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The primary course blog for HIST 246, Spring 2011
 

Archive for the ‘Dowling’ Category

The Numbers Question

Tuesday, April 19th, 2011

In class today, Alex raised a good question about how the various groups should deal with discrepancies in the numbers of soldiers reported to have been involved in the Battle of Sabine Pass.

This is an issue that has been raised before on this blog and elsewhere. (For example, see my round-up post on Library Assignment #2, and this comment on one of Kat’s posts.)

What are you thoughts on how we should deal with this issue in the various parts of our project? Should we settle on a particular set of numbers to use across the projects? Or simply say that the number is still controversial? I’m eager to hear your thoughts.

Perhaps one way to begin this discussion would be to share how you yourself have resolved the numbers issue if you have had to pick a number for one of your group assignments. Which source did you rely on and why?

Group Resources

Monday, April 18th, 2011

Whichever group project you are working on, you may be interested in using and checking out some of the resources that other groups have been compiling over the last week. Since we obviously want to avoid inconsistencies in what we are saying about Dowling in the various projects you are working on, it would be worth checking in with these other resources to offer feedback if you think that something is in error or to get help settling some point of fact.

  • The Movie Group is compiling their drafts of a script for their movie on Writeboard, with the same password we always use in this class.
  • The Timeline Group is compiling their data on a Google Spreadsheet.
  • The Podcast Group is compiling their scripts on their blog (and also on a Google Doc, link forthcoming). [UPDATE: Google Doc now available.]
  • Over at the Map Group, Courtney and Craig have posted some research-heavy posts on sites related to Dowling.

Have other resources you want to make available to all the groups? Let me know.

Sectional Disunion: The UCV in Houston, 1895

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

Post written by Ryan Shaver

[NOTE: The author of this post is a student in HIST 300, an independent study group that has been reading historiography about Dowling, the Battle of Sabine Pass, and the contested memory of the Civil War. To satisfy one of the requirements for that course, Kat did some additional research about the context for the re-dedication of the Dick Dowling monument.]

If one did not know better, when Miss Winnie Davis took the stage at the United Confederate Veterans Reunion in Houston on May 22, 1895, she might have been mistaken for a deity. The uproarious reception from the 10,000 people packed inside the specially-constructed auditorium, not to mention the auxiliary thousands in the streets, suggested that she was more than a woman; that she was more than the daughter of the late Confederate President, Jefferson Davis. And she was. The jubilant tears and defiant Confederate battle flags visible at the scene signaled that not only was the Southern cause alive three decades after the Civil War, but Houston was its epicenter for a moment in time.

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Irish Confederates

Monday, April 11th, 2011

Post by Jocelyn Wright

[Note: The author of this post is a student in HIST 300, an independent study group that has been reading historiography about Dowling, the Battle of Sabine Pass, and the contested memory of the Civil War. To satisfy one of the requirements for that course, Kat did some additional research about the context for the re-dedication of the Dick Dowling monument.]

Dick Dowling’s statue is the product of collaboration between two groups with seemingly very different agendas: the Ancient Order of Hibernians and the United Confederate Veterans. Why would a society aimed at preserving and celebrating Irish heritage ever find a reason for collaborating with a group aimed at doing the same for Confederate heritage? As we learned in Dr. Murphy’s discussion last Thursday though, the concept of a Confederate Irish man during the Civil War was actually quite common. Several other Irish men, including John Mitchell and Patrick Cleburne, made equally important contributions to the Confederacy’s war effort. In fact, Irish Confederates were not exceptional during the Civil War. 


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The Monument Restoration Movement

Monday, April 4th, 2011

Post written by Kathryn Skilton

[Note: The author of this post is a student in HIST 300, an independent study group that has been reading historiography about Dowling, the Battle of Sabine Pass, and the contested memory of the Civil War. To satisfy one of the requirements for that course, Kat did some additional research about the context for the re-dedication of the Dick Dowling monument.]

A study of the Dick Dowling monument and rededication ceremony of 1997 would not be complete without understanding the reason behind the monument’s rededication. While many in History 246 and History 300 have asked whether the main focus of this rededication was Dowling’s Irish Heritage or Confederate Legacy, few have asked a more basic question: why exactly was the monument being rededicated at the exact moment it was? The restoration of the Dick Dowling Statue, was not a unique occurrence in Houston during 1996-1997, instead, it was part of a greater movement involving federal, state, and local authorities to preserve outdoor sculpture and public art.

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Historians on Dowling over Time

Friday, April 1st, 2011

For your second library assignment, each of you selected a past historian of Texas to see what he or she had to say about Dowling and the Battle of Sabine Pass. Only a couple of you found that these topics were not mentioned in the texts you looked at, which testifies to how often Dowling and the battle are mentioned even in very general Texas history books. I also noticed a couple of themes in your posts.

The Numbers Game
As many of you noticed, it’s striking that the critical “numbers” involved in the Battle of Sabine Pass vary so wildly across books and even across editions of the same book. How many Union transports were involved–17? 20? 23? How many Union prisoners were taken–250, 315, 350? How many men did Dowling have in the fort–42? 46? 47? These are all questions on which the authors of the books you read differ. And they also differ in their reports of the number of Union troops involved in the battle. As I mentioned in a comment on Kat’s post, determining that number is actually more difficult than you might think. It doesn’t help matters that different writers have proposed figures ranging from 1,500 to 4,000–5,000–6,000–and even, in the case of one Confederate veteran who wrote a history of Texas, 15,000! These disparities raise some dilemmas that your groups will need to resolve about how you intend to describe the battle. They also indicate, perhaps, that writers of Dowling have often simply relied on other chroniclers to get their figures instead of rigorously examining the primary sources–a pattern that has perhaps allowed popular myth and memory to have particular influence on the way historians describe the battle.

The Significance of the Battle
While the writers you examined don’t all agree on the numbers, it is striking that so many of them mention the numbers of the forces involved in the battle. What that indicates to me is that many historians have written as though the primary significance of the battle lies primarily in its lop-sided nature. Certainly, that was what Dowling’s early champions like Jefferson Davis believed–they thought what made the battle most significance was that it was a “David versus Goliath” victory. In a way, what these histories show is that these early descriptions of the battle succeeded in shaping the way the battle has been remembered ever after. It’s almost de rigueur for historians to mention the numbers in the battle, which of course is exactly how Davis wanted the significance of the battle to be remembered (see DD0001). Meanwhile, as many of you noted, other potential interpretations of the battle’s significance–like the fact that it prevented Union armies from liberating slaves in Texas as they were elsewhere–are hardly ever mentioned. Some of the texts do repeat the idea that the battle affected the credit rating of the United States and the stock market; from your collective research, it appears that this claim was taken originally from a contemporary article in the New York Herald and may have been first reported in the 1943 edition of Rupert Norval Richardson’s Texas history textbook, before being picked up by other books published in 1968, 1971, and 1976. It seems odd that this claim, apparently based on the slender evidence of one newspaper article, has gotten so much play, since the impact of the battle on the fortunes of slavery in Texas seem like they would be more significant than a temporary dip in the stock market. Yet the larger national context of the war–including slavery–doesn’t seem to have appeared often in the excerpts you all found, and even when it did appear, the national picture was usually brought up in brief discussions about the causes of the war instead of being connected to the battle itself and its consequences.

These reflections pose another dilemma that you and your group may have to settle as you make your projects: how will you describe the significance of the battle, if indeed it deserves to be called significant? As you answer that question, it might be worth checking out Stephanie’s reflections on the book she examined by David McComb:

I personally was surprised to see that he did not make changes to the whole book. As professor emeritus of history at Colorado State University, it would seem that McComb would recognize that over the 20 years between his two editions, scholarship about the history of the South has changed and grown dramatically. It was disappointing to see that he did not show those changes in his new edition.

Whatever McComb’s reason for leaving his editions relatively the same, Stephanie’s comment raises a question for all of you: should Dowling’s story be told differently in light of some of the scholarship you have read this semester–by Manning, Levine, Berlin, McPherson, Hahn, and others? If this scholarship had been around earlier, would the memory of Dowling and his significance have been different?

The Significance of the Civil War
A final point that many of you made was that the significance of the Civil War itself seemed to be downplayed in many of the histories you’ve read. Renee, Courtney, Stephanie, Alex, and Victor all expressed some surprise to find that their books devoted so little attention to the whole conflict and seemed to race past it, spending more time talking about the Texas Revolution or the postwar period. This in itself is an interesting finding. Does it suggest a larger tendency of Texas historians to downplay the war, its causes, and its consequences? It’s striking that the books that Courtney and Clarissa looked at both seemed to devote some time to mentioning Unionist resistance to the Confederacy; is the attention given to that topic out of proportion to the extensiveness of Unionism, and if so, why do you think writers go out of their way to talk about Sam Houston’s Unionism instead of about the positions of, say, Governor Frank Lubbock–who was in charge when the Battle of Sabine Pass was fought?

More on Emancipation Park

Tuesday, March 29th, 2011

Post written by Jaclyn Youngblood

[Note: The author of this post is a student in HIST 300, an independent study group that has been reading historiography about Dowling, the Battle of Sabine Pass, and the contested memory of the Civil War. To satisfy one of the requirements for that course, Jaclyn did some additional research about Emancipation Park and the streets named after Dowling that bound it. Here is her own report of her findings.]

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Emancipation Park came to life in 1872. Under the leadership of Reverend John Henry Yates, pastor at Antioch Baptist Church, former slaves reached out to Houston’s black community to raise $800 to purchase land for Juneteenth celebrations (McCullough). The ten-acre tract of land sits squarely in Houston’s third ward, once a vibrant center of black life in the city (Wintz). Interesting, then, that the park is bordered on two sides by streets named in honor of Dick Dowling, a man whose success at the Battle of Sabine Pass contributed to the delay of emancipation in Texas.

The intersection of Tuam Street and Dowling Street form the easternmost boundary of Emancipation Park, land purchased explicitly for commemorating June 19, 1865, the day of the formal reading of the Emancipation Proclamation in Texas. Is this juxtaposition a message to Houston’s black community? It seems as though in the war between Emancipation and Confederate memory, the battle of Emancipation Park versus its border streets is a question of space and timing.

The Dowling St.-Tuam St. border of Emancipation Park is somewhat of a chicken-or-the-egg question. Did the park exist before the streets were named as such? If so, was the city and/or the organizations responsible for having the streets named trying to send a message to the black community? Or did the streets, named as such, exist before the park, making the juxtaposition irony instead of ill-will?
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New photos of St. Vincent’s Cemetery

Friday, March 25th, 2011

Tombstone of Dick Dowling by Patrick Feller (From Flickr)

I have just loaded some new photographs into our folder of Dowling archive items. You can access the metadata for them on the Google Spreadsheet, and you can use the link to Dropbox on OWL-Space to see the photos. These are photographs of monuments related to Dowling and the Battle of Sabine Pass in St. Vincent’s Cemetery near Our Lady of Guadalupe church in Houston. They will probably be useful to all four of your groups. Incidentally, in the course of working on your group projects, you may come across other items that you think belong in our digital archive. Or you may take your own photographs of relevant sites. (We need some good photographs of the Dowling monument in Hermann Park, for example.) In that case, you can use the same Google Form you used before to report metadata on Library Assignment #1, and then upload the file on OWL-Space into the folder titled “Uploaded Student Files.”

Start your engines …

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011

I have now posted introductory posts about your group projects to each of the student group blogs. As those posts indicate, you need to begin thinking now about your projects, primarily by brainstorming ideas with your fellow group members and getting up to speed on the technical aspects of the project.

You should also notice that there is now a page of Dowling resources (with a link in the sidebar of this page) that you can use to work on your projects. This page will be updated throughout the remainder of the semester.

Library Assignment #2

Monday, March 21st, 2011

Fondren Library

Your next library assignment will allow you to investigate how the story of Dick Dowling and the Battle of Sabine Pass have been remembered and retold in books and schoolbooks over the last one hundred and fifty years. Each of you will select

To complete the assignment, you will need to follow these steps. All of the steps must be completed by 11:59 p.m. on Wednesday, March 30.

STEP 1: Go to this Writeboard, enter the password distributed in class (it’s the same password we used for Library Assignment #1), and then select one of the books on the list. Just as you did last time, edit the Writeboard and put your last name next the title that you are claiming.

STEP 2: Locate the book and any other editions of the book published in other years in Fondren library. You may wish to talk to a librarian to make sure that you can find and access the book(s) you need.

STEP 3: Examine the book and make some notes to yourself about what kind of book it is. Is the book a textbook meant for use in schools? A popular history text? Was it published in Texas or outside of Texas? When was it published first, and what was going on in the country either then or at the time of later editions? Who is the author and what can you find out about him or her, either from the book itself or from other sources like the Handbook of Texas? Were there multiple authors, editors, and compilers involved in making the book?

STEP 4: Look inside the book and locate any passages that talk about Dick Dowling and the Battle of Sabine Pass. If these topics come up in the book, carefully transcribe the complete passage into a document on your computer. If there are multiple editions of the book, check to see if the section that talks about Dowling remains the same in later editions; if it changes, transcribe the new passages as well, making careful note of which edition(s) the passages come from. (Note: If Dowling and Sabine Pass don’t come up in the book, make note of that and see if you can come up with reasons why it doesn’t. Is the Civil War in Texas discussed at all? If so, how?)

STEP 5: Write a blog post about what you’ve found. The post should conform to these specifications:

  • The title of the post should be the author of the book you examined.
  • At the beginning of the post, provide a full bibliographic citation of the first edition of the book you studied, using the formatting guidelines provided by the Chicago Manual of Style.
  • In a paragraph, briefly summarize, using mainly your own words, the author’s presentation of Dowling and the battle or, if the author doesn’t talk about the battle, what parts of the Civil War era in Texas the author talks about instead.
  • In a paragraph, briefly summarize any changes in the author’s presentation in later editions, including changes in fact or wording that you noticed. (This won’t apply if there weren’t multiple editions.)
  • In a paragraph, briefly report on the reflections you made as part of STEP 3, and any information you located about the kind of book you had.
  • Finally, at the end of the post, include your full transcriptions of the passages that you located having to do with Dowling and Sabine Pass. Make sure you indicate what pages the copied passages come from, and use the “blockquote” function within WordPress to make the transcribed passages stand out clearly as quotes from the book.
  • Before “publishing” to WordPress, make sure that the box next to “Library Assignments” (in the “Categories” panel on the right hand side of the dashboard) is checked.

Any questions about these steps? Leave them in the comments here or email Dr. McDaniel for more information. Remember that all of these steps must be completed by midnight on Wednesday, March 30. The blog post that you will write for this library assignment is not a substitute for Blog Post #9, which will be a separate assignment having to do with the group projects.