Number 4 (April 1998)

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North & South Magazine, Volume 1, Number 4 (April 1998)
North & South Magazine, Volume 1, Number 4 (April 1998)

96 Pages

Page 6
Editorial
by Keith Poulter

Page 7
Crossfire

Letters to the Editor

Page 8
Featured Museum

Page 10
Al Nofi’s Knapsack
by Al Nofi

Page 14
A Certain Bullheadedness
by W. Todd Groce

Lafayette McLaws did not hold a high opinion of his commander James Longstreet. Groce covers this feud in the article. According to McLaws, Longstreet had “nothing to recommend him as a commander but the possession of a certain bullheadedness.”

Page 23
Do You Know?

Page 24
Battle of the Rams
by Chester G. Hearn

Charles Ellet, Jr., a pre-war bridge builder, took his engineering prowess and came up with a fleet of rams for the Union cause. At the Battle of Memphis on June 6, 1862, the rams played an important role in a complete victory over the Confederate Navy, although Ellet died of blood poisoning not long after the battle as a result of a wound suffered there.

Page 33
Building A Civil War Library
by David J. Eicher

David Eicher discusses ways in which a Civil War buff should approach building a Civil War library of books. Given the fact that there are literally hundreds of new books being published each year, the possibility of buying something not worth your while is a real possibility.

Page 34
Freedom Began Here
by Edward Steers Jr.

The Christiana Riot of 1851 was an important milestone in the movement to free the slaves. Edward Gorsuch, a Baltimore area farmer, had gone to retrieve some of his runaway slaves in the Quaker and free Black community of Christiana. Much to Gorsuch’s surprise, he received no help once there, and faced a fight if he wanted his slaves back. That fight came, and the result made national news when Gorsuch and his son Dickinson were killed.

Page 44
Story of a Poem
by Mel Young

The first two stanzas of “Lines on the Back of a Confederate Note” were featured in Margaret Mitchell’s classic book Gone with the Wind. Mel Young discusses the background of the poem and its author, Samuel Alroy Jonas.

Page 46
The Defense of Battery Wagner
by Hon. Lieut. Col. T.D.D. Twiggs

Many people have seen a rendition of the Union assault on Battery Wagner from the Northern perspective in the movie Glory. This article contains excerpts from T.D.D. Twiggs’ diary, a Confederate officer defending the fort, providing readers with the Southern view.

Page 58
Pickett Before Gettysburg
by Lesley L. Gordon

George Pickett is often depicted as a heroic caricature of a man as the leader of Pickett’s Charge at Gettysburg. Lesley Gordon looks deeper, and finds a human being with flaws and traits all his own.

Page 76
Decision In The West, Part III: Five Battles in Eighteen Days
by Keith Poulter

Editor Keith Poulter describes the part of the Vicksburg Campaign just after Grant crossed the Mississippi, from April 29 to the Battle of the Big Black River, on May 17, 1863. Between those dates, the two armies fought five battles, Port Gibson, Raymond, Jackson, Champion Hill, and the aforementioned Battle of the Big Black River. Grant was now poised to close in on the hilltop citadel on the Mississippi.

Page 88
Briefings

Book Reviews

Page 95
Cover Story

Page 96
Classified Ads

Comments

2 responses to “Number 4 (April 1998)”

  1. Ann Taylor Boutwell Avatar

    Page 44
    Story of a Poem
    by Mel Young

    The first two stanzas of “Lines on the Back of a Confederate Note” were featured in Margaret Mitchell’s classic book Gone with the Wind. Mel Young discusses the background of the poem and its author, Samuel Alroy Jonas.
    For over 14 years have told stories about GWTW author Margaret Mitchell. Previously, read in David O’Connell’s 1996 Irish Roots of Margaret Mitchell that her maternal grandfather wrote the had written the poem. Not true.
    First read Mel Young’s story in March-April 1998 issue of The Jewish Georgian.
    Atlas the original source and note of Hazel Felleman’s 1936 Collection of American People’s favorite poems. Atlanta INtown paper “A Look Back”

  2. Austin Bragg Avatar
    Austin Bragg

    Can anyone provide me with Hon.Lt.Col. T.D.D. Twigg’s account of the defense of Battery Wagner?

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