Saturday, June 28, 2008

Reporter for Fox News Thankful For History Lesson

From Southern Heritage News & Views (Charles Demastus [demastus@aol.com])

I'm Orlando Salinas the reporter who did the *soldiers flag* story for fox news

Thanx for the kind words! I must admit I was one of those folks that was ready to call that *battle flag* a racist symbol

I had my opinion made up and then I did something incredible... I actually listened to some one who knew more than me!

... And I learned some history that I was ignorant about! Go figure!

I'm more curious than ever to know more about southern heritage and real history... That is both proud and honourable and at the same time... A history that is almost forgotten!

I am taking somewhat of a beating for this story... Most of the *bosses* In new York felt I had the story *wrong* and there was some pressure to change it but I said no... That’s the story...

To fnc's credit they backed off and let my story air...

Still I'm taking a bit of a beating by some colleagues who say I'm flat wrong!!!

If u think I really did a fair job pls email my bosses in NY At Ny@foxnews.com

Just don't tell em I gave that addy to u!!

And pass that addy onto others who also believe the story was fair and have them email my bosses too!! I hope fnc and other media outlets realize there's a whole history out there that's not being told... And to me that is a dishonourable thing to do to our country and to the many ancestors that fought and died on both sides...

ThanxOrly

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Annual Reunion to be Held in Concord, NC

Important Notice to All Camps & SCV Members

All SCV members and camps are encouraged to attend the 113th Annual General Reunion which will be held in Concord NC during the period July 16 to July 19, 2008. There are a number of important documents included with (attached to) this announcement that are related to this event and normal SCV business with which you will need to be familiar.

Credentials Form- You may print this document on plain paper. Please ensure that GHQ has the names of the correct camp Commander and Adjutant in their database records because one of them must sign the credentials form to validate it. The credentials committee will check the name against the master camp rosters. Please do not send the signed credentials form back to the GHQ as it must be retained and taken to Concord NC by your camp’s delegate(s).

2008 Awards Program Information sheet- This information should answer all of your questions concerning national awards for this reunion. You may download a distinguished camp award entry form at member services, forms and documents on the SCV website at this link: http://www.scv.org/documents.php . You may also download the annual camp report form at this same link and this report should be completed and transmitted to GHQ no later than July 10, 2008. Please request a copy of your camp's current roster from the appropriate secretary, Stephanie Bible, atmdesk@scv.org for ATM and Georgia or Nikki Thornton for ANV and AOT except Georgia at anvdesk@scv.org. Please review this camp roster to determine if there are any errors, omissions or other problems to be corrected prior to the reunion. If so, please contact your Army secretary by email, phone, facsimile, or letter, and these corrections will be made by the GHQ before the reunion. GHQ will continue to process all new memberships and reinstatements which are postmarked by July 1, 2008. New members and reinstatements received after this date will not be included on reunion camp rosters for voting purposes.

SCV National Organization Starts a Blog

I just discovered that the national organization of Sons of Confederate Veterans has also started a blog website. It is located at this link.

I will add them to our link list in the left sidebar right away.

UPDATE: Confederate Veteran Magazine has also started a blog. It has been added to the sidebar link under "Blogs." It is located at this link.

Attention Camp Commanders, Adjutants, Others

If your California camp doesn't have its own website or blog, and you don't want the hassle of starting one, send your meeting and event notices here (secesh@rebelgray.com) and we will post them as soon as we open your email.

Also, please do send news of upcoming reenactments, Civil War Roundtables, events of related organizations (Daughters of the Confederacy, Confederate Rose, Sons of Union Veterans, Military Order of the Stars and Bars, parades, etc). Send photos if you want them posted with the article (one or two photos - don't get carried away!).

Out of state news is also welcome, as are articles related to the Civil War, reenactments, movie reviews, book reviews, etc, as long as they are "on topic."

Newsletters can be posted here as an article. Send the newsletter to us in Word format and we will post it here too.

Our goal is to add articles on a daily basis so that this blog becomes a useful and frequently used tool for the California Division.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Woody Plaugher: In Memoriam



Photo courtesy of Will Tisch.

Click photo to see full size.

Fox News Video on Florida Flag Raising

The Florida Division of Sons of Confederate Veterans has raised a huge Confederate battle flag along a state highway. Many of the Sons and friends (including some valued black friends) were there to celebrate the event.

Here is the video of the Fox News broadcast that aired last night. Fox News was remarkably objective about it; so often any news about Southern heritage is spoken in disapproving and mildly accusatory tones (the undertone being shame, shame, shame).

Way to go, Florida brothers!

Chuck Norred: A Message Re Woody Plaugher

Folks

Most of you know by now that California has lost a "Real Son" in Woody Plaugher. Thanks to Compatriot Barron Smith and Compatriot Vern Padgett for helping pass the word.

Camp 1804 members please know that we will invite his niece and her family who lives in Fresno to a dinner meeting. His nephew whose family lives in nearby Woodlake will also be invited. His nephew was a World Known Bull Fighter (Rodeo Clown.) I don't think many people within the SCV knows that. I have attended a few of his FCC (Fellow of Christian Cowboys) meetings and still use my FCC Bible he gave me years ago.

Woody had an awesome personality and loved his Confederate Heritage. Most of all Woody was a man of outstanding Character and never had a bad thing to say about any one person. Please place Woody Plaugher in your prayers.

I do not have my full address book recorded within my new comcast book and I would appreciate you folks if you would pass onto others the news of Woody Plaugher, a very loved California "Real Son" within the Sons of Confederate Veterans.

Thank you Barron Smith as I know you have had your own very serious health problems. Thank you for being a good friend to Woody and all you have done for him. You have been an inspiration as I know you have been the one who has helped him at every National Reunion I have been to. God Bless you for that and please know you are still in my prayers.

I was not able to make our past Division Reunion because I was at a GEC meeting. I will always remember the two Reunions (2007 & 2006) before our 2008 Reunion, in Bakersfield. Commander Kenny Ramsey at each Reunion hosted Woody's Birthday party. At our 2007 Reunion, Commander Ramsey presented Woody with the most beautiful Confederate Flag birthday cake. At the same reunion our members, and Woody had the privledge of singing "Dixie" that was broadcasted over 5 different radio stations at the Crystal Palace in Bakersfield with Buck Owens.

Again I ask you to please place Woody's family within your prayers. I send to you a picture of Woody and Camp 1804 1st Lt. Commander Russell Snow.

God Bless

Chuck Norred

Monday, June 23, 2008

An Age-Old Forgery Still Used to Denigrate Jefferson Davis

A few years ago I read a biography of Jefferson Davis by a northern author, written in the 1930's. The author described an incendiary speech, said to have been delivered by Davis as a response to the Emancipation Proclamation.

The author stated flatly that the speech was a forgery, created for propaganda purposes during the American Civil War, and gave examples of similar forgeries occurring in American history.

Nevertheless, this fake speech still circulates on the internet, in college classrooms and websites, presented as fact and used to denigrate Davis and his cause. Once in a while you will come across this forgery, so be prepared.

That Jefferson Davis never gave such a speech is obvious. It isn't included in any scholarly collections of his papers or speeches or newspapers of the time period. For example, see this listing of Davis's speeches on the Rice University website. The speech Jeff Davis gave on January 5, 1863 doesn't remotely resemble the fraudulent one [reproduced below].

Furthermore, though Harper's Magazine of January 31, 1863 did print Jeff Davis's response to the Emancipation Proclamation, those remarks did not resemble the fraudulent address herein described. It is doubtful that such an incendiary speech by Davis would have been overlooked, particularly one specifically addressed to "to the People of the Free States by the President of the Southern Confederacy."

Further evidence that the address is fraudulent is that Jeff Davis allegedly says ".....and entertaining the belief that the day is not distant when the old Union will be restored with slavery nationally declared to be the proper condition of all of African descent...." Jefferson Davis would never had said any such thing. He was utterly determined and committed to preserving the independence of the Southern states; restoration of the Union was to him unthinkable. Furthermore, Jefferson Davis acknowledged that slavery would come to an end at some point in the future, regardless of the outcome of the Civil War.

In the speech Jefferson Davis allegedly makes powerful policy decisions as if he were a dictator, when in reality such decisions would have to be approved by the Confederate Congress.

Here's the forged speech. If you see it anywhere, know it for what it is.
-------------------------------------------------
CONFEDERATE RESPONSE TO THE EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION
An Address to the People of the Free States by the President of the Southern Confederacy, Richmond, January 5, 1863.

Citizens of the non-slaveholding States of America, swayed by peaceable motives, I have used all my influence, often thereby endangering my position as the President of the Southern Confederacy, to have the unhappy conflict now existing between my people and yourselves, governed by those well established international rules, which heretofore have softened the asperities which necessarily are the concomitants of a state of belligerency, but all my efforts in the premises have heretofore been unavailing. Now, therefore, I am compelled e necessitati rei to employ a measure, which most willingly I would have omitted to do, regarding, as I always must, State Rights, as the very organism of politically associated society.

For nearly two years my people have been defending their inherent rights their political, social and religious rights against the speculators of New England and their allies in the States heretofore regarded as conservative. The people of the Southern Confederacy have -- making sacrifices such as the modern world has never witnessed -- patiently, but determinedly, stood between their home interests and the well paid, well fed and well clad mercenaries of the Abolitionists, and I need not say that they have nobly vindicated the good name of American citizens. Heretofore, the warfare has been conducted by white men -- peers, scions of the same stock; but the programme has been changed, and your rulers despairing of a triumph by the employment of white men, have degraded you and themselves, by inviting the cooperation of the black race. Thus, while they deprecate the intervention of white men -- the French and the English -- in behalf of the Southern Confederacy, they, these Abolitionists, do not hesitate to invoke the intervention of the African race in favor of the North.

The time has, therefore, come when a becoming respect for the good opinion of the civilized world impels me to set forth the following facts:

First. Abraham Lincoln, the President of the Non-Slaveholding States, has issued his proclamation, declaring the slaves within the limits of the Southern Confederacy to be free.

Second. Abraham Lincoln has declared that the slaves so emancipated may be used in the Army and Navy, now under his control, by which he means to employ, against the Free People of the South, insurrectionary measures, the inevitable tendency of which will be to inaugurate a Servile War, and thereby prove destructive, in a great measure, to slave property.

Now, therefore, as a compensatory measure, I do hereby issue the following Address to the People of the Non-Slaveholding States:

On and after February 22, 1863, all free negroes within the limits of the Southern Confederacy shall be placed on the slave status, and be deemed to be chattels, they and their issue forever. All negroes who shall be taken in any of the States in which slavery does not now exist, in the progress of our arms, shall be adjudged, immediately after such capture, to occupy the slave status, and in all States which shall be vanquished by our arms, all free negroes shall, ipsofacto, be reduced to the condition of helotism, so that the respective normal conditions of the white and black races may be ultimately placed on a permanent basis, so as to prevent the public peace from being thereafter endangered.

Therefore, while I would not ignore the conservative policy of the Slave States, namely, that a Federal Government cannot, without violating the fundamental principles of a Constitution, interfere with the internal policy of several States; since, however, Abraham Lincoln has seen fit to ignore the Constitution he has solemnly sworn to support, it ought not be considered polemically or politically improper in me to vindicate the position which has been at an early day of this Southern republic, assumed by the Confederacy, namely, that slavery is the corner-stone of a Western Republic. It is not necessary for me to elaborate this proposition. I may merely refer, in passing, to the prominent fact, that the South is emphatically a producing section of North America; this is equally true of the West and Northwest, the people of which have been mainly dependent on the South for the consumption of their products. The other States, in which slavery does not exist, have occupied a middle position, as to the South, West and Northwest. The States of New England, from which all complicated difficulties have arisen, owe their greatness and power to the free suffrages of all other sections of North America; and yet, as is now evident, they have, from the adoption of the Federal Constitution, waged a persistent warfare against the interests of all the other States of the old Union. The great centre of their opposition has been Slavery, while the annual statistics of their respective State Governments abundantly prove that they entertain within all their boundaries fewer negroes than any single State which does not tolerate slavery.

In view of these facts, and conscientiously believing that the proper condition of the negro is slavery, or a complete subjection to the white man, -- and entertaining the belief that the day is not distant when the old Union will be restored with slavery nationally declared to be the proper condition of all of African descent, and in view of the future harmony and progress of all the States of America, I have been induced to issue this address, so that there may be no misunderstanding in the future.

*****
The commentary of a modern university teacher is included below:

This document shows Jefferson Davis, the commander-in-chief of the
confederate armies, firmly promulgating the national policy that the
southern armies were fighting for slavery. It also belies any supposed
confederate support for blacks in their own ranks, as Davis clearly regards
having blacks as soldiers degrades white society.

There's only one problem, lady. Jeff Davis never wrote it or said it.
...

A Message from Louis Olker

VERY nice new website!! Thanks for putting in the time and effort on that. A couple of things I should relate to you now while I've got you on email. Along with Connie Lawson(UDC-Vallejo), I am putting together a grave marking ceremony for Major Joseph P. Vaughn, who is buried in the Benicia Cemetery. We are planning this for 10:00AM, Saturday, October 4th, 2008 and there will be riflemen, UDC, SCV in and out of uniform from our Camp and I hope your Camp too. We will be installing a bronze marker for Maj. Vaughn, who left Benicia in 1862, traveled back to Missouri to join the State Guard, He fought in the battle of Lexington and was promoted to Major and led the MO 6th INF REG at the Battle of Iuka where he was killed. There will be a picnic afterward down the hill in one of the City Parks (we have it reserved). Do you know any buglers?

Also, your men may want to know about the Duncan Mills reenactment over on the Russian River July 19-20. For the past few years I have brought an old oak "recruitment table" for our SCV Camp in Sacramento to share with the SUVCW Post in Santa Rosa on Saturday. There are two reenactments during the day and tons of suttlers and displays. Probably the second best and nicest site for joint ACWA and NCWA reenactment.

Also, I will send you Wayne Ford's email address(our Adjutant....didn't notice if you had it posted). Sorry to hear about Woody. He was quite a trouper!

Thanks again! Lou

Remember Your Heritage

Here's a great video from YouTube. It has segments from the movies "Gods and Generals" and "Gettysburg."

The first segment shows Stephen Lang as General Jackson explaining to his troops why Virginia will enter the war on the side of the South.

Another segment shows General Armistead rallying his troops for Pickett's Charge. I was present in the making of that scene; in fact, I was one of the Confederate infantrymen standing at attention behind him.

Black and White Compatriots Celebrate Confederate Flag - Together!

This news item from Fox News is interesting and hopeful.

Controversial Confederate Flag Raising Ceremony
by FNC News Crews
By Orlando Salinas

I thought I’d only see Caucasians attending a controversial Confederate flag raising ceremony, early on Saturday morning in Tampa, Florida. That’s what I get for thinking.

But there they were-a smattering of African Americans, mixing it up with Caucasian bikers wearing Confederate flag jean jackets and caps. But what really caught my eye was seeing some of those same African American folks also sporting the controversial symbol on their bodies too.

Right smack dab at the politically powerful junction of Interstate 4 and I-75… hoisted 139 feet up in the in the air, was what most Americans call the flag of the onfederacy, but what is more correctly referred to by historians as “a soldiers flag.”

Marion Lambert, who owns the sliver-size piece of property where the flag has been displayed, calls himself a proud member of the sons of Confederate veterans, who says his local organization would never defend the painful issue of slavery. And, as I watched Caucasian and some African Americans, hoist that heavy flag 139 feet in the air, there was a collective but “Out of tune” rendition of “I wish I was in Dixie,” and yep, African Americans folks were singing it too, and off key as well.

Throughout the morning, motorcycles rumbled in and out of the parking lot, making it hard to hear, and these folks wanted to be heard. Marion Lambert told me he wants people to notice the flag, wants people to ask, “Why is that huge flag being flown here in Tampa.”

Lamberts answer was simple enough: “I want people to talk to us, let us tell ‘em we’re not for slavery, we’re not for racism, we don’t hate minorities. We just want to show pride and reverence to our ancestors. We don’t agree with the slavery part, it was wrong, but we can’t ignore this flag. It represents our southern heritage, the good that we want to remember, and the bad part we should never forget.”

So there it was, white and black folks, some sitting on cinder blocks, smoking pipes. One elderly African American man wearing a suit and a Confederate tie, back-slapping and joking with a younger Caucasian man wearing so many Confederate symbols, he looked like the poster child for the event. The local NAACP has called these Confederate flag-supporting blacks “out of touch,” saying they don’t represent black America.

I asked the older black man in the Confederate tie, what he thought about the NAACP’s comment, he said “I’m about as black as it gets, I’m the grandson of slaves, I’m a U.S. war veteran, and I’m just as proud of this (Confederate) flag, because it represents my heritage too. And the NAACP doesn’t represent all of black America either.”

Read the entire article here.

I love it -- black Southerners and white Southerners being friends and celebrating Confederate heritage together even though some folks find that inconvenient. I hope this trend continues.

Real Son Woody Plaugher Passes Away

Woody Plaugher, a Real Son of a Confederate veteran, passed away last night. Woody was well known and often honored by the California Division of Sons of Confederate Veterans.

Here's the message we received:

Hello Friends and Compatriots

I just want to inform everyone that our dear Friend and Real Son of a Confederate Soldier Woody passed away last night peacefully about 6:30 pm in the presence of his Grandson. The family plans to have a celebration of his life in the near future but there will be no gravesite services. I will keep you all informed.

Sincerely

Barron Smith

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Lt. General Wade Hampton, Camp 2023 - Modesto

Wade Hampton was born in Charleston, South Carolina on March 28, 1818. As a member of one of the wealthiest families in antebellum South Carolina, Wade Hampton was reputed to be the largest landowner in the South. He owned several plantations in both South Carolina and Mississippi.

Wade Hampton was one of three citizens to attain the rank of Lt. General in the Confederate Army without benefit of formal military training – the other two being Nathan Bedford Forrest and Richard Taylor.

Prior to the War for Southern Independence, Wade Hampton served as both a State Representative and a State Senator for South Carolina. At the outbreak of the War, he resigned from the South Carolina Senate to accept a Colonel’s commission in the Confederate Army. Hampton formed Hampton’s Legion, which he equipped at his own expense. Taking his Legion to Virginia, Hampton’s force fought at First Manassas where Hampton was wounded. Hampton’s Legion was later broken up into separate units. Hampton also was wounded at Gettysburg. In 1865, he evacuated Columbia, South Carolina when General Sherman’s forces entered the city.

After the War, Wade Hampton was elected Governor of South Carolina and was instrumental in ridding the state of carpet baggers. He died in Columbia on April 11, 1902 and is buried at Trinity Episcopal Church in Columbia, South Carolina.

General Albert Sidney Johnston, Camp 2048 - Tehachapi

At the beginning of the Civil War it was almost universally agreed that the finest soldier, North or South, was Albert Sidney Johnston. The Kentucky-born Johnston was appointed to West Point from Louisiana and graduated eighth in the class of 1826. After eight years of service he resigned to care for his terminally ill wife. A failure at farming, he went to Texas and joined the revolutionary forces as a private. He rose to the forces chief command as senior brigadier.

He served as secretary of war in the Republic of Texas and commanded the lst Texas Rifles in the Mexican War. Reentering the regular army in 1849 as a major and paymaster, he became colonel, 2nd (old) Cavalry, in 1855. For his services in the 1857 campaign against the Mormons in Utah he was brevetted brigadier general. He resigned his commission on April 10, 1861, but did not quit his post on the West Coast (the Presidio at San Francisco) until his successor arrived.

Relieved, he began the long trek to Richmond overland. Meeting with Jefferson Davis, he entered Confederate service where his assignments included: general, CSA (August 30, 1861, to date from May 30, 1861); commanding Department No. 2 (September 15, 1861 - April 6, 1862); in immediate command of the Central Army of Kentucky, Department No. 2 (October 28 - December 5, 1861; February 23- March 29, 1862).

As the second ranking general in the Southern army he was given command of the western theater of operations. Establishing a line of defense in Kentucky from the Mississippi River to the Appalachians, he held it until it was broken at Mill Springs in January and at Forts Henry and Donelson in February 1862. Abandoning Kentucky and most of Tennessee, he fell back into northern Mississippi where he concentrated his previously scattered forces.

In early April he moved against Grant's army at Shiloh. In what was basically a surprise attack, he drove the enemy back. While directing frontline operations he was wounded in the leg. Not considering his wound serious, he bled to death. His early death in the war was an incalculable loss to the Confederacy.

The Sons of Confederate Veterans is a genealogical-historical organization dedicated to preserving the history and honoring the memory of our Confederate ancestors. The SCV is the direct heir of the United Confederate Veterans, and the oldest hereditary organization for male descendants of Confederate soldiers. Organized at Richmond, Virginia, in 1896, the SCV continues to serve as a historical, patriotic, and non-political organization dedicated to insuring that a true history of the 1861-65 period is preserved.

C.S.S. Virginia, Camp 2062 - Ventura County

The citizen-soldiers who fought for the Confederacy personified the best qualities of America. Today, the Sons of Confederate Veterans is preserving the history and legacy of these heroes, so future generations can understand the motives that animated the Southern Cause.

The SCV is the direct heir of the United Confederate Veterans, and the oldest hereditary organization for male descendants of Confederate soldiers. Organized at Richmond, Virginia in 1896, the SCV continues to serve as a historical, patriotic, and non-political organization dedicated to insuring that a true history of the 1861-1865 period is preserved.

Membership in the Sons of Confederate Veterans is open to all male descendants over the age of twelve of any veteran who served honorably in the Confederate armed forces. The SCV has ongoing programs at the local, state, and national levels which offer members a wide range of history-related activities. In addition to the privilege of belonging to an organization devoted exclusively to commemorating and honoring Confederate soldiers, members receive "The Confederate Veteran", the bi-monthly national magazine which contains in-depth articles on the war along with news affecting Southern heritage.

CSS VIRGINIA CAMP 2062

The Camp was named to honor the 320 soldiers, sailors and Marines of the Confederate Armed Forces who served as Ship's Company from February to May of 1862. CSS Virginia Camp 2062 organized on July 20, 2002 in Thousand Oaks, California, in order to serve the needs of members in the north and west San Fernando Valley, the Santa Clarita Valley, and Ventura County.

See the Camp's website here for more information.

Captain Cameron E. Thom, Camp 2007 - Long Beach

Captain Cameron Erskine Thom, Camp 2007, received its charter on 15 October 2002. Founding members came from Camp 1742 Inland Empire, Camp 1208 Los Angeles, Camp 584 Headquarters, and members new to SCV.

Cameron Erskine Thom was a native of Culpeper Virginia. Along with many others, he came to California as a 49er. His group included 30 other Virginians. After a few years mining, not attaining the sought after fortune, he began to study law. Captain Thom started his law career in land claims.

C. E. Thom moved his practice to Los Angeles; after two years he was elected City and County Attorney. Cameron Thom was an ardent Southron. Upon hearing the call, he returned to his beloved Virginia. He served the Confederacy well participating in 15 battles and being wounded twice.

After the war of Northern Aggression, Thom returned to California. He lost his property, fortune, and his wife. Susan Henrietta Hathwell returned to her family in Marysville where she later became ill and passed on.

An Old Friend loans $300 in Gold
Shortly after arriving in San Pedro he was recognised by an old friend-- J.M. Griffith. Griffith loaned him $300 in gold. Captain Thom began to move forward with his life. He pooled his money with others and became a co-founder of the City of Glendale California. He served the City of Los Angeles as Mayor from 1882-1884. He served again as City Attorney from 1869-1873, and 1877-1879. Captain Thom served before the War in the State Senate, 1859-1860.

Cameron Erskine Thom was a true Southron Patriot. He passed on in 1915 at the age of 90 and is buried in Evergreen Cemetery in the 3300 block of E. 1st Street Los Angeles, California. A 20-foot obelisk prominently marks his burial site. Upon entering the cemetery, drive 100 yards straight, and you will find him on the left side of the road.

By Paul Williams
For information on meetings and events, see links in the left side panel for Camp 2007.

General Tyree H. Bell, Camp 1804 - Fresno

Tyree Harris Bell was born on September 5, 1815, in Covington, Kentucky. He grew up on his family's Tennessee plantation and, when war broke out between the states, became an ardent supporter of the Confederate cause. In early 1861, Bell recruited a company for the 12th Tennessee Infantry and was elected captain of the company. He soon advanced to become lieutenant colonel of the 12th Tennessee, and led his troops at the Battles of Belmont (Missouri) and Shiloh, then took part in the Battle of Richmond (Kentucky). Transferred to cavalry command, he participated in the Battles of Perryville and Stone's River.

In 1863, Major Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest recruited Bell for an independent command that Forrest was organizing in West Tennessee and northern Mississippi. Bell served with Forrest until the end of the war. Bell served as a recruiting and conscript officer until he was eventually given command of a brigade. In recognition of his service in the Battle of Brice’s Cross Roads and various campaigns in Mississippi and Tennessee, Bell was commissioned as a brigadier general on February 28, 1865.

General Bell fought to the last along side General Forrest, finally surrendering with him at Selma, Alabama at the end of the war. Later, Bell moved to Fresno, California, and became a farmer. He died while traveling through New Orleans on September 1, 1902. His remains are buried in Bethel Cemetery, Del Rey, California, in Fresno County.

Capt. James Iredell Waddell, Camp 1770 - Orange County

The Captain James Iredell Waddell Camp 1770, Orange County, California, Sons of Confederate Veterans, honors the memory of the CSS Shenandoah, her captain and crew. The only Confederate vessel to sail around the world, the Shenandoah captured 38 U.S. ships, mainly Yankee whalers in the North Pacific. During her 13-month voyage, she only dropped anchor twice and visited every ocean except the Antarctic. She surrendered to the British authorities in Liverpool England on November 6, 1865 and lowered the last Confederate Flag.

Captain Waddell wrote: "I claim for her officers and men a triumph over their enemies and over every obstacle, and for myself, I claim having done my duty."

In our lives, most of us have found some things important to us. Furthermore, we have embraced some things of honor to us. The Sons of Confederate Veterans in Orange County want to help you honor and embrace your Confederate heritage. We plan to create a Confederate memorial and burial site in Southern California. The memorial will be a centerpiece for the Confederate pride and services to honor the veterans buried there.

The need for a Confederate memorial in Orange County has been recognized for years. GAR monuments abound, but there is no marker honoring Confederate veterans though many were founding fathers of Orange County. The development of a plan to design, fund and build a suitable Confederate monument has waited for the right time. That time is now.
“For my part, when the time comes to cross the river like the others, I shall be found asking at the gates above: where is the army of Northern Virginia? For there I make my Camp.”
--Brig. Gen. G. Moxley Sorrel, CSA

Camp 1741 - Inland Empire

Following the War for Southern Independence, many surviving Southern soldiers joined to form a veteran's organization named the United Confederate Veterans (UCV). The Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV), formed in Richmond, Virginia in 1896, is the one and only heir to this legacy.The Inland Empire SCV Camp 1742 is based in Redlands, California. We are a non-profit organization dedicated to preserving the memory and heritage of the Confederacy and our Confederate ancestors through memorial, historical, and educational activities.

Being part of the SCV, we reject any person or group whose actions tarnish or bring dishonor upon the Confederate soldier and/or his reason for fighting. This particularly applies to those groups and persons using our cherished flag as a symbol for their own dishonorable purposes. The members of Camp 1742 thank you for visiting us. We're sure you will find much useful and interesting information on these pages. If you are a male aged 12 or over with Confederate ancestry, we encourage you to consider membership in the Sons of Confederate Veterans. If you are unsure of your lineage, please feel free to use our resources to help. Confederate Ancestor Research Guide

For information on Camp 1742 please email Commander - Steve Madden or Adjutant - Billy Williams

For questions or comments about this website please emailSignals Officer - Mike Climo

See Camp's website here.

Deaderick-Doremus-Thurmond, Camp 1631 - Santa Barbara

Colonel James G. Deaderick, was born April 25, 1838 in Jefferson County, Tennessee. He enlisted in Company B of the 19th Tennessee Infantry when the war broke out and was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel of his regiment. Colonel Deaderick studied law after the war. He moved his family to California in 1883 where he settled in Carpinteria, and served in various civic positions. He died on June 17, 1918 and is buried in the Carpinteria Cemetery.

Doctor Augustus Boyd Doremus was born on the 4th of July 1842 in St. Landry's Parish, Louisiana. Doctor Doremus enlisted in Company A 28th Louisiana Infantry as a second Lieutenant. Doremus served as adjutant to General Pemberton during the siege of Vicksburg. After Vicksburg surrendered on July 4th, 1863, Doremus was paroled and later exchanged. Following the war, he received his degree in dentistry and eventually settled in Santa Barbara in 1891. In recognition of his service on the Santa Barbara Parks Board, he is known as the Father of Santa Barbara's many parks. Doctor Doremus died November 22, 1937, and is buried in the Santa Barbara cemetery.

Gideon Edward Thurmond was born November 27, 1843 in Hardman County Tennessee. Thurmond enlisted in Company B 17th Mississippi Infantry, the "Featherstone Brigade." He rose to the rank of Captain, and fought in the battles of Manassas, Ball's Bluff, Seven Pines, the Seven Day's battle around Richmond and Fredericksburg. Injured by a Union shell, Captain Thurmond was left for dead, but recovered and finished out the war. He moved to San Jose, California in 1868. He ultimately settled in Carpinteria, and served as Santa Barbara County Superintendent of Schools, where he oversaw the expansion and modernization of the county schools. When he passed away on January 25, 1911, the flag at the Santa Barbara Courthouse was flown at half-staff in his honor. Captain Thurmond is buried in the Carpinteria Cemetery.

General George Blake Cosby, Camp 1627 - Sacramento

GEORGE BLAKE COSBY was born at Louisville, Ky., January 19, 1830. He graduated from the United States Military Academy in 1852, and was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Mounted Rifle regiment. He was transferred to the Second cavalry at its organization, March 3, 1855, was promoted to first lieutenant May 1, 1856, and to captain May 9, 1860. He resigned from the service to enter the Confederate military establishment in 1861.

His first position therein was that of captain and chief of staff to Gen. S. B. Buckner. After passing through the intermediate grades, he was commissioned a brigadier general January 20, 1863, and assigned to the command of a brigade under General Van Dorn. After the close of the war he settled in California, where he engaged in contracting. He served as adjutant general of that state during the administration of Governor Stoneman, who had been a comrade-at-arms in the "old army." He subsequently filled other public positions, both state and federal. He died at Oakland, Cal., in July, 1909. [Webmaster’s note: the remains of George Blake Cosby are buried in the Old Sacramento City Cemetery, Sacramento, California.]

Biography courtesy of the Kansas State Library, http://skyways.lib.ks.us/. Excerpted from "Collections of the Kansas State Historical Society, 1911-1912", Edited by Geo. W. Martin, Secretary. Vol XII., State Printing Office, Topeka, Kansas 1912. Submitted by Teresa Lindquist (merope@radix.net); (copyright) 2001 by Teresa Lindquist

KSGENWEB INTERNET GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY COPYRIGHT NOTICE: In keeping with the KSGenWeb policy of providing free information on the Internet, this data may be used by non-commercial entities, as long as this message remains on all copied material. These electronic pages cannot be reproduced in any format for profit or other gain. Copying of the files within by non-commercial individuals and libraries is encouraged. Any other use, including publication, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission by electronic, mechanical, or other means requires the written approval of the file's author.

Contact the adjutant for information on Sacramento camp 1627

Stainless Banner, Camp 1440 - San Jose

The Sons of Confederate Veterans Camp for San Jose and the San Francisco Bay
Area
"To you, Sons of Confederate Veterans, we submit the vindication of the Cause for which we fought; ... the defense of the Confederate soldier's good name, the guardianship of his history, ... it is your duty to see that the true history of the South is presented to future generations."
--General Stephen Dill Lee, C.S.A.
Camp 1440, "The Stainless Banner," is named for the second national flag of the Confederate States of America. The "Stainless Banner" flew as the official flag of the Confederacy from May 1st, 1863 until March 4, 1865. This flag was first used to drape the casket of General Stonewall Jackson as he lay in state in Richmond, Virginia after falling at the battle of Chancellorsville. It was the last Confederate flag to be furled when the raider C.S.S. Shenandoah lowered its colors in Liverpool, England on November 6th, 1865, nearly seven months after the surrender of the South's two greatest armies.

The camp has periodic meetings, and members gather at several events during the year including a Confederate Memorial Day service, Robert E. Lee supper, Confederate ball, and the SCV California Division's convention as well as parades and reenactments. We worked with the United Daughters of the Confederacy to place headstones over the unmarked graves of Confederate soldiers buried at Colma's Cypress Lawn Cemetery.

If you're proud of your Southern heritage, you'll be welcome in our ranks which include or have included a former U.S. Congressman, a Bay Area police chief, graduate of the Citadel, and a professional bull rider as well as attorneys, surgeons, accountants, teachers, businessmen, military servicemen and tradesmen. The citizen-soldiers of the South personified the best qualities of America. The preservation of liberty and freedom was the motivating factor in the South's decision to fight a second revolution for the right to self-government.

If you are interested in defending your Confederate ancestor against the tide of political correctness, the Stainless Banner Camp and the SCV needs you.

General John Bell Hood, Camp 1208 - Los Angeles

"THE SOUTH NEEDS ALL ITS SONS!" If you live in the greater Los Angeles area, including the high desert, please consider joining us. If you have direct or collateral ancestry to a Confederate Veteran, you qualify for membership. We promote the Confederate Veteran, and we promote true Confederate history.

John B. Hood has been the "Mother Camp" on the West Coast since 1951. Our camp has many activities all over Los Angeles county, including Confederate seminar luncheons, and Confederate Memorial Day services at Hollywood Cemetery each April.

We carry the Colors at the Los Angeles National Cemetery on National Memorial Day; we have joint functions with the United Daughters of the Confederacy, such as the Lee/Jackson/Maury luncheon in January; we provide memorial dedications for Confederate Veterans buried in the area, including complete bibliographies of the Veteran; we meet at Fort Tejon each August, and we have many more events supporting Confederate heritage. YOU ALL COME JOIN US!

MEETING INFORMATION:

We meet all over Los Angeles County and sometimes out of it. Please email the Camp Commander or Adjutant (see links in the left sidebar).

Father Abram J. Ryan, Camp 302 - San Diego

The Father Abram Joseph Ryan-San Diego Camp 302 was organized on March 27, 1993 in El Cajon, California. The parent Camp was the General John B. Hood Camp 1208 in Los Angeles. The membership area of Camp 302 is San Diego, Riverside, Imperial and Riverside Counties, but members are welcome wherever they may reside.

The Camp is named after Father Abram Joseph Ryan (image, right), THE "POET LAUREATE OF THE SOUTH." Father Ryan, a Catholic Priest who served as Chaplain with the Confederate troops in Missouri, Tennessee and Virginia, is best known as the author of the poem The Conquered Banner, or as it is sometimes called, Requiem Of The Lost Cause, in 1865. He died in Louisville, Kentucky, on April 22, 1886, a poet, a patriot, and a Catholic priest.

The introduction of a poetry book, published in 1897, says this of Father Ryan: “So distinguished a character and so brilliant a man cannot be passed over lightly, or dealt with sparingly...for Abram Ryan's fame is the inheritance of a great and enlightened Nation, and his writings have passed into history to emblazon its pages and enrich its history.”

The Camp’s number, 302, is the resurrected number of the old Robert E. Lee camp active in San Diego during the 1920s. The Camp meets regularly the second Saturday of each odd-numbered month. Each meeting includes a program on a Confederate topic. The public is invited to attend these free programs.

If you are a Confederate descendant and wish to preserve the honor and memory of the Confederate soldier, as well as learn more about Confederate history, please join us.

For information on San Diego Camp 302 contact the Camp Adjutant.

African-American Confederates

Some African-Americans fought for the Confederacy. There is debate over the actual numbers and how many were in combat. Consider, however, the following report by Thomas Knox, correspondent of the New York Herald, with the Union army at Chickasaw Bayou, Mississippi, December, 1862:

"On our right a Negro sharpshooter has been observed whose exploits are deserving of notice. He mounts a breastwork regardless of danger, and getting sight of a Federal soldier, draws up his musket at arm's length and fires, never failing of hitting his mark.... It is certain that Negroes are fighting here, though probably only as sharpshooters."

This description is of an African-American exposing himself to fire by mounting the breastwork to sight on his opponents, not content to fire from the safety of the trench but showing personal courage and initiative in his cause.

Yet there are those for whom this image is an anathema, because it destroys the simplistic, politically correct view of African-Americans in the war. When confronted with evidence such as this war correspondence's report, they dismiss its significance by various means, but the truth remains - there are today, in America, African-Americans who are Sons of Confederate Veterans.
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See also Vern Padgett’s excellent series of articles on Black Confederates.


See the following books:
Barrow, Charles. K.; Segars, J. H., & Rosenburg, R. B. (2001). Black Confederates. Gretna, Louisiana: Pelican Publishing Company. (Originally published as Forgotten Confederates.)

Durden, Robert F. (1972). The Gray and the Black: The Confederate Debate on Emancipation. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. Jordan, Ervin. L. Jr. (1995). Black Confederates and Afro-Yankees in Civil War Virginia. University Press of Virginia.

Koger, Larry. (1985; 1995). Black Slaveowners: Free Black Slaveowners in South Carolina, 1790-1860.
Miller, Edward. A., Jr. (1995). Gullah Statesman: Robert Smalls: From Slavery to Congressman, 1839-1915. Rollins, Richard (1994). Black Southerners in Gray: Essays on Afro-Americans in Confederate Armies. Redondo Beach: Rank and File Publications.

Segars, J. H. & Barrow, C. K., Eds. (2001). Black Southerners in Confederate Armies. Southern Lion Books, Atlanta, Georgia.

Hispanics in the Confederacy

The Cuban patriot Narciso López approached Mexican War heroes Jefferson Davis and Robert E. Lee in 1848 with the request to head a liberation army to free Cuba from Spain -- Lee seriously considered the offer, but turned it down.

José Agustín Quintero, a Cuban poet and revolutionary, ably served Confederate President Jefferson Davis as the C.S. Commissioner to Northern Mexico, ensuring critical supplies from Europe flowed through Mexican ports to the CSA.

Santiago Vidaurri, governor of the border states of Coahuila and Nuevo León, offered to secede northern Mexico and join the Confederacy; Jefferson Davis declined, afraid the valuable "neutral" Mexican ports would be then blockaded.

The Spanish inventor Narciso Monturiol offered the Confederacy his advanced submarine Ictineo to smash the Federal blockade. Never purchased, Jules Verne apparently based the Nautilus on this, the world's most advanced vessel of the day.

Ambrosio José González, a famous Cuban revolutionary, served Confederate general P.G.T. Beauregard as his artillery officer in Charleston; earlier, in New York, he helped design the modern Cuban and (inversed) Puerto Rican flags.

The Mexican Santos Benavides, a former Texas ranger, commanded the Confederate 33rd Texas Cavalry, a Mexican- American unit which defeated the Union in the 1864 Battle of Laredo, Texas. He became the only Mexican CS colonel.

Thomas Jordan, a Confederate general responsible for early codes used in spying on Washington, after the war led the Cuban revolutionary army as Commander-in-Chief, training its generals and in 1870 routing the Spaniards at two-to-one odds.

Lola Sanchez, of a Cuban family living near St. Augustine, had her sisters serve dinner to visiting Federals, while she raced out at night and warned the nearest Confederate camp. The Yankees thus lost a general, his unit and a gunboat the next day.

Loretta Janeta Velazquez, a Cuban woman, claimed to have fought in the war disguised as a Confederate soldier, Lt. Harry Buford. She chronicled her amazing and harrowing adventures in an account called The Woman in Battle.

James Hamilton Tomb, a Confederate engineer on the innovative semi-submarine ship David, accepted a post-war offer from the Brazilian emperor as technical expert on torpedoes (submarine mines) in the Paraguayan War of 1865-1870.

Hunter Davidson, a Confederate torpedo (submarine mine) scientist, assumed the head of the Argentine Torpedo and Hydrographic Bureau for some years, training its leadership, and retired to Asunción, Paraguay, where he is buried.

John Randolph Tucker, head of the Charleston Confederate Naval Squadron, accepted a post-war position as Vice-Admiral heading the combined Peruvian-Chilean fleets in a Pacific conflict against Spanish coastal incursions.

John Newland Maffitt, who before the war captured illegal slave-trading ships, served the Confederacy as the CSS Florida's commander. Afterwards, he served in the Paraguayan war and commanded the Cuban gun-runner Hornet.

Thomas Jefferson Page, a Confederate naval commander who learned of the war's end in Cuba after sailing the ironclad CSS Stonewall from Spain, settled in Argentina, his son becoming an Argentine naval commander, his grandson an admiral.

Mexican service influenced Confederate general Stonewall Jackson; he often spoke Spanish endearments to his wife, Anna.

After the war, many prominent governors and other Confederates established a colony, Carlotta, in Mexico.

More Info? Check Out These Fine Books:
Richard H. Bradford, The Virginius Affair, 1980

Light Townsend Cummins, Spanish Observers and the American Revolution, 1775-1783, 1991

James W. Daddysman, The Matamoros Trade: Confederate Commerce, Diplomacy and Intrigue, 1984

Ella Lonn, Foreigners in the Confederacy, 1965 (reprint, 1940 edition)

Andrew Rolle, The Lost Cause: The Confederate Exodus to Mexico, 1965

Ronnie C. Tyler, Santiago Vidaurri and the Southern Confederacy, 1973

Frank de Varona (ed.), Hispanic Presence in the United States: Historical Beginnings, 1993

David Werlich, Admiral of the Amazon: John Randolph Tucker - His Confederate Colleagues and Peru, 1990

John O'Donnell-Rosales, Hispanic Confederates, list of several thousand who served the Confederacy, 8 1/2 x 11, 90 pp., paper, (1997), reprint 1998. Clearfield Publishing Co., 200 E. Eager St., Baltimore, MD 21202

Introduction to Sons of Confederate Veterans, California

The Sons of Confederate Veterans of California is a historical organization dedicated to preserving the history and good name of the Confederate soldier, sailor and marine.

Our organization has no racial component whatsoever, express or implied. All Confederate descendants are eligible and welcome to join, regardless of color, politics, national origin or religion.

This blog will replace the SCV California website. Blogs are a new, modern format for presenting the activities and information of an organization; they are much easier to update and many more people can participate in the blog's creation and content.

All California camps are urged to create a blog of their own and to link to the State Division blog.