Author: donsailer

McClintock Riot (June 1847)

Martha C. Slotten, “The McClintock Slave Riot of 1847,” Cumberland County History 17 (2000): 14-35.

While Dickinson College Professor “John McClintock spent twelve long, difficult, though happy years in Carlisle,” Martha C. Slotten notes that for him any “sense of belonging…was quickly dispelled in the riot on the square” in June 1847. Two slaveowners from Hagerstown, Maryland – James Kennedy and Howard Hollingsworth – arrived in Cumberland County and caught three fugitive slaves in Shippensburg.  They brought the fugitives to Carlisle for a hearing early on June 2, 1847. Slotten’s explores the riot and the court cases that followed in her article.

This essay has been posted online with permission from the Cumberland County Historical Society.

Mechanicsburg, PA – Summer of 1863

North Ward - Mechanicsburg, PA

Norman D. Keefer, Mechanicsburg: Civil War Centennial (Mechanicsburg, PA: Mechanicsburg Area Chamber of Commerce, 1963).

Norman D. Keefer’s essay provides a detailed overview of what happened in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania and the surrounding area during the Confederate invasion in June 1863. While this essay’s title includes “Centennial,” the focus throughout the article remains on what happened in 1863 rather than how Mechanicsburg commemorated the war in 1963. After Confederate troops captured Mechanicsburg on June 28, 1863, Brigadier General Albert G. Jenkins established his headquarters in the town. Two days later his troops left the town and marched towards Gettysburg. Some historians argue that Mechanicsburg was “the northern-most town to have been captured…during the Civil War,” as Keefer explains.

This essay has been posted online with permission from the Cumberland County Historical Society.

Shelling of Carlisle, Pennsylvania

William E. Miller, Local History: Troops Occupying Carlisle, July, 1863 (Carlisle, PA: Hamilton Library Association, 1902).

William E. Miller’s essay offers an overview of the events surrounding the Confederates’ occupation of Carlisle, Pennsylvania in 1863. Miller describes in detail the Confederate advance through Pennsylvania in June 1863 and provides the order of battle for Confederate General Richard S. Ewell’s second corps. In addition, the essay includes an article (“Came Near Being Hung: What Happened to Two Cumberland Countians in the Rebel Invasion”) that was originally published in the Carlisle (PA) American Volunteer.

James W. Sullivan, Boyhood Memories of the Civil War 1861-’65: Invasion of Carlisle (Carlisle, PA: Hamilton Library Association, 1933).

While in Hereford, England in July 1932, J. W. Sullivan writes a letter to a family friend and recalls his experiences in Carlisle, Pennsylvania during the Civil War and other related topics. Before the war Sullivan notes that political tensions were high. “From my earliest years I was accustomed to hearing among our neighbors the high notes of political arguing,” as Sullivan explains. Sullivan was 13 when Confederates attacked Fort Sumter in April 1861 and he provides an overview of what happened in Carlisle during the war as well as how the community reacted to news from the front. In addition, Sullivan offers a detailed account of the Confederate shelling of Carlisle in 1860. Sullivan also reflects on the ways that Americans commemorated the Civil War, including visiting Gettysburg and the establishment of the Grand Army of the Republic.

Charles Gilbert Beetem, Experiences of a West Ward Boy (Carlisle, PA: Hamilton Library Association, 1963).

Charles Gilbert Beetem’s article discusses James W. Sullivan’s recollection of the Confederate Invasion of Carlisle. (Sullivan’s original account was published in 1933 and has also been posted on Library Divided). Even though “there was far more action around the Public Square and in Carlisle’s eastern parts,” Beetem notes that this account from someone who lived in the West Ward remains an “interesting” story. Beetem includes excerpts from Sullivan’s letter and provides additional information about people and events in Sullivan’s account.

Robert Grant Crist, Confederate Invasion of the West Shore – 1863 (Carlisle, PA: Hamilton Library Association, 1963).

Robert Grant Crist provides a detailed overview of the Confederate advance in June 1863 to the West Shore of the Susquehanna River in Pennsylvania. His article ends with the Confederate withdrawal from Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania on June 30. While “Harrisburg was safe,” Crist notes that “the storm was about to break in Adams County.” Crist uses a wide range of materials to write his account, from Pennslyvania nad New York newspapers to solders’ letters and the Official Records. His essay also includes several photographs and maps.

George M. Diffenderfer, Notes on Rebel Routes and Artillery (Carlisle, PA: Hamilton Library Association, 1963).

George M. Diffenderfer’s essay discusses several questions about Confederate artillery units that participated in the shelling of Carlisle on July 1, 1863. After explaining why Confederates shelled the town, Diffenderfer reviews military records to determine how many cannons were involved, the location of artillery during the bombardment, and the number of times that Confederate artillery fired.

Milton E. Flower, Wednesday, July 1st 1863 (Carlisle, PA: Hamilton Library Association, 1963).

Milton E. Flower’s short essay offers a relatively concise overview of the events that took place in Carlisle on July 1, 1863.

James D. Flower, “Physical Remains of the Confederate Invasion of 1863,” Cumberland County History 15 (1998): 73-78.

Even though Confederates invaded Pennsylvania in 1863, James D. Flower explains that one can still find physical remains from that event today. Flower describes several places in Carlisle that were damaged when Confederates shelled the town as well as the remains of two defensive fortifications (Fort Couch and Fort Washington). The essay includes photographs of these locations.

Simpson K. Donavin, “The Invasion: Rebel Occupancy of Carlisle, 1863,” Cumberland County History 15 (1998): 34-50.

Simpson K. Donavin’s account of the Confederate’s operation in Carlisle, Pennsylvania was originally published in July 1863 in three local papers (American Volunteer ; Carlisle Herald ; Carlisle American). As Confederates approached Shippensburg, Carlisle residents began to realize that General Robert E. Lee’s advance was a major operation. “The threats so often made by the Southern papers were to assume reality, and the States of Maryland and Pennsylvania were indeed to be made the battle-field,” as Donavin explained. As Confederates entered Carlisle on June 27, 1863, Donavin recalled that “every man carried his gun to a position to use it on the instant with his hand on the hammer.” Donavin described in detail what happened between this initial encounter and the Confederate shelling of the town on July 1, 1863. Historians have been unable to figure out many details about Donavin’s life before or after this article appeared in July 1863. This essay also includes several photographs.

Barbara Houston, “Narrow Escapes: Two Original Accounts of Civil War Shells in the Hands of Carlisle Civilians After the War,” Cumberland County History 24 (2007): 48-52.

Barbara Houston’s article includes two accounts of Carlisle residents’ encounters with unexploded artillery shells after the Civil War. Frank Wetzel recalled one incident that involved a Civil War veteran who worked at his father’s shop on North Bedford Street. In addition, an article from the Carlisle (PA) Herald described what happened at a house on South Hanover Street in May 1868 after a conical shell was accidentally “shoveled into a bucket of coal and from thence carried to the cook stove where the contents of the bucket were thrown upon the fire.”

These essays have been posted online with permission from the Cumberland County Historical Society.

Union Soldiers – Cumberland County, Pennsylvania

John Cantilion

Patricia Coolmeyer, “Southern Sentiments: A Look at Attitudes of Civil War Soldiers ,” Cumberland County History 7 (1990): 68-79.

Patricia Coolmeyer’s essay explores the different ways that soldiers and residents of southern Pennsylvania saw the South during the Civil War. Coolmeyer uses a wide variety of sources in her account, including letters, diaries, local newspapers, and other nineteenth-century publications.

James A. Holechek, “From Carlisle and Fort Couch: The War of Corporal John Cantilion,” Cumberland County History 10 (1993): 71-80.

James A. Holechek’s article focuses on Corporal John Cantilion’s experiences in central Pennsylvania during the summer of 1863. Cantilion served in the 4th United States Cavalry and was stationed at Carlisle Barracks in early June 1863. This essay includes transcripts of letters that Cantilion wrote from Carlisle Barracks on June 19 and from Fort Couch on June 23. Holechek also provides the transcript of a letter that Cantilion’s wife, Sarah, wrote in early November 1863. However, Cantilion died on November 12, 1863 and never received that letter. In addition, photographs of John and Sarah Cantilion are reproduced in this essay.

These articles has been posted online with permission from the Cumberland County Historical Society.

“Captain Miller’s Medal of Honor”

Captain William E. Miller

Captain Miller’s Medal of Honor (1963)

Merrill F. Hummel’s essay discusses Captain William E. Miller’s Medal of Honor, which he received as a result of his actions during the Battle of Gettysburg on July 3, 1863. Miller lived in Carlisle on North Hanover Street and served in the Third Pennsylvania Calvary during the Civil War. Hummel includes Miller’s account of his actions during the battle, which are from a letter he wrote to his brother on July 7, 1863. Miller received his Medal of Honor on July 21, 1897. After the war, Miller returned to Carlisle and helped establish the Captain Colwell Post No. 201 of the Grand Army of the Republic. He also joined the Historical Association of Cumberland County and wrote an article in 1902 about the Confederates in Carlisle during the Civil War, which is available on Library Divided.

This essay has been posted online with permission from the Cumberland County Historical Society.

“Cumberland County’s Connection to John Brown’s Raid at Harper’s Ferry”

Albert Hazlett

Joseph D. Cress, “Cumberland County’s Connection to John Brown’s Raid at Harper’s Ferry,” Cumberland County History 26 (2009): 48-60.

Joseph D. Cress uses reports from several local newspaper to explore the story of Albert Hazlett’s arrest in Chambersburg on October 22, 1859. Hazlett had participated in John Brown’s raid on Harpers Ferry on October 16, but he managed to escape. The Carlisle American and American Volunteer published reports about Hazlett’s case with contradicting evidence and testimony, which reflected the confusion over Hazlett’s identity. (When local authorities arrested him, Hazlett claimed that he was actually William Harrison). After three trials in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, Judge Frederick Watts decided to extradite Harrison to Virginia. Hazlett was executed in Charlestown, Virginia on March 16, 1860.

This essay has been posted online with permission from the Cumberland County Historical Society.

“Fitzhugh Lee Returns, and Returns”

Fitzhugh Lee

D. W. Thompson, Fitzhugh Lee Returns, and Returns (Carlisle, PA: Hamilton Library Association, 1963).

D. W. Thompson’s essay discusses Confederate General Fitzhugh Lee’s connection with Carlisle, Pennsylvania. General Lee was stationed at Carlisle Barracks before the Civil War, returned as a Confederate general who shelled the town in the summer of 1863, and came back again in 1896 to speak at the Carlisle Indian School. As Thompson explains, Superintendent Richard Henry Pratt invited Lee and Union General Oliver Otis Howard “to show that North and South were united with East and West in a common life, hope, and allegiance.” Yet some Carlisle residents believed that Pratt should not have invited Lee. As an editorial in the Carlisle Herald argued, “it was a mistake not because [Lee] was a rebel but because he did a disgraceful and unsoldierly thing that can not be justified.” This essay also has several related documents, including transcripts of two letters that Lee wrote and excerpts from newspaper articles.

This essay has been posted online with permission from the Cumberland County Historical Society.

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