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Category Archives: Ulysses S. Grant (General and President)

Waugh on Grant

02 Monday May 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Ulysses S. Grant (General and President)

≈ 9 Comments

I have always known a fair amount about Ulysses S. Grant.  What I had not known until recently finishing Joan Waugh’s U. S. Grant: American Hero, American Myth was the level of respect held for him by his contemporaries.  This can be summed up in the slogan—“Washington the father, Lincoln the martyr, Grant the savior”—that appeared in print around the time of his death.  Americans were so keen for news on the president’s illness that reporters staked out his Manhattan and Mount McGregor homes for months leading up to his death from throat cancer in July 1885.  To give you a sense of the intensity here are select headlines from the New York Times, just one of the nearly twenty Gotham dailies of the time:

GEN. GRANT NOT SO COMFORTABLE.  March 8, 1885

GEN. GRANT MUCH BETTER.  March 12, 1885

GEN. GRANT’S CONDITION; THE CONTINUED PROGRESS OF THE DISEASE. THE LOCAL DIFFICULTY MARKEDLY INCREASED–BROWN, THE SPECIALIST, NOT ALLOWED TO SEE THE PATIENT.  March 13, 1885

GEN. GRANT’S CONDITION.; EARNEST REMARKS BY MR. BEECHER AT THE PLYMOUTH CHURCH PRAYER MEETING.  March 14, 1885

GEN. GRANT ABOUT THE SAME.  March 16, 1885

GEN. GRANT’S CONDITION.; ANOTHER NIGHT OF SLEEPLESSNESS, BUT RESTING DURING THE DAY.  March 18, 1885

GEN. GRANT’S WEAKNESS; A WEARISOME DAY AND NIGHT FOR THE SUFFERER. SLEEPING IN HIS CHAIR TO PREVENT A RECURRENCE OF THE PAINFUL COUGHING SPELLS–A GREAT LOSS OF STRENGTH.  March 31, 1885

GEN. GRANT MUCH WORSE; ANOTHER SEVERE ATTACK YESTERDAY MORNING.  April  2, 1885

OBTAINING MORE SLEEP; A QUIET NIGHT AND DAY IN THE GRANT HOUSEHOLD.  April 4, 1885

PASSING A WAKEFUL DAY; STILL DESPONDENT, BUT PHYSICALLY COMFORTABLE.  April 6, 1885

Dedication of Grant’s Tomb, April 27, 1897

Americans continued to hold Grant in high esteem until his popularity waned in the 1920s with the institutionalization of Lost Cause historiography and the public aversion to militarism after the carnage of the just-ended Great War.  I think she overstates the case, but Waugh offers an analysis of Grant and his place in history at Salon.  I say overstates because the reinterpretation of Grant has been underway for some time now, with Grant going from bumbling drunk to conscientious public figure in the estimation of most historians.  That said, it is not clear if the general public has caught up with these changes in scholarship;  when my wife and I visited his tomb this past winter I was saddened to see the paucity of visitors.

Waugh talks about the disrepair at various Grant sites across the country.  Thankfully, this is no longer the case at his final resting place.  Last week the new Visitor Center opened in the Overlook Pavilion at Grant’s tomb.

She concludes:

Perhaps the looming Sesquicentennial will bring many Americans to a more knowledgeable and appreciative judgment of the man. Ulysses S. Grant became the embodiment of the American nation in the decades after the Civil War. No living person symbolized both the hopes and the lost dreams of the war more fully than Grant. No living person more clearly articulated for posterity a powerful truth about the Civil War when he wrote in his “Personal Memoirs” of his feelings about Lee and the soldiers he had led and the slave republic they had defended:

“I felt like anything rather than rejoicing at the down fall of a foe who had fought so long and valiantly, and had suffered so much for a cause, though that cause was, I believe, one of the worst for which a people ever fought, and one for which there was the least excuse.”

Grant’s legacy to his own generation was deep and wide, and he became an icon in the historical memory of the war shared by a whole generation of men and women. They believed that an appreciation of Grant could only come with the recognition that he was both the heroic general that saved the Union, and the essential president who made sure that it stayed together.

Read the whole thing.

Grant in Brooklyn

27 Wednesday Apr 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Ulysses S. Grant (General and President)

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Hey everybody, today is Ulysses S. Grant’s birthday. Unfortunately I was not able to attend the ceremonies at Grant’s Tomb today.  Last night I did visit the W. O. Partridge statue in Crown Heights, Brooklyn.


This equestrian statue was designed by William Ordway Partridge.  It is one of two Grants in Brooklyn, the other being under the arch at Grand Army Plaza.

The Union League Club of Brooklyn gave the statue to the city in 1896, eleven years after Grant’s death and one year before the opening of his tomb.  “City” here means Brooklyn, not New York; our fair borough was its own municipality until the merger in 1898.

Technically the club donated the statue on Grant’s birthday, but the ceremony was actually held two days earlier, on the 25th .  Most of the immediate Grant family, including Julia, were in attendance.  The governor and mayors of Brooklyn and New York also shared the stage.  Thousands were on hand for the parade, music, and speeches.  General Horace Porter, who was doing so much in these years to make sure Grant’s mausoleum became reality, delivered the oration.  A teenaged Ulysses S. Grant III—yes, the man who later chaired the United States Civil War Centennial Commission—pulled the cord to unveil the statue.

It was chilly and somewhat rainy that Saturday, but an April day in Brooklyn is always beautiful.  This small garden is directly behind the statue.

The statue stands in front of the Union Club, whose cornerstone was laid in 1889.  The building is a senior citizen home today.  An employee leaving for the day told me they are often asked about the building and statue but were unaware of its history.

These terra cotta reliefs of Lincoln and Grant decorate the exterior.  You can make these out if you look between the arches in the photograph of the Union Club entrance.

One word said it all a hundred and fifteen years ago.

Grant’s Overlook Pavillion

25 Monday Apr 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in National Park Service, Ulysses S. Grant (General and President)

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Okay, it is not that rare a discovery but nonetheless an interesting piece of Grant memorabilia turned up in New York last week.  Those who know me know that I love stories of Recently Found Long Lost Items.

(Source: Beinecke Rare Books & Manuscript Library, Yale University; Courtesy: Wikimedia Commons)

Grant’s 189th birthday is this coming Wednesday and the Park Service has scheduled a day’s worth of events at his tomb.  The best news is that the Overlook Pavilion will be rededicated after an extensive renovation.  The NPS has done a great job refurbishing the mausoleum after the dark years of the 1970s and 1980s.  Things had gotten so bad with crime and graffiti that in the early 1990s the general’s descendants began talking of moving his and Julia’s remains to Illinois if something were not done.  My wife and I went to Grant’s Tomb in the winter and I cannot recommend strongly enough that you visit.

Ulysses Grant Dietz

11 Monday Apr 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Monuments and Statuary, Museums, Ulysses S. Grant (General and President)

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The USA Today has a short interview with General Grant’s great-great grandson.  Dietz is an author, senior curator, and curator of decorative arts at the Newark Museum in New Jersey.  I have been to the Newark Museum several times over the years and can attest that it is one of the finest museums in the nation.  Sadly many don’t visit because of the location.  The best way to experience the Newark Museum is to visit the site and then have dinner in the Ironbound District.  Both are within walking distance of Newark Penn Station.

An added bonus is the nearby Gutzon Borglum statue of Lincoln.  An audience in the thousands watched Theodore Roosevelt dedicate Borglum’s statue on May 30, 1911.

(Courtesy: Wikimedia Commons)

(Thanksgiving Friday, 2009)

See you at the sites,

Keith

 

Ulysses S. Grant V

10 Thursday Mar 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Ulysses S. Grant (General and President)

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…died last week.  The general’s great-grandson was born in 1920 and had become the guardian of the family legacy.  It will be interesting to see what happens with the artifacts mentioned in this brief piece.

Last great-grandson of Ulysses S. Grant dies

By Heather Hollingsworth

The Associated Press

The last surviving great-grandson of Ulysses S. Grant has died in a southwest Missouri home brimming with artifacts from the nation’s 18th president and commander of the Union forces in the Civil War.

Ulysses S. Grant V spent part of his youth in the home of his grandfather, Jesse Grant, who was the late president’s youngest son. Jesse Grant’s wife, Elizabeth, is credited with helping to save the artifacts.

As an adult, Grant V became a custodian to the items — including his famous relative’s letters, his will, his China and even the flag said to have flown over the Appomattox Court House when Robert E. Lee surrendered. Some of the items have been sold in recent years.

“It was everywhere growing up,” said Grant V’s grandson, Ulysses S. Grant VI. “It was an everyday part of our life.”

Grant VI said his grandfather died Wednesday at age 90 at his home near the Springfield-area town of Battlefield, which received its name for its proximity to a Civil War clash. He had suffered a stroke previously.

Grant VI said Grant V was “proud of his heritage” and “the smartest man I ever met.” He said they had a special relationship because he was born on his grandfather’s 50th birthday.

Grant V called him Sam — a nickname the late president’s West Point classmates gave him because his initials, “U.S.,” reminded them of “Uncle Sam.” In reality, the general was actually born Hiram Ulysses Grant, but the congressman who submitted his name to West Point mixed it up. Grant adopted the new name.

His great-grandson, Grant V, followed in his great-grandfather’s footsteps, serving in World War II and Korea. He later owned an avocado-growing operation in California and designed buildings before moving to Missouri to be closer to family.

Keya Morgan, who collects Grant memorabilia and is writing a book and making a film about the general, struck up a friendship with Grant V. Morgan called his death “the end of an era.”

“He was a historian,” said Morgan, who also is serving as a spokesman for the family. “He kept his family’s history intact.”

Civil War subway trip

28 Monday Feb 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in National Park Service, New York City, Subway trips, Ulysses S. Grant (General and President)

≈ 1 Comment

Hey everybody,

This past Saturday the Hayfoot and I took the A train to a site that, sadly, most New Yorkers no longer visit: Grant’s Tomb.  For decades after it was dedicated in 1897, the mausoleum was one of the most visited places in Manhattan.  Tens of thousands from across the country turned out annually to pay their respects.  Now, as you can see, that is no longer the case.  That’s the Mrs. on the far left.

The National Park Service acquired the General Grant National Memorial, as it is properly called, in 1959.  We took in a discussion led by a very knowledgeable ranger.  There aren’t many displays but the ones they do have are informative and cover Grant’s career in its entirety.

These regimental flags are reproductions

…with the exception of this one that belonged to the 11th Indiana, Colonel Lew Wallace commanding.  It was covered with glass, which is why the photo is a bit difficult to make out.

In a rare misstep, the Park Service built these benches around the perimeter of the tomb in the 1970s.  I think they were trying to be relevant.

In a better use of the space, the public area outside has been a regular stop on Harlem’s Jazzmobile going back nearly five decades.  We’re going to try to get up there this summer.

It opened in 1897 at the height of the reconciliation phase.

Hayfoot and Strawfoot

The final resting place of President and Mrs. Ulysses S. Grant.

And then it was on to Ethiopian cuisine in Harlem.

Thanks for checking in.

Keith

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