CWRTDC'S PREVIOUS MEETING:
DWIGHT HUGHES
speaks on

"A CONFEDERATE BIOGRAPHY: THE CRUISE OF THE CSS SHENANDOAH"


 Tuesday, December 13, 2016
at Ft. McNair Officers' Club, Washington, DC

(see directions here) or (download them in pdf here)


6 pm: Social Hour (cash bar)

7 pm: Dinner ($36 for dinner and lecture)
8 pm: Lecture ($5 for lecture only)
(please arrive at 7:30pm for the lecture)


Reservations required by 5:00 pm, Wednesday, December 7th 


SEE THE INSTRUCTIONS TO THE RIGHT OF THIS POST
TO MAKE RESERVATIONS AND REMIT PAYMENT
If you have any problems making reservations online or would like to know about alternatives to making reservations or payments online, please email reservations@cwrtdc.org





ABOUT THE TOPIC: "The cruise of a ship is a biography,” wrote the Confederacy’s foremost sailor, Raphael Semmes. A ship can be, therefore, a central character in a life story through which we view the momentous past more clearly.

From October 1864 to November 1865, the CSS Shenandoah carried the Civil War around the globe to the ends of the earth through every extreme of sea and storm. Her officers represented a cross section of the Confederacy from Old Dominion first families through the Deep South aristocracy to a middle-class Missourian: a nephew of Robert E. Lee; a grandnephew of founder George Mason; a son-in-law to Raphael Semmes; grandsons of men who fought at George Washington’s side; and an uncle of Theodore Roosevelt.


They considered themselves Americans, Southerners, rebels, and warriors embarking on the voyage of their lives, defending their country as they understood it and pursuing a difficult, dangerous mission in which they succeeded spectacularly after it no longer mattered.

Shenandoah was a magnificent ship. Her commerce-raiding mission was a central component of U.S. Navy heritage and a watery form of asymmetric warfare in the spirit of John Mosby, Bedford Forrest, and W. T. Sherman. She contributed to the diplomatic maelstrom of the Civil War, as evidenced by a contentious visit to Melbourne, Australia.

Later, at the Pacific island of Pohnpei, Southern gentlemen enjoyed a tropical holiday while their country lay dying, mingling with an exotic warrior society that was more like them than they knew. Their observations looking back from the most remote and alien surroundings imaginable, along with the viewpoints of those they encountered, provide unique perspectives of the conflict.

Finally, Shenandoah invaded the north, the deep cold of the Bering Sea. She fired the last gun of the conflict and set crystal waters aglow with flaming Yankee whalers.
Seven months after Lee’s surrender, Shenandoah limped into Liverpool. Captain Waddell lowered the last Confederate banner without defeat or surrender. This is, as Admiral Semmes describes, a biography of a cruise and a microcosm of the Confederate-American experience.

ABOUT THE SPEAKER: Dwight Sturtevant Hughes graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1967 and served twenty years as a Navy surface warfare officer on most of the world's oceans in ships ranging from destroyer to aircraft carrier and with river forces in Vietnam (Bronze Star for Meritorious Service, Purple Heart).

Lieutenant Commander Hughes taught Naval ROTC at the University of Rochester, earning an MA in Political Science; he later earned an MS in Information Systems Management from USC. In his final sea tour, he planned and conducted convoy exercises with over twenty ships of the Maritime Prepositioned Force.


Dwight's second career was software engineering, primarily in geographic feature naming data and electronic mapping under contract for the U.S. Geological Survey. A ridge in Antarctica is named for him in recognition of contributions to Antarctic databases and information services.

Dwight's current calling builds on a lifetime of study in naval history with the desire to translate a love of the sea and ships into an understanding of our naval heritage and to communicate that heritage in an educational and entertaining manner.

Dwight is a guest author at the Emerging Civil War blog. He is a life member of the U.S. Naval Institute, the U.S. Naval Academy Alumni Association, and the Historic Naval Ships Association. He is a member of the Naval Historical Foundation and the National Maritime Historical Society.
Dwight Hughes lives near Manassas in Virginia with his wife, Judi, a former Air Force officer and Electronics/Communications Engineer.


For more information about the speaker's book, visit http://aconfederatebiography.com/



___________________________________________
For information about the Round Table and to apply for membership, see the Tab above marked "About Us/ Membership Information" or click HERE 


CWRTDC'S PREVIOUS MEETING:




DAVID GOETZ

speaks on


"THE POSTWAR RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN MOSBY AND GRANT"


Wednesday, November 9, 2016
(Note: this is on Wednesday night rather than our usual Tuesday meetings)

at Ft. McNair Officers' Club, Washington, DC

(see directions here) or (download them in pdf here)

6 pm: Social Hour (cash bar)
7 pm: Dinner ($36 for dinner and lecture)
8 pm: Lecture ($5 for lecture only)


Reservations required by 5:00 pm, Thursday, November 3rd 

SEE THE INSTRUCTIONS TO THE RIGHT OF THIS POST
TO MAKE RESERVATIONS AND REMIT PAYMENT
If you have any problems making reservations online or would like to know about alternatives to making reservations or payments online, please email reservations@cwrtdc.org  <reservations@cwrtdc.org



About the Topic:  “Hell is Being a Republican in Virginia”: The Postwar Relationship Between John Singleton Mosby and Ulysses S. Grant is essentially the story of Mosby and Grant and their search for peace and reconciliation between North and South in the years following the War Between the States.


Bitter enemies during the war – in 1864, Grant had declared, “Where any of Mosby’s men are caught, hang them without trial” – they met in 1872 as Grant was in a fierce contest with Horace Greeley for his second term.  Mosby gave Grant a strategy that helped him win and the two remained close friends for the rest of their lives.


Mosby and his family were spurned by Southerners who felt betrayed by Mosby’s active support of Grant and, after nearly being assassinated in Warrenton, Va. in the fall of 1877, Mosby contacted Grant who used his influence with President Rutherford Hayes to appoint Mosby as U.S. Consul to Hong Kong, where he served for seven years.
Even with the hand of death on him in the summer of 1885, Grant asked his friend Leland Stanford, president of the Southern Pacific Railroad, to find a job for Mosby upon his return from Hong Kong; he did, and Mosby worked as an attorney for the railroad for the next 16 years, until 1901.
That these two giants of their time first reconciled between themselves before  working toward healing the nation’s post-war wounds is instructive for us in the 21st Century, as the need for peace and reconciliation among citizens is greater than perhaps ever before.
About the Speaker: David Goetz owns Mosby's Confederacy Tours, and leads tours in “Mosby's Confederacy,” including Virginia counties of Fauquier, Loudoun, Warren and Clarke. 
Mr. Goetz is descended from the family of Chaplain Father James M. Graves, S.J., who served with Generals Joe Johnston and Stonewall Jackson in the Army of Virginia in 1861-62.  He is a past commander of the Black Horse Camp #780, Sons of Confederate Veterans in Fauquier County, Virginia, serving from 2009-13.
Mr. Goetz has a professional background in public relations, sales and marketing, primarily with non-profit organizations.  He holds an undergraduate degree in English from Bellarmin University, Louisville, Kentucky, and a Master of Science degree in Community Development from the University of Louisville.  He is a U.S. Army veteran, received an Honorable Discharge, and lives in Culpeper County, Virginia.




____________________________________________
For information about the Round Table and to apply for membership, see the Tab above marked "About Us/ Membership Information" or click HERE 
CWRT-DC's PREVIOUS MEETING:
ED BEARSS
speaks on
"CUSTER AT LITTLE BIGHORN"

Tuesday, October 11, 2016
at Ft. McNair Officers' Club, Washington, DC

(see directions here) or (download them in pdf here)


6 pm: Social Hour (cash bar)
7 pm: Dinner ($36 for dinner and lecture)
8 pm: Lecture ($5 for lecture only)

Reservations required by 5:00 pm, Thursday, October 6th
SEE THE INSTRUCTIONS TO THE RIGHT OF THIS POST
TO MAKE RESERVATIONS AND REMIT PAYMENT
If you have any problems making reservations online or would like to know about alternatives to making reservations or payments online, please email Mary Jane at reservations@cwrtdc.org <reservations@cwrtdc.org>

About the Topic: At age 23, George Armstrong Custer became one of the youngest generals in the Union Army, and he was victorious in many cavalry battles of the Civil War. He stood out for flamboyant uniforms and aggressive tactics. At the conclusion of the Appomattox Campaign, in which he and his troops played a decisive role, Custer was present at General Robert E. Lee's surrender to General Ulysses S. Grant on April 9, 1865.

After the War, Custer remained a major general in the United States Volunteers until they were mustered out in February 1866. He reverted to his permanent rank of captain and was appointed a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. 7th Cavalry Regiment in July 1866. He was dispatched to the west in 1867 to fight in the American Indian Wars.


The Battle of the Little Bighorn, commonly referred to as Custer's Last Stand, was an armed engagement between the 7th Cavalry Regiment and the combined forces of the Lakota, Northern Cheyenne, and Arapaho tribes.  The battle, which occurred June 25–26, 1876, near the Little Bighorn River in eastern Montana Territory, was the most prominent action of the Great Sioux War of 1876.

The fight was an overwhelming victory for the members of the tribes who fought against the U.S. troops and who were led by several major leaders, including Crazy Horse and Chief Gall, inspired by the visions of Sitting Bull. The 7th Cavalry, including the Custer Battalion, a force of 700 men led by Custer, suffered a major defeat.  Five of the 7th Cavalry's twelve companies were annihilated; they lost 16 officers, 242 troopers, and 10 scouts. Among the dead were Custer, all of the personnel in the companies under his immediate command, including two of his brothers, a nephew, and a brother-in-law, and 18 men who fought in the southern part of the battlefield (i.e., the valley and hilltop engagements in the Reno-Benteen Battlefield).

Our speaker, Ed Bearss, grew up on a ranch adjacent to the Little Bighorn Battlefield in Montana and like very few others knows of the battle, the landscape, the personalities, and the controversies that have been passed down over the years.  Why didn’t Custer wait for the other U.S. Army columns under Terry and Gibbon before attacking?  How large was the tribal village that Custer attacked?  Did Crook's defeat at the Battle of Rosebud the week before seal Custer’s fate? Why did Custer divide his regiment into three battalions that were too distant to support each other?  Could the Reno and Benteen battalions have rode to the rescue?  Why were Custer’s tactics effective against the Confederates in the Civil War but not members of the tribes on the high plains?  Join us to hear Ed’s opinion on these questions and more!

About Our Speaker:  Edwin Cole (Ed) Bearss needs no introduction to this Round Table or to most Civil War enthusiasts. He is a world-renowned military historian, author, and tour guide recognized for his work on the history of the Civil War and World War II.  We are gratified to have Ed as one of our Round Table's lifetime honorary member, yearly speaker, and frequent leader for our field trips and tours.

Ed is the author of numerous books including the definitive three volume series, “The Vicksburg Campaign.” He is a tireless advocate of Civil War preservation, donating his time to many organizations and activities involved with that mission, including serving on the board of the Civil War Trust. Among his many honors, Ed was named by the Smithsonian Magazine as one of its “35 Who Made A Difference.” Since 2005, the Civil War Round Table of the District of Columbia has recognized Ed’s contributions by making an annual “Ed Bearss Award” to a preservation cause of his choosing. To date, the Ed Bearss Award has provided more than $10,000 to worthy--many times little known--Civil War preservation efforts.

Ed has worked as a historian at the Vicksburg National Military Park, where he conducted research leading him and two friends to the long-lost Union gunboat the U.S.S. Cairo. He also located two forgotten forts at Grand Gulf, Mississippi. Ed rose in the National Park Service (NPS) to the post of regional historian and is acclaimed as more knowledgeable on the Civil War battlefields than virtually anyone else.


During his time with the National Park Service, Ed led efforts for researching, preserving, and interpreting among others: Pea Ridge; Wilson’s Creek; Fort Smith; Stones River, Fort Donelson; the battlefields around Richmond, Fort Moultrie, and Fort Point. Ed was named Chief Historian of the NPS in 1981, a position he held until 1994. He also served as special assistant to the NPS director from 1994 to 1995. After his retirement in 1995, Ed received the title "Chief Historian Emeritus," which he holds to this day.

Ed’s abundance of awards and honors are too numerous to mention. Some of the more recent include: the 2014 DAR Medal of Honor; the Douglas Southall Freeman Award for 2014 in honor of his book entitled “The Petersburg Campaign,” recognized as the best published book of high merit in the field of Southern history; and the Lincoln Forum’s Richard Nelson Current Lifetime Achievement Award in 2011.  In addition, the Civil War Trust has established its annual lifetime achievement award in Ed’s name.

Currently, there is a bill pending in Congress (H.R. 2059) sponsored by Rep. Gerald Connolly (D-VA), to recognize Ed, and he may soon receive a new accolade to add to an already lengthy resume: Congressional Gold Medal recipient. For more information about that effort, click HERE or visit http://www.cwrtdc.org/p/ed-bearss.html
______________________________________________
For information about the Round Table and to apply for membership, see the Tab above marked "About Us/ Membership Information" or click HERE

CWRTDC'S PREVIOUS MEETING:

GEORGE F. FRANKS, III
speaks on
"THE BATTLE OF
FALLING WATERS"

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

at Ft. McNair Officers' Club, Washington, DC

(see directions here) or (download them in pdf here)

6 pm: Social Hour (cash bar)
7 pm: Dinner ($36 for dinner and lecture)
8 pm: Lecture ($5 for lecture only)


Reservations required by 5:00 pm, Thursday, September 8th 

SEE THE INSTRUCTIONS TO THE RIGHT OF THIS POST
TO MAKE RESERVATIONS AND REMIT PAYMENT
If you have any problems making reservations online or would like to know about alternatives to making reservations or payments online, please email admin@cwrtdc.org <admin@cwrtdc.org> 


About the Topic:
The Gettysburg Campaign has recently received increased attention from historians. The study of the battle on July 1-3, 1863 in and around the small crossroads town in Pennsylvania is not complete, however, without also looking into the movement of the Army of Northern Virginia to and from Gettysburg, and the pursuit by the Army of the Potomac after the battle. Many historians agree the Gettysburg Campaign concluded with the July 14, 1863 Battle of Falling Waters, which occurred on the banks of the Maryland side of the Potomac River. The battle is also called the Battle of Williamsport or the Battle of Hagerstown.

Lee's bloodied army began to retreat from Gettysburg in torrential rain beginning the night of July 4. It moved southwest across South Mountain on the Fairfield Road toward Hagerstown and Williamsport. The Union army cautiously followed. On July 7, Confederate cavalry successfully prevented Union cavalry from occupying Williamsport and destroying the Confederate trains there. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia reached the Potomac River on July 11 to find its pontoon bridge destroyed. Unable to cross the rain-swollen river, Lee entrenched to protect the river crossings at Williamsport and waited for Meade’s army to attack. Meade arrived on July 12 and immediately probed the Confederate line. Heavy skirmishing took place on July 13 as Meade prepared for a full-on attack. Luckily for Lee and his men, the river fell enough to allow them to construct a new bridge and Lee began crossing after dark on the 13th. On the morning of  July14, Union cavalry launched a blistering attack on Lee’s rearguard, which was on the Maryland bank waiting to cross. More than 500 Confederates were taken prisoner and Confederate Brig. Gen. James Pettigrew was mortally wounded in the fight.

Although not the climactic battle of the war desired by President Lincoln, the Gettysburg Campaign remains a story of miscalculation, bravery, larger-than-life personalities, tragedy and a cover-up. The story does not end with the battle, either. The events include an intriguing tale about veterans of the Battle of Falling Waters decades after Gen. Robert E. Lee’s rearguard clashed with Maj. Gen. George G. Meade’s cavalry. Our speaker, George Franks, will discuss this critical battle.


About Our Speaker:
George F. Franks, III is the author of Battle of Falling Waters 1863: Custer, Pettigrew and the End of the Gettysburg Campaign, which makes extensive use of first-hand accounts, detailed maps, period drawings and photographs to breathe life into the crucial yet little remembered end of the Gettysburg Campaign. The book includes as well a detailed description of the battlefield today and efforts to preserve portions of the land for future generations.

Passionate about the study of the American Civil War since visiting the Gettysburg battlefield with his parents in July 1963, Mr. Franks studied history at the U.S. Naval Academy and the University of Pittsburgh. A former telecommunications executive with extensive international experience, he is currently the President of Franks Consulting Group and the owner of CockedHats.com, a historical hat business. Mr. Franks also is the founder and President of the Battle of Falling Waters 1863 Foundation, Inc. and a member of the Board of Directors of the Heart of the Civil War Heritage Area. 

Mr. Franks is the former President of the Capitol Hill Civil War Round Table, a member of Hagerstown Civil War Round Table, Save Historic Antietam Foundation and the Civil War Trust. He is also a Governor and a former Vice President of the Company of Military Historians.



Mr. Franks has researched the July 14, 1863 battle of Falling Waters, Maryland for a decade and owns and lives in the 1830 Daniel Donnelly House on the battlefield. Franks can be reached via email at fallingwatersmd1863@gmail.com or his web site at www.fallingwatersmd1863.com.
_____________________________________________
For information about the Round Table and to apply for membership, see the Tab above marked "About Us/ Membership Information" or click HERE 
CWRT-DC's PREVIOUS MEETING:
EUGENE D. SCHMIEL

Tuesday, June 14, 2016

at Ft. McNair Officers' Club, Washington, DC 

(see directions here) or (download them in pdf here)

6 pm: Social Hour (cash bar)
7 pm: Dinner ($36 for dinner and lecture)
8 pm: Lecture ($5 for lecture only)
Reservations required by 5:00 pm, Thursday, June 9th: Email (preferred) to treasurer@cwrtdc.org <mailto:treasurer@cwrtdc.orgor call (202) 306-4988.


TOPIC: 
"CITIZEN-GENERAL JACOB DOLSON COX"

About the Topic:
Our topic for this month's meeting will spotlight Jacob Dolson Cox of Ohio. Cox rose from humble beginnings to become an abolitionist, a polarizing political figure, a major general for the Union Army, an educator, and an author historian. As a young man, he worked as an apprentice in a legal firm and as a bookkeeper in a brokerage firm. Cox moved to Ohio and enrolled at Oberlin College. He graduated in 1851, studied law while he served as a school superintendent, and was admitted to the bar in 1853.  An abolitionist sympathizer and a supporter of the antislavery Whigs and Free Soil Party, Cox was elected to the Ohio State Senate in 1858. Although a rising political star, Cox entered the Union Army as a brigadier general of the Ohio Volunteers in April 1861.


Cox served under General George McClellan in western Virginia, helping to secure the region for the Union. Reassigned to Washington DC to protect the capital, Cox’s division was sent from there to join the Army of Virginia for the Maryland Campaign of 1862 where they were instrumental in the battles of South Mountain and Antietam. Cox then returned to western Virginia and routed remaining rebels in the area. The year 1863 proved a relatively quiet one for Cox, as he was assigned to command the District of Ohio and then the District of Michigan. 1864 found him back in the thick of things, commanding a division under William T. Sherman in the Atlanta Campaign.  When Confederate General John Bell Hood withdrew from Atlanta and moved into Tennessee, Cox was part of General George Thomas’ pursuit. Cox’s men engaged the Confederates at Spring Hill and were at the center of the most violent fighting at Franklin. His success led to Cox’s appointment to major general in December 1864 and he ended his Civil War service by helping to secure the port of Wilmington NC for the Union.


After the war, Cox was elected governor of Ohio in 1865. As his reelection approached, his views on black suffrage angered his formerly loyal constituents and he lost the election. Cox believed, from personal observations during the war, that blacks and whites could not live together as equals. Despite the loss, he would go on to serve as Secretary of the Interior in 1869, under Ulysses S. Grant. The two did not agree on policy, and this disagreement as well as the corruption Cox believed was inherent in the political system led him to resign in the fall of 1870. Not yet finished with politics, however, Cox ran for and was elected to Congress in 1875. His political career finally ended when he declined to seek reelection in 1878. 

Cox’s next vocation was in academia, and he served as Dean of the Cincinnati Law School, President of the University of Cincinnati, and finally as a trustee of Oberlin College. After he retired in 1897, Cox became a prolific writer, discussing all manner of military topics related to the Civil War. His writings remain a valuable resource for serious Civil War scholars to this day. 


About Our Speaker: 
Eugene D. ("Gene") Schmiel, although retired from full-time service as a Foreign Service Officer, continues to work part-time the US Department of State. Schmiel has served overseas in Sweden, South Africa, Djibouti, Kenya, and Iceland.  He was also appointed Charge’ d’Affaires at three embassies and Consul General in Mombasa, Kenya. Prior to joining the State Department, Schmiel was an Assistant Professor of History at St. Francis University in Pennsylvania. 

Schmiel earned his Ph.D. from Ohio State University. While there, he met his wife, Bonnie Kathryn, with whom he collaborated in 1998 to author a book about their life in the Foreign Service entitled, “Welcome Home: Who are You? Tales of a Foreign Service Family.” Schmiel's latest book, "Citizen-General: Jacob Dolson Cox and the Civil War Era," was published in 2014 by Ohio University Press.  It is the first biography of this highly respected Union general whose accomplishments in the war belie the myth of the incompetent "political general." Schmiel resides with his family in Gainesville, Virginia.

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For information about the Round Table and to apply for membership, see the Tab above marked "About Us/ Membership Information" or click HERE 
CWRT-DC's PREVIOUS MEETING:



LAWRENCE M. DENTON

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

at Ft. McNair Officers' Club, Washington, DC 

(see directions here) or (download them in pdf here)

6 pm: Social Hour (cash bar)
7 pm: Dinner ($36 for dinner and lecture)
8 pm: Lecture ($5 for lecture only)
Reservations required by 5:00 pm, Thursday, May 5th: Email (preferred) to treasurer@cwrtdc.org <mailto:treasurer@cwrtdc.orgor call (202) 306-4988. For more information about making reservations, visit our Meetup Page by clicking HERE.
http://www.meetup.com/The-Civil-War-Round-Table-of-the-District-of-Columbia/



TOPIC: 
UNIONISTS IN VIRGINIA

About the Topic:
Whether the Civil War was preventable is a debate that began shortly after Appomattox and continues today. But even earlier, in 1861, a group of Union-loyal Virginians—led by George Summers, John Brown Baldwin, John Janney and Jubal Early—felt war was avoidable. In the statewide election for delegates to the Secession Convention that same spring, the Unionists defeated the Southern Rights Democrats with a huge majority of the votes across the state. These heroic men unsuccessfully negotiated with Secretary of State William Henry Seward to prevent the national tragedy that would ensue.


Author and historian Lawrence M. Denton traces this remarkable story of Virginians working against all odds in a failed attempt to save a nation from war.  He will: (1) describe as a backdrop the period before and after election of Abraham Lincoln as Deep South moves toward secession; (2) discuss how President James Buchanan and President-elect Lincoln prepared approached their political duties (including explaining how Lincoln was inexperienced at a national political level, knew few key players and lacked information from Washington); (3) introduce William Henry Seward with an emphasis on his influence and power in Washington and his connections to national leadership; (4) explain Seward’s plan to divide the South by offering a compromise to upper South Unionists; and (5) speculate on possible outcomes if Seward had been elected President.

(Reprinted/edited from Amazon.com and https://www.amaritime.org/component/rseventspro/event/22-lecture-by-larry-denton)

About Our Speaker: 
Lawrence M. Denton is a direct descendant of many Maryland families who have been in this country before the American Revolutionary War, including the Denton/Lusby families with sons who fought in the Army of Northern Virginia and in the 7th Maryland Infantry present at Appomattox. 

Mr. Denton, a graduate of Towson High School and Western Maryland College, received a Masters degree with honors from Johns Hopkins University, where his career would lead him to serve as a Dean of Admission at the school and oversee an effort to establish merit scholarships. In 1978, Mr. Denton accepted a Presidential appointment to serve as special assistant to the Associate Administrator of NOAA, where he helped collocate NOAA facilities on university campuses. He has also served as a senior consultant to major firms involved in environmental science and, from 1993-2004, represented the Weather Channel and was instrumental in the production of "Forecast Earth."

Mr. Denton is an authority on the secession crisis and the author of A Southern Star for Maryland: Maryland, published in 1995, and the Secession Crisis and William Henry Seward and the Secession Crisis: The Effort to Prevent Civil War, published in 2009.


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For information about the Round Table and to apply for membership, see the Tab above marked "About Us/ Membership Information" or click HERE 
CWRT-DC's PREVIOUS MEETING:


TOM HUNTINGTON

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

at Ft. McNair Officers' Club, Washington, DC 

(see directions here) or (download them in pdf here)

6 pm: Social Hour (cash bar)
7 pm: Dinner ($36 for dinner and lecture)
8 pm: Lecture ($5 for lecture only)
Reservations required by 5:00 pm, Thursday, April 7th:  Email (preferred) to susankclaffey@cwrtdc.org or call (202) 306-4988.  For more information about making reservations, visit our Meetup Page by clicking HERE.
http://www.meetup.com/The-Civil-War-Round-Table-of-the-District-of-Columbia/



TOPIC: 
GEORGE GORDON MEADE

About the Topic: (Reprinted from Amazon.com)


While researching Searching for George Gordon Meade: The Forgotten Victor of Gettysburg, author Tom Huntington visited a severed leg, a buried arm, and a horse's head. He also hiked across Civil War battlefields, recited the names of fallen soldiers at a candlelit ceremony at Gettysburg, and drank a champagne toast in a Philadelphia cemetery on New Year's Eve. It was all part of his quest to learn more about the man who commanded the victorious Union army at the Civil War's Battle of Gettysburg, yet has been unfairly overlooked by history in the years since.

Although in command of the Army of the Potomac for a mere three days before the battle, Major General George Gordon Meade managed to defeat Robert E. Lee and the Army of Northern Virginia during three days of vicious fighting. The cantankerous general remained in command of the army for the rest of the war even as he watched his reputation decline. "I suppose after awhile it will be discovered I was not at Gettysburg at all," he griped in a letter to his wife.

Searching for George Gordon Meade is not your typical Civil War biography. While Huntington does tell the story of Meade's life, he also provides first-person accounts of his visits to the battlefields where Meade fought and museums that cover the Civil War. He includes his conversations with experts, enthusiasts, curators, park rangers and even a Meade impersonator to get their insights. The result is a compelling mash-up of history, biography, travel and journalism that touches both past and present.

  • A historian's investigation of the life and times of Gen. George Gordon Meade to discover why the hero of Gettysburg has failed to achieve the status accorded to other generals of the conflict
  • Covers Meade's career from his part in the Mexican-American War through his participation in the great Civil War engagements, including Second Bull Run, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, the Overland Campaign, and Appomattox.
  • Available for the 150th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg
  • Explores Meade's legacy today at reenactments, battlefields, museums, and institutions that preserve history


  • About Our Speaker: 
    As the editor of the late, lamented Historic Traveler magazine, Tom Huntington developed a love for writing that merged stories from the past with journeys of discovery in the present. That was an approach he took with his first two books, Ben Franklin’s Philadelphia and Pennsylvania Civil War Trails. His next book, Searching for George Gordon Meade: The Forgotten Victor of Gettysburg (Stackpole Books, February 2013), will continue that tradition as Mr. Huntington visits battlefields and museums and talks with historians, curators, park rangers and Civil War enthusiasts as he examines the life and reputation of the general who won the pivotal battle of the war.

    Mr. Huntington’s many magazine articles have appeared in American Heritage, Smithsonian, Air & Space, British Heritage, America in WWII, Civil War Times, America’s Civil War, Invention & Technology and many other publications. He lives in Camp Hill, Pennsylvania with his wife, Beth Ann, and his children, Katie and Sam.

    You can contact him at thuntington@stackpolebooks.com.
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    For information about the Round Table and to apply for membership, see the Tab above marked "About Us/ Membership Information" or click HERE