Saturday, July 31, 2021

Additions to My Schedule at Gettysburg National Battlefield Park on August 14, 2021

There are some additions to my schedule at Gettysburg National Battlefield Park on August 14, 2021.

I'm still due to give a talk with Charlie Knight at 9:30 a.m. at the marker for Ross's Battery on West Confederate Drive about the movement of Mahone's brigade on the evening of July 2, 1863.

Additionally, I'll be on the authors panel moderated by my publisher Ted Savas at 4 p.m. August 14, 2021 at the Gettysburg Heritage Center.

At 5 p.m. I'll be remaining at the Heritage Center to sign any copies purchased of the July 2021 edition of Gettysburg Magazine, which contains my article, "The Myth that Mahone's Brigade Did Not Move on July 2, 1863" as well as copies purchased of my latest book, The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War: A History of the 12th Virginia Infantry from John Brown's Hanging to Appomattox, 1859-1865 (Savas Beatie, 2019), winner of the 2019 Army Historical Foundation's Distinguished Writing Award for Unit History.


William Evelyn Cameron, Adjutant of the 12th Virginia Infantry, Witness to the Movement of Mahone's Brigade on the Evening of July 2, 1863, Governor of Virginia 1882-1886

From George S. Bernard, ed., War Talks of Confederate Veterans (Petersburg: Fenn & Owen, 1892)

(Bernard was another member of the 12th Virginia in Mahone's brigade and another witness to its move on the evening of July 2, 1863) 

Saturday, July 10, 2021

Charlie Knight and I Will Give a Talk at Gettysburg 9:30 a.m. August 14, 2021

There will be a gathering of Savas Beatie authors at Gettysburg August 13-15, 2021.  Author Charlie Knight (Robert E. Lee's Civil War Day by Day) and I (The Petersburg Regiment) will discuss the movement of Mahone's brigade on July 2, 1863 as set forth in my article in July's Gettysburg Magazine entitled "The Myth that Mahone's Brigade Did Not Move on July 2, 1863."  The talk will take place at 9:30 a.m. on Saturday, August 14, 2021, and will last about an hour.  I'm hoping to meet up near the marker for Ross's Battery (Sumter Artillery) on West Confederate Drive.  I should be able to point out the route of Mahone's brigade from there.  Copies of Gettysburg Magazine should be available at the Visitor Center and I'll bring copies of The Petersburg Regiment and I'll sign either for anyone who wishes to buy one.

 
Map by Hampton Newsome, from The Petersburg Regiment

For my Gettysburg Magazine article, Hal Jespersen has drawn a splendid map based on Hampton's.


Thursday, July 8, 2021

Major Moncena Dunn's Dream, June 22, 1864

One of my favorite anecdotes about the first Federal attempt to invest Petersburg from the Appomattox River below the city to the Appomattox above occurred on June 22, 1864, at the United State Army advanced toward the Dimmock Line south of the city.  (June 22 is the climax of my forthcoming book about Grant's second offensive at Petersburg.)

I was very pleased to find a picture of Major Moncena Dunn, who had a poignant dream early that disastrous afternoon.



Major Moncena Dunn

            As Brig. Gen. Francis Channing Barlow’s troops deployed in front of the Dimmock Line, the officers of the 19th Massachusetts of Pierce’s brigade in Gibbon’s division strolled to the rear to eat.  Their regiment held breastworks at the edge of an open field covered by a crossfire from Battery B, 11th New Jersey Light Artillery and the 12th New York Battery.  “Our regiment was so small that we were in single rank and the formation was two companies instead of ten,” recalled Capt. John Gregory Bishop Adams, who commanded the left company.  After enlisting as a private, Adams had won a Medal of Honor at Fredericksburg and a promotion to captain prior to suffering a Gettysburg wound.

The 19th’s commander shared an unsettling experience with his fellow officers. 

“I fell asleep a little while ago, and had a queer dream,” said Major Moncena Dunn, a Maine-born bookkeeper, cutler and hotel manager wounded at Fredericksburg.  “We were lying just as we are here, and the rebels came in our rear and captured the entire regiment.”[1]

Dunn’s fellow officers reacted with disbelief.

“We laughed at his story, said we guessed we should not go to Richmond that way, and returned to our places in line,” remembered Adams.  “The firing in our front increased, the batteries doing good service for the rebels.”[2]

Everything came to pass as Dunn had dreamed.  He, Adams and about 1,700 other Yanks wound up in Confederate custody before evening.  Dunn survived his captivity and often spoke of its hardships.



[1] John G. B. Adams, Reminiscences of the Nineteenth Massachusetts Regiment (Boston, 1890), 102.

[2] Ibid., 102-103.


Map by Hampton Newsome


Thursday, July 1, 2021

The Richmond and Atlanta Campaigns of 1864 Were Joined at the Hip


On June 18 I finally visited Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park.  I was down in Atlanta for my grandson's second birthday.  I'm currently writing about Grant's second offensive at Petersburg.  The Atlanta Campaign battles of Kolb's Farm (June 22, 1864) and Kennesaw Mountain (June 27, 1864) took place within the span of the Federal general-in-chief's second offensive at Petersburg.  Grant loaned his horse Cincinnati to President Lincoln during his visit to the Union lines around there on June 21-22, 1864.  The Kennesaw Mountain park sells a little replica of Cincinnati and I bought one for my grandson, whom the toy horse pleased.


Chickamauga, fought on September 18-20, 1863 just south of Chattanooga, had a profound effect on the general-in-chief.  He realized that the Union armies must act as a team, applying continuous pressure on their respective fronts to prevent the Confederates from concentrating against any particular Federal army.  As late as his second offensive at Petersburg, he feared that if Sherman let up on Johnston in the Atlanta Campaign, the Secessionists might transfer troops from Georgia to Virginia. OR 40, 2:175. Afterward Grant feared that withdrawing his army group from James River would ensure Sherman's defeat by allowing the Southerners to shift forces from Virginia to Georgia for a reprise of Chickamauga.  OR 42, 2:193. The general-in-chief's fourth offensive in August ended any chance of that.  Confederate President Davis was not even thinking of such a move; in fact, he ordered an infantry brigade transferred from Atlanta to Mobile shortly before Atlanta's fall.