CWRTDC'S PREVIOUS MEETING:
who will speak on
"THE PETERSBURG CAMPAIGN"
Tuesday, September 12, 2017
Tuesday, September 12, 2017
6 pm: Social Hour (cash bar)
7 pm: Dinner ($36 for dinner and lecture)
8 pm: Lecture ($5 for lecture only)
7 pm: Dinner ($36 for dinner and lecture)
8 pm: Lecture ($5 for lecture only)
Reservations required by 5:00 pm, Wednesday, September 6th
SEE THE INSTRUCTIONS AT http://cwrtdc-meetings.blogspot.com/ OR BY CLICKING THE "MEETING/TOURS" TAB ABOVE
TO MAKE RESERVATIONS AND REMIT PAYMENT
About the Topic: Emmanuel Dabney will discuss the June
1864-April 1865 Petersburg Campaign. In addition to an overview of battles, Mr.
Emmanuel will look at the troop’s relationship with the earthwork system, the
varied use of artillery and sharpshooting techniques, and the effects of disease
and morale on the outcome. W. H. McLaurin William H. McLaurin of the 18th North
Carolina Infantry wrote years after the war:
“The story of
Petersburg will never be written; volumes would be required to contain it, and
even those who went through the trying ordeal, can not recall a satisfactory
outline of the weird and graphic occurrences of that stormy period.”
Yet,
soldiers (including McLaurin) through letters, diaries, or memoirs attempted to
make sense of the 292 days in and around the trenches outside Petersburg and
Richmond.
About the Author: Emmanuel Dabney has been employed by the
National Park Service at Petersburg National Battlefield since 2001. After
completing high school in Dinwiddie County, Emmanuel graduated magna cum laude with an Associates of
Arts from Richard Bland College, graduated magna
cum laude with a Bachelor of Arts in Historic Preservation from the
University of Mary Washington in Fredericksburg, Virginia and completed a
Master’s degree in Public History at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
Mr. Dabney is particularly interested in
nineteenth-century American history, including the Civil War, slavery and
emancipation, free blacks, and slaveholders. He has stated, however, that he is not limited
to that specific time frame or region. https://interpretivechallenges.wordpress.com/about/
Mr.
Dabney has given many programs on the issues facing African-Americans in
antebellum, wartime, and immediate post-war America as well as how to represent
these experiences within professional museum settings. Emmanuel has delivered
programs to the Civil War Trust, the Virginia Association of Museums, the
Virginia Historical Society, and the Association for the Study of
African-American Life and History, various roundtables, and other
organizations.
As an
avid genealogist and historian, Mr. Dabney discovered his great-great-great
grandfather was a wealthy Virginia slave owner and his great-great-great
grandmother was a mixed-race free Black woman. Among those in his family tree
are two members of Virginia’s Secession Convention, numerous Confederate
soldiers and officers, and his great-great grandfather, Henry Dabney, who was
involved in digging earthworks around Petersburg in 1864 and 1865.
Kevin Levin has noted that dramatic changes have taken
place in the way we remember and commemorate the battle of the Crater. He
explains that Mr. Dabney is a big part of the story that he now tells about the
Crater. For more information, visit Mr. Levin’s website at http://cwmemory.com/2010/08/01/the-future-of-petersburg-national-battlefield/
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