The ‘Herkimer Regiment’ Goes to War on July 3, 1861

News from New York State Division of Military & Naval Affairs

(Saratoga Springs, NY – July 1, 2011)(readMedia) On Wednesday, July 3, 1861 most Herkimer County residents were getting ready to celebrate Independence Day.

But the 733 men of the 34th New York Infantry, known as “The Herkimer Regiment” because that’s where most of them came from, were heading off to what was then called “the seat of war.”

Although it was nicknamed in honor of Herkimer County, only half of the regiment’s 10 companies had been recruited there.

Company B , commanded by Capt. Wells Sponable had been raised in Little Falls; Company C had been recruited by Capt. James Suiter in Norway; Company F had been recruited in Herkimer by Capt. Byron Laflin and Capt. Suiter had also raised Company G in the county’s biggest town. Finally Capt. John Beverly had recruited Company K in Salisbury.

But A Company came from Albany County, while Companies I and E were recruited in Steuben County, Company D came from Clinton County and Company H hailed from Essex County. But because the unit commander, Col. William LaDue, was a Herkimer County militia officer and most of the men were recruited there, it became known as the Herkimer Regiment.

The five companies from Herkimer County were accepted into State Service on May 1, 1861, while the other companies were accepted later as they arrived at the Albany training site. The entire regiment was accepted into New York’s service on May 24, 1861.

During the Civil War each state was responsible for enlisting Soldiers into units and providing those Soldiers with their first issue of equipment. These “volunteer” regiments-which were supposed to be composed of 10 companies of 100 Soldiers each– were then accepted into service by the United State Army.

The state of New York, for example, spent $44,679.81 equipping the men of the 34th New York Volunteer Infantry.

This was the pattern the American Military had followed from Revolutionary War until the Spanish American War. The states raised units and named them, either –the 2nd Massachusetts or the 5th New York-and each unit had a strong state flavor.

This system of recruiting units by state lasted until World War I when state designations disappeared from unit names.

Thus the 69th New York Infantry, a National Guard unit from New York City that fought in the Civil War as the 69th New York Volunteer Infantry, went to that war as the 165th Infantry Regiment, United States Army.

These volunteer infantry units enlisted for two or three years, depending on who was doing the recruiting.

On June 15, 1861 the Herkimer Regiment was accepted into the United States Army and on July 3 the men got on railroad cars and headed for Washington D.C. where the Union’s main Army was gathering.

Over the next two years the Soldiers of the 34th New York would distinguish themselves.

They fought at the Battles of Fair Oaks and Seven Pines and the Battle of Malvern Hill during General George B. McClellan’s Peninsular Campaign in June and July of 1862 . At the Battle of Antietam in September 1862 the unit took heavy losses.

Forty-five men were killed or mortally wounded, Lieutenant Armineas Rounds, 1 other officer and 96 enlisted men were wounded and Lieutenant John Kirk and 9 enlisted men missing or captured out of 311 men engaged.

The unit’s performance at Antietam, one of the key battles of the Civil War is marked by a monument on the battlefield erected in 1902 by survivors of the regiment and Herkimer County.

But, as in any organization, there were problems

On Saturday, October 12, 1861 two members of Company G took to drinking. Soon Lawrence Rooney and Hiram Bush were in an argument. According to a newspaper item at the time:

“High words passed; the quarrel has subsided, and Bush retired a short space from the scene; when he was heard to say, “He has said enough,” and suddenly Rooney exclaimed, “He has stuck me!”

He had stabbed Rooney fearfully with a large dirk knife, tearing open his stomach, and letting out his bowels. This occurred at about 10 P. M., and about 8 A. M. the next day Rooney died. Bush, by direction ofour Brigadier General, was turned over to the civil authority.

Yesterday, we escorted him to Rochville, shire town of Montgomery County, Md., where his case was brought before a magistrate, and he was committed to jail to await his trial, which is to come off next November. Bush and Rooney were both good soldiers, and it is needless

to add that bad whisky was the cause of the tragedy, which was a fatal to one and put the other on trial for murder.

Our commanders have been very decided against the “ardent,” but it was smuggled in from a shanty on the canal, and we have seen its accustomed fruits.”

The different dates on which Soldiers were recruited and then the unit was accepted by into state and then federal service also caused problems later.

When April 30 , 1863 rolled around , 60 Soldiers who had enlisted on May 1 argued that their two years of service were up and they wanted to go home. They would fight, the Soldier told their commanders, but they would not do duty otherwise. But the War Department had decided their 2 years of service ended on June 15, 1863.

The mutinous Soldiers were placed under guard by the brigade commander and separated from the other soldiers. The commander Gen Sully decided that the best way to end this rebellion was to threaten to shoot a few of the ringleaders. Another regiment was brought in with loaded muskets and the 60 Soldiers who wanted to go home right away decided it was better to wait a few months than be shot outright.

So in June 1863 the Soldiers of the Herkimer Regiment returned home, first to Albany where they were greeted with a free lunch and thanks at the Delancy House, a local restaurant and then to their homes.

Over the course of their military service the Herkimer Regiment lost 101 Soldiers Killed in Action, 30 Soldiers died of wounds, 100 who died of sickness and six who died of accidental wounds. Another 119 Soldiers were mustered out because of their injuries and 73 deserted. Of the 1016 Soldiers who eventually served in the Herkimer Regiment, only 536 came home with the unit.

More than 500,000 New Yorkers enlisted in the Army and Navy during the four years of the Civil War and 53,114 New Yorkers died. Throughout the period of the Civil War Sesquicentennial observance, the New York State Division of Military and Naval Affairs will produce short articles about New York’s Civil War experience researched by the New York State Military Museum in Saratoga Springs.

For more information, go the NewYork State Military Museum Civil War Timeline Website at http://dmna.state.ny.us/civilwar

 

Great Lakes Seaway Trail Now Part of Blue Star Museums Program

(Sackets Harbor, NY – June 29, 2011) The Seaway Trail Discovery Center in Sackets Harbor  is now a Blue Star Museum.

The Blue Star Museums program is an initiative of the National Endowment for the Arts with Blue Star Families, an organization that raises awareness of the challenges and strengths of military family life- and more than 1,300 participating museums across America. The museums, nature center, historic and cultural sites provide free admission spouses and families of active military.

More than one million children in the U.S. have had at least one parent deployed. The program provides the free admission to affected families through Labor Day, Sept. 5, 2011.

“The Great Lakes Seaway Trail is pleased to partner with the National Endowment of the Arts in this initiative to provide military families with opportunities to learn about the byway region and the activities and destinations found only along our freshwater shoreline,” says Seaway Trail, Inc. President and CEO Teresa Mitchell. “By visiting the Seaway Trail Discovery Center which showcases the entire 518-mile National Scenic Byway, they will discover a diversity of recreational, historic, cultural, natural and scenic travel opportunities.”

The Great Lakes Seaway Trail Discovery Center is located along the Sackets Harbor waterfront in the three-story, native limestone former Union Hotel built in 1817. The free admission will apply to daytime visits and evening programming at the Center.

Upcoming 6:30pm programs feature US Lacrosse Hall of Fame Coach Kirk Ventiquattro on Saturday, July 9 and Onondaga Nation lacrosse stickmaker, coach and retired professional lacrosse player Alfie Jacques on Saturday, July 16.

There are 14 Blue Star Museums on Great Lakes Seaway Trail that stretches out with 518 miles for leisure driving and freshwater vacations along the St. Lawrence River, Lake Ontario, Niagara River and Lake Erie in New York and Pennsylvania. Those sites are:

Antique Boat Museum – Clayton, NY
Col. William Bond-Jesse Hawley House – Lockport, NY
Edinboro Area Historical Society – Edinboro, PA
Erie Canal Discovery Center – Lockport, NY
The Erie Maritime Museum & U.S. Brig Niagara – Erie, PA
Great Lakes Seaway Trail Discovery Center – Sackets Harbor, NY
Historic Palmyra – Palmyra, NY
Hornby School Museum – North East, PA
Memorial Art Gallery of the University of Rochester – Rochester, NY
Niagara County History Center – Lockport, NY
North Tonawanda History Museum – North Tonawanda, NY
Seneca-Iroquois National Museum – Salamanca, NY
Seward House Museum – Auburn, NY
Sodus Bay Lighthouse Museum – Sodus Point, NY.

More than 300,000 military families benefitted from the Blue Star Museums program in 2010.

The 2011 Great Lakes Seaway Trail Travel Magazine is being distributed to military personnel at Fort Drum, located approximately 25 miles northeast of Sackets Harbor.

For more information, go online to www.arts.gov/bluestarmuseums and www.seawaytrail.com, 315-646-1000.

 

Admiral Thanks Sylvan Beach Flotilla for his start in Coast Guard

MichaelParks-CAPCadets317a1

(Sylvan Beach – June 5) It’s not often that an admiral visits a local Coast Guard Auxiliary base, but Rear Admiral Michael N. Parks said he went out of his way to participate in commissioning of Sylvan Beach Flotilla 26 for the 2011 boating season.

It was like coming home, he told a crowd of over 150 active duty and auxiliary Coast Guard personnel and guests June 5.

“This is where I got my start in the Coast Guard,” Parks said.

Admiral Parks, commander of the Ninth Coast Guard District, grew up in the town of Brookfield. His mom, Charlotte, still lives near there in the village of Waterville.

He pointed to his high school guidance counselor, Carter Stephenson, who had told him about a week-long program to introduce high school juniors to the Coast Guard Academy and Coast Guard life. And Flotilla 26 sponsored him. The experience led him to apply to the Academy.

“And the rest, as they say, is history,” he said.

[Flotilla 26] “took a chance” on a “16-year-old from Brookfield,” the admiral said. “You gave me a love for the Coast Guard Auxiliary that has been with me all through my career.”

“To Flotilla 26,” he added, “I say ‘thank you.”

Flotilla 26 is currently commanded by Bill Cummings of Utica, who served as master of ceremonies for Commissioning Day.

Admiral Parks, who is based in Cleveland and responsible for the Great Lakes region stretching from Minnesota to New York, took a moment to talk about boating safety. Noting that Memorial Day Weekend is usually the official start of the boating season in the region, he said, “We had 85 search-and-rescue calls and one fatality” over the holiday weekend. That’s a significant improvement from the previous year’s holiday, when the Coast Guard responded to some 100 search-and-rescue calls in the Great Lakes region, including nine fatalities. The Coast Guard took last year’s fatal boating mishaps as “a call to action,” he said, with the Coast Guard Auxiliary embracing a renewed boating safety campaign.

He applauded the Auxiliary’s preventative efforts, particularly Flotilla 26 and the other flotillas of Central New York’s Division II. Those efforts included sponsoring boating safety classes, conducting free vessel safety checks, and responding to boaters in distress on Oneida Lake.

“I wish you God speed, as you go out there to keep people safe,” Parks said.

The admiral then presented two awards: A 30-year Membership Service Award to Auxiliarist Dave Troutman of Rome and a Meritorious Service Medal to Auxiliarist John Keshishoglou of Ithaca, for decades of service as an audio-visual consultant, writer and editor for the district and division.

Parks made it a point to laud the cooperation between the active duty and auxiliary Coast Guard, thanking an active duty contingent from Coast Guard Station Oswego for attending and for providing support and training for Flotilla 26, and for the flotilla’s support of Station Oswego.

He also praised the active-duty operations training officer, Chief Warrant Officer Kevin Clark, for his model work with auxiliarists. Clark, the architect of a new operations training program for the auxiliary, thanked Flotilla 26 and other Central New York flotillas for participating in pilot training that led to the new program.

The admiral also recognized Commodore Nancy Rudiger, commander of the auxiliary’s Ninth District Eastern Region, for her support of the local flotillas, and Division II Commander Helen Cummings, wife of the Flotilla 26 commander.

Admiral Clark expressed his delight at the inter-agency cooperation being displayed at the Sylvan Beach base, lauding the Civil Air Patrol’s Utica Cadet Squadron for providing a color guard squad and recognizing the Oneida County Sheriff’s Marine Patrol, which operates out of the base.

The commissioning ceremonies were followed by a picnic reception.

 

 

 

 

 

Jefferson Leadership Institute Announces Class of 2011

(Watertown, NY – June 2011) The Greater Watertown – North Country Chamber of Commerce would like to congratulate the graduates of the Jefferson Leadership Institute Class of 2011. Graduation will be held on Thursday, June 9 at the Black River Valley Club in Watertown. The event will feature special guest, Brian Ashley of WWNY TV 7/WNYF Fox 28. The dinner will begin with a social hour at 6 p.m. and the dinner and program begins at 7 p.m.

JLI is a nine-month leadership development program that immerses participants in community issues.  The curriculum seeks to provide opportunities for students to develop their leadership capabilities build relationships and encourage involvement in effecting positive change in their communities.  Students study the components that make up a healthy community and the critical issues affecting its economic sectors.

The Greater Watertown – North Country Chamber of Commerce established JLI in 1991.  The program is sponsored by Northern Federal Credit Union and Samaritan Medical Center, and currently has over 400 alumni.

The JLI participants are financially sponsored by their employers.  The graduating class, along with their sponsor includes:

Marie Ambrose, Community Action Planning Council

Bonnie Belfield, Northern Federal Credit Union

Hartley Bonisteel, Jefferson County Planning Department

Katherine Caputo, Jefferson Rehabilitation Center

Sarah Colligan, WWNY TV 7/WNYF Fox 28

Jeany Danielsen, Rose & Kiernan, Inc.

Sonja Draught, US Army Garrison Fort Drum

Nathan Hunter, Northern Federal Credit Union

Jeff Kaplan, Samaritan Medical Center

Erich Leonard, New York Air Brake

Jennifer Meagher, Family Counseling Service of NNY, Inc.

Robert Nicholson, Jefferson Rehabilitation Center

Sam Purington, Volunteer Transportation Center

Michael Richardson, US Army Garrison Fort Drum

Amanda Root, Cornell Cooperative Extension

Michael Russell, AmeriCu Credit Union

Andrew Short, Samaritan Medical Center

Tom Spaulding, Transitional Living Services of NNY

Elizabeth Stevens, CREDO Community Center for the Treatment of Addictions

For more information about the event or program, please contact Michelle Farrell at the Chamber at (315) 788-4400 or events@watertownny.com.

 

 

 

Annual Lifesaver Blood Drive and Health Fair Announced

(Cicero, NY – June 2011) Save the Date for the 5th Annual Lifesaver Blood Drive and Health Fair to be held from noon until 6 p.m., Tuesday, July 19 at Gillette Road Middle School, 6150 South Bay Road, Cicero.

“It has become one of the biggest blood drives in Central New York, in which blood donations during each of the past four years have exceeded 100 pints. Considering an average drive produces about 30 pints, this number is significant. For this reason, and with the urging of Red Cross officials, I determined that this event, which was started by Al Stirpe, is far too important to our community to end,” said Assemblyman Bill Magnarelli.

“Giving blood is one of the most important gifts a person can give and this blood drive is planned during the summer, when there is always a shortage of blood on hand. As a matter of fact, blood donations during this time decrease by 10 to 15 percent, while need escalates because of increased outdoor work and recreational activities.

This is another reason why it is very important to continue this blood drive to help save lives.”

To donate blood, if you have any questions or need more information, call 428-9651 or email abdellad@assembly.state.ny.us.

Exciting news about the CNY Veterans Parade!

The CNY Veterans Parade is moving to the New York State Fairgrounds at noon, Saturday, Nov. 5, 2011 and will be accompanied by a veterans’ themed EXPO at the Center of Progress Building.

For more information, to volunteer or to register for the CNY Veterans Parade and Expo on Nov. 5 contact Diana LaMattina Abdella at abdellad@assembly.state.ny.us.

Out and About

Assemblyman Magnarelli donated an American Flag to be displayed at Canton Woods Senior Center in Van Buren. Senator John DeFrancisco donated a New York State Flag. The Mayor of Baldwinsville, Joseph Saraceni, acted as master of ceremonies.

Assemblyman Magnarelli was a guest server at Crouse Hospital’s employee appreciation picnic.

Assemblyman Magnarelli visited Miss Armani’s first grade class at Solvay Elementary to help instill the importance and fun of reading.

The Centers at St. Camillus recently celebrated a new $3 million expansion for outpatient brain injury and rehabilitation and adult day health programs. The expansion, named for Honorable William Robert and Sally Roy, will enrich the Central New York community by enabling St. Camillus to care and support our loved ones in times of need.

 

The following information was taken from the June 2011 newsletter of Bill Magnarelli, assemblyman for the 120th Assembly District.

 

Annual Lifesaver Blood Drive and Health Fair Announced

(Cicero, NY – June 2011) Save the Date for the 5th Annual Lifesaver Blood Drive and Health Fair to be held from noon until 6 p.m., Tuesday, July 19 at Gillette Road Middle School, 6150 South Bay Road, Cicero.

“It has become one of the biggest blood drives in Central New York, in which blood donations during each of the past four years have exceeded 100 pints. Considering an average drive produces about 30 pints, this number is significant. For this reason, and with the urging of Red Cross officials, I determined that this event, which was started by Al Stirpe, is far too important to our community to end,” said Assemblyman Bill Magnarelli.

“Giving blood is one of the most important gifts a person can give and this blood drive is planned during the summer, when there is always a shortage of blood on hand. As a matter of fact, blood donations during this time decrease by 10 to 15 percent, while need escalates because of increased outdoor work and recreational activities.

This is another reason why it is very important to continue this blood drive to help save lives.”

To donate blood, if you have any questions or need more information, call 428-9651 or email abdellad@assembly.state.ny.us.

Exciting news about the CNY Veterans Parade!

The CNY Veterans Parade is moving to the New York State Fairgrounds at noon, Saturday, Nov. 5, 2011 and will be accompanied by a veterans’ themed EXPO at the Center of Progress Building.

For more information, to volunteer or to register for the CNY Veterans Parade and Expo on Nov. 5 contact Diana LaMattina Abdella at abdellad@assembly.state.ny.us.

Out and About

Assemblyman Magnarelli donated an American Flag to be displayed at Canton Woods Senior Center in Van Buren. Senator John DeFrancisco donated a New York State Flag. The Mayor of Baldwinsville, Joseph Saraceni, acted as master of ceremonies.

Assemblyman Magnarelli was a guest server at Crouse Hospital’s employee appreciation picnic.

Assemblyman Magnarelli visited Miss Armani’s first grade class at Solvay Elementary to help instill the importance and fun of reading.

The Centers at St. Camillus recently celebrated a new $3 million expansion for outpatient brain injury and rehabilitation and adult day health programs. The expansion, named for Honorable William Robert and Sally Roy, will enrich the Central New York community by enabling St. Camillus to care and support our loved ones in times of need.

 

The following information was taken from the June 2011 newsletter of Bill Magnarelli, assemblyman for the 120th Assembly District.

 

Annual Lifesaver Blood Drive and Health Fair Announced

(Cicero, NY – June 2011) Save the Date for the 5th Annual Lifesaver Blood Drive and Health Fair to be held from noon until 6 p.m., Tuesday, July 19 at Gillette Road Middle School, 6150 South Bay Road, Cicero.

“It has become one of the biggest blood drives in Central New York, in which blood donations during each of the past four years have exceeded 100 pints. Considering an average drive produces about 30 pints, this number is significant. For this reason, and with the urging of Red Cross officials, I determined that this event, which was started by Al Stirpe, is far too important to our community to end,” said Assemblyman Bill Magnarelli.

“Giving blood is one of the most important gifts a person can give and this blood drive is planned during the summer, when there is always a shortage of blood on hand. As a matter of fact, blood donations during this time decrease by 10 to 15 percent, while need escalates because of increased outdoor work and recreational activities.

This is another reason why it is very important to continue this blood drive to help save lives.”

To donate blood, if you have any questions or need more information, call 428-9651 or email abdellad@assembly.state.ny.us.

Exciting news about the CNY Veterans Parade!

The CNY Veterans Parade is moving to the New York State Fairgrounds at noon, Saturday, Nov. 5, 2011 and will be accompanied by a veterans’ themed EXPO at the Center of Progress Building.

For more information, to volunteer or to register for the CNY Veterans Parade and Expo on Nov. 5 contact Diana LaMattina Abdella at abdellad@assembly.state.ny.us.

Out and About

Assemblyman Magnarelli donated an American Flag to be displayed at Canton Woods Senior Center in Van Buren. Senator John DeFrancisco donated a New York State Flag. The Mayor of Baldwinsville, Joseph Saraceni, acted as master of ceremonies.

Assemblyman Magnarelli was a guest server at Crouse Hospital’s employee appreciation picnic.

Assemblyman Magnarelli visited Miss Armani’s first grade class at Solvay Elementary to help instill the importance and fun of reading.

The Centers at St. Camillus recently celebrated a new $3 million expansion for outpatient brain injury and rehabilitation and adult day health programs. The expansion, named for Honorable William Robert and Sally Roy, will enrich the Central New York community by enabling St. Camillus to care and support our loved ones in times of need.

 

The following information was taken from the June 2011 newsletter of Bill Magnarelli, assemblyman for the 120th Assembly District.

 

LeMoyne Professor to Present at next Round Table Meeting

(East Syracuse, NY – June 2011) On Thursday June 16 at 7 p.m. at the Town of DeWitt Community Room, 148 Sanders Creek Pkwy, E. Syracuse (off NYS Thruway Exit 35 at Carrier Circle), the Onondaga County Civil War Round Table program is pleased to present a talk by the nationally – acclaimed historian Douglas R. Egerton, Professor of History at LeMoyne College.

Egerton will be discussing his recent, widely-praised book “Year of Meteors: Stephen Douglas, Abraham Lincoln, and the Election that Brought on the Civil War,” regarded by many as an essential prequel to Team of Rivals.

In it, Professor Egerton explores the extraordinary political events of the 1860 election year, analyzing Lincoln’s unexpected emergence as President of the United States, the ascendancy of the young Republican Party, the disintegration of the Democratic Party, and the events immediately precipitating the secession of Southern states and the onset of military conflict between the North and the South.

In early 1860, political analysts across the country shared the view that Democratic U.S. Senator Stephen A. Douglas (IL) would be elected President.  Instead, on Nov. 6, 1860, Abraham Lincoln, a former one-term U.S. Representative (IL) who had initially not even been a leading candidate within his own Republican Party (which had been in existence less than 10 years), won the popular election with a still-record low 39.8% of the vote.  He went on to receive 180 of the 303 electoral votes (152 were needed to win) on Feb. 11, 1861 and was sworn into office on March 4, 1861.

Between Nov. 6 and March 4, seven states seceded from the Union. Within one month of his assumption of office, the Civil War commenced.

Egerton received his Ph.D. from Georgetown University in 1985, and has been on the LeMoyne College faculty since 1987.  During the 2011 – 2012 academic year he will be teaching at the University College Dublin as a Fulbright scholar, holding the Mary Ball Washington Chair.

Egerton, a descendant of North Carolina slaveholders and Confederates, is the author of four other books:  Death or Liberty:  African Americans and Revolutionary America, Gabriel’s Rebellion: The Virginia Slave Conspiracies of 1800 & 1802, He Shall Go Out Free: The Lives of Denmark Vesey, and Rebels, Reformers, and Revolutionaries:  Collected Essays and Second Thoughts.

For additional information, visit http://occwrt.blogspot.com, or contact Bill Goodwin at 315-437-3887.

 

LeMoyne Professor to Present at next Round Table Meeting

(East Syracuse, NY – June 2011) On Thursday June 16 at 7 p.m. at the Town of DeWitt Community Room, 148 Sanders Creek Pkwy, E. Syracuse (off NYS Thruway Exit 35 at Carrier Circle), the Onondaga County Civil War Round Table program is pleased to present a talk by the nationally – acclaimed historian Douglas R. Egerton, Professor of History at LeMoyne College.

Egerton will be discussing his recent, widely-praised book “Year of Meteors: Stephen Douglas, Abraham Lincoln, and the Election that Brought on the Civil War,” regarded by many as an essential prequel to Team of Rivals.

In it, Professor Egerton explores the extraordinary political events of the 1860 election year, analyzing Lincoln’s unexpected emergence as President of the United States, the ascendancy of the young Republican Party, the disintegration of the Democratic Party, and the events immediately precipitating the secession of Southern states and the onset of military conflict between the North and the South.

In early 1860, political analysts across the country shared the view that Democratic U.S. Senator Stephen A. Douglas (IL) would be elected President.  Instead, on Nov. 6, 1860, Abraham Lincoln, a former one-term U.S. Representative (IL) who had initially not even been a leading candidate within his own Republican Party (which had been in existence less than 10 years), won the popular election with a still-record low 39.8% of the vote.  He went on to receive 180 of the 303 electoral votes (152 were needed to win) on Feb. 11, 1861 and was sworn into office on March 4, 1861.

Between Nov. 6 and March 4, seven states seceded from the Union. Within one month of his assumption of office, the Civil War commenced.

Egerton received his Ph.D. from Georgetown University in 1985, and has been on the LeMoyne College faculty since 1987.  During the 2011 – 2012 academic year he will be teaching at the University College Dublin as a Fulbright scholar, holding the Mary Ball Washington Chair.

Egerton, a descendant of North Carolina slaveholders and Confederates, is the author of four other books:  Death or Liberty:  African Americans and Revolutionary America, Gabriel’s Rebellion: The Virginia Slave Conspiracies of 1800 & 1802, He Shall Go Out Free: The Lives of Denmark Vesey, and Rebels, Reformers, and Revolutionaries:  Collected Essays and Second Thoughts.

For additional information, visit http://occwrt.blogspot.com, or contact Bill Goodwin at 315-437-3887.

 

LeMoyne Professor to Present at next Round Table Meeting

(East Syracuse, NY – June 2011) On Thursday June 16 at 7 p.m. at the Town of DeWitt Community Room, 148 Sanders Creek Pkwy, E. Syracuse (off NYS Thruway Exit 35 at Carrier Circle), the Onondaga County Civil War Round Table program is pleased to present a talk by the nationally – acclaimed historian Douglas R. Egerton, Professor of History at LeMoyne College.

Egerton will be discussing his recent, widely-praised book “Year of Meteors: Stephen Douglas, Abraham Lincoln, and the Election that Brought on the Civil War,” regarded by many as an essential prequel to Team of Rivals.

In it, Professor Egerton explores the extraordinary political events of the 1860 election year, analyzing Lincoln’s unexpected emergence as President of the United States, the ascendancy of the young Republican Party, the disintegration of the Democratic Party, and the events immediately precipitating the secession of Southern states and the onset of military conflict between the North and the South.

In early 1860, political analysts across the country shared the view that Democratic U.S. Senator Stephen A. Douglas (IL) would be elected President.  Instead, on Nov. 6, 1860, Abraham Lincoln, a former one-term U.S. Representative (IL) who had initially not even been a leading candidate within his own Republican Party (which had been in existence less than 10 years), won the popular election with a still-record low 39.8% of the vote.  He went on to receive 180 of the 303 electoral votes (152 were needed to win) on Feb. 11, 1861 and was sworn into office on March 4, 1861.

Between Nov. 6 and March 4, seven states seceded from the Union. Within one month of his assumption of office, the Civil War commenced.

Egerton received his Ph.D. from Georgetown University in 1985, and has been on the LeMoyne College faculty since 1987.  During the 2011 – 2012 academic year he will be teaching at the University College Dublin as a Fulbright scholar, holding the Mary Ball Washington Chair.

Egerton, a descendant of North Carolina slaveholders and Confederates, is the author of four other books:  Death or Liberty:  African Americans and Revolutionary America, Gabriel’s Rebellion: The Virginia Slave Conspiracies of 1800 & 1802, He Shall Go Out Free: The Lives of Denmark Vesey, and Rebels, Reformers, and Revolutionaries:  Collected Essays and Second Thoughts.

For additional information, visit http://occwrt.blogspot.com, or contact Bill Goodwin at 315-437-3887.