Stannard Camp #2, Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War

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The Tejano Tiger: Col. Santos Benavides, Confederate States of ArmyBy Norman Dasinger, April 7, 2020Blue and Gray Educat...
04/09/2020

The Tejano Tiger: Col. Santos Benavides, Confederate States of Army
By Norman Dasinger, April 7, 2020
Blue and Gray Education Society
Col. Santos Benavides | Wikipedia
In 1971 the Public School System of Laredo, Texas, built a new elementary school. They named it after a Confederate officer. Not Lee, not Jackson—but Col. Santos Benavides. Today, that school still is in existence and still named for the highest ranking Mexican-American who served in the Confederate Army.

Santos Benavides, nicknamed the “Merchant Prince of the Rio Grande,” was from Laredo and born in 1823. Earlier, his family had established that town and by 1856 Santos was elected its mayor. When the Civil War began, he was a Webb County judge and entered Confederate service, eventually serving in the 33rd Texas Cavalry, which later was renamed Benavides Regiment. Rising to the rank of colonel, Santos would become the highest ranking Tejano of the over 12,000 that served the Confederacy. One of his assigned duties was to maintain a safe route whereby cotton and other goods could be transported from Texas across the Rio Grande into Mexico for sale. Federal armies stationed in and around modern-day Brownsville continually attacked soldiers and merchants guarding this passageway, but for the most part were unsuccessful in eliminating it from use by the Confederate government.
Palmito Ranch battlefield | Wikipedia

Benavides had, perhaps, his finest day on March 19, 1864, when 42 of his men defended Laredo against over 200 Federals under the command of Col. Edmund Davis. The Yankees had been ordered to destroy 5,000 bales of cotton being held in the San Augustin Plaza in anticipation of shipment into Mexico. On May 24, 1864, the Texas State legislature formally thanked Benavides and his men for successfully defending Laredo on that date.
Benavides was involved in over 100 engagements and never lost. His most famous battle was at Palmito Ranch, Texas. The last battle of the Civil War, it was fought May 12-13, 1865—over a month after Lee surrendered to Grant at Appomattox.
World Cotton Centennial, 1884, New Orleans | Wikipedia
After the war, Benavides served three terms in the Texas State Legislature and would serve as a delegate to the World Cotton Exposition/World’s Fair held in New Orleans in 1884. He died in 1891 and is buried in Laredo.

Because he and many of his neighbors served the Confederacy, they became targets of Reconstruction retaliation after the Civil War. Santos and his family did not hide from this issue and became leaders of a resistance movement to this regional violence.

Santos believed in local control, but also knew that his isolated area of Texas had to be active in state and national politics in order to prosper. He never did, however, lose his sense of local independence.


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Fitzgerald, Georgia: The Soldier's Colony of Unityby Gloria Swift, BGES Historian – December 3, 2019 (originally publish...
04/04/2020

Fitzgerald, Georgia: The Soldier's Colony of Unity
by Gloria Swift, BGES Historian – December 3, 2019 (originally published October 15, 2019)
The last vets
When people retire or are looking for new jobs, especially those in colder climates, they often think of moving South so that they might enjoy warmer temperatures during the winter months. Today we view this as a modern phenom- enon, given that people are much more mobile now than in years past.
One town in Georgia, however, provided that opportunity in 1895 through an idea of Philander H. Fitzgerald of Indi- anapolis, Indiana. Fitzgerald was a pension attorney after the war for Union veterans and also owned and ran a news- paper called The American Tribune, formerly the Veteran’s Review, with a circulation of 25,000 copies per week.
The 1890s in the Midwest were not good ones. Widespread depression and severe, long-term drought ruined many farms. Worried for his veterans, Fitzgerald came up with the idea of purchasing land for a planned community where veterans and their families could live out their days in a milder climate. A hundred thousand acres in Georgia were bought for the creation of a soldiers “colony.” Fitzgerald used his paper to sell the idea. He sold fifty-thousand shares of stock in The American Tribune Soldiers Colony Company for ten dollars per share. Shares were to be converted into lots in town or farmettes of twenty to forty acres. Money quickly poured in from veterans seeking relief. Surveyors and work teams were sent to lay out the town that became “Fitzgerald."

Fitzgerald was not a town reserved only for Union veterans. Southern veterans were invited to live there too, and many moved into the community. As they began to name the streets of Fitzgerald, an equal number were named for Southern generals as Northern. Other streets were named for Georgia rivers and trees. A sense of humor appeared to be had when the fire department was built on Sherman Street! Eventually, a railroad connected Fitzgerald with the outside world bringing in supplies. So, too, came tourists, because of advertisements and regular excursion trains scheduled to “look at the Yankees!”
Fitzgerald grew quickly and prospered. Despite the widespread depression, the town did not suffer because of the influx of cash into the economy from the pensions of the veterans. Combined, the pensions added to more than fifty thousand dollars per month. With prosperity, the town continued to grow. A hotel named the Lee Grant was built to accommodate visitors, and an event hall called the Corn and Cotton Palace was built.
In 1896, the citizens of Fitzgerald wanted to celebrate their good fortune. Invitations were sent
for an exposition to be held at the Corn and Cotton Palace and to watch a grand parade of veterans as part of the event. The parade was planned so that the Southern veterans would go first. After a short break, the Union veterans would start. When the doors of the Palace opened, all of the bands stepped out, and all of them were playing the National Anthem. Behind them were the soldiers, some in blue, some in gray, all following as one behind the Stars and Stripes. The veterans were giving the signal that this was once again the United States of Ameri-
ca. The parade became known as the Parade of Unity. The soldiers who marched formed Batallion One of the Blue and Gray. You can visit Fitzgerald, Georgia, today and learn more about this amazing town.

America's Premier Civil War Education Organization

03/22/2020

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New post on Irish in the American Civil War   In Defence of Substitutes: The Story of Mary & James Ryan of Drogheda, Can...
02/20/2020

New post on Irish in the American Civil War


In Defence of Substitutes: The Story of Mary & James Ryan of Drogheda, Canada & Vermont
by irishacw

The men who entered the Union military as substitutes from 1863 onwards are among the most neglected and maligned groups associated with the American Civil War. History–and many historians–have overwhelmingly focused on the negative aspects of their service, highlighting their lesser ideological commitment, disciplinary issues, and propensity to desert. This was undoubtedly true of many of them. Yet it was also the case that many did not act in that way. Indeed, their participation was crucial in seeing the Union cause through to victory.

Detailed analysis of the practical experiences of substitutes and draftees is one of the great neglected areas of Civil War history, and is something that requires significant further work. We continue to focus almost all of our efforts on understanding the ideologies and motivations of early-war volunteers who we perceive–both consciously and subconsciously–as "morally superior" men. In contrast, late war volunteers are often cast as morally deficient "skulkers", who by extension are not worthy of detailed consideration. The opprobrium they often receive is all the more curious given the reality that the majority of military-aged men in the North chose not to enlist in military service at all.
'Wanted A Substitute' A Wartime Sheet Music Cover (Library of Congress)"Wanted A Substitute" A Wartime Sheet Music Cover (Library of Congress)

I have long struggled with the regular dismissal of these men's service, often founded solely on an arbitrary judgement based on how, why and when they joined the military. To my mind, their stories are equally deserving of attention–and just as interesting–as those of the 1861 and 1862 volunteers. Without a significant effort to understand their backgrounds, motivations and experience, any analysis of the Civil War soldier lies incomplete.

Over the years, I have encountered large numbers of working-class substitutes in the widow's pension files (and written many micro-histories of them on this site and in my books). Many were flawed men, many were not. With most, a consistent narrative emerges– a tale of relatively poor individuals seeking to improve the financial futures of themselves and their families. For what it's worth, and contrary to popular perception, this was a major motivator for many working-class early war volunteers as well. The topic of substitutes is one I hope to carry out significantly more work on in the future, but for this latest Widows in the Atlantic World post, I want to take a look at a single family story. It clearly demonstrates that many substitutes were more than just money-grabbing ne'er do-wells. It revolves around the son of Mary Ryan, an Irish woman who received her American military pension in Compton County, southeastern Quebec.
Instructions for drafted men from the 3rd Congressional District of Vermont (Burlington Daily Times 25 July 1863)

In July 1863, the name of 31-year-old merchant Christopher F. Douglas was drawn in Vermont's 11th Sub District Draft. Christopher was a notable figure in his home town of Stowe, where he operated as a dry-goods merchant. An apparently loyal Union man, that summer he had been active as a local militia enrolling-officer. Nevertheless, heading to the front was not part of his plans. When his number came up, he and his wife Loneza were caring for their two-year-old daughter, Mary, and Christopher's business was beginning to take off. This was reflected in the value of his personal estate, which would leap from $600 to $25,000 in the decade between 1860 and 1870. Though he likely supported the war effort, these factors contributed towards Christopher's decision to hire a substitute. As historian J. Matthew Gallman has ably demonstrated, such a step was seen as a perfectly acceptable decision in Northern wartime society, and would not have impacted Christopher's standing as a good and patriotic citizen. (1)
Christoper F. Douglas listed among the drafted men from Stowe in July 1863 (Burlington Daily Times 15 July 1863)

The man Christopher paid to take his place was James Ryan, a 20-year-old emigrant from Drogheda in Ireland. James, an illiterate laborer, was described as being 5 feet 3 inches tall, with blue eyes, dark hair and a fair complexion. On 19th August 1863 he officially took Christopher's place in the army, and was duly assigned to Company I of the 3rd Vermont Infantry. His parents Laurence Ryan and Mary Smith had been married on Shrove Tuesday, 1841, in that part of Drogheda which lies in Co. Meath. A little over a year later, James was born. Initially, the family's prospects had appeared bright, at least in comparison with many others in Ireland. Laurence had secured a job as an engine driver on the Dublin Railway, a position that offered some financial stability. All that changed in 1845. That summer, Laurence lost his life to a workplace accident, and around the same time Mary suffered a mishap or illness that would hinder her ability to earn a living for the remainder of her life. In the blink of an eye, the prospects of the young woman and her son had become desperate. (2)

The substitute enlistment of James Ryan, note his mark instead of a signature (NARA)

Mary had little option but to submit herself and her toddler to a life "on the parish"- making them reliant on whatever poor relief they could garner in Drogheda. So the situation remained until James was of "sufficient age and strength" to earn enough for their support. Sometime in the late 1850s or early 1860s, mother and son decided that their best option was for James to make for North America. Whether James had managed to save the requisite funds or was supported through assisted emigration is unclear. Either way, they were only able to secure a single passage– Mary would have to wait for her son to earn enough to send for her. When he departed across the Atlantic, he did so in the full knowledge that his future actions would determine the fate of both their lives. (3)
Drogheda's North Quay in the 19th century, an area that would have been familiar to both Mary and James (National Library of Ireland)

James's exact destination is unknown, but it seems probable he joined familiar faces who had settled in the vicinity of Sherbrooke, Quebec, where people like his aunt Margaret Smith and longtime family friend John Sheerin made their homes. Still, life did not become much easier. Though he was able to send money back to Ireland, it was sporadic, and he was unable to gather enough together to secure his mother's passage. As a result, Mary once again found herself reliant on charity in Drogheda, where she was "supported by the Parish as a Pauper". Then, in 1863, the Enrollment Act came into force, and an unprecedented opportunity presented itself just across the border. (4)

There can be little doubt that James Ryan was as satisfied as Christopher Douglas with the transaction that saw him enter the army in the merchant's place. The funds Douglas provided him with immediately enabled James to remit sufficient finances for his mother's emigration. He was still settling into his first weeks of military life by the time Mary made landfall; her new life in Sherbrooke began in December 1863. Unfortunately, it is unlikely that they had an opportunity to meet prior to the commencement of the Overland Campaign in 1864. (5)
The Vermont Brigade monument on The Wilderness battlefield, where James Ryan experienced his first battle. Image taken on the 150th anniversary of the engagement in 2014 (Damian Shiels)

On 5th and 6th May 1864, Private James Ryan went into his first action of the American Civil War in Virginia's Wilderness. The horrors he and his Vermont Brigade experienced along the Brock Road and Orange Plank Road were indescribable. By battle's end, they had sustained more than 1200 casualties. James was not one of them. He was among those fortunate survivors who were able to stagger on towards the next major engagement of the campaign, at Spotsylvania Court House. There, on 12th May, he was part of the colossal Union assault that was hurled against the salient in the Confederate line that became known as the Mule Shoe. The Vermont Brigade's target was an area that is known to history as the "Bloody Angle". Over the 24 hours that followed, it would become the scene of some of the most intense and protracted fighting of the entire conflict. It seems that James may never have made it that far. His officer later recalled that while "charging on the enemys works", James was hit, "the bullet entered through his left breast and passed out through his back". He has no known grave. (5)
The fields over which the Union assault on the Mule Shoe salient took place at Spotsylvania, as dawn breaks on the 150th anniversary of the battle, 12th May 2014 (Damian Shiels)The fields over which the Union assault on the Mule Shoe salient took place at Spotsylvania, as dawn breaks on the 150th anniversary of the battle, 12th May 2014. James Ryan was killed in action here (Damian Shiels)

As was so often the case, Mary Ryan had to deal concurrently with both the emotional and financial implications of her son's death. Despite her "feeble condition" she attempted to work, but could only manage one or two days at a time. Soon she was again reliant on charitable support, this time in Sherbrooke. Despite her poverty, she was seen as a woman of good character– one of the "deserving poor". Within weeks of her son's death she had begun the process of applying for a pension, citing the "immediate and great need of such assistance as may be due me from the Bounty of the Government in whose service my son lost his life". Her claim was ultimately successful, and she received payments up until the time of her death on 24th March 1887. She never left Sherbrooke, where she appears to have spent most of her remaining years living alone. (6)

More than 70,000 substitutes served during the American Civil War. Certainly, all were not created equal; some were unreliable opportunists, who fit the "mercenary" mould commonly ascribed to them. But the way in which they performed–and came to be viewed–varied widely. For example, many of those who entered service in advance of the devastating campaigns of Spring 1864 came to be regarded as "old soldiers", and developed their own esprit-de-corps (see posts here and here). (7)
Sherbrooke, Canada in the 1880s, where Mary Ryan lived out her final years ( City of Sherbrooke Illustrated, P.N. Boucher, Sherbrooke)

It can be reasonably argued that James Ryan's motivations for entering the Union military were as noble as any of the ardent volunteers of 1861. He was neither a "skulker" or a "shirker"; by the time he enlisted, nobody was under any illusions about the risks attached to the donning of military uniform. Yet he did so willingly, taking his place in the ranks as part of a transactional arrangement that (he hoped) would save his mother from pauperism. Ultimately it did, though unfortunately for them both, the price paid was his death. It is only through the exploration and examination of micro-histories such as theirs that we an begin to add some much needed complexity and balance to how we view these late-war recruits.

The research and cost-of-running of the Irish American Civil War website is self-financed. If you would like to support the work and upkeep of this site you can do so via my Patreon site for as little as $1 a month at patreon.com/irishacw, or by making a one-off donation to the site’s running costs via the “Donate” button in the right-hand sidebar.

(1) Burlington Daily Times, Lamoille Newsdealer, Burlington Weekly Free Press, 1860 Census, 1870 Census, Draft Registration Records, Gallman 2015: 157; (2) James Ryan Service Record, Roster of Vermont Volunteers: 101, Ryan Pension File; (3) Ryan Pension File; (4) Ibid.; (5) Ibid.; (6) Ibid.; (7) Murdock 1971: 83-90, Ryan Pension File, 1871 Canada Census, 1881 Canada Census;

References

Burlington Daily Times 15 July 1863.

Burlington Weekly Free Press 5 June 1863.

Lamoille Newsdealer 4 June 1863.

1860 Federal Census, Stowe, Lamoille, Vermont.

1870 Federal Census, Stowe, Lamoille, Vermont.

1871 Census of Canada, Sherbrooke, Quebec.

1881 Census of Canada, Sherbrooke, Quebec.

U.S. Civil War Draft Registration Records, Third Congressional District, Vermont.

Gallman, J. Matthew 2015. Defining Duty in the Civil War: Personal Choice, Popular Culture, and the Union Home Front.

Murdock, Eugene C. 1971. One Million Men: The Civil War Draft in the North.
irishacw | February 18, 2020 at 4:47 pm | Tags: Atlantic Widows Project, Bloody Angle, Civil War Substitutes, Irish emigration, Irish Poor Law, Louth Diaspora, Meath Diaspora, Vermont Brigade | Categories: Atlantic Widows Project, Battle of Spotsylvania, Canada, Louth, Meath, Vermont | URL: https://wp.me/p90y4o-6xS

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Aviator Howard Hughes Could Have Been a Member of the Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV)By Norm DasingerThe world famous...
02/18/2020

Aviator Howard Hughes Could Have Been a Member of the Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV)

By Norm Dasinger
The world famous motion picture producer, the creator of the ‘Spruce Goose’ airplane, the inspiration for comic book personality Tony Stark (the father of superhero Ironman), the successful and super wealthy business tycoon, the boyfriend of Katharine Hepburn, the man that set the modern airspeed record of 352 mph in 1935, the speculated financer of the Watergate break-in 1972 , an insane recluse as his life came to a close and best remembered today as the character portrayed by Leonardo DiCaprio in a recent movie, was the great grandson of Confederate General Richard Montgomery Gano. Yes, Howard Hughes was eligible for membership in the SCV!
Howard Hughes

General Richard Montgomery Gano
Great-Grandfather of Hughes
Gano, like his great grandson, was rich. He had moved from Kentucky to Texas in 1859 and made it big in the land and cattle trading business. In 1860, he resigned his seat in the state legislature and would soon form the ‘Grapevine Volunteers’ for the Confederate State Army. Their initial assignment would be back in Gano’s home state serving with cavalry General John Hunt Morgan in Kentucky. Eventually, Gano would fight in the Indian Territory (modern day Oklahoma) in the battles of Second Cabin Creek and Poison Springs. After the War, he became a man of God and served as minister to churches in Kentucky and Texas. He and his sons accumulated over 55,000 acres in Texas before he died in 1913. Big Bend National Park was formed with much of Gano family land as its nucleus.

When the landing gear retracts following take off on your next airplane trip, you should remember the great-grandson of a Confederate soldier, Howard Hughes. He was the first commercial airline designer to make them standard in the industry.

It may be strange, but it is important to acknowledge our modern-day connections to the Civil War are really not that far removed from our daily lives.
This Civil War Dispatch has been brought to you by the Blue and Gray Education Society, a non-profit 501-3C
educational organization. Please visit us at www.blueandgrayeducation.org.
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06/25/2019

We commemorate the soldiers who fought for the Union during the American Civil War. We meet on the second Saturday of each month at the American Legion Hall, 2 Legion Road, Milton Vermont. We enjoy camaraderie and fellowship. Our camp is open to all who are interested in the Civil War. Direct lineage to a civil war soldier is not required.

06/25/2019

Stannard Camp #2 will hold a monthly luncheon open to all at the Colchester American Legion 3650 Roosevelt Highway. Come and join us.

04/27/2019

Stannard Camp #2
Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War

We commemorate the soldiers who fought for the Union during the American Civil War. We meet on the second Saturday of each month at the American Legion Hall in Milton Vermont. We enjoy camaraderie and fellowship. Our camp in open to all who are interested in the Civil War. Direct lineage to a civil war soldier is not required.

Frank McNight
[email protected]

04/06/2019

Next meeting Saturday, April 13, 2019, at the American Legion Hall, 2 Legion Road, Milton, VT. Time is 1300 (1:00 PM).

Courtesy of Department of Massachusetts, Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War
03/23/2019

Courtesy of Department of Massachusetts, Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War

To their living sons and daughters, the soldiers in blue and gray are flesh and blood, not distant figures in history books.

03/06/2019

Canadians in the Grand Army of the Republic shared a post.
12 February at 17:24 ·
Feb 11 1954 - Last veteran of the Union Army.
Albert Henry Woolson, last survivor of the Union Army of the Civil War, makes a quick work of blowing out all 107 candles on a birthday ? cake at the home he shares with his daughter’s family in Duluth, MN . Woolson, former drummer boy, is last of 2,675,000 boys in blue.

03/03/2019

Our next meeting will be at 1:00 in the Milton American Legion Hall, 2 Legion Road, Milton.

Address

Milton American Legion, 7 Legion Road
Milton, VT
05468

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