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Presidents Day 2018

19 Monday Feb 2018

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Theodore Roosevelt Sr (Father), Union League Club

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I have spent the weekend wrapping up the penultimate chapter in my Civil War book, which ends with the death of Theodore Roosevelt Sr. in February 1878. As it happened I was writing yesterday of President Rutherford B. Hayes’s May 1877 trip to New York City. Hayes, wife Lucy, and much of the cabinet came to New York for a very public series of events spread over a few days. In today’s parlance, we would say that Hayes was consolidating his base. He actually had lost Manhattan to Samuel J. Tilden quite handily in the 1876 presidential election, on his way to losing the overall popular vote. Much of Hayes’s support came from individuals like Theodore Roosevelt Sr., John Jay, Joseph H. Choate and their allies in organizations such as the Union League Club. Roosevelt was at just about every one of the public and private gatherings held in Hayes’s honor.

Contemporary photograph of Fitz-Greene Halleck statue in Central Park

The dedication depicted here took place on 15 May 1877. A short list of those on hand to see President Hayes dedicate the statue to poet Fitz-Greene Halleck includes William Cullen Bryant, William M. Evarts and Carl Schurz, Generals Winfield Scott Hancock and William Tecumseh Sherman, and former New York governor Edwin D. Morgan. The Seventh Regiment Band played. After this event Hayes toured the American Museum of Natural History in its temporary quarters within the Central Park Arsenal escorted by Theodore Roosevelt Sr. It is strange how in popular memory we tend to jump from Lincoln to Theodore Roosevelt, dismissing the administrations that came between. Abe and Teddy are the subjects of considerably more biographies than all the others between. I believe we serve ourselves poorly and that it is our loss for not doing so.

Enjoy your Presidents Day, everyone.

(images/top, NYPL; bottom, unknown photographer via Wikimedia Commons)

Oh, sleep, that hast fled away

13 Thursday Jul 2017

Posted by Keith Muchowski in New York City, Union League Club

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They fight, but we must weep
For our boys that are gone and dead,
God send the sleep we cannot sleep
To every soldier s bed!

I was at the New York Public Library yesterday reading through issues of The Spirit of the Fair, the newspaper published during the Metropolitan Fair of April 1864. The fair was held by the Union League Club and U.S. Sanitary Commission, effectively the same thing, in April 1864 as a fundraiser for The Sanitary. The lines above are an excerpt from a poem published in the newspaper. Here are a few photos I took along the way.

They are available electronically but there is nothing like holding the real thing in your hands. The issues have held up quite well and show no signs of yellowing. I’m sure they used rag paper and not newspaper pulp.

The provenance of how these types of materials reach libraries and archives is a fascinating story in and of itself. The Reverend Henry Bellows donated the Sanitary Commission papers to NYPL around 1890. As we can see here, this item arrived independent of Bellows’s gift.

I love the stamp. That said, there were no “best practices” in the late nineteenth century to tell conservators not to mark up historical items. The ad for the Complete Works of Washington Irving is a nice touch. These books and other items were on sale at the fair, with the proceeds going to soldiers’ relief.

 

 

 

Sunday morning coffee

22 Sunday Jan 2017

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Theodore Roosevelt Sr (Father), Union League Club, Writing

≈ 2 Comments

Edwin Forbes drawing of the January 1863 Mud March

The January 1863 Mud March as depicted by Edwin Fobes

I’m listening to Debussy as I type this. It is ideal Sunday morning music. I’m having my coffee and gearing up to write a few hundred words on the Roosevelt Sr./Olmsted/Dodge manuscript. I’ll do some tweaking and editing while I listen to the AFC title game tonight. I don’t know if this is unusual but I am writing the book in chronological order; when I began I started the monograph in the 1830s and am now up to January 1863. My story ends in 1878 with Roosevelt’s death. In a small coincidence General Ambrose Burnside’s disastrous Mud March took place 154 years ago this week, right when I was discussing it yesterday. Lincoln replaced Burnside with Hooker a few days later. The disastrous Union offensive added urgency to Olmsted and Wolcott Gibbs’s  creation of the Union League Club, which though in the works since November 1862 came into being in February.

This was a productive week. I was able to generate over 4000 words. As I mentioned in a post the other day, this is the winter when I bring it all together. I have been working on this for 3 1/2 years now, with many–many–side projects mixed in there along the way as well. The target is to finish the draft by mid spring and to not be writing new material come summer. The semester begins a week from tomorrow, and while I will be doing my usual duties I will not be teaching this term. I asked out because the idea is to cut down on the distractions. Winter 2017 rolls along.

(image/NYPL)

 

Francis in Philadelphia

10 Monday Aug 2015

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Gettysburg, Museums, Union League Club

≈ 2 Comments

Gettysburg National Cemetery

Gettysburg National Cemetery

I read with interest that when Pope Francis appears next month at Philadelphia’s Independence Hall he will be speaking from the lecturn used by Abraham Lincoln when the president gave the Gettysburg Address. The podium, originally part of Wert Collection, is currently on longterm loan to the Union League Club of Philadelphia. I have never visited the Union Club in Philadelphia, but I have been inside the one here in New York. Both institutions date to winter 1863 and have vast collections of Civil War and Gilded Age memorabilia.

I was a little surprised to read that the podium had ever even belonged to the Wert Collection. I have been in many of the shops along Steinwehr Avenue and have seen many Gettysburg relics for sale. Locals such as John Rosensteel and J. Howard Wert began collecting the battle’s detritus within hours of the fighting’s end. (I have been to Belgium and north France, where I have seen the same phenomenon relating to Ypres, the Battle of the Marne, and elsewhere.) The Rosensteel Collection today forms the base of the Park Service’s vast holdings. If Wert is to believed, some of the bullets and shrapnel pieces were still hot when he gathered them in the days immediately after the battle.

What surprised me was that Wert had even acquired the lecturn to begin with. He apparently obtained it right there and then just after Lincoln’s speech on November 19, 1863, adding it to his already extensive collection of Gettysburg relics.

New York’s social set

18 Thursday Jun 2015

Posted by Keith Muchowski in New York City, Union League Club

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Union League Club, 1919

17 February 1919: Much of New York City turned out to see the return of the 15th NY “Harlem Hellfighters” after their recent return from France. Here Union League Club members review the 15th as they pass the clubhouse.

An interesting piece from Curbed NY about long-standing New York City social clubs came through my in-box. This is something I am especially interested in because the Union League Club plays an important part in my manuscript about Civil War New York. The article traces the history of such clubs all the way back to the colonial period where bewigged men socialized in coffee shops. Soon such meeting places were soon privatized to keep out the rabble. Subtly is sometimes the price for brevity. I think the author simplifies the story of the ULC’s creation in 1863. At the risk of further quibbling, I don’t know if such clubs have “fallen” either. Though it is true that some are doing less well than others, it is difficult to imagine these staid institutions going anywhere anytime soon. New ones are even cropping up to meet the needs of twenty-first century New Yorkers.

There is a tendency to snub one’s nose at such institutions but they played, and still play, an important role in the fabric of the city. Just to stay with the Union League Club for a minute, it is difficult to imagine how New York City could have contributed so much to the Civil War effort without the ULC. It was important, albeit to a lesser extent, during the First World War as well. The Union League Club sponsored many of the Negro regiments in the Great War, just as it had fifty years earlier during the Rebellion. Many members themselves also served in uniform from 1917-19.

Today in the twenty-first century the clubs that remain are important cultural centers. They also provide a sense of continuity. You may recall my writing about visiting The Players NYC on the anniversary of Appomattox.

(image/Underwood & Underwood, Photographer (NARA record: 1123804) (U.S. National Archives and Records Administration) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons)

 

Sanford Robinson Gifford on sale, cont’d

11 Wednesday Dec 2013

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Museums, Union League Club

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Sunday Morning in the Camp of the Seventh Regiment near Washington, D.C., in May 1861

Sunday Morning in the Camp of the Seventh Regiment near Washington, D.C., in May 1861

Update: Surprisingly Gifford’s Sunday Morning did not sell at last week’s auction. I am even more surprised because another work by the Hudson River School artist did so. I am wondering if the Civil War-themed piece was considered too subject specific by collectors. It will be interesting to see what eventually happens with this work.

Christie’s is auctioning Sanford Robinson Gifford’s Sunday Morning in the Camp of the Seventh Regiment near Washington, D.C., in May 1861. The “Silk Stocking Regiment” was one of the first to arrive in the nation’s capitol after the firing on Fort Sumter. The painting has been in the collection of the New York Union League Club since 1871, when it was acquired from the artist. The work is fascinating on many levels: as a historical artifact; a visual representation of the early months of the Rebellion, when it still seemed possible that it would be over quickly (First Bull Run was still two months in the future; note the relaxed poses of the individuals in the scene.); and oh yes, as a work of art. We focus so much on the photographers of the Civil War–Brady, Gardner, et al–that we sometimes forget that it was the painters and sketch artists who gave us much of the war’s visual representation. One can see the unfinished U.S. Capitol and Washington Monument off in the distance.

This work by the Hudson River School artist has been exhibited generously many times over the decades. Sunday Morning was also on loan to the White House from the Ford through Reagan Administrations as well. The auction of this and other American art will be on December 5th. The previous auction for a Gifford is $2.1 million. This work is expected to sell somewhere in the range of $3-$5 million. Someone is going to have a nice Christmas.

(image/Christie’s)

Christie’sMore Information: http://artdaily.com/index.asp?int_sec=11&int_new=66244#.UozhSSeJI1J[/url]
Copyright © artdaily.org
Sanford Robinson Gifford’sMore Information: http://artdaily.com/index.asp?int_sec=11&int_new=66244#.UozVcSeJI1I[/url]
Copyright © artdaily.org
Sanford Robinson Gifford’s Sunday Morning in the Camp of the Seventh Regiment near Washington, D.C., in May 1861More Information: http://artdaily.com/index.asp?int_sec=11&int_new=66244#.UozVcSeJI1I[/url]
Copyright © artdaily.org
Sanford Robinson Gifford’s Sunday Morning in the Camp of the Seventh Regiment near Washington, D.C., in May 1861More Information: http://artdaily.com/index.asp?int_sec=11&int_new=66244#.UozVcSeJI1I[/url]
Copyright © artdaily.org

Sanford Robinson Gifford on sale

20 Wednesday Nov 2013

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Museums, Union League Club

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Sunday Morning in the Camp of the Seventh Regiment near Washington, D.C., in May 1861

Sunday Morning in the Camp of the Seventh Regiment near Washington, D.C., in May 1861

Christie’s is auctioning Sanford Robinson Gifford’s Sunday Morning in the Camp of the Seventh Regiment near Washington, D.C., in May 1861. The “Silk Stocking Regiment” was one of the first to arrive in the nation’s capitol after the firing on Fort Sumter. The painting has been in the collection of the New York Union League Club since 1871, when it was acquired from the artist. The work is fascinating on many levels: as a historical artifact; a visual representation of the early months of the Rebellion, when it still seemed possible that it would be over quickly (First Bull Run was still two months in the future; note the relaxed poses of the individuals in the scene.); and oh yes, as a work of art. We focus so much on the photographers of the Civil War–Brady, Gardner, et al–that we sometimes forget that it was the painters and sketch artists who gave us much of the war’s visual representation. One can see the unfinished U.S. Capitol and Washington Monument off in the distance.

This work by the Hudson River School artist has been exhibited generously many times over the decades. Sunday Morning was also on loan to the White House from the Ford through Reagan Administrations as well. The auction of this and other American art will be on December 5th. The previous auction for a Gifford is $2.1 million. This work is expected to sell somewhere in the range of $3-$5 million. Someone is going to have a nice Christmas.

(image/Christie’s)

Christie’sMore Information: http://artdaily.com/index.asp?int_sec=11&int_new=66244#.UozhSSeJI1J[/url]
Copyright © artdaily.org
Sanford Robinson Gifford’sMore Information: http://artdaily.com/index.asp?int_sec=11&int_new=66244#.UozVcSeJI1I[/url]
Copyright © artdaily.org
Sanford Robinson Gifford’s Sunday Morning in the Camp of the Seventh Regiment near Washington, D.C., in May 1861More Information: http://artdaily.com/index.asp?int_sec=11&int_new=66244#.UozVcSeJI1I[/url]
Copyright © artdaily.org
Sanford Robinson Gifford’s Sunday Morning in the Camp of the Seventh Regiment near Washington, D.C., in May 1861More Information: http://artdaily.com/index.asp?int_sec=11&int_new=66244#.UozVcSeJI1I[/url]
Copyright © artdaily.org

Easter morning coffee

31 Sunday Mar 2013

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

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Ad Meskens

Happy Easter. I am sitting in the living room with my coffee and Kind of Blue is on the turntable. The windows open to the early spring warmth.

I was having a brief back-and-forth online the other day with someone about Grant’s Tomb. Specifically, we were talking about how far the monument had fallen during New York City’s lost years in the 1970s and 1980s. This excellent piece in yesterday’s Wall Street by Dennis Montagna of the Park Service about the Grant Memorial on the grounds of the national capitol got me thinking even harder about various Grant statues and monuments I have seen over the years. Built from roughly 1885-1922, the monuments initially reflected the nation’s sentiments for the man many put in the same class with Washington and Lincoln. After the horrors of the First World War the Grant the Butcher meme took hold and his standing went down precipitously in the coming decades. To visit Grant Cottage in Upstate New York one must enter the grounds of a medium security prison. People walk past the beautiful Grant statue in Brooklyn, across the street from what was the Union Cub, everyday without think twice about it. When I visited two years ago a woman who worked in the adjacent building said they always wondered who it was, which struck me as odd because his name in on the pedestal. Oh well.

In a sense these things are inevitable. It is not even just Grant. I have seen beautiful statues of Lincoln in places like Newark and Jersey City that are visited by no one except the homeless who now inhabit those areas. Time moves on. Demographics change. Once thriving industrial areas that could afford a statue in, say, 1913 have better thing to worry about a hundred years later. The recent immigrants of Flatbush–and it is the immigrants who have revitalized Brooklyn in the past 25-30 years–are concerned with educating there kids and moving on to bigger and better things, not the particulars of the old statuary in their neighborhood.

The major ones deserve are our attention, though. Great things have been done to revitalize the vicinity around Grant’s Tomb in Upper Manhattan. Hopefully, strides will be taken with the Grant Memorial on the capitol grounds. It would be great if they got rid of the ugly reflecting pool for starters. The Grant bicentennial (1822-2022) is just nine short years away.

(image/Ad Meskens)

The Loyal Publication Society, cont’d

07 Thursday Feb 2013

Posted by Keith Muchowski in New York City, Union League Club

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Here is the second in a two part series about the Loyal Publication Society of New York, which is part of a larger project I am working on about William E. Dodge Jr. and Theodore Roosevelt. Part one can be found here.

Soon after the founding of the Union League in February 1863 its Loyal Publication Society opened headquarters at 863 Broadway. Its mission was to counteract secessionist and Copperhead propaganda, bolster support in and for the Federal Army, and promote the Union cause among voters in the 1863 and 1864 elections. The reason it was necessary was because the Administration was not up to the task. Public outreach was a staple of the First and Second World Wars in the form of the Committee on Public Information and Office of War Information, but no such agencies existed during the War of the Rebellion. The Administration was just too overwhelmed with military and political matters to take on the added responsibility. Bolstering Union support was crucial in the early months of 1863, when the North was reeling from a string of military defeats and political crises, and the LPS wasted no time in getting down to business. The New York Loyal Publication Society was structured into three committees: a Publication committee that selected documents, an Executive that distributed them to the Army down south and to local communities in the north and west, and a Finance that collected the funds necessary to carry out these endeavors. Charles King was the Society’s first president but its driving force was Francis Lieber, the Society’s initial Publication Committee chairman, eventual chief executive, and overall driving force.

Solider, professor, and jurist Francis Lieber

Solider, professor, and jurist Francis Lieber

A great champion of human liberty, Lieber was born in Germany and had fought in the Prussian army against Napoleon at Waterloo. In 1829, after emigrating to the United States, the jurist became editor of the Encyclopedia Americana. Lieber had a deep understanding of the American South, having served as Professor of History and Political Economy at South Carolina College for twenty-two years before moving to Columbia University. In the months prior to the founding of the Union League and its Publication Society Lieber had authored General Order Number 100, or Instruction for the Government of Armies of the United States in the Field, the code that established laws for American soldiers during time of war. President Lincoln approved the Lieber Code on April 24, 1863.

The Publication Committee met thirty-nine times and considered just over one hundred publications in the Society’s first year. The Executive Committee eventually chose forty three pamphlets and twelve broadsides for distribution. The Society printed and distributed 400,000 copies of these items. Subjects were chosen to focus on the concerns of soldiers, women, immigrants, working-class men, Democrats, Catholics, abolitionists, and Southern Unionists. A representative sampling of titles includes: “A few words in behalf of Loyal Women of the United States,” by One of Themselves; “No Party now, but all for our Country,” by Francis Lieber; “Address to King Cotton,” by Eugene Pelletan; “Emancipation is Peace,” by Robert Dale Owen; and “Letters on our National Struggle,” by Brigadier General Thomas Francis Meagher.” The Meagher pamphlet is especially noteworthy. Like Lieber, Meagher was an immigrant who had been active in European affairs as a young man before settling in the United States. Meagher was a well-known Irish nationalist who eventually became a high-ranking officer in the Union Army. He appealed to religious and ethnic constituencies in both the Union Army and public-at-large, and his inclusion was quite intentional.

The New York Loyal Publication Society existed for three years and published eighty-nine pamphlets, broadsides, and reports during its lifetime. It collaborated closely with similar organization in Boston and Philadelphia as well, and together they distributed hundreds of thousands of publications to soldiers in the field and civilians on the home front.. The Society was instrumental in the 1863 re-election of Pennsylvania Governor Andrew Curtin, a key Lincoln supporter. In 1864 the Publication Society worked rigorously on behalf of Lincoln’s re-election. As the war wound down in 1865 the Society began publishing less and less. Lieber and his colleagues declared victory soon thereafter. At the annual meeting on February 27, 1866 the Society members voted to disband, secure in the knowledge that they had done their part for Union and Emancipation.

(image/Brady Studio, Library of Congress)

The Loyal Publication Society

06 Wednesday Feb 2013

Posted by Keith Muchowski in New York City, Union League Club

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A few weeks ago I mentioned that I will be attending the New York History conference in Cooperstown in early June. My talk is going to be on the professional relationship between William E. Dodge Jr. and Theodore Roosevelt. One of the many organizations in which they worked together was the The Union League Club of New York. The Union Club was founded on February 6, 1863–150 years ago today. To note the occasion here is a piece I have written about the Loyal Publication Society, the League’s public relations apparatus responsible for what we would now call public diplomacy.

The midterm elections of 1862 were all the proof Americans—Northern and Southern alike—needed that the Union war effort was not going well. The Republican Party maintained its majorities in the U.S. House and Senate, if just barely. Things were not so dire in the Senate; when the third of that body up for election submitted to the will of the people, the Party of Lincoln gained two seats. The House was a different story. After the country had gone to the polls to elect their local congressmen that fall the Republicans lost twenty-three seats while the Democrats picked up twenty-eight, a fifty-one count turn-around. Republicans fared no better in many state legislatures, losing either significant majorities or control outright of many Northern state houses.

The gubernatorial elections were no less alarming. Joel Parker, Democrat and vociferous Lincoln critic, won the New Jersey governor’s mansion. The most stinging defeat came in New York, the nation’s most populous state and the one providing the most men to the war effort. Horatio Seymour now controlled the executive mansion in Albany. Diarist George Templeton Strong captured that mood when he wrote on November 5 that “Seymour is governor. [and] Elsewhere defeat, or nominal success by a greatly reduced vote. It looks like a great, sweeping revolution of public sentiment, like general abandonment of the loyal, generous spirit of patriotism that broke out so nobly and unexpectedly in April, 1861.”

President Abraham Lincoln understood the magnitude of the Republican defeat, and its reasons, as well as anyone. Writing to General Carl Schurz on October 10 he averred that “Three main causes told the whole story. 1. The democrats were left in a majority by our friends going to the war. 2. The democrats observed this & determined to re-instate themselves in power, and 3. Our newspapers, by vilifying and disparaging the administration, furnished them all the weapons to do it with.” Lincoln was correct, but the causes of the Administration’s unpopularity ran even deeper. When the conflict began a year and a half earlier most expected a short war of perhaps three months. Union defeats–and casualties–were soon mounting. First and Second Bull Run, Ball’s Bluff, and other Confederate victories became synonymous in Northern minds with Union incompetence and futility. Even the victories were costly, as the reports from Shiloh and photographs from Sharpsburg illustrated.

Defeat was one thing, treachery another. When Lincoln released the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation on September 22, days after the slim Union victory at Antietam, many Northerners felt betrayed. The proclamation played into the hands of Lincoln’s detractors, who used the document to stoke the fears of the many Northerners who had supported the cause of Union not emancipation. Two days later, on September 24, 1862, Lincoln issued another, equally controversial proclamation, suspending the writ of habeas corpus. Such was the milieu when Northerners began going to the polls one month later.

Samuel F.B. Morse: artist, inventor, Confederate supporter

Samuel F.B. Morse: artist, inventor, Confederate supporter

Loyal unionists also grasped the seriousness of the Union plight. In the summer and fall of 1862 citizens organized into Union Leagues throughout the mid-West to assist in the war effort. Such grassroots organizations were not new in American society. The Sons of Liberty were active during the colonial era, and Hickory Clubs were common in the Age of Jackson. Now, as the crisis intensified after the Union defeat at Fredericksburg in December 1862, the wealthy Northeast establishment organized Union League clubs as well. The Union League Club of New York was officially founded on February 6, 1863. On February 14 members of the nascent organization met in the home of the attorney and co-founder of Union Theological Seminary Charles Butler, 13 East 14th Street, to form a Loyal Publication Society. In its own words the object of the Society was “the distribution of journals and documents of unquestionable and unconditional loyalty throughout the United States, and particularly in the armies now engaged in the suppression of the rebellion, and to counteract as far as practicable the efforts now being made by the enemies of the Government and the advocates of a disgraceful Peace.”

“Advocates of a disgraceful Peace” was a reference to August Belmont, Samuel F. B.Morse and other Northerners with Southern sympathies who had founded the Society for the Diffusion of Political Knowledge the very evening before just down the street at Delmonico’s. This society’s purposes were to oppose Lincoln, his party, and emancipation, the Emancipation Proclamation having gone into effect just the month before. With Morse as president the Society soon began publishing pieces defending its Southern allies. One representative tract asked, “Who has constituted the two races physically different? There can be but one answer, it is God. To attempt, therefore a removal of this corner-stone . . . is of so presumptuous a character, that few should be rash enough to undertake it.” Corner-stone was an allusion to Confederate Vice President Alexander Stephens’s March 1861 speech explaining that slavery and racial inferiority were the corner-stones upon which secession lay.

Tomorrow, Part 2: The Loyal Publication Society begins its work

(image/daguerrotype of Samuel Morse by Macbeth Gallery, Smithsonian)

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