I have passed though many ordeals […]

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5

Mar

10

Upper South and the Secession Crisis

Posted by sailerd  Published in Antebellum (1840-1861), Letters & Diaries

I already described DocSouth’s online exhibit on antebellum students at UNC-Chapel Hill, but this letter from March 1861 provides an interesting example of the Upper South’s role in the secession crisis. Even though “Lincoln’s inaugural…amounts to coersion [sic],” John Halliburton believed that “[he could] hate him and still love the Union.” Pro-secession editorials were “absurdities,” […]

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3

Feb

10

Westbrook Seminary: Educating Women

Posted by sailerd  Published in 19th Century (1840-1880), Images, Letters & Diaries

“Westbrook Seminary: Educating Women” is an interesting digital exhibit available through Maine Memory Network, which is managed by the Maine Historical Society. One can read a student’s diary (1843-1844) as well as learn more about several students who attended Westbrook Seminary throughout the 19th century.  Check out all of the digital exhibits on Maine Memory […]

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