DWIGHT HUGHES
speaks on
"A CONFEDERATE BIOGRAPHY: THE CRUISE OF THE CSS SHENANDOAH"
Tuesday, December 13, 2016
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)
(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
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.

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