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Top blue bar image The American Civil War Era
The primary course blog for HIST 246, Spring 2011
 

Mid-week Round-Up

March 24th, 2011 by Mercy Harper

This week’s prompt asked you to consider how, when, and why Confederate officials began to embrace the idea of enlisting slaves as soldiers, and if this Confederate measure could be called “emancipation.” Adam’s post offers a detailed explanation of how and when Confederates embraced the enlistment of the enslaved as “essentially a last ditch effort.” Craig also explains the how, when, and why of Confederate “Emancipation.” Although he approached Levine’s book with skepticism, he found Confederate Emancipation’s argument convincing because it “ranged across multiple factions” to provide a maximal explanation for slave enlistment, and because Levine’s arguments tied into our previous discussions in this course. Jocelyn’s post takes on Prompt 2, and analyzes Union emancipation in tandem with “Confederate Emancipation.” Jocelyn succinctly argues, “Despite the differences in their concepts of emancipation, though, the Confederacy’s and Union’s reasons for emancipation were surprisingly similar.”

Could differences and similarities between Union and Confederate “Emancipation” reveal something about understandings of masculinity as well as race? What do debates over emancipation – among northerners and southerners – suggest about the co-construction of race and gender?

Start your engines …

March 22nd, 2011 by Caleb McDaniel

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

March 21st, 2011 by Caleb McDaniel

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.

Blog Post #8

March 18th, 2011 by Caleb McDaniel

On Tuesday, we will be discussing Bruce Levine’s Confederate Emancipation in class. For Blog Post #8, which is due at 9 a.m. that morning (instead of on the usual Thursday deadline), I would like you to write a post addressing ONE of the following prompts, based on your reading of the Levine book:

  1. How does Levine explain why, when, and how Confederate officials began to embrace the idea of enlisting slaves as soldiers? Based on what you’ve learned about making causal arguments in your position papers and in our in-class discussions, do you find his explanation persuasive?
  2. The title of the book is “Confederate emancipation.” Is “emancipation” the best word for what Confederate supporters of slave enlistment were envisioning? How did their notions of “emancipation” compare to the ideas we’ve seen in the “Emancipation Proclamation” and other federal policies like the Confiscation Acts?

Optionally, after addressing your prompt, you may also use your post to discuss anything that you found surprising, confusing, or particularly interesting about the book.

Important announcements

March 16th, 2011 by Caleb McDaniel

Remember that tomorrow, Dr. Murphy will be our guest speaker and will be speaking with you about Irish immigrants in the antebellum United States. Many of you have raised questions about how Dowling’s Irish-ness affected his life and memory, so this will be a wonderful opportunity to ask these questions to one of the experts!

Courtney also emailed me to let me know about another wonderful opportunity that you may want to take advantage of tomorrow night: a lecture at the Museum of Fine Arts Houston about an important Civil War painting.

Finally, as noted on the schedule, please be aware that you need to read Bruce Levine’s Confederate Emancipation this week and weekend. Be prepared to discuss the book in class on Tuesday.

Weekend Round-Up

March 12th, 2011 by Mercy Harper

Many of you were surprised at Lincoln’s complex views of race and slavery as you examined the Lincoln Documents on Slavery. This week I’d like to point you to two posts. Alex and Juri agree that Lincoln’s understanding of race influenced his attitude toward slavery and what could be done about it. Alex identifies Lincoln’s “segregationist sentiment” – his prejudge against African Americans and concerns about racial coexistence that, he argues, “worked to delay emancipation until Lincoln felt it was absolutely necessary for victory.” Juri holds a similar view of Lincoln. He argues, “I believe that perhaps because of Lincoln’s belief in white superiority, he was not eager to free slaves, unless it benefited the Union.”

Should these views held by Lincoln lead historians to label him a “racist,” as some of you did in your posts? What does calling Lincoln a “racist,” “white supremacist” or “segregationist” illuminate, and what does it obscure?

Building Fort Griffin

March 9th, 2011 by Caleb McDaniel

Yesterday in class, I mentioned that Confederate engineers used 500 slaves to build Fort Griffin–the fortification that proved crucial to Dowling’s victory in the Battle of Sabine Pass. In his book, Sabine Pass, which is still available on Fondren reserve, historian Edward Cotham has this to say about the conditions in which these slaves worked:

Expense records that have survived suggest that most of these slaves were transported from the Houston and Galveston areas to work on this project. This must have been extremely difficult and dangerous work. The records that have survived for similar projects in Galveston reflect a large number of fatalities among the slaves who were brought in and forced to build those fortifications. …

Kellersberg was concerned that the slaves’ owners would not make them available for work if they were abused. As he admitted in one letter requesting additional cornmeal rations in 1861, “They work hard & if such bad policy [underfeeding the slaves] is pursued, we won’t get any more of them.” The fact that the work was difficult, combined with the fact that at times relatively few slaves were available, meant that construction of the new fort at Sabine Pass tended to progress slowly, sometimes crawling to a complete stop. At one point in July, work had been suspended for so long that a local rumor suggested that the plan to build a new fort had been abandoned entirely, to be replaced with a scheme that called for Sabine Pass to be defended by cottonclad steamers alone. …

Most of the important work constructing Fort Griffin seems to have been done in the heat and humidity of August. Nicholas H. Smith, an engineer from Louisiana who had drawn the terrible assignment of supervising on-site all of the finishing touches on the fort, headed his letters from Fort Griffin with the designation “Headquarters of the Army of Mosquitoes,” noting that these insects “are so bad here that it is almost impossible for man or horse to live.” Under these conditions, the tasks of driving pilings, building a palisade, and mounting the remaining guns were proving difficult, if not impossible. Smith’s job was made even harder because of the absence of materials and the scarcity of manpower in what he described as this most “accursed of all places.” Lamenting that Colonel Sulakowski was now forcing him to work approximately eighteen hours out of each twenty-four, Smith summarized his views succinctly: “This place is hell.” Appealing to his supervisor and an even higher authority, Smith wrote near the end of August that “I wish to God you would relieve me of this place.”

(Source: Edward T. Cotham, Jr., Sabine Pass: The Confederacy’s Thermopylae (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2004), 78-79)

Some questions prompted by this passage: How does the fact that Fort Griffin was built by the forced labor of slaves affect the way you view Dowling and the memory of the battle of Sabine Pass? Should their numbers be included in the numbers of men that Dowling and the Confederates had at their disposal to prepare for the battle? Why do you think that Jefferson Davis and other Dowling promoters did not talk much about the fort itself or the conditions in which it was built? And how should the fort and the battle be remembered today? The official historic park at Sabine Pass mentions briefly the involvement of slaves in construction, but if you were to go to the actual site and see the huge statue of Dowling, what conclusions would you come away with? Is the site–either there or online–organized in such a way to ensure that the role of slavery in the battle and the war is remembered?

Blog Post #7

March 7th, 2011 by Caleb McDaniel

Welcome back from break everyone! For your blog post assignment this week, you will need to read the file on OWL-Space titled “Lincoln Documents on Slavery, 1858-1865.” You should see the file as soon as you log into OWL-Space and click on the tab for our course. As I mentioned in an earlier email, I’d like you to think about these questions as you read the documents:

  1. What does Lincoln think about slavery?
  2. What does Lincoln think should be done about slavery?
  3. What does Lincoln think about race?

For your assignment, select TWO of those questions and write a post discussing how the answers to these questions are related. That is, how are Lincoln’s ideas about slavery related to his ideas about what should be done about it? Or, how are his ideas about race related to his ideas about slavery? And so on. Be sure that you cite specific examples from the documents that illustrate your points.

This blog post assignment will be due at the usual time, this Thursday morning, March 10, at 9 a.m. See you in class tomorrow!

Why did Texas secede?

March 1st, 2011 by Caleb McDaniel

Texas Ordinance of Secession, 1861

We interrupt this Spring Break to note that on this day, 150 years ago, Texas officially became a Confederate state. That makes this as good a time as any to reflect on the question: Why did Texas secede?

First, it is worth noting that secession had been brewing for months before March 1, 1861, when the final deed was struck. As today’s post on the New York Times “Disunion” blog notes, Unionists in Texas were an embattled group that did not put up much of a fight to keep Texas in the Union. On February 16, 1861, U.S. General David Twiggs and all the federal troops under his command quickly surrendered under pressure from hundreds of armed secessionists who surrounded him in San Antonio. Two days later, without a shot being fired, he and his troops filed out of Texas, leaving it to the Confederacy. Only two weeks before Twiggs’ surrender, a secession convention in Austin had adopted two documents: an ordinance of secession from the Union (pictured above), and a declaration of the state’s causes for secession. And only two weeks after Twiggs’ surrender, the deed was officially done.

If you had happened to be in San Antonio two weeks ago, you might have seen a reenactment of Twiggs’ surrender. As a recent article in the Texas Observer reported, this reenactment–organized partly by the Sons of Confederate Veterans–takes place every year on the plaza of the Alamo. But as the article also notes, if you had asked the reenactment’s organizers about the reasons for Texas’s secession, you probably wouldn’t have heard much about slavery. One of the past organizers interviewed by the Observer even said bluntly that “the South was fighting for states’ rights,” not about slavery per se.

In fact, however, the Declaration of the Causes which Impel the State of Texas to Secede from the Federal Union, adopted by the secession convention in Austin on February 2, 1861, returns again and again to the issues of slavery and race. First, the declaration argues that Texas only agreed to join the Union in 1845 on the understanding that “the institution known as negro slavery–the servitude of the African to the white race within her limits” would be protected and allowed to “exist in all future time.” According to the secessionists who voted Texas out of the Union, the federal government was now advancing schemes that would lead to the “ruin of the slave-holding States.” As a result, said the secessionists, Texans wanted to make their own views clear:

We hold as undeniable truths that the governments of the various States, and of the confederacy itself, were established exclusively by the white race, for themselves and their posterity; that the African race had no agency in their establishment; that they were rightfully held and regarded as an inferior and dependent race, and in that condition only could their existence in this country be rendered beneficial or tolerable.

That in this free government all white men are and of right ought to be entitled to equal civil and political rights; that the servitude of the African race, as existing in these States, is mutually beneficial to both bond and free, and is abundantly authorized and justified by the experience of mankind, and the revealed will of the Almighty Creator, as recognized by all Christian nations; while the destruction of the existing relations between the two races, as advocated by our sectional enemies, would bring inevitable calamities upon both and desolation upon the fifteen slave-holding States.

In short, secessionists in Texas made clear, in their own words, that they were seceding to preserve the institution of slavery permanently and to maintain a government for whites only.

One question worth pondering in the coming weeks: if this is what Texan secessionists went on record to say when they left the Union, what did Dick Dowling think about secession? In last week’s blog post, Ross raises the question of what Dowling was fighting for at Sabine Pass. How would you answer that question? Have you found evidence in your research that might indicate where Dowling stood?

At the very least, we know that Dowling was a fervent supporter of secession from very early on. He was one of over two hundred people who signed a petition in November 1860, immediately after Lincoln’s election, calling for a public meeting in Houston that later voted to ask the governor to convene the legislature. When Governor Sam Houston, a Unionist, refused to do that, secessionists took matters into the own hands by planning the February 1861 secession convention. Dowling’s rapidly enlisted after that convention called for troops, and while he was not present at Twiggs’ surrender, he was part of a group of militia companies dispatched to the lower Rio Grande Valley to force a federal army post there to surrender, which it did not long after Twiggs folded.

All of this happened before shots had been fired on Fort Sumter. There was no immediate threat of federal armies marching on Texas; on the contrary, the few federal troops in Texas were marching out. But in this crucial month, it was clear that Dowling stood on the side of the secessionists. That raises several questions worth thinking about as we continue to talk about Dowling: In the absence of evidence to the contrary, is it safe to assume he agreed with the “causes” for secession outlined in the convention’s declaration? Is there evidence that other motives played a role in his thinking? When Texas secessionists spoke about political equality for all white men, would they have included Irish Catholics like Dowling?

And here’s another question: regardless of what Dowling personally thought, what do Texas’ secession documents tell us about the kind of society Texas would have been if his side had succeeded? If Dowling’s victory at Sabine Pass had not been an isolated victory, but instead had succeeded in keeping Texas permanently outside the Union, what would Texas have looked like? If it would have looked at all like the society of permanent slavery and white supremacy envisioned in the Declaration, is it even possible to consider Dowling a hero?

Feel free to post comments on this post if you’d like to weigh in on these questions. I have been enjoying working through your Library Assignment posts. As Mercy notes in her latest round-up, your classmates have written some great posts that you should read. In the meantime, have a great Spring Break, and I’ll see you in a week.

Weekend Round-Up

February 25th, 2011 by Mercy Harper

You all did some really interesting research this week. This is an especially good week for you to read each other’s posts. Check out Victor’s and Courtney’s posts on articles from 1863 in the Houston Tri-Weekly Telegraph. Examining a September 12th article, Courtney finds, “that the primary, contemporary account of the battle, published merely days after the events, did not glorify the victory as much as I may have thought.” The September 16th articles Victor examines show grander commemoration of the victory taking shape only a few days later. The battle is now being lauded as a “greatest feat of the war,” and Mr. Charles Otis is arranging a concert in honor of the “gallant” Davis Guards.

As several of you found, the articles and headlines surrounding articles on Dowling can be quite revealing. Analyzing the context surrounding an 1889 Houston Post article, Tyler argues that in this period, “The nation was repairing itself, and the South was thanking its veterans for their sacrificing.” Kat examines a 1966 Houston Chronicle article, “Texas Will Dedicate Marker to Honor Sabine Pass Victory.” She finds that the coverage surrounding the article “shed[s] light upon the changing times of a nation at war in Vietnam and facing considerable cultural change at home.”

Your research on these newspapers and magazines offers insight into the relationship between memorializers and their socio-cultural context. If any of you are interested in learning a bit more about the newspapers you looked at, check the Texas State Historical Association’s Handbook of Texas Online. Here is an overview of newspapers in Texas, but you can also search for entries on various Texas newspapers such as the Tri-Weekly Telegraph, Houston Post, or Houston Chronicle.