By now followers of our museum have probably become accustomed to what the national ensign of the Confederate States Gunboat Hampton looked like when it was officially accepted into the collection of the Naval History and Heritage Command in 2013. It is what I like to call the "before" picture:
The flag was not only
desiccated from insufficient moisture, but it also suffered from an “acidic” environment caused by pollutants
in the atmosphere. It had also sustained damaging exposure to ultraviolet rays over the years. Its loose and frayed hems have been painstakingly mended, its structural integrity has now been stabilized using archival-quality batting, and it is supported by its own frame. This brings me to the "after" picture:
On Wednesday, the 22nd of April at 6 PM, this true rarity made its public debut in our main museum location at One Waterside Drive, inside Nauticus.
Come and see it!
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
Friday, April 3, 2015
150 Years Ago: CSS Hampton's Flag is Captured
The following recollection was recorded on page 578 of Thirteenth Regiment of New Hampshire Volunteer Infantry in the War of the Rebellion, 1861-1865: A Diary Covering Three Years and a Day by S. Millett Thompson, who believed Captain William J. Ladd to be the first Union soldier to enter Richmond, Virginia after its evacuation. This was Ladd's recollection of his brief encounter with the gunboat Hampton on the morning of April 3, 1865:
I was in the Capitol grounds as early as 5.30 a. m. I saw no flag on the Capitol at that time. After looking about the grounds and vicinity for a few minutes, and realizing that I was alone in the city, I rode back toward Rocketts, and when near there met a white Union cavalryman—the first Union soldier I had seen in Richmond that morning. We tied our horses, took a skiff and rowed out to a rebel war ship in the James, and captured the two Confederate flags then flying upon her. I pulled down the larger flag, the cavalryman the smaller one, and we rolled them up and tied them to our saddles. These were the first and only flags of any kind—Federal or Confederate—that I saw in Richmond that morning... Soon after we secured these flags the vessel blew up.
A model of the Hampton-class gunboat Nansemond at the Hampton Roads Naval Museum. |
Final Orders for the James River Squadron
CONFEDERATE STATES OF AMERICA
Executive Office, Richmond, Va., April 2, 1865
SIR: General Lee advises the Government to withdraw from this city, and the officers will leave this evening accordingly.
I presume that General Lee has advised you of this and of his movements, and made suggestions as to the disposition to be made of your squadron. He withdraws from his lines toward Danville this night: and, unless otherwise directed by General Lee, upon you is devolved the duty of destroying your ships this night, and with all the forces under your command, joining General Lee. Confer with him, if practicable, before destroying them.
Let your people be rationed as far as possible for the march and armed and equipped duly in the field.
Very respectfully, your obedient servant,
S.R. MALLORY
Secretary of the Navy
Rear-Admiral RAPHAEL SEMMES,
Commanding James River Squadron
Wednesday, April 1, 2015
River Queen: Ark of a Civil War Covenant
He was mystically, sincerely, but most discreetly religious.
Life of George P.A. Healy by His Daughter Mary (Mme. Charles Bigot), 1912
Entitled, The
Peacemakers, it is an extraordinary painting of an extraordinary meeting
near Hampton Roads; the only face-to-face strategy session between four men who
were by this time 150 years ago deciding not only how best to finish a period
of war, but how to begin an era of peace.
The Scene: Arguably the greatest military leaders of the American Civil War meet with their Commander-in-Chief in what appears to be a cozy parlor. William T. Sherman, fresh from leading the greatest punitive expedition of the war, seems to give advice to the President. His friend Ulysses S. Grant at Lincoln’s right listens, yet seems nonplussed. David D. Porter, seated at Lincoln’s left after his recent return from waging a successful military campaign against Wilmington, North Carolina, followed by blunting Benjamin Butler’s political campaign against him before Congress, listens as well.
There is something more than a little allegorical about the scene rendered by the prolific artist George P.A. Healy in 1868. With their symmetrical gestures, Lt. Gen. Grant and Rear Adm. Porter seem to be holding back an invisible curtain or veil revealing Lincoln, who has borne the responsibility for deciding nearly every major strategic decision of the war. Note that the four windows behind them seem to progress, beginning on the left with curtains and shades drawn, to the rainbow’s appearance followed by the parting of the clouds. The destructive flood of war that swept the nation is subsiding, Healy seems to say, and it seems that one merely has to open the doors located directly behind the president and step out into the light.
The setting for The Peacemakers was the steamer River Queen, then moored near Lt. Gen Grant's headquarters at City Point, Virginia. River Queen was also the setting for a very different conference held near Fort Monroe just a few days after the fall of Fort Fisher in January. Perhaps within the very cabin depicted in the painting, Lincoln had received three other high-ranking visitors, Confederate Vice President Alexander Stephens, Assistant Secretary of War John A. Campbell, and Senator Robert M.T. Hunter, who had traveled under a flag of truce from Richmond to propose an armistice and joint expedition against Mexico.
Probably preoccupied with more profound thoughts than the three Confederate emissaries could possibly fathom, Lincoln stated flatly during the February 3 meeting that only the disbandment of the Confederate armies and the restoration of the union would bring the peace they supposedly sought; not a mere redirection of the fighting.
Thanks to Sherman’s account of his meeting with Healy while his painting was still in the planning stages, we have a pretty good insight into precisely what he was actually telling the President during this reconstructed moment.
“In this picture I seem to be talking, the others attentively listening,” Sherman wrote to Lincoln’s friend and early biographer Isaac Newton Arnold. “Whether Healy made this combination from Admiral Porter's letter or not, I cannot say; but I thought that he caught the idea from what I told him had occurred when saying that ‘if Lee would only remain in Richmond till I could reach Burkesville, we would have him between our thumb and fingers,’ suiting the action to the word.”
According to Porter, Lincoln's response might not have been what some of his officers were hoping to hear, yet it was consistent with the higher goal he had elucidated within his second inaugural address earlier that month, with intentions to "bind the wounds of the nation...[w]ith malice towards none, with charity for all....".
"All very well," said the President, "but we must make no mistakes, and my way is a sure one: Offer General Johnston the same terms that will be offered Lee; then, if he will not accept them, try your plan; but as long as the Confederates lay down their arms I don't think it matters much how they do it. Don't let us have any more bloodshed if it can be avoided. General Grant is in favor of giving General Lee the most favorable terms."
And that is precisely what Grant did 12 days later at the village of Appomattox Court House, April 9, 1865.
Porter concluded:
General Grant shared in the President's desire for the most liberal arrangements that could be entered into for the surrender of the confederate armies; and while Mr. Lincoln had implicit confidence in Grant's military abilities, he relied no less on his good judgment and kind feeling, and it is fortunate that the last act in the bloody drama of the civil war[sic] was under the direction of the two men acting in perfect accord, whose names will be handed down to posterity with increase of honor as the years roll by.
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