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News Updates Spring 2000 News



Two Tennesseans charged with stealing French historical documents


TN veterans upset over Army's decision to pull Ranger's black beret

CSS Hunley restoration proceeding
ahead of schedule

Elk make a return to the Smokies

PBS Seeking Volunteers


Two Tennesseans charged with stealing
French historical documents


NASHVILLE – Two Tennessee men have been arrested for stealing one of the most historical documents in French history – the 1814 Treaty of Fontainebleau, signed by Napoleon and reported stolen in 1988 from the French National Archives in Paris. The Treaty forced Napoleon to renounce his claim to the French Empire and consigned him to exile on the island of Elba.
An indictment, which was filed in U.S. District Court in New York says John William Rooney, 69, is accused of stealing the Treaty and other historical documents from the French National Archives in 1988.
Marshall Lawrence Pierce III, 39, (AKA Frederick Tomcezak), is accused of allegedly approaching Sotheby’s auction house about selling them at auction.
The two men were arrested Tuesday in the home they share in Monteagle, Tenn. Both Rooney and Pierce were charged and released on $20,000 bond and ordered to appear in court April 5.
Federal officials contacted last week said they had little information on the men, but both apparently are highly educated – Rooney was a visiting history professor at The University of the South in Sewanee during the 1995 and 96 school year.
The federal indictment alleges Rooney not only stole the Treaty of Fontainebleau and four letters of ratification signed by Napoleon I, King Frederick William III of Prussia, Emperor Francis I of Austria and Tsar Alexander I of Russia, but also accuses him of stealing 30 letters of King Louis XVIII of France.
Rooney’s alleged accomplice Marshall Pierce, who also holds a P.H.D., reportedly approached Sotheby’s in 1995 and 1996 with the documents reportedly telling the auction house that he had purchased the documents from a lady in Lyon, France. According to reports, he mailed the treaty to Sotheby’s and signed an agreement consigning it to be sold at auction. He also reportedly inquired about selling the letters as well.
Sotheby’s listed the documents for sale and agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation recognized the items as stolen.
While Sotheby’s listed the items as valued between $50-$75,000., French historians say the documents are far more valuable.
"It is hard to put these in proper historical perspective," said a French historian with the University of Tennessee. "You could put these documents in the same realm as letters and Treaties signed by George Washington or Thomas Jefferson, but even that pales in comparison because Napoleon was such a world figure who’s impact on history has only been accomplished by a handful of men."
The 1814 Treaty of Fontainebleau is believed to be the only copy of the treaty and is allegedly being held by the F.B. I. in New York. Federal officials in New York and Tennessee contacted last week would not comment on how the documents were stolen or smuggled out of the French National Archives without alerting security.
Officials are being very tight-lipped about the case – saying they will not comment on an ongoing investigation.



GSMNP releases final report on
2000 bear attack fatality


GATLINBURG – Officials at the Great Smoky Mountain National Park released their final report last week on the May 2000 death of Sevier County teacher Glenda Ann Bradley.
Bradley, who was regarded as an experienced hiker in the Smoky Mountains, was believed to have been attacked by two bears during a hike along the Little River Trail at the intersection with Goshen Prong Trail. Rangers with GSMNP later arrived on the scene and killed both the sow and the cub believed to have attacked Bradley. It marked the first time in the history of the National Park Service that someone had died as a result of a black bear attack.
Officials say their investigation and the autopsy results performed by East Tennessee State University’s College of Medicine "confirmed the preliminary findings that Bradley died of injuries due to bear attack." The manner of death was ruled as an accident.
The Board of Inquiry Report also detailed the Park’s response to the incident and listed a series of eight recommended action that the Park is taking in response to the attack. The changes are mainly in the areas of staff training, tightened procedures for reporting and responding to bear incidents and methods of educating visitors on how to respond to various types of bear encounters.
The following recommendation were made:
1. The February 1993 Black Bear Management Guidelines should be revised and updated. While no major changes are required, the guideline has become dated. Information and insight gained from the Bradley fatality would be a useful addition to the handbook.
2. The Trail Map should be revised. The "Bears and You" section should include advice and recommendations of what to do if encountered by a bear. More attention should be given to evaluation of a bear’s behavior during an encounter with guidance for the proper response.
3. Back country signs should be revised to include the potential for bear encounters. These signs advise visitors of the potential danger of bears. The bear warning sign has been revised to include language that bear attacks on humans have occurred.
4. The ranger division should devote a segment of its annual law enforcement training to problem bear management. Wildlife staff should review the protocols for identifying and managing recurring problem bear behavior.
5. The Black Bear Management Report has been revised and reaffirmed. The procedure for reporting after-hour/weekend observations has been reaffirmed to ensure that bear reports are received by the appropriate resource management staff in a timely manner.
6. The Resources Management and Science Division should identify one person who will be assigned as a point of contact for problem bear reports. This employee will coordinate his response with the wildlife biologist and ranger staff.
7. Other Park information distributed in visitor centers, the communications center and by Resource Education personnel should be modified to include the lessons learned from the Bradley incident. Written materials should describe the appropriate measures to take when encountered by a bear. Research by Professor Steve Herrero and others clearly show that during an encounter people should respond according to specific types of bear behavior. More attention should be given to evaluation of a bear’s behavior during an encounter with guidance for the proper visitor response.
8. The Resources Management & Science Division should resume sponsorship of an annual bear management workshop in the spring of the year. Employees from all operating divisions would benefit from open discussion of bear management issues as b ears emerge from their dens concurrent with the arrival of Spring break campers and backpackers.
"In short," said one Park official, "black bears can be aggressive and people need to know how to act and react when encountering a black bear. Never get too close to one and always try to watch from a good distance. A black bear is a wild animal and will act like one. "

.TN veterans upset over Army's decision to pull Ranger's black beret

SEVIERVILLE - A group of local Army veterans is upset over the military branch's recent decision to adopt the black beret as official headgear of the Army, which has historically been worn by the elite Ranger Unit - a special forces organization with long ties to Sevier County and the establishment of the first University Ranger organization at the University of Tennessee. The black beret was officially adopted as the special forces headgear in 1975. Former Rangers David Scott and David Nielsen have just started the road march.from Fort Benning, GA to Washington, D.C. to protest the Army decision and is expected to be joined by others supporting the Ranger's stance. Donations to support the protest march are needed and many

retired Rangers are hopeful the incoming presidential administration will rescind the order. The decision made last year by Army Chief of Staff Eric Shinseki to decommission the Ranger headgear has many military veterans joining the campaign to stop the action. Retired Marine Commandant Krulak joined the fray last year and has stated the action is demeaning to the elite force and will hurt the morale of Army Rangers who worked hard to earn the privilege to wear the black beret. Current members of the elite squad have a gag-order slapped on them and would not publicly comment on the matter, but, many did express having problems with the Army's apparent move to cheapen the black beret that they say has stood for something for more than 200 years in American military history. Retired Ranger Col. Jack Daniel has been helping lead the fight in Tennessee. The Clarksville native and Vietnam veteran, who was placed in the U.S. Army Ranger Hall of Fame last year for his actions in Vietnam and efforts in founding the University of Tennessee Ranger program, says the Army's decision is a mistake that cheapens the service of those Rangers who faithfully earned the right to don the black beret. "We are the oldest fighting force on the North American continent," said Col. Daniel, "and what soldiers have to go through to earn the right to

wear the beret is a tradition that the Army should respect. The Rangers have usually been the first to fight and were the basis for every other special forces group that has came along since. I want to impress upon Army officials and elected representatives the importance of this matter and hope that they will rescind this order and let the Rangers keep this tradition. Not just anyone can be a Ranger and the training is all aimed at earning the right to wear that piece of headgear. When American soldiers and our enemies have seen that beret, it has meant something because of the efforts and sacrifices of a lot of great men. It's a tradition that should be respected and honored and I hope we can be successful in preserving this piece of American military history. When we started the U.T. Ranger program, we had a group of students from Sevier County High School who would always act as the enemy and help in our training- we even called them the Sevier County Rangers. That program led to many Sevier County boys enlisting in the army in hopes of earning the privilege to wear that black beret. It is a source of pride to anyone who has ever served in the Rangers." To make matters worse, a statement released last October by Army officials stated that there aren't enough of the black berets to outfit soldiers and America will have to buy them from China and other Asian nations to fill the orders. The Army has had a hard time meeting its recruiting goals in the last couple of years and has recently unleashed a new marketing campaign that has many veterans shaking their heads. The "Army of One" campaign is aimed at telling recruits that the individual is more important than the team efforts drill sergeants have been instilling in recruits since the U.S. Army was founded. "This 'Army of One' crap is unbelievable," said retired Col. Robert Richards. "There is no such thing as an Army of one and I feel that this deterioration of the Army can be laid squarely at the feet of the outgoing presidential administration's dislike for the military forces, especially with the decision to do away with the Ranger's black beret. These new television commercials show a military that isn't real and, if you look closely, you don't even see a soldier carrying a rifle. The Army command looks like it has bought into some Madison Avenue fantasy that will draw the wrong kind of recruits. An Army is a team that has to work together and place their lives in the hands of their fellow soldiers. Independent contractors are not and have never been part of the equation. The Marines, Navy, and Air Force have met their recruiting requirements using the traditional methods that attract the kind of soldiers needed in our armed forces. There is simply too much social engineering going on in the military and that will do nothing, but lead to disaster. I hope the new presidential administration will take a hard look at this and make the necessary changes." For those who would like to help in the matter, veterans say to write your local federal representatives and if you would like to contribute to the Ranger David Scott's march on Washington, D.C., you can contact the organization through their web site at http://www.rangerblackberet.com/


CSS Hunley restoration proceeding
ahead of schedule

NASHVILLE - Tennessee archaeologists are watching with interest the current studies being conducted on the CSS Hunley in Charleston, S.C. The vessel has been in a closed environment since being recovered this past summer and archaeologists as well as historians are wondering if the remains of the submarine's last crew could still be intact. Archaeologists and scientists are finding a lot of surprises in their work.The design and engineering are different from what was earlier thought, namely, that it was built of overlapping iron plates, which were riveted together. The design of the submarine minimized the drag and gave the submarine the most efficient movement possible through the water. In addition, it has been determined that the steering cables and the propeller shaft ran inside protective hollow tubes that gave them protection. According to reports from the Friends of the Hunley organization, who has been aiding in the process of preserving the vessel, probes into the aft section of the submarine have detected what appears to be a bulkhead between the aft ballast tank and the crew compartment. This finding by the staff is very important to the possibilities for the condition of the human remains in the crew compartment. In addition, Dr. Neyland, who is overseeing the project, reports that an animal rib from either a cow or hog was found inside the tail section of the submarine which was washed into the site after the sinking of the vessel. It became lodged inside the tail section through the three-foot hole in the rear starboard section. While this bone is not related to the crew of the Hunley, it is in good condition considering it was exposed to elements. Senator Glenn McConnell, who is chairman of the Hunley Commission, says the preservation of the animal bone could very well mean that the remains of the human crew could still be intact. "The presence of a bulkhead and the good condition of the animal bone," said McConnell, " increased the probabilities that the human skeletal remains are in very good state of preservation and hat the discoveries ahead will be remarkable especially given the time that the Hunley has been on the ocean bottom." The public is being invited to view the ongoing work and more information can be found on the CSS Hunley's ongoing preservation efforts at www.hunley.org. There is an addmission fee. If the remains of the last historic crew are still intact, descendents as well as members of the Sons of Confederate Veterans are planning burial ceremonies for the crew. The CSS Hunley is recognized as the first submarine in history to sink an enemy ship when it rammed a torpedo into the USS Housitanic. The submarine was the brainchild and project of Tennessee natives Horace L. Hunley and Matthew Maury.




Elk make a return to the Smokies

GATLINBURG - Managers at the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, including Park Superintendent Mike Tollefson, were joined by a huge crowd of onlookers and wildlife officials when they marked a milestone last Friday releasing their first herd of elk into the Park after an absence of more than 150 years. The 26 elk ranging from 400 to 700 pounds were released into a large acclimation pen to begin getting used to their new home in the Park. Viewing holes were cut into the 10-feet high pen to give people a chance to get a look at the park's latest inhabitants. The acclimation is expected to take 8-10 weeks before they are released on their own. The pen-site is located in the Cataloochee Valley in North Carolina and was chosen because of its remote location. Because of the turnout to see the elk released into the Park, officials had to rotate groups in so they could each take a turn viewing the animals. "This has been one of the most anticipated moments for Park supporters and ourselves," said Park Wildlife Biologist Kim Delozier. "Some of those attending had to wait a couple of hours to see the elk, but the response has been overwhelmingly great. If the elk release program can complete its five-year trial, then we will release them permanently into the park." Also on hand for the event were representatives from the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, Friends of the Great Smoky Mountains, and the Great Smoky Mountains Natural History Association. The elk reintroduced last week are the first of three groups totaling approximately 75 animals that the Park plans to release over successive years. All animals will be radio-collared, including calves born in the wild. This will allow biologists from the University of Tennessee and the U. S. Geological Survey to track the animals' movements and to assess habitat use, mortality, and food preferences. The data gathered during the five years of this experimental release will guide Park managers in their decision as to whether a permanent release is feasible. Visitation to the facility is now closed until after the elk are released into the wild in mid-April. Elk reintroduced into Campbell County a few weeks ago reportedly seem to be doing well in their new environment. Three have died since, but officials say they expect to lose a few animals in any reintroduction program and are studying the reasons for the deaths. The elk were once abundant in the Smoky Mountains and surrounding region, but were hunted out of existence more than 150 years ago. "This was really a fantastic thing to see and I hope that the elk can thrive once again in the Park," said North Carolina resident Jeanine Doyle. "Any project like this takes time and what we are seeing now is something that our children and grandchildren will get to take advantage of. I hope that they do well here and on the Tennessee side of the Park. I know a couple of farmers have been worried about the impact the elk might have on agriculture near the Park boundaries, but the gains far outweigh the risks in that regard and with Park officials and U.T. biologists staying in touch with the herds I feel comfortable that any problems encountered will be quickly handled."

 

PBS Seeking Volunteers

PBS seeks willing families to go back in time and live as pioneers in 1880s Montana for a new television series. Participants will dwell for six months on the frontier as late nineteenth century settlers would have done--building their homes, farming and hunting for their food. In particular, PBS strives to tell the stories of all those people who made their lives on the frontier. As history shows, African Americans, Native Americans, and Asian Americans were represented on frontier lands. We encourage people with these backgrounds to apply. If you know of anyone who might be interested, please contact me via email or phone. For more information about the project, look at the Web site: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/frontierhouse

Tennessee Gets New Forest

By Linda Lewanski Contributing Editor

Tennessee will get its first new state forest in more than half a century thanks to the efforts of The Conservation Fund. The US Forest Service and the State of Tennessee have purchased a 6,800-acre parcel of forestland located in Cocke County that is known as the Gulf Tract. This is a unique property, adjacent to Cherokee National Forest. The land, which is made up of diverse forested hardwoods and includes native trout streams, black bear and ruffed grouse, is just four miles west of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. When International Paper expressed an interest in selling the Gulf Tract, the fund, which is a private, non-profit organization dedicated to helping protect land and water resources, helped facilitate discussion and the property was subsequently purchased. Gov. Don Sundquist made the announcement last week at the Welcome Center in Hartford. " This land will become the first new state forest in Tennessee in more than 50 years," Sundquist said. "Conserving areas like the Gulf Tract is one of the best things we can do, but it is a big job. We cannot do it alone. We have looked to partners like the Conservation Fund, the U. S. Forest Service and the private sector to work with us in assuring the future sustainability of this unique resource." "We are proud to be part of this unique public-private partnership," said president of the Conservation Fund John F. Turner. "With its six miles of Appalachian Trail welcoming hikers, this wonderful mountain woodland will continue as wildlife habitat and as a sustainable, managed forest. Acquisition of the Gulf Tract adds to Cocke County's reputation as the gateway to the Great Smoky Mountains. Everyone benefits." The purchase from International Paper insures that the parcel will be protected from future development. " International Paper is proud of our continuing relationship with The Conservation Fund and of our presence as a corporate citizen of Tennessee," George A. O'Brien, senior vice- president for forest resources of International Paper said. "We are proud to see the land becoming a part of both our national heritage and a source of enjoyment and benefit to all Tennessee residents and visitors." In this innovative partnership, the wildlife and other natural resources found on the tract will be conserved. The natural landscape will remain intact for the ecological, recreational and economical benefits of the surrounding communities. "We are extremely pleased to see this important acquisition take place, " Elizabeth Estill, regional forester for the southern region USDA Forest Service said. "The citizens of Cocke County worked closely with their Congressional delegation to help make this possible. The acquisition of this property is a welcome addition to the Cherokee National Forest to recreational opportunities, wildlife habitat, water quality and scenic beauty in the area. We're looking forward to working with the state in managing this property."

Book Review
"Civil War on the Web"


offers a good map to WBTS Internet sites The Internet has fostered countless web sites on the War Between the States, but a new book promises to help serious historians cut through the maze of various sites and point you towards those based upon scholarly research. "The Civil War on the Web" by Noel Loyd covers the numerous sites and offers a grading system of sorts that cuts through the hype and gives readers an idea of where to look for answers. Many of the sites graded you will recognize and others were sites off the beaten path that carried historical documents and rare photographs. "I thought the book was a good beginning and something everyone should have as a reference on the War Between the States on the Internet," said researcher Bob Renfro. "There are a lot of 'junk sites' out there that deal more with the politics and opinions of the war than offer good historical value. Search engines are a bad resource many times for finding the sites I need for my children's school projects. I thought the book was a good resource and would recommend it to historical web masters and librarians who need a good hard-copy source of Internet information." For more information on obtaining a copy of "The Civil War on the Web", you can contact Noel Loyd at nlloyd@scholarly.com


THE CIVIL WAR IN TENNESSEE:


NEW INSIGHTS FROM NEW CONSIDERATION OF FAMILIAR MATERIALS. James B. Jones, Jr. Public Historian Tennessee Historical Commission About five years ago I asked a colleague how many military engagements took place in Tennessee during the Civil War. He immediately piped up with the established answer provided by E. B. Long, that there were 1,462 fights in the Volunteer State during the Civil War; second, he said in reverential tones, "only to Virginia." I thought my search had ended before it began, I took a look at Long's work only to find he does not indicate how he got his sum. Using Long's figure of 1,462 cases of belligerency in the state from 1861 to 1865, an interesting estimate can be made that raises questions about the actual amount of time spent in combat. . After taking into account the length of battles such as Fort Donelson, Shiloh, Stones River, Chattanooga, Knoxville and Nashville, (two weeks each) I assigned the arbitrary but rational value of three hours to all military conflicts in the state; the total number of hours spent in combat was 4,386 hours (or 183 days). The total number of hours that Tennessee was involved in the war amounts to 35,784 (or 1,491 days). Thus, the time spent in actual fighting was 12% of the total. Didn't anything else transpire during the other 88% (1,308 days) of the time? Even after trebling the value of all combat to an average of 9 hours, only 36% of the time was spent in actual fighting. I really had no figure to compare; yet the actual time spent in combat in Tennessee during the Civil War appears to be less than half. Thus, even Nathan Bedford Forrest had to stop and reload sometimes. These calculations spurred my interest and so I consulted Dyer's Compendium for numbers and documentation. At first I was delighted at this book of lists, but found that Dyer offered no sources, only the briefest of descriptions that accounted only for Federal units. A more detailed study led to the Guide Index of the NPS study entitled Military Operations of the Civil War. This promising publication indicated the kind of military action that occurred at the given time and place. This was encouraging, but it provided a minimum of narrative value, did not go much beyond the listing of military events, and did not place them in chronological order I hadn't found what I was looking for, a chronological, documented list of martial conflict in Tennessee that provided narration based on the OR. Either I was to drop the project or do the right thing -- take it upon myself to do the work of the historian, to seek out new information, to boldly go where many had gone before, to the OR. At first I intended to come up with a more nearly accurate list of combat actions during the Civil War in Tennessee. I found no comprehensive lists. There were lists giving types of combat and dates proceeding operational reports found in the OR, but these were not keyed to report citations. Pasting them together I saw a limited chronology begin to emerge. So, there was nothing else to do but count them. I reasoned the only place to find the information was in the OR 2-volume index. It was a matter of counting beans. I went page by page, entry by entry, seven times and finally concluded there was something over 1,700 separate instances of combat, most of them accompanied by at least one circumstantial report. This list was matched to Dyer's list, which proved to be manifestly lacking by comparison. My list was bigger, and so I concluded I had found the documentation with which I could construct the narrated list for which I was looking. This meant keying in what seemed an endless number of reports on skirmishes, actions, advances, affairs, bombardments, campaigns, engagements, reconaissances, scouts, descents, guerilla attacks and raids found in the operations sections of each of the pertinent volumes. This took a lot of time. The large battles were counted as one event, and I did not copy documents relating directly to them, but provided a brief narrative with citations for the curious. There are plenty of secondary sources dealing with big battles and famous generals. It became evident I couldn't type that many reports without risking a case of carpal tunnel syndrome. In two years I had done a lot of typing. Then at about the halfway mark the THC purchased a CD Rohm collection of the OR, the Guild Press's NOR. But it was a two edged blade because these tools allowed me to find other referrals to skirmishes, reconaissances, bushwhacking, conscript sweeps, naval combat and other smaller events that were separate and distinct events not mentioned in circumstantial combat reports and the index. These citations would have been next to impossible to enumerate without the aid of the CD Rohm technology . I found the Army and Navy records provided excellent and believable accounts, but I still wanted independent corroboration. What better sources than newspapers, diaries and correspondence? These familiar sources did not provide many beans for the counter's mill. They did address the gloomy psychological aspects of the war on the home front, displacement and the plight of refugees, confiscation of property, guerrilla warfare, smuggling, inflation, currency and commodities speculation, food shortages, urban life, a myriad of Special and General Orders not recorded in the OR, attempts to improve public health, public education, the complexity of occupation, the roles played by women, religious and family life, murders, politics, the theater, juvenile delinquency, prostitution, murder, the liberation and shaping of the African-American community, and the effect of the war upon children, to name but a few. There is more to the war in Tennessee than, as my nephew put it, "neat fightin' stuff." Presently the work is over 3,500 pages, weighing in at 56 pounds. Tabulations so far indicate 2,777 instances of combat in Civil War Tennessee. Until now Virginia was held to be where most Civil War combat took place. The Old Dominion's total, according to Long, was 2,154, 623 less than the newly tabulated total for Tennessee. So, if nothing else, one can conclude there was more fighting in the Volunteer State than in any other state. That being the case it is possible suggest that the war was won (or lost) in Tennessee, not Virginia. For those who may censure this finding with discriminating remarks about quality vs. quantity I say "quantity has a quality all its own." Virginia might regain its earlier ascendant place as the "Mother of all Civil War battles," when someone does as Casey Stengal admonished: "You can look it up." The nature of the fighting in Tennessee was not characterized by large battles. Instead combat was on the smaller level of the skirmish, at 1,122, or roughly 40% of the total. The other 60% of combat missions are divided between "affairs," battles, reconnaissances, raids, guerrilla action and what we might today call "search and destroy" missions, and expeditions of various types. The terminology for the various kinds of combat activity defied any settled definition. They knew what they meant when they meant it . Could a skirmish be identified by numbers of combatants? No, because a skirmish could involve as few as 7 with no losses, or as many as 7,000 men with losses amounting to 250. Could time be a clue? No, seldom were time spans listed in OR reports. A skirmish could precede a large battle, or be an isolated incident. An action could not be determined to be any different from an engagement and at times a scout meant reconnaissance, and vice versa. The Tennessee total of 2,777 incidences cannot represent a comprehensive number of combat operations in Tennessee during the Civil War. For example, my findings show 58 citations under the word "skirmishes." How many "skirmishes?" Three? Fifteen? Similarly, how is an "affair" different from an "engagement," or a "retreat" from a "withdrawal?" There was no designation "conscript sweep" in any of the OR circumstantial combat reports or indexes. Many references to conscripting activity are found in correspondence, newspaper reports and journals. I have found nothing to indicate how conscripting actually worked. One hint comes from Brigadier General Gideon J. Pillow in January 1863. As conscription officer for the Army of Tennessee he reported to General Bragg that he had ordered his field commanders: to rake Bedford County, in which there are 1,500 men liable to duty under the conscript law. I was anxious to clean out that county by one movement, and doing it at once to avoid giving alarm. A partial movement over one portion of the county will give the alarm, and cause the conscripts to scatter and hide out So, not only was there resistance to the Confederate draft, but being conscripted was more accurately a swift, jolting experience with cavalrymen dragooning farm boys against their will. Why else would Pillow fear they would scatter and hide out? Scattering and hiding out were contradictory to my notions of Confederate youth eager to follow the rebel battle flag. Likewise was the apparent opposition to enlisting in the Confederate army by some young men in the cities. Among the insights I found startling was the general calm and resignation displayed in newspapers concerning the February 1861 vote to stay in the Union. The secret nature of the business of the legislature was equally curious, especially after the awe-inspiring pro-Union vote in February. Why was it secret? What went on behind closed doors? Another insight revolved around the attempt of the state government to finance its war effort. It was pitiful, even comical. Men of means and position agitated more about the transfer of state debt to the Confederate government and having it reimburse bondholders for expenses rather than providing for soldiers. In late January 1862, it was obvious to the members of the Fayetteville Committee of Correspondence that volunteers from Lincoln County would get no winter clothing from the Confederate government. They wrote to Confederate Secretary of War , offering to clothe them with uniforms made from wool textiles manufactured in Fayetteville. Flush with promises of huge profits arms manufacturers promised state officials the moon but could not deliver, forcing the governor to impound all civilian-sporting pieces for military use. The formation of refugee juvenile gangs in the cities in 1864 came as a surprise. One gang called "the Forty Thieves" originated in Louisville and spread down the railroad to Nashville, Chattanooga, and even Atlanta. Another, the "Mackerel Brigade," formed in Memphis. Turf battles were fought with rival gangs that came from New Orleans. The magnitude of illegal cotton trading near Memphis, Chattanooga and in Middle Tennessee was intriguing. The editor of the Chattanooga Daily Rebel was infuriated, as was W. T. Sherman in Memphis. The War Department quietly sanctioned the practice. Inflated prices, currency and commodities' speculation were common. The anti-Semitism displayed by Grant and Sherman was previously unknown to me. I know some may find this an onerous conclusion, but Nathan Bedford Forrest was defeated a number of times in Tennessee. There was at least one case of mass murder of white USCT officers committed by Confederate soldiers under Forrest's command. The incidence and extent of guerrilla, or as some prefer, "partisan ranger," activity and the attempts to suppress it were widespread. Home guard units on both sides often took on characteristics of terrorist gangs, and were only in it for the money. Col. Fielding Hurst, for example, extorted over $100,000 from citizens of West Tennessee, while his brother in law squeezed $50,000 out of McNairy County alone. Both Confederate and Federal forces took political prisoners and hostages to extort loyalty. Hints were found regarding the vigilante-like behavior of "Committees of Public Safety" that formed in Memphis and Nashville before fighting took place. Such groups were apparently as much mechanisms for slave and class management as instruments to appropriate the wealth of those whose beliefs were not "pc" ["politically Confederate"]. Another unique chapter of the war in Tennessee cities dealt with the U. S. Army Medical Corps and prostitution. The practice was far and away a great threat to the army, and in 1863 officials in Nashville exiled the courtesans to Louisville. The "Cyprians" weren't welcomed there and were restored to Nashville. The only solution was to set up a legalized and licensed system of prostitution based upon medical inspection. Memphis duplicated the system a year later. Additionally, the Medical Corps made strides in improving and maintaining public health, constructing sewers, removing dead animals, rubbish and offal from the streets, and enforcing small pox inoculation. Early in the war the "Southern Mothers" formed in Memphis, and similar groups in other cities, to help sustain and nurse wounded Confederate troops. 64 bellicose belles of Gordonsville, Smith County, petitioned Governor Johnson in November 1862 for arms they wished to use in "aiding to put down the rebellion. "If you accept us" they wrote, "please send them immediately….If not we will arm ourselves land bushwhack it." They were not at all like the pro-Confederate and wealthy Rebecca Carter Craighead of Nashville who took a trip to NYC in the summer of 1864. There she purchased a $400 dress and fine jewelry. There was poetry in the newspapers, as well as accounts of flag or sword presentations and humorous accounts of grand balls and camp life and editorials complaining of martial prohibition. The theater was active in the cities. In February 1864 John Wilkes Booth appeared in Nashville and got rave reviews. An interesting comment on class-consciousness is found in a letter from Lieutenant-General Leonidas Polk to his wife written in February 1863. He mentions that he promoted his son to his staff because the young man found the artillery captain to whom he was assigned too demanding. While Confederate soldiers went without, Polk sent his wife material and dress patterns. He complained his staff officers were too busy seeking paramours about the countryside to write their reports on the battle of Stones River. In the months before the fiasco at Fort Donelson, slave owners were asked to provide labor to help build fortifications at Nashville and other points. Few did, and some bragged about not complying. The forts weren't built. It struck me as ironic that the very people who had the most to gain from the Confederacy refused to support it, and not out of loyalty to the Union, but out of a stingy spirit of deception and duping the government. In Middle Tennessee, at least, a sort of sliding scale of class-consciousness and prejudice existed in which the poorest whites resented the Confederacy for conscripting their sons to fight a rich man's war. The middle class, while supportive of the Confederacy, was ambivalent. The richest were the most stalwart in their support of the rebellion and often send Confederate foraging parties to those they considered traitors to the cause. Two apparently gay men carried out spy missions in West Tennessee while dressed as women. Other insights included the October 1863, proposal by Nashvillian S. R. Cockrill to the Commissioners of the Confederate States for a five step strategy to harvest fish in Tennessee's rivers to feed the armies. General Pillow endorsed the idea and proposed using his conscription force to aid in the plan. In February 1865, the Board of Commissioners for the State of Tennessee met in Aberdeen, MS. They worked long and hard to establish an extensive "schedule of prices for produce and army supplies…to continue in force until altered." That there was no Confederate authority in Tennessee that late in the war apparently did not cross their minds. General Pillow, by the way, on two different occasions wrote to the Federal commanders in Memphis in attempts to obtain safe passage so that he might take care of his property within Union lines. If this wasn't treason (as well as stupid) it was very close. Another insight into the war was finding the location of the first recorded instance of actual fighting in Tennessee - it had to start somewhere. The site was on the Cumberland Plateau, near the Kentucky border, in Pickett County, at a place called Travisville. This was a new finding to historians and the natives. In time a historical marker was unveiled to an appreciative crowd of locals and politicians. A 40-page booklet entitled "A Documentary Guide to the Civil War on the Tennessee Cumberland Plateau" was produced, and given its limited run of 120 copies, was out of print in a week. This was an insight that led me to entrepreneurial musings about profiting from history and new notions about history education. Namely, documentary evidence was a popular commodity and a teaching tool. This reference book approach to the Civil War in Tennessee can have a more populist application. I like to think that as a printed text this work will prove of interest to "civilians" who have neither the time nor the research skills to find this data. The public has no familiarity with such documents because of a number of factors, the most compelling being that it is difficult to find what they want in primary sources, especially the OR. It simply bewilders them. Which brings up the professional versus avocational expenditure of the time it takes to conduct research. In West Tennessee's Civil War history there was a skirmish on June 30, 1862 at a place then called both Morning Sun or Rising Sun - a Confederate victory, by the way. One constituent, an elderly enthusiast, said he had spent most of his adult life looking for any information about the fight but could not find it. He didn't know where to look. I knew where to look and provided him with that information within minutes. It wasn't that hard to do, but then I'm a historian. I wondered if it would have been easier for him to consult a documentary guide to the Civil War in Tennessee. While this work cannot be called comprehensive, it is big. It presents more diversity than any one study, and it is that diversity that can help refocus attention away from "neat fightin' stuff" to a better understanding of the complexity of the war in Tennessee -- and no doubt other states. It can serve an educational function and maybe even attenuate the dogged "us vs. them" thinking, what Jim Loewen identifies as a "neo-Confederate mentality." That approach interprets the war as a uniformly martial white male southern heritage, the product of the United Daughters of the Confederacy's successful efforts that "distorted why the South seceded and made hash of Civil War history from beginning to end." . "The heritage syndrome," as Michael Kammen calls it, is "an impulse to remember what is attractive or flattering [to one's peers] and ignore the rest." History and heritage, it follows, are two different things. It might be best to reflect on the phrase: "we weren't there, we didn't do that." A documentary guide to the Civil War in Tennessee -- and other states -- can be presented to the public in a fashion to help counter the zeal and anecdotal wisdom of reenactors, farbs, and relic collectors. Otherwise they will continue to guide the public's interpretation of the Civil War as a celebration of a monolithic and contrived filiopietistic heritage instead of study and appreciation of a many faceted history. To paraphrase Marie Antoinette: "Let them read documents." (3,189 words)




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