Wednesday, January 7, 2015

January 9, 1865---Two Congresses Carry On



JANUARY 9, 1865:  

Tennessee abolishes slavery.

The debate on the Thirteenth Amendment goes on in the House of Representatives. Slowly, President Lincoln is winning over members of the fractious House.

While the Northern Congress argues over abolishing slavery, so does the Southern Congress. There is much resistance to the idea (in both Congresses), and the idea of arming slaves to fight remains anathema to most Southrons.  

Complicating the debate are rumors of Francis Preston Blair’s supposedly secret trip to Richmond to discuss peace with Jefferson Davis. The idea that the end of the war may be imminent stiffens the back of the slaveocracy, Northern and Southern. 


Tuesday, January 6, 2015

January 8, 1865---The Battle of Dove Creek (The Kickapoos Kick Some Ass)



JANUARY 8, 1865:  

The Battle of Dove Creek. In modern-day Tom Green County, Texas, a Confederate force of 400 launches an unprovoked attack on a village of Kickapoo Indians. The Kickapoos had been at peace since the 1830s. Nevertheless, six hundred Kickapoo warriors defend their village valiantly, inflicting nearly 200 casualties on the Texans, who withdraw in confusion. The Texans later claim that Union Jayhawkers were commanding the Kickapoo defense, but there is no proof of this. The Kickapoos, who lose 16 men, travel south and cross the Rio Grande for sanctuary in Mexico; from their Mexican village they conduct border raids on Texas settlements well into the 1870s.


Monday, January 5, 2015

January 7, 1865---The Hatfields and The McCoys: Of hillbillies, rednecks, and crackers



JANUARY 7, 1865:            

The famous feud between the Hatfields and the McCoys begins with the murder of Asa Harmon McCoy most likely by Captain William Anderson “Devil Anse” Hatfield C.S.A. Hatfield, who was a West Virginia Confederate murdered the Kentuckian Asa for supporting the Union cause. Ironically, most of the McCoys were Confederate as well, and so Asa’s death was never of much concern in and of itself. However, as a matter of family honor, Randall “Ole Ran’l” McCoy and his fifteen surviving children declared war on Anse and the 16 Hatfield progeny. Internecine violence, with its reprisals and counter-reprisals, went on well into the 1890s. Even though members of the two families freely intermarried throughout the feud the Hatfields and the McCoys did not formally make peace until 2003.  

William Anderson "Devil Anse" Hatfield (1839-1921)


The grand irony of the Hatfield-McCoy Feud is that not only did Hatfields and McCoys intermarry during the feud but that they intermarried before the feud and continue to do so today. In fact, as far as anyone knows, they were closely related even in the Old Country, and their respective ancestors chose to live in the same region of the New World because of their close bonds. 

Randall "Ole Ran'l" McCoy  (1825-1914)


The “Old Country” for the Hatfields and the McCoys was the north of Ireland. Both families are among those who were (sometimes forcibly) resettled from Scotland to Ireland in the 17th Century in a scheme called “Plantation,” designed by the Protestant royalty of England to establish control over the Irish Province of Ulster --- once the seat of the O’Neills, the most powerful Catholic royal house in Ireland. The dispossessed Catholic Irish were exiled “to hell or Connaught,” the bleak, rocky western province of Ireland. Most American Irish Catholics are descended from the Connaught exiles. 

The shared homeland of generations of feuding Hatfields and McCoys. Today, along with Bluegrass music and locally (and legally) produced white lightning, the feud draws tens of thousands of tourists yearly.


“Plantation” gave rise to a new people, the Scots-Irish (described uncharitably as “not quite Scots, not quite Irish, and the worst of both”). Today, the Scots-Irish make up the Protestant population of Northern Ireland. They also make up the largest single ethnic group among modern Americans, including the majority of U.S. Presidents. 

Hatfields and McCoys pose with actor Kevin Costner who played Devil Anse in the TV miniseries in 2012. Both families lost at least a score of relatives during the feud.


A great many of the Scots-Irish fought on the Protestant side in Ireland’s many civil wars, and made up the majority of the foot soldiers at the Battle of the Boyne (1690) when the Protestant William of Orange defeated the Catholic James of England. Known as “King Billy’s Boys” in that engagement, the infantry wore orange neckerchiefs as part of their uniforms. The Catholics called them the “Red Necks.” Since most of them lived in rugged Ulster, they also became known as the “Hill Billys.” 

The term “Cracker” is also Gaelic in origin --- Craic (pronounced “crack”) means "talk" --- and among the Catholic Irish the Scots-Irish were mocked as bigmouths who bragged more but did less. 


All these terms --- redneck, hillbilly and cracker --- became part of the American lexicon when the Scots-Irish emigrated to America. Poorer than the English who settled the New England coasts and the Tidewater of Virginia and the Carolinas, they became America's first underclass. Many among the Scots-Irish moved into the hinterlands, mostly into the dells and hollows (“hollers”) of Appalachia where they became (as they had been in Europe) tenant farmers and unskilled laborers, an often dour, stubborn and exceptionally clannish people; they also homebrewed their own whiskey as they had in Ireland ("po't'cheen"), often at night to hide the activity from tax collectors. Illicit “moonshine” is still made today. 

Elisha Lunsford, Confederate soldier, wearing the red scarf. Lunsford was the third great-granduncle of Audie Murphy, the most decorated U.S. soldier of World War II.

"Redneck Pride" is an old commodity. Although (then as now) most often meant as perjoratives, numerous Scots-Irish felt and feel no shame in being described thus. A (sometimes lowbrow) cracker subculture has evolved, which many Americans --- including many crackers --- conflate and confuse with the culture of the Old South.  

Not an uncommon article of clothing among Confederate soldiers in the 1860s, even nowadays the red scarf (often sporting a clan tartan) is a symbol of pride among many descendants of the Scots-Irish.



The region along the Kentucky-West Virginia border where the Hatfields and McCoys feuded 150 years ago is one of the most beautiful albeit the most economically depressed areas of the United States. Southeastern Kentucky, right in the heart of Hatfield-McCoy country, and the home of bluegrass music, is made up of five of the ten poorest counties in the nation. The damage wrought by the Civil War still lingers in this region. 

An abandoned farmstead in Owsley County, Kentucky, the poorest county in America, with a median income of $12,000 annually.

January 6, 1865---"Alive and Kicking"; "A Meddler" and "A Marplot"



JANUARY 6, 1865:            

The Milwaukee Sentinel reports that Colonel John Singleton Mosby C.S.A.  is dead after receiving a serious abdominal wound. According to the news report, most details of which are correct, Mosby was killed at the dinner table during a surprise raid by Federal troops in Rectortown, Virginia. The Sentinel crows: There is no doubt however that he was the redoubtable Mosby.


On January 11th, the Daily Cleveland Herald proved Mosby to be beyond all doubt a revenant in an article entitled Mosby Alive and Kicking. Apparently, the Gray Ghost was even more redoubtable than anybody at first believed. And even more amazing, it seems that the first thing that happens when you’re resurrected is that you get a contract with the NFL. Actually, that explains quite a bit.

The Herald also pointed out for those readers utterly unfamiliar with the Civil War that Davis [is] A Meddler and that Lee [is] A Marplot. Those guys!



At least General Butler [was] Not Surprised. Probably for the first time in the entire war.

  










Sunday, January 4, 2015

January 5, 1865---"I claim for loyal citizens of Florida all the rights and all the protection to which a citizen of Illinois or of New York may be entitled . . . "



JANUARY 5, 1865:   


Although the Confederate Constitution provided for a Judiciary, that third branch of government was never put into operation. As a matter of practicality, local judges remained on the bench handling legal matters in conformity with the Common Law and U.S. Case Law where it could be applied. Prewar Federal District Judges frequently remained on the bench and their Courts often became quiet centers of gravity for Unionist sentiment.  

As the United States reabsorbed areas of the South, the business of the Courts slowly returned to normal. In 1862, the Union retook Jacksonville and reinstituted the Federal District Court for the Northern District of Florida. Occasionally the business of the Courts and military exigencies collided. On this day President Lincoln received a letter from The Honorable Philip Fraser, the loyal Federal Judge of the Northern District of Florida, decrying the destructiveness of property seizures against Unionists. It reads in part:

Sir:

I hope you will find an excuse for my appealing to you . . . in behalf of the people of my state . . . Threatened by the rebels on one side, our rights as citizens of the United States disregarded and trampled upon by commanders of our armies on the other, our property taken from us [and] used . . . without compensation, our title to protection as American Citizens . . . treated with coldness or contempt, we appeal as a last resort to your Excellency, for that protection to which we are entitled as . . . citizens of these United States . . . 

I would rather fall to-day by a rebel bullet fighting for my country, than to be subjected day by day to the humiliation of submitting to the petty despotism of small men . . . men . . . incapable of grappling, like Grant and Sherman and Thomas and Sheridan and Porter and Farragut with this great rebellion . . . through weakness of head or want of heart . . . [who] expend . . . their power upon unoffending and unarmed citizens who have under the Constitution equal rights with themselves --- I claim for [the] loyal citizens of Florida all the rights and all the protection to which a citizen of Illinois or of New York may be entitled . . . 

Thanks to General Sherman we hope soon to see Florida free and restored to her rightful position under the Government --- upholding constitutional liberty, and rebuking tyranny with the ballot . . .

I claim Mr. President to be a loyal citizen ready to sacrifice what little I have not already sacrificed, to restore the authority of the Government over the rebel states. I am ready to fight when men of my physical ability are needed --- I will vouch for greater sacrifices than my own on the part of some of my fellow citizens now in Florida. [Is] Gen Foster [Commanding the Department of The South] privileged to take what little remains to us . . . ? We do not believe that the Government will sustain him in such designs . . . 

Some of the citizens who have lost large amounts of property on account of their fidelity to the Union have purchased confiscated rebel property at Marshals sale --- General Foster refuses to give them possession, and alleges that he holds it as a military necessity --- When applied to by one of the purchasers, I am credibly informed that he replied -- "that if the      U. S. Court did not stop interfering with him he would evacuate Florida"--- The carrying out of such a threat might exhibit good Generalship in escaping from a dangerous enemy viz: the U. S. Court, but I think it will hardly be considered by General Grant a military necessity.

I wish myself to place no impediment in the way of military operations. The Court has not done so thus far. Neither can it do so --- It is merely exercising its proper functions by enforcing the laws of Congress. If the Government will sustain the Court it will continue to do so, if not it must discontinue its business and adjourn until happier days ---

. . . 

I have the honor to be

Very Respectfully

Your Obedient Servant

Philip Fraser
U. S. District Judge
Northern District of Florida