Tag Archives: Civil War

Remember Vicksburg…

Today remember our losses at Gettysburg and Vicksburg on July 4th 1863. They were severe blows to our freedom and liberty. In Vicksburg, Mississippi, many, many Missouri Battle Flags were surrendered this day 149 years ago. “Missouri Brigade Battle Flag Prior to the Vicksburg Campaign,Missouri units of the “Army of the West” received presents of new battle flags that they carried into the siege with them. These flags were rectangular, consisting of a dark blue bunting field with a red bunting border on three sides and a white cotton “Latin” cross standing near the staff edge. At some time in 1863 or 1864 similar flags were presented to the five units of Burns’ Missouri Brigade serving in the Trans-Mississippi Department. According to surviving documents man of these flags were made in occupied New Orleans by ladies loyal to the Confederacy and smuggled through the lines to give to General Sterling Price”

Father “Abram” Ryan: Missouri Native, Priest / Poet of the Confederacy

The following article was written by an anonymous blogger known only to the world as “Enemy of the State” and submitted to the Southeast Missourian “Speak Out” forum found at the following URL: http://www.semissourian.com/forums/speakout/thread/3331

Adored throughout the South, Cape Catholics ignore Missouri’s Most Famous Priest
Posted by Enemy of the State on Wed, Jun 22, 2011, at  6:09 AM:

"Enemy of the State": anonymous blogger/ modern day partisan

One Hundred, and Forty Six Years ago, on June 24th, 1865, the Poet Priest of the Confederacy, Father Abram Ryan, released his most famous poem, “The Conquered Banner.

It appeared in a pro-southern Catholic newspaper, the NEW YORK FREEMAN’s JOURNAL, since then, millions of southern children learned it by heart and recited it in classrooms throughout the south.

My guess is that no Cape Girardeau Catholics ever heard of Father Ryan, who was a free lane Chaplin to our soldiers in the Confederate Service, but they should have.

Nashville named a high school after Father Ryan.

The Sons of Confederate Veterans, Camp #302 in San Diego, CA, named their camp after Father Ryan.

A memorial plaque has been erected at his former parish, Immaculate Conception Church, in Knoxville, Tennessee.

A memorial park with a statue of Father Ryan is in downtown Mobile, AL.

Father Ryan is commemorated on the Poet’s Monument in Augusta, Georgia, along with Sidney Lanier, Paul Hamilton Hayne, and James Ryder Randall

There is a stained glass window at the Confederate Museum in New Orleans

There is a stained glass window depicting Father Ryan at Bapst Library, Boston College

A memorial plaque graces the front of St Boniface Church in Louisville KY, the remaining active portion of the Franciscan Monastery where he died. The adjoining monastery building is now apartments.

Why then, should Cape Girardeau Catholics honor this great man, a devoted priest, who risked his life to tend to the needs of loyal Confederate soldiers?  It is because Father Ryan has a Cape Girardeau history.

Born born on February 5, 1839 in Hagerstown, Maryland, his parents soon moved to St. Louis, Missouri, where he was educated at the Academy of Christian Brothers.  Later, Later Ryan studied for the priesthood at St. Mary’s of the Barrens Seminary near Perryville.  He was ordained a Priest in the Vincentian order on September 12th, 1860.  As a new priest, he taught theology at St. Mary’s of the Barrens and was also listed in 1860-61 on the faculty roster of the diocesan seminary in Cape Girardeau, Missouri.

It was from this area, that Father Ryan answered the call of the Archbishop of New Orleans who was recruiting Catholic Priests to be free lance Chaplins for the Confederate Service.  Father Ryan began to be absent from duties due to “illness” so that he could travel to minister to troops in Tennessee, and Kentucky, Louisiana.

According to wikipedia, “Fr. Ryan began formal full-time clerical duties in Tennessee in late 1863 or early 1864. Though he never formally joined the Confederate Army, he clearly was serving as a free-lance chaplain by the last two years of the conflict, with possible appearances at the Battle of Lookout Mountain and the Battle of Missionary Ridge near Chattanooga (both in late November 1863), and well-authenticated service at the Battle of Franklin (November 1864) and the subsequent Battle of Nashville (December 1864). Some of his most moving poems–“In Memoriam” and “In Memory of My Brother”–came in response to his brother’s death, who died while serving in uniform for the Confederacy in April 1863, probably from injuries suffered during fighting near Mt. Sterling, Kentucky.”

All this makes Father Ryan a notable, highly regarded priest, to risk his life, even though he wasn’t in the Confederate Army, to minster to the troops.

However, that may not have been Father Ryan’s greatest accomplishment, though I would venture that to those who Father Ryan attended, they may disagree.  Father Abram Ryan is best known as the Poet Priest of the Confederacy.

His poems, “CSA”, “In Memoriam”, and “The Conquered Banner” were, and still are, treasured in the south, and helped sooth it in it’s most difficult time, that being when they lost their war for Independence from the tyrannical northern government.

The latter, “The Conquered Banner” was required to be learned by all southern school students for many, many years, just as we were required to memorize the tyrants “Gettysburg Address.”

Father Ryan published volumes of poems, on the war, the military, and on other circumstances and several volumes of his work is even now available on eBay.

Imagine if you will, a Father Ryan Museum in Cape Girardeau.  Cape would become a stopping point for not only bus loads of vacationing Catholics, but southerners who remember him fondly from learning about him in their high school years.

I am sure that there are records in Cape Girardeau that prove that Father Ryan was at the diocesan Seminary, (St. Vincents) and also at St. Mary’s in Perryville.  Some enterprising Catholic ought to look into it as we celebrate the 150th Anniversary of our nations launch of it’s struggle for freedom from the vicious tyranny of the north.

At the very least, the Knights of Columbus ought to commemorate a plaque to this great man, this extraordinary Priest, Father Abram Ryan.

American Civil War Folklore or Legend, the story of Confederate Scout John Noland

From http://www.kevinmweeks.com ,written by Ann DeWitt:

http://kevinmweeks.com/wordpress/?p=1460

Tombstone of Confederate Scout John Noland

In 1861, slaves in the border states of the 36-degrees-30-minutes latitude line must have wondered why President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation was slated to only make provisions for slaves in the rebel states.  Missouri was a border state.  In August 1861 when Union General John C. Frémont issued a military order for the emancipation of slaves in Missouri, martial law was instituted.

Union General John C. Frémont military order stated:  “All persons who shall be taken with arms in their hands within these lines shall be tried by court-martial, and, if found guilty, will be shot. The property, real and personal, of all persons in the State of Missouri who shall take up arms against the United States, and who shall be directly proven to have taken active part with their enemies in the field, is declared to be confiscated to the public use; and their slaves, if any they have, are hereby declared free.”

This decree emotionally charged the pro-Union militia, dubbed the Jayhawkers, to take matters into their own hands.  The Jayhawkers targeted Missouri slaveholders.  If these slaveholders had weapons, they were shot and killed; and many of these Missouri citizen’s personal items were taken.

Now, turn to John Noland, a Missouri slave.   The Jayhawkers came and destroyed life as John Noland once knew it; however, the Jayhawkers did not have any plans of delivering John Noland’s slave family into the life in which John Noland dreamed.  Everything was gone, except the clothes on their backs.

Then, William Quantrill entered into the life of John Noland.  Quantrill was the leader of a pro-Confederate militia group dubbed the Bushwackers.  So, when Quantrill’s Raiders offered John Noland some semblance of equality as a militia Confederate scout and spy, John Noland accepted their offer.  The common law system as we know today did not exist; and John Noland was determined to go after the Jayhawkers, who took clothes, food, and shelter away from his family.  Even when the Union came and offered John Noland $10,000 to betray Quantrill, John Noland refused.  Can anyone put a price tag on family? Unto his death, John Noland gained the racial equality he desired.  The men in the Quantrill’s Raiders called John Noland, “a man among men.”

For more information about African Americans who served with the Confederate States Army, visit www.blackconfederatesoldiers.com.

This article is sponsored by The Street Life Series Youth Edition. Contact email: info@kevinmweeks.com.

Peel back the sticker and reveal the names of African-American men who served in various capacities with the Confederate States Army (Black Confederates) during the American Civil War.

Recommended Reading:

  • Quantrill of Missouri by Paul R. Petersen
  • Entangled In Freedom: A Civil War Story by Ann DeWitt and Kevin M. Weeks


Army of titles finds new niches of Civil War to explore

From the Kansas City Star:

http://www.kansascity.com/2011/03/26/2750726/150-years-later-reading-the-civil.html

“•Paul Petersen of Raytowngives a new perspective on the Border War in “Quantrill at Lawrence: The Untold Story,” scheduled to be published in April (Pelican; $26.95).

Petersen makes the case that William Quantrill’s raid was not a bloody massacre against innocent citizens. Rather, his attacks affected only strategic military positions in Lawrence and brought Quantrill no monetary gain. According to Petersen, Union propaganda perpetuated the myth of Quantrill’s brutality.

Petersen furthers the controversy by arguing that Jayhawkers — the Kansans, that is — were the ruthless guerrillas, using the false front of patriotism to justify their violence.”

Read more: http://www.kansascity.com/2011/03/26/2750726/150-years-later-reading-the-civil.html#ixzz1IonT9hKh

Want to know more about “Quantrill of Missouri”? Then don’t miss the Col. John T. Coffee Camp’s 11th annual Heritage Dinner, featuring Paul R. Petersen , award winning author of “Quantrill of Missouri” , “Quantrill in Texas” and the upcoming book “Quantrill in Kansas” The dinner is free but you must RSVP before April 26, 2011. For information about this event and how to RSVP click on the following link:

https://myscv.wordpress.com/2011/03/03/press-release-petersen-to-be-guest-speaker-at-11th-annual-heritage-dinner/

 

Happy Birthday to Brig Gen. M. Jeff Thompson

F rom Suite 101.com

“Meriwether Jeff Thompson, also known as M. Jeff Thompson, was born during the year of 1826, in Jefferson County, Harpers Ferry, Virginia, which is now part of West Virginia. In 1848, he moved to St. Joseph, Missouri, where he worked as a store clerk, land surveyor, engineering, and director of the building crew of the Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad. He then became mayor of St. Joseph from 1857 to 1860, and was there to inaugurate the Pony Express. At that point, the Civil War began with the firing upon of Fort Sumter, and Thompson raised a Calvary in St. Joseph, which was part of the Missouri State Guard, became it’s commander, and fought for the Confederates.

The Missouri Swamp Fox

Thompson received the name “Missouri Swamp Fox” from his tactic of tricking Union steamboats into docking. Once docked to help him, he would then take his battalion and capture the vessel with all Union Soldiers on board. It was documented that he did release ships that were privately owned. Starting in 1860, his strategies soon came to the attention of Ulysses S. Grant, and by 1861, Grant wanted Thompson imprisoned. Due to the success of the capturing of many scores of Union soldiers, his nickname stuck and his Calvary was also given the nickname of “Swamp Rats”. By mid 1861, he was made brigadier of the Missouri State Guard.

After his victory at Iron Mountain Railroad, near Blackwell, Missouri. General Thompson then moved onto Fredericktown, where he was defeated, leaving Southern Missouri to the Union. Thompson and his forces then moved out past the Mississippi River to regroup and engaged in several actions, and then finally marched down to Arkansas. While fighting to regain Missouri, Thompson and his men were captured in Arkansas.

Jeff Thompson the P.O.W.

When Thompson was captured in 1863, he was first taken to St. Louis’ Gratiot Street prison. He was then transferred to the prison camp at Fort Delaware and then finally on Johnson’s Island. While in Fort Delaware, he wrote letters to friends, wrote poetry and journeyed his experiences which where then published after the war. While at Fort Delaware he met a 14 year old orderly from Tennessee by the name of Bailey Peyton Key, who remained at his side the entire time he was incarcerated at Fort Delaware. In the spring of 1864, he was exchanged for a Union general. He returned to Missouri shortly after to fight alongside Major General Sterling Price. That campaign was defeated and Thompson surrendered his brigade in Arkansas in May of 1865.

Thompson was never made a full fledged Confederate General, since Missouri wasn’t officially part of the Confederate Congress at the time of his promotion, but the fact that he didn’t have a commission didn’t seem to matter. Thompson also had the distinction of having a Confederate Army ship named after him, which was unusual. Civilian life found Thompson in New Orleans, Louisiana, were he once again found himself in the role of a civil engineer. This profession was hard on his health, and he died in 1876. His final resting spot can be found back in his beloved St. Joseph, Missouri.”

Read more at Suite101: M. Jeff Thompson: The “Missouri Swamp Fox” of the Confederatacy http://www.suite101.com/content/m-jeff-thompson-the-missouri-swamp-fox-of-the-confederatacy-a285349#ixzz1Bp0fieVy

Interesting enough , Thompson was so respected by his enemies, that many worked toward his freedom after his capture in 1863, as documented in the Nov. 1 , 1863 New York Times -webmaster


In memory of the victims of the Wilson Massacre

The following article has appeared in the Barnes Review Magazine as well as the John T. Coffee Camp#1934 website:

Editor’s Note:

The following essay was originally published on the Show Me South website by John T. Coffee Camp member Clint Lacy. This spellbinding article is a corollary to the riveting essay authored by Australian writer Jim Gray about how the Lincoln administration ran their policy of terror in Missouri. —Editor.


 THE WILSON MASSACRE
“The Story of Union Brutality in the Southeast Missouri Ozarks”

By: Clint E. Lacy

One of the most controversial pieces of work that late author and historian Jerry Ponder wrote was his account of the Wilson Massacre in Ripley County, Missouri; which occurred on December 25th 1863. On December 23rd, 1863, members of the 15th Missouri Cavalry, CSA, attacked and captured nearly 100 Union prisoners at Centerville in Reynolds County, Missouri; burning the courthouse down before they left. Ponder wrote that:

“An unusual group assembled at the Pulliam farm in southwestern Ripley County, Missouri for Christmas in 1863. Nearly 150 officers and men of the Missouri State Guard’s 15th Cavalry Regiment (Confederate); at least sixty civilians, many of them women and children; and 102 prisoners, officers and men of Company C, Missouri State Militia (Union).

The civilians were family members, friends, and neighbors. Confederate “hosts” and Union “guests” were all Missourians; but they were divided by perhaps the bitterest of all enmities–those of civil war.

The day’s activity was to begin with religious services conducted by the Reverend Colonel Timothy Reeves, commanding officer of the 15th Cavalry and a Baptist preacher of Ripley County. Then would follow Christmas dinner in the afternoon. The group at Pulliam’ s farm numbered above three hundred at the very least, if the figures on the record are to be believed. It was too many for a mere religious service and holiday dinner. Pulliam’s was one of Reeves’s regimental camps.

What began as a festive occasion ended in horror and tragedy. As the celebrants sat at dinner, their arms stacked, they were surprised by two companies of the Union Missouri State Militia, more than 200 mounted cavalrymen. Only those guarding the prisoners, about 35 men, were armed. The Militia attacked without warning, shooting into the crowd, attacking with sabers, and killing at least thirty of the Confederate men instantly and mortally wounding several more. According to local tradition, many–perhaps most—of the civilians were killed or wounded as well.

The immediate cause of the Wilson Massacre was a series of events at Centerville, Reynolds County. Centerville Courthouse was some sixty miles north of Doniphan and twenty-five southwest of Pilot Knob. Late in 1863, Centerville was captured by the Union 3rd Cavalry from Pilot Knob. Company C was left as garrison. On December 21, while engaged in building stables on the courthouse grounds, they were surprised and surrounded by Company N of Reeves’s 15th Missouri Cavalry, under command of Captain Jesse Pratt, before the war the Baptist minister of Centerville. Company N was composed of farmers and merchants of Reynolds County. Probably Pratt and the Reeves brothers, also Baptist preachers, were long-time acquaintances. That Pratt was accorded the honor of recapturing his hometown was not accidental.

Captured were 102 Union men with their horses. Pratt took them south to Ripley County with a small group, leaving most of his men to garrison Centerville. He presented the prisoners to Reeves at Pulliam’s on Christmas morning, and joined his fellows of the regiment for the day’s festivities. One Union soldier had been allowed to escape at Centerville, doubtless to carry news of the event back to Pilot Knob. Reaction there was swift. Colonel R.G. Woodson, commander of the 3rd Missouri, ordered two mounted cavalry companies under Major James Wilson to pursue Pratt. They left Pilot Knob mid-morning on the twenty-third.

Wilson’s force rode swiftly, rising in the darkness of the twenty-fifth to be on the road at 3:00 AM. They passed through Doniphan that morning, and continued west toward Ponder, capturing pickets as they went, and descended on Colonel Reeve’s group and prisoners just as they were eating Christmas dinner” (1)

Mr. Ponder’s research on this subject can be found in his book: “History of Ripley County Missouri” , “A History of the 15th Missouri Cavalry Regiment, CSA: 1862-1865″ , in an article published in Ozark Watch magazine (Vol.IV, No.4, Spring 1991) entitled, “Between Missourians: The Civil War in Ripley County”, as well as “The Civil War in Ripley County Missouri” (published by the Doniphan-Prospect News in 1992) His research was also convincing enough that author Paulette Jiles used it in her novel “Enemy Women”.

It was during this time, that the controversy arose concerning Ponder’s research. Most of the criticism appears to have come from Ripley County Historian Ray Burson. 

Mr. Burson contacted me several times and tried to convince me not to believe Mr. Ponder. He even sent me a packet of info that he has created to dissuade those who dare use Ponder’s research in their writings. Among the papers that Mr. Burson included in his “packet” were pieces (that he put together) entitled: “Jerry Ponder’s Sources for the Wilson Massacre and Other Tales” and “Jerry Ponder On Providing His Sources”.

Mr. Burson has also seemingly convinced historian and author Kirby Ross that Ponder’s account of the Wilson Massacre is fictitious. However, Ponder, shortly before his death in 2005 sent me two documents,

The two papers are:

“The Time of the War” By: Lindzy Dudley written in 1918. Dudley appears to have fought under Colonel Reeves. His name does not appear on the official records, however this is not uncommon. Many men “took to the brush” in order to defend their families from Yankee invasion. It is also my understanding that Confederate “Partisans” were not afforded the same pensions later in life as Union and regular Confederate troops were, therefore no pension records would exist to verify their service. In this piece Lindzy Dudley states (of the Wilson Massacre):

“Reeves was a Baptist preacher. He backed up every sermon with his pistol. Reeves men were mean. No quarter was given or asked. He had commanded a company till the end of 1863. 

Colonel Righter was captured with General Thompson and Reeves was put in command of the 15th. In November a field hospital was attacked by colored cavalry and about 100 of Reeves’ men were killed. Reeves collected revenge but he never got over the loss of sick and wounded not able to fight back. Just shot in their beds. He talked about that until he died. On Christmas, a month later, several companies were at the Pulliam farm for a service and feed with their families. This was on the old Tom Pulliam place northwest of Johnston’s Chapel and close to Oregon County and the Arkansas line. There was a big spring there on the Mill Branch where folks in that part had picnics.  Reeves did a sermon and the group was ready to eat. The well known Major Wilson, the Yankee from Pilot Knob called “The Murderer”, surrounded and attacked. The killed and the wounded were all over the field. Soldiers, their families, nearby families. All were killed.  Those that could get across the creek and up the bluff on the south side and into the timber there to hide or keep on running. It was not right to kill the families. Wilson lived up to his name. The loss of sick and wounded at the hospital and the loss of the men and families at Pulliams was pretty hard to take. We were ready to wipe out the blues all the way to St. Louis” (2)

It is interesting that Ray Burson of the Ripley County Historical Society, would question Dudley’s credibility in his account of the Wilson Massacre, yet in the book “History and Families of Ripley County Missouri” the historical society (who along with the publisher holds the copyright to the book) finds Dudley credible enough to relate who the first European settler of Ripley County was:

“In an interview with historian HUME in 1900, Lindzy DUDLEY reported that the first European resident was a “Wees RILEY” who arrived in 1802 with a Delaware Indian wife who soon died in childbirth” (3)

The other document was entitled: “Doniphan- No Man’s Land During the Civil War” By: T. L. Wright Jr. and was written in March ,1929. The paper appears to be one written for a High school assignment by T. L. Wright Jr.. On the copy that Mr. Ponder sent me “DONIPHAN PUBLIC LIBRARY” is stamped on the upper left hand corner of the page.

I was able to talk to Jerry Ponder over the phone, while he was in Texas (a few months before he died) and he told me that he found the documents after they had been discarded. During the time that he found the documents (1990-1991) the Doniphan Public Library and the Ripley County library were being consolidated.

In addition I contacted the Ripley County Library’s Doniphan Missouri location on Friday July 29, 2006 and talked to two separate librarians, Mr. Allen Rife and Mrs. Rebecca Wilcox. Both told me it was possible that the documents could have been discarded during the consolidation. During a second phone interview conducted on August 7th, 2006 I talked to a third librarian Mrs. Patricia Robison, who told me that though she did not work at the library at the time of the consolidation, she is a life long resident of Ripley County it was “entirely possible” that documents were discarded during the consolidation of the two libraries in the early 1990′s.

As a side note, I was also able to check out a book from the Doniphan-Ripley County Library entitled “Doniphan and Ripley County History”. There is no copyright date, but the earliest entries appear to be from the early 1900′s and the last entry appears to be in the early 1970′s and upon examination of the library stamp on this book, and the document that Jerry Ponder sent me, they are the same and one can clearly ascertain that the library stamp on the document Jerry Ponder sent me is valid. 

T. L. Wright Jr.’s 1929 paper also gives long time residents accounts of the Wilson Massacre.  Given the fact that this paper was written in 1929, it is possible that the accounts could have been eyewitness accounts. Certainly they could be accounts written by citizens who were living during the time of the “Wilson Massacre”.

“On Christmas Day, 1863, Major James Wilson, later captured and executed by firing squad at Pilot Knob, and 200 Union troops from Fort Davidson at Pilot Knob, passed through Doniphan, traveling on a southeast course to Pulliam’s Farm, 17 miles from Doniphan where Colonel Reeves and his cavalry were encamped. A vicious, surprise attack ensued and 35 rebels were killed and 112 taken prisoner when the fighting had ended. But worse, families and neighbors were present and, in the heat of battle, Wilson’s soldiers killed over 50 civilians. Mrs. Betty Towell, Tom Pulliam and Ed Cline, long-time residents of the neighborhood, tell that the civilians killed, in camp for a Christmas visit, included women and children who were shot down the same as the rebel soldiers of Reeves’ Regiment. That action attests to the cruelty of the war.” (4)

According to historian Kirby Ross, T.L. Wright Jr. was born in 1912. That would have made T.L. Wright Jr. 17 years of age at the time he wrote this document (which appears to be a high school paper). One of the criticisms that Mr. Ross has made in his attempt to discredit Jerry Ponder was posted on an online forum on August 14th, 2005. In it Mr. Ross states (in reference to the document written by T.L.Wright Jr. in 1929) that:

“…do you realize that this version of the T.L. Wright article has a four year old boy conducting complex historical interviews?” (5)

Ross continues by stating:

“Now as to Mr. Ponder’s fantabulous precocious four year old interviewer/historian, T. L. Wright, I refer you to Mr. Lacy’s posting that says:

“A major set-back was experienced by the Confederate Army on August 24, 1863, when General Jeff Thompson, Colonel William Righter and most of their staffs were captured at the hotel in Pocahontas while holding a planning meeting. General Thompson was taken to a military prison in Ohio and held there for over a year before he was released. Colonel Righter was taken to St. Louis by a circuitous route around Ripley County. He agreed to sign an alliance to the Union and put up $1,000.00 bond as assurance that he would not fight again. The Colonel told me.”

That last sentence bears repeating: “The Colonel told me.”

Ponder is offering this to show that T.L. Wright personally interviewed Col. William H. Righter. This passage is so ridiculously bad that it is laugh out loud funny and begs to be repeated, for you see, T.L. Wright was born Feb. 15, 1912 and William Harmon Righter passed away on November 26, 1916.” (6)

This criticism by Ross bears examination. First of all, as stated before, T.L. Wright Jr. was 17 years of age when he wrote his 1st version of “Doniphan: No Man’s Land in the Civil War” in 1929 and the words “The Colonel told me” seems to be more of a recollection of a story that William Harmon Righter told him when he was a young boy. Nowhere has Jerry Ponder ever wrote that T.L.Wright Jr. was conducting “complex interviews” at 4 years of age. It is also important to note that T. L. Wright Jr.’s 1929 version of “Doniphan: No Man’s Land During the Civil War”, matches Lindzy Dudley’s 1918 version of what occurred at Pulliam’s Farm on December 25, 1863.

On the same online forum posted by Kirby Ross on Wednesday August 31st, 2005, Ross states:

“And with this published account of the document in question, if Jerry Ponder’s version of “the Wilson Massacre” is to be accepted, one must also accept that Wright participated in part of the massive cover-up of the massacre that Jo Shelby and Jeff Thompson would have also been a part of.” (7)

There is no way that Confederate General M. Jeff Thompson of the Missouri State guard could be involved in the Wilson Massacre or have known about it because he was captured on August 22, 1863. The Wilson Massacre occurred on December 25, 1863. General M. Jeff Thompson was in a Yankee prison in the North at the time that the “Wilson Massacre” occurred. (7)

It is possible that after General Thompson’s release in 1864, that he had no doubt heard about the atrocities being committed in Ripley County and the surrounding areas, after he made his way back to Missouri just in time to participate in General Price’s 1864 Missouri Expedition.

On the same August 31′st, 2005 online forum post Kirby Ross offers another version of T.L. Wright Jr.’s “Doniphan: No Man’s Land in the Civil War” which he claims is the “real” T.L. Wright Jr. document and was published in Doniphan Prospect-News Doniphan, Missouri Thursday, April 2, 1970. Ross states:

“By the way, note that Wright doesn’t refer to William H. Righter as being one of his sources in this article, or of having interviewed him when he was four years old.” (8)

This is true, T.L. Wright Jr. does not make mention of Colonel William H. Righter as one of his sources in the 1970 Prospect-News newspaper article. However one must remember that there is a 51 year difference between the article written in 1970 , when T.L. Wright Jr. was 58 years of age and the one written in 1929 when he was 17 years of age. Mr. Ross claims that the 1970 Doniphan Prospect News article is the “real” T.L. Wright Jr. article. Yet there is a third version of the T.L. Wright Jr. article that appeared in the Ripley County Library book, “Doniphan and Ripley County in the Civil War”, there is no date on this piece, but it appears to be written around the same time period as the 1970 article. Like the 1970 article there is no mention of civilians killed or Colonel Righter. But there are areas in which the T.L. Wright Jr. article found in the book “Doniphan and Ripley County in the Civil War” differ from the version published in the Doniphan – Prospect news in 1970. Is it not legitimate as well?

It appears that in later years T.L. Wright Jr. decided to cite more official sources for his revised work, “Doniphan: No Man’s Land in the Civil War” and his version of the Wilson Massacre seems to follow other versions in the “Doniphan and Ripley County in the Civil War” book found in the Ripley County Library. This does not make his original version any less valid. Remember the 1929 version quoted long time residents of Ripley County who lived in the area.

No one knows why T.L. Wright Jr chose not to include these sources in the two other versions of his paper in later years.

Mr. Burson’s criticism seems to be centered around Colonel William H. Righter himself and whether or not he was a real Colonel. In a personal letter sent to me by Ray Burson entitled: “Jerry Ponder’s Sources for the Wilson Massacre and other Tales” Burson writes:

“The tale: That William Harmon Righter was the founder and Colonel of the 15th Missouri Cavalry, CSA , captured at Pocahontas , AR with Gen. Jeff Thompson and then sat out the rest of the war in St. Louis. Righter is a prominent figure in Ponder’s books on the 15th Missouri Cavalry, The Battle of Chalk Bluff and Maj. Gen. John S. Marmaduke.

Historians have not found any record of Righter’s service in the CSA and there is not mention of it in his biographic sketches and three obituaries. He is not mentioned in the OR with the Capture of Thompson or elsewhere. He was merely a Southern sympathizer. Ponder got the VA {Veterans Administration} to provide a headstone which he had placed in the Doniphan City cemetery for Righter without providing Righter’s service record” (9)

A “Post It” note was attached to the letter which reads:

“Mr. Lacy , Here’s the real scope of Ponder’s mischief. See IV- what does creating fake colonels add to the story of Southern valor during the Civil War? Regards, Ray Burson”

The fact that Burson has stated that no service record of Righter in the CSA has been found doesn’t mean that Righter did not serve in some capacity. As stated at the beginning of this article, this was not uncommon, many men “took to the brush” and fought as informal companies of partisans. It is extremely doubtful that the Veterans Administration would have provide a headstone for Colonel Righter, free of charge, without some kind of documentation that Righter served in some capacity during the war.

In Jean Ponder’s story “Doniphan During the Civil War”, she states that:

“There is an amusing anecdote told about a group of southern sympathizers who lived in Doniphan. Living in the town at that time was a man by the name of W.H. Ryder, who claimed he was from Virginia. — ‘A gentleman from Virginia – drunk or sober.’ One day all of these southern sympathizers were gathered in the town. Suddenly, without any warning, a division of the Union Army marched into town. Caught unprepared, the Southerns had to ‘take to the bushes’ for their lives. As Ryder was the fastest runner of them all and got to safety first, the rest of them immediately made him their colonel.” (10)

If these men were ordinary citizens, then why were they afraid, why did they run?  If they were nothing more than ordinary citizens, then why were they gathered in town? What was the intention of the gathering?

The fact that obituaries about Righter did not mention any military service is not proof positive that he did not fight. After all Colonel Timothy Reeves, after the war, was reluctant to discuss his war time experiences, stating that “he wished to be remembered as a good preacher, not a civil war hero”, obituaries about him made no mention of his military experience. (11)

Jerry Ponder said in his research that Righter’s commission came from Brigadier General M. Jeff Thompson. Ponder’s critics state that Thompson made no record of this. Is it possible that this could have happened? It is entirely possible. In his book “This is the War Experiences of Brigadier General M. Jeff Thompson”, Thompson himself writes that:

“About the 1st of July 1861, Cyrus Black and Miles Ponder of Ripley County, Missouri came down to Pocohontas {Arkansas} to inform me that the citizens of Ripley and Carter counties were meeting at Martins-burg to organize a Battalion and desired me to come up and take command” (12)

Thompson further states that he was elected to command the battalion and that Aden Lowe was not a candidate because of the strict discipline that he enforced before Thompson’s arrival. One of Jeff Thompson’s first acts as commander of the Ripley County Battalion, was to, start enlisting men as Partisan rangers. Thompson writes:

“I saw at this time the necessity of mounted troops even for my small command, and I authorized James F. White to raise as many men to act as Partizans and Flankers , as he could find with good horses: (13)

Sam Hildebrand, who later became known as a Missouri Bushwhacker, is another partisan that was given a commission by General M. Jeff Thompson. In his autobiography Hildebrand wrote:

“As soon as I could gain admission to the General’s headquarters I did so, and he received me very kindly.  He listened very attentively to me as I proceeded to state my case to him – how my brother had been murdered, how I had barely escaped the same fate, and how I had finally been driven from the country.

General THOMPSON reflected a few moments, then seizing a pen he rapidly wrote off a few lines and handing it to me he said, “here, I give you a Major’s commission; go where you please, take what men you can pick up, fight on your own hook, and report to me every six months.” (14)

Even though Hildebrand received a Major’s commission from Thompson, the act is not mentioned in “This is the War Experiences of Brigadier General M. Jeff Thompson”. Nor is it mentioned in “General M. Jeff Thompson’s Letter Book July 1861-June1862″, written by Jim McGhee, therefore the fact that there is no record of Righter’s commission, doesn’t mean that he was not given one by Thompson.

Yet there is another possibility in this story. If there was a record of Colonel Righter’s or Sam Hildebrand’s commissions given by M. Jeff Thompson, the records might have very well been destroyed at the time of M. Jeff Thompson’s capture in Pocahontas, Arkansas, on August 22, 1863. In the book, “This is the War Experiences of Brigadier General M. Jeff Thompson”, Thompson writes:

“Kay spread out my maps to examine them and by -the -way I had the best set of maps that I saw during the war, for I had all kinds of military information on them, and the name and status of nearly every man in Southeast Missouri. I sat down in my shirt sleeves to copy some drawings, about 4 P.M.  We heard horses running. I did not look up, but Kay did and shouted ; “By George , here’s the Feds.”  I sprang to my feet, and sure enough they were within forty yards, with a string of them as far as the eye could reach, all coming at full speed. I gasped as if my heart would jump out of my mouth, but instantly sat down again, and said:, Kay, burn those maps.” (15)

The only flaw in the Linzy Dudley, T.L Wright Jr.’s 1929 document, and Ponder’s writings that I could find is the fact that Righter was not captured directly with Thompson. Again quoting “This is the War Experiences of Brigadier General M. Jeff Thompson” Thompson writes of being brought to Doniphan , Missouri in route to Pilot Knob, Missouri that:

“There were only five military prisoners, being Kay, Train, McDonald , Miller and myself, but there were a large number of people , men and boys, brought into camp to prevent them from carrying the news”. (16)

Righter could have very well have been in the latter group. Perhaps this is the reason that Lindzy Dudley told Charles Booker in 1918 that:

“Colonel Righter was captured with General Thompson” (17)

In the book “The Civil War in Ripley County , Missouri” it states that Colonel W.H. Righter following his capture was:

“…was taken to Gratiot Prison in St. Louis. There he agreed not to further take up arms and was paroled. He remained in St. Louis the remainder of the war, reading law. His wife, Anna Wright Righter, died there in February 1864. When the war ended, Colonel Righter returned to Ripley County and, in 1866, was elected as the state representative from Ripley County. Because of his Confederate service, the General Assembly refused to seat him and appointed a “stand -in” to represent the county…In 1867 Colonel Righter went to Mississippi and raised cotton, but he returned to Ripley County the same year and built the Bay City Mils on Current River” and that, “As soon as the Missouri constitution permitted former Confederates to practice law in the state Righter leased the mills and opened a law office in Doniphan. He was considered an excellent lawyer and had a large practice. He was elected prosecuting attorney for Ripley County in 1876″ (18)

The Thursday Sept. 2d, 1909 issue of “Twice a Month Magazine” confirms that Righter:

“returned to St. Louis October 1863, planted cotton in Mississippi in 1866-67 and returned to Ripley County in 1868″ (19)

“Twice a Month Magazine” also stated that :

“Colonel Righter is a typical Southern gentleman possessing nearly all their strongest characteristics. During the Reconstruction days of the late 60′s and early 70′s he had many “warm skirmishes” with the “carpet baggers” his county contained about 300 Democratic voters who were “slow to come under the ban”. Leaving it in the hands of about 12 Republicans to handle its affairs”. (20)

Righter was elected to the State Legislature in 1882, after Reconstruction, when former Confederates were once again allowed to hold office. (21)

Even without the discussion of what role Colonel William Harmon Righter played in the War Between the States, there is plenty of other evidence that proves the “Wilson Massacre” could have happened.  Yankee atrocities happened throughout the Missouri Ozarks during the war and fighting between warring factions was both personal and brutal.

On a U.S. Forestry Service website entitled, “History of the Irish Wilderness”, a detailed description of Union policy toward Missouri Southerners living in the Southeast Missouri Ozarks is given.

The website cites the War of the Rebellions: Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, one entry in particular shows proof that the women of the area were looked down upon and treated badly by the occupying Union soldiers. Captain Robert McElroy of the 3rd Missouri State Militia (Union) wrote that:

“I am of the opinion that the women in that region are even more daring and treacherous, and in fact, worse than the men, as we found in their possession a number of newly made rebel uniforms, etc. (22)

Jerry Ponder’s critics cite eye-witness accounts of Union soldiers who were present at the Wilson Massacre and stated that all of the prisoners were well cared for. But reading through the U.S. Forestry Service’s “The History of the Irish Wilderness” , which cites the official records of the War of the Rebellions, one will find that anyone who was even “suspected” of being a “Bushwhacker” was taken prisoner. In Captain Boyd’s (who was a Union Scout) report he states that:

“…found fresh trail of horses, followed them on Jack’s Fork to the residence of Miles Stephens and brother, Jack Stephens, whom’ I’m satisfied were Bushwhackers. Burned the house.” (23)

Anyone “suspected” of harboring or aiding a Bushwhacker had their property burned, furthermore, in Captain John Boyd’s  report of the 6th Provisional Regiment EMM (Union)  one will find between November 4 – 9 , 1863 ,there were over 23 houses burned  , and 10 men killed, by these Union troops, the majority of which were prisoners who “tried to escape” and were shot. (24)

 All of this occurred little over a month before the “Wilson Massacre” and we are supposed to believe that the Union militia treated Reeves men and local civilians any better on December 25, 1863?

There are other pieces of evidence that suggest that the “Wilson Massacre” did happen. At the Stoddard County Civil War Cemetery in Bloomfield, Missouri, there are monuments erected in honor of Southern soldiers and civilians who were killed during the War Between the States. The monuments are unique due to the fact that they have detailed information about the individual on the front of the monument, name, rank unit, etc. and on the back of the monument a detailed description of where and how the individual died.

One states on the front of the monument:  “PVT. , Thomas McKinney, Co. A, 15th Mo. Reg. Cav. CSA. July 16, 1845 – Dec. 25, 1863.” The back of the monument reads: “Killed in Action, Ripley County, Mo”.

Another monument is more specific. The front reads: “In memory of , PVT. , Jacob Foster, Co. A, 15th Mo. Cav. , April 18, 1830- December 25, 1863.”

The back of the monument reads: “Died of Wounds, Received At, Christmas Dinner, Doniphan Mo., “Wilson Massacre” (25)

If one looks at the events following the “Wilson Massacre” a clear picture begins to develop that something “very significant” happened on December 25, 1863 in Ripley County , Missouri. An event so drastic, that the effects of it would be felt throughout the rest of the War Between the States in Missouri, and even after the war had ended.

First of all something must have been weighing very heavily upon Major Wilson’s mind for in March of 1864 he told his nephew, while he was on furlough:

“If you ever hear of me being taken prisoner by the guerilla Tim Reeves you may count me as dead.  I know I shall never get away from him alive.  I have broken up his recruiting operations three times.” (26)

Was Wilson worried about his life because he had broken up Reeves’ recruiting operations? Or did he fear retribution for something much worse, that he did not want his family to know about?

One must not discount the fact that that during the General Sterling Price’s Missouri Expedition of 1864, at the Battle of Pilot Knob, Missouri:

“Maj. James Wilson, Third Cavalry Missouri State Militia, after being wounded was captured on Pilot Knob, and subsequently with six of his gallant men was brutally murdered by order of a rebel field officer of the day.” (27)

In an article entitled: “No Heroes On Either Side” written by Ponder critic Ray Burson and published in the Prospect-News (Doniphan Missouri’s local newspaper) and dated Wednesday, July 16,2003 , another Ponder critic Kirby Ross  attributes Major Wilson’s death to the burning of Doniphan, Missouri.

“Ross , whose article on the burning of Doniphan will be in an upcoming issue of North – South magazine, linked Wilson’s death to the destruction of Doniphan “which had taken place earlier, two weeks to the day.” (28)

However,  in the “Report of Confederate General J.O. Shelby C. S. Army, Commanding Division. AUGUST 29-DECEMBER 2, 1864. Price’s Missouri Expedition.” 

  It appears that General Shelby administered justice to the perpetrators who were responsible for the of burning Doniphan, almost as quickly as the act was committed. Shelby wrote that:

“On the 12th of September I moved camp from Sulphur Rock, Ark., toward Pocahontas in anticipation of the arrival of the army, and on the 19th, after having received my instructions, started for Missouri, and encamped in Doniphan. Before arriving there, however, couriers from Lieutenant-Colonel Johnson, of Marmaduke’s command, brought information that 100 Federals were in the town and pressing him back. I immediately started forward sufficient re-enforcements, but the enemy fled before reaching them, burning the helpless and ill-fated town. That night I dispatched 150 men under Lieutenant-Colonel Johnson to pursue the vandals. They came upon them early the next morning [20th], attacked, scattered, and killed many of them. I pushed on then rapidly for Patterson, destroying on the way the bloody rendezvous of the notorious Leeper, and on the morning of the 22d I surrounded and charged in upon the town. Its garrison, hearing of my advance, retreated hastily, but not before many were captured and killed, and some supplies taken. All the Government portion of Patterson was destroyed, together with its strong and ugly fort.” (29)

Confederate General M. Jeff Thompson offered another reason for the execution of  Major James Wilson. As mentioned earlier in this article, Thompson was in a Union prison at the time of the “Wilson Massacre”, but he was exchanged in time to make his way back to Missouri to join Confederate General Sterling Price’s 1864 Missouri Expedition.

In May of 1865 Thompson surrendered 10,000 men at Jacksonport , Arkansas. Out of those 10,000 men, only one was not paroled. Confederate Colonel, Timothy Reeves, Commander of the 15th Missouri Cavalry, CSA. Thompson wrote that:

” In a few days we finished all the paroles  , except that of Timothy C. Reeves, whom Col. Davis would not agree to parole , considering him outlawed for the shooting of Major Williams { Major Wilson, this was a misprint} and five men on the Price Raid; but I must state for Col. Reeves, that he was as good a man and soldier as any in the command , and his shooting of that party was entirely justifiable; only that it should have been by such an order and form that retaliation would have been avoided.

I solicited to have this party turned over to me, that I might have them shot in due form, and Reeves men refrained from killing them for three days in hopes that I would get them; but responsibilities of this kind were not to our commanders liking , and they were turned over to Reeves to guard, with a pretty full knowledge that they would be shot.

I knew Reeves men , nearly everyone of them, and the provocation was bitter, for I had seen the blackened ruins and lonely graves in Ripley county with my own eyes.” (30)

Is it possible that Jerry Ponder made some mistakes in his research? Yes. Everyone makes mistakes. But Jerry Ponder was a retired military intelligence officer, and far from inept.

Is it possible that his two greatest critics Ray Burson and Kirby Ross are biased in their research?

In an online webpage entitled, “The Military Record of Major James Wilson”, author Willard S. Bacon writes that:

“Mr. Kirby Ross who had many relatives who served in the 3rd MSM, provided immeasurable help, in finding obscure sources and documents, from many repositories.” (31)

(Major Wilson, was the commander of the 3rd Missouri State Militia, which attacked Pulliam’s Farm on December 25, 1863)

Friends of Jerry Ponder have also told me that  Ray Burson, was not originally from Ripley County, Missouri, but from a Northern state, and that it is rumored  his wife is a descendant of one of the 14 families in Ripley, County Missouri that were pro-Union during the war. I have attempted to contact Burson in the hopes that he could shed some light on this subject. But as of yet he has not provided any answers to this question.

Perhaps Jerry Ponder said it best when he said that:

“Some questions will probably never be satisfactorily explained” (32)

Sources:

  1. “Between Missourians: Ripley County in the Civil War” , Ponder, Ozark Watch Magazine , Vol. IV, No. 4, Spring 1991 a.Linzy Dudley: The Time of the War pgs. 1,15 1918
  2. “Doniphan: No Man’s Land During the Civil War” T.L. Wright Jr. ,1929, Doniphan High School
  3. Article entitled “First Settlers of Ripley County” found in the book “History and Families of Ripley County Missouri”, Ripley County Historical Society
  4. Kirby Ross post made August 14th ,2005 on the Missouri in the Civil War message board.
  5. Ibid.
  6. posted by Kirby Ross on Wednesday August 31′st, 2005, Missouri in the Civil War message board.
  7. M. Jeff Thompson“This is the Story of the War Experiences of Brig. General M. Jeff Thompson”, pg.103, Kent Library, Southeast Missouri State University
  8. posted by Kirby Ross on Wednesday August 31′st, 2005, Missouri in the Civil War message board.
  9. Personal correspondence from Ray Burson, Ripley County Historical Society entitled, “Jerry Ponder’s Sources for the Wilson Massacre And Other Tales”
  10. Doniphan and Ripley County in the Civil War, Ripley County Library, Doniphan, Missouri
  11. “War Hero Timothy Reeves wanted to be remembered as ‘good preecher’,Daily American Republic Newspaper
  12. “This is the War Experiences of Brig. General M. Jeff Thompson”, M. Jeff Thompson, Kent Library, Southeast Missouri State University, pgs. 21-22
  13. Ibid
  14. “The Legend of St. Francois County: Sam Hildebrand’s Confession”, Chapter 6, Reprinted from the County Advertiser by Farmington News Printing Company September 26, 1979
  15. “This is the War Experiences of Brigadier General M. Jeff Thompson”, Thompson, Kent Library, Southeast Missouri State University, pg.103
  16. “This is the War Experiences of Brigadier General M. Jeff Thompson”, Thompson, Kent Library, Southeast Missouri State University, pg.104
  17. “The Time of the War” by: Linzy Dudley as told to Charles Booker, 1918, pgs. 1,15 (document sent to me by Jerry Ponder shortly before his death)
  18. “The Civil War in Ripley County Missouri”, The Prospect News, pgs.27-28
  19. “Twice a Month” magazine, Sept. 2’cd,1909 pgs. 27-28
  20. Ibid.
  21. Missouri State Legislators 1820-2000, information obtained from the Missouri Secretary of State office.
  22. Information obtained from the U.S. Forestry Service Website entitled, “The History of the Irish Wilderness” found at the following internet web address in pdf format: Irish Wilderness Country.pdf also found in the War of the Rebellions, Official Records, Volumes XXII, Part 1. Page 744
  23. Information obtained from the U.S. Forestry Service Website entitled, “The History of the Irish Wilderness” found at the following internet web address in pdf format: Irish Wilderness Country.pdf also found in the War of the Rebellions, Official Records, Volumes XXII, Part 1. Pages 746-747
  24. Ibid.
  25. Research conducted by author at the Stoddard County Civil War Cemetery, Bloomfield, Missouri
  26. “The Military Record of Major James Wilson”, compiled Willard S. Bacon, and found at the following internet web address: http://www.rootsweb.com/~molincol/misc/ms-military-record-wilson.htm and from Dr. Joseph Mudd’s notes for the publication , “The History of Lincoln County”, Powell Memorial Library, Troy , Mo.
  27. “Report of Brig. Gen. Thomas Ewing, jr., U. S. Army, Commanding District of Saint Louis. AUGUST 29-DECEMBER 2, 1864 Price’s Missouri Expedition.”, Official Records, War of the Rebellions.
  28. “No Heroes On Either Side”, Ray Burson, The Prospect – News, Doniphan , Missouri, Wednesday, July 16, 2003
  29. Report of Brig. Gen. Joseph O. Shelby, C. S. Army, Commanding Division. AUGUST 29-DECEMBER 2, 1864. Price’s Missouri Expedition.
  30. “This is the War Experiences of Brigadier General M. Jeff Thompson”, M. Jeff Thompson, Kent State Library, Southeast Missouri State University, Pg. 155
  31. “The Military Record of Major James Wilson”, compiled Willard S. Bacon, and found at the following internet web address: http://www.rootsweb.com/~molincol/misc/ms-military-record-wilson.htm
  32. The Ponder-Bradbury-Flanders Correspondence, Ozark Watch Magazine, Vol. IV, No. 4, Spring 1991/Vol. V, No.1, Summer 1991, Pg. 4.

    For more information about the basis for Reconstruction and the continued reign of terror in Missouri see: Iron Clad Oath

    Mr. Lacy’s website.

    © Clint E. Lacy 2006
    Published on the J. T. Coffee Camp website with permission from the author

Note: I have recently renewed my research into this event and have found records of Arkansas troops that were captured, provost marshall’s records also reveal citizens that we “captured” in Ripley County, December 25, 1863. A book that cites an eye witness account of when Colonel Timothy Reeves caught up with the perpetrators of the Massacre, very interesting facts indeed.

The research is hard work, but a labor of love. We owe it to the victims , soldier and citizen alike to make sure the truth is told and to never forget.

 

-Clint E. Lacy

 

Whatever happened to Old Sacramento?

From the August 11, 1884 New York Times (via the St. Louis Globe-Democrat). Click on the link below to download the PDF file about one of the most famous pieces of artillery during the “Civil War”. Deemed “unfit for service” at the beginning of hostilities, it saw action on both sides of the Mississippi River and was instantly recognizable by its unique sound. What happened to Old Sacramento? Click on the link and find out!

Old Sacramento

Letter to the Editor: New Confederate Monument

A well attended memorial was held just outside Richland, Mo. last Saturday at the most beautiful Beulah Baptist Church in memory of the Confederate Soldiers killed in The Battle Of Monday Hollow. This was possible due to the efforts of John W. Wilson representing the Camden County Historical Society and the Missouri Civil War Heritage Foundation.

Many dignitaries gathered to help honor the many fallen soldiers sent to a mass grave in a hollow not far from Beulah Baptist. After almost 150 years of little recognition those brave men, family and friends can now rest assured their efforts have been properly recognized.

After inspirational hymns by Brandi Kincaid and Missy Miller, prayers by Beulah Baptist Pastor Clifton Hodges and Father Owen Henderson, as well as moving words from Diane Franklin, Kris Franken and Aron Koeppen the honoring ceremony was handled by John Wilson, Commander Jim England of The Missouri Sons Of Confederate Veterans and Terry Cadenbach, Commander of the 4th Missouri Cav/President MCWRA. A beautiful memorial was unveiled and the inscription was read to a gun salute and taps.

The Beautiful Beulah Baptist Church could have not been more hospitable in their efforts and after the ceremony the lady’s provided a most bountiful and delicious spread of food imaginable.Do yourself a favor and make the extra effort to stop by this most beautiful little church just outside Richland, Mo. on Highway 7 to salute these most honorable Soldiers of our Confederacy as well as the efforts all above mentioned.

Paul Garrison is a resident and former Alderman of Lake Ozark Missouri and is a member of the Colonel John T. Coffee Camp #1934, Osceola, Missouri

Ole Miss Students should look to Vermont for Answers

 

Ole Miss Colonel Reb (left) was the inspiration VERMONT'S for Brattleboro Union High School (right)

 

Deadspin.com recently published an article entitled:

“The Ugly, Racially Charged fight Over a Confederate Mascot. In Vermont”.   Apparently fights over mascots aren’t limited to the South. Some of them are the result of Northerners appreciation of Southern culture. As Deadspin.com reports:

My small Vermont hometown has made the national news circuit on just a handful of occasions since I was a kid: the Bush-Cheney arrest warrant, the public nudity ban, the closing of the nuclear power plant, the annual cow parade, and the time my high school retired Colonel Reb as our mascot.

He wasn’t called Colonel Reb, of course. He was just “the Colonel.” Save for a purple-and-white color scheme, he was identical in every way to Ole Miss’s mascot. The Colonel had been around since the 1950s, when, as the story goes, Brattleboro Union High School’s student council randomly chose Colonel Reb out of a mail-order mascot catalog. To some degree, it was a sensible choice. Brattleboro is, after all, named after Colonel William Brattle, an old white guy who owned lots of land. What’s more, our playing fields had once hosted Vermont soldiers—Union solders—as they prepared for the Civil War. I doubt anyone at the time recognized it as a caricature of a Confederate plantation owner or questioned whether it was a paradoxical choice for the state that was the first in the Union to abolish slavery. It’s unlikely anyone even made a connection to Ole Miss. The Colonel was just a sketch in a book”

The author of the article makes a very good point when he points out that the fight over mascots isn’t a North/ South struggle, it is more of a Left / Right battle. Stating that:

“Vermont’s politics only really shifted dramatically to the left in the 1990s, with an influx of liberal urban expats like my parents, and now we have the nation’s only socialist senator. To generalize just a bit, this created a political tension in Brattleboro between the children of multi-generational Vermonters—with kids whose parents and grandparents competed as Colonels—and the new Boomer-spawned kids and their ultra-sensitive parents. That tension, along with a general ignorance of historical and geographical context, because this was about here and now and only us, informed the circuitous debate on the removal of the 50-year-old Brattleboro Colonel.”

So what should the students and alumni at Ole Miss who want to preserve their heritage do? Look to Vermont!  As the author of the article points out, the PC police might have taken their mascot but not their traditions…

It’s not because of a mascot, and it never was. The old Colonel didn’t bring intolerance from Oxford to Brattleboro—it was with us all along. It’s easy to ridicule Ole Miss and all that desperate clinging to outdated tradition, but racial resentment isn’t exclusive to the South and its symbols. It was certainly there in a corner of Vermont, just waiting for the right provocation—an influx of outsiders like my parents, a threat to a cherished tradition—before it could come bubbling to the surface.

My younger brother graduated from Brattleboro Union last spring. There were Confederate flags in the parking lot. Reb the mascot was long gone, but the Reb within lives on.”

So to the students and alumni at Ole Miss I say this, racism wasn’t exclusive to the South, it was as bad if not worse in the North, and wasn’t the inspiration of  the Colonel in the North or the South.  Don’t furl those flags. Fly them with pride, even if it is in the parking lot.- Webmaster

Related:

http://deadspin.com/5663951/why-did-ole-miss-pick-a-louisiana-black-bear-as-their-new-mascot

 

 

Is Abraham Lincoln responsible for the downfall of America?

Lincoln , advocate for a central bank and government

Did Abraham Lincoln’s creation of a strong centralized government and government banking responsible for today’s economic collapse of America? Switzerland’s “The Daily Bell”  reports:

“We are well aware of the corruption that inevitably arises when regulatory democracies persist and like tumors begin to swell. The United States is perhaps the world’s most powerful regulatory democracy, and likely its most icily corrupt. Nevertheless, it is absolutely startling to find a senior judge (see article excerpt above) at one of America’s most important financial regulatory agencies – the Commodities Futures Trading Commission – bluntly accusing a former CFTC Chairwoman (Wendy Gramm, wife of former Senator Phil Gramm) and a fellow judge of deliberate malfeasance, apparently over decades. Sub dominant social theme: “This kind of thing doesn’t happen in the US!”

OK, rewind. It has been kind of ironic to watch the US mainstream media wring its collective hands over the “corruption” in Afghanistan as if the US itself, and its deliberately corrupt system of regulatory democracy, were not worse by orders of magnitude than anything Afghanistan could summon. The three most corrupt places in the world are probably Beijing, Brussels and Washington DC in no particular order. We’ll throw in London as a fourth. And Moscow as fifth. And, wait, there’s India, too. We probably could go on and on. Is there a pattern here, dear reader?

The corruption of the West’s regulatory democracies began after the American Civil War and grew far worse in the early 21st century once the Federal Reserve was founded. The corruption was driven by a familial elite of Western power players, mostly banking families that wanted to install one-world government. They intended to do so incrementally using regulatory democracy as a Trojan Horse. Thus the West’s institutions were imperceptibly corrupted over time and almost every aspect of Western culture and commerce was tainted as well.”

L. Neil Smith, in his essay “The American Lenin” stated that:

“History tells us that Lincoln was a politically ambitious lawyer who eagerly prostituted himself to northern industrialists who were unwilling to pay world prices for their raw materials and who, rather than practice real capitalism, enlisted brute government force — “sell to us at our price or pay a fine that’ll put you out of business” — for dealing with uncooperative southern suppliers.”

An article written by John Walker entitled, “None dare call it treason” states that:

“the Civil War and the policies advocated by Lincoln and implemented in his administration and its Republican successors, fundamentally changed the relationship between the Federal government and the states. While before the Federal government was the creation of the states, to which they voluntarily delegated limited and enumerated powers, which they retained the right to reclaim by leaving the union, afterward Washington became not a federal government but a national government in the 19th century European sense”

Lincoln’s own monetary policy states that:

“Money is the creature of law and the creation of the original issue of money should be maintained as an exclusive monopoly of National Government.

Money possesses no value to the State other than given to it by circulation. Capital has its proper place and is entitled to every protection. The wages of men should be recognized in the structure of government and in the social order as more important than the wages of money. 1

No duty is more imperative on the Government than the duty it owes the people to furnish them with a sound and uniform currency, and of regulating the circulation of the medium of exchange so that labor will be protected from a vicious currency, and commerce will be facilitated by cheap and safe exchanges.

The available supply of gold and silver being wholly inadequate to permit the issuance of coins of intrinsic value or paper currency convertible into coin in the volume required to serve the needs of the people, some other basis for the issue of currency must be developed, and some means other than that of convertibility into coin must be developed to prevent undue fluctuations in the value of paper currency or any other substitute for money of intrinsic value that may come into use. The monetary needs of increasing numbers of people advancing toward higher standards of living can and should be met by the Government. Such needs can be served by the issue of national currency and credit through the operation of a national banking system. The circulation of a medium of exchange issued and backed by the Government can be properly regulated and redundancy of issue avoided by withdrawing from circulation such amounts as may be necessary by taxation, redeposit, and otherwise.1 Government has the power to regulate the currency and credit of the nation.

Government should stand behind its currency and credit and the bank deposits of the Nation. No individual should suffer a loss of money through depreciated or inflated currency or bank bankruptcy.

Government possessing the power to create and issue currency and credit as money and enjoying the right to withdraw both currency and credit from circulation by taxation and otherwise, need not and should not 2 borrow capital at interest as the means of financing governmental work and public enterprise.

The Government should create, issue, and circulate all the currency and credit needed to satisfy the spending power of the Government and the buying power of consumers.

The privilege of creating and issuing money is not only the supreme prerogative of Government, but it is the Government’s greatest creative opportunity.

By adoption of these principles, the long-felt want for a uniform medium will be satisfied.

The taxpayers will be saved immense sums in interest, discounts, and exchanges.

The financing of all public enterprise, the maintenance of stable government and ordered process, and the conduct of the Treasury will become matters of practical administration. The people can and will be furnished with a currency as safe as their own Government.”

In his own monetary policy , Lincoln advocates total government control over the economy and for paper currency. It is this policy, Lincolns dread, that he was willing to implement by force. It is for Lincoln’s dream of total government control over the economy , that war was waged on the South, resulting in the killing of over 600,000 Americans, and the economic collapse that is occurring in America today.