The Rebel Yell

One of those old movies I was wishing for in the last post! Smithsonian Magazine uncovered this film of a bunch of aged Southern vets demonstrating what’s left of their Rebel Yells for a crowd in the 1930s. The individual yells don’t do much on their own (one old fellow, in particular, looks winded by the attempt), but my goodness, that opening scene with the screaming crowd does match Shelby Foote’s “peculiar corkscrew sensation up the backbone” description, doesn’t it?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s6jSqt39vFM&feature=related

The Scoundrel’s Descendant

Over my years of study I’ve read a few slave narratives, but it’s always a smack in the face to read a fresh one. It’s worth remembering, when the debates rage on States’ Rights and the other distracting discussions, that slavery was a horrific, inhumane system that deeply affected real people. The arguments are a lot easier to rebut when you put yourself in their shoes.

This article’s interesting, too, for its j’accuse towards the North, who was also benefitting from the products of slavery.

Twenty years ago, DeWolf discovered he was the direct descendant of a “scoundrel.” When his distant ancestor, Senator James DeWolf, died in 1837, he was the second richest man in America. Much of his wealth was acquired from the most successful slave-trading dynasty in history. A dynasty he built.

The discovery prompted DeWolf and 10 family members to research their checkered ancestry. Their efforts uncovered historical “myths” surrounding slavery that perpetuate a false history, and obscure the origins of social inequities that endure today, DeWolf said.

The British Civil War

No, not the one that cost a certain King Charles his head; NPR does their usual great job at recounting unusual pastimes and interesting fringe groups by publicizing the existence of a far-afield group of reenactors.

“Why not? It’s jolly good poppy,” says Philip Clark. A lawyer by weekday and soldier by weekend, he is one of Seawell’s many interviews. “The American war is somebody else’s war. Over in America, I’ve experienced the ‘Your grandpappy shot my grandpappy’ stuff. Over here … we’re all friends together.”

http://www.npr.org/blogs/pictureshow/2010/09/08/129722983/civilwar-uk

Ironclad Reenactment

There’s a very cool reenactment taking place in Swedesboro, NJ on the 25th of September:

The re-enactors will present what life was like for sailors serving onboard an ironclad warship during the Civil War. “Eyewitness” participants will describe daily shipboard routine during the blockade and stirring naval battles in great detail.  Uniforms, weapons, accoutrements and models of the “new” ironclads, including a few vessels from the Rebel navy, will be displayed.

Between the Booth play in Williamsburg and this unusual reenactment in Swedesboro, Civil War buffs in the NY/NJ area are having a great month!

http://www.nj.com/gloucester-county/towns/index.ssf/2010/09/ship_mates_due_to_visit_swedes.html