Tag Archive - Civil War

Samuel Harrison studied in Peterboro and served as a Civil War chaplain

By 10 February 2012. Filed in History.

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Samuel Harrison studied in Peterboro and served as a Civil War chaplain | syracuse.com

Samuel Harrison studied in Peterboro and served as a Civil War chaplain | syracuse.comhttp://www.syracuse.com/news/index.ssf/2012/02/samuel_harrison.html
Samuel Harrison was born April 15, 1818, in Philadelphia, Pa., to enslaved parents. He was given his freedom as a child and came to Peterboro in Madison County to study with wealthy abolitionist Gerrit Smith.

8 Heroic U.S. Military Chaplains

By 5 January 2012. Filed in History.

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8 Heroic U.S. Military Chaplains - Mental Floss

8 Heroic U.S. Military Chaplains – Mental Flosshttp://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/112386Some contemporaries wrote of the Mexican-American War as one of U.S. Protestants against Mexican Catholics. President Polk responded to such allegations by appointing two Catholic priests to serve as military chaplains. Father Anthony Rey, a Jesuit from Georgetown University with no military background or training, participated in the battle of Monterrey in September of 1846. He tended to the wounded on the battlefield and gave last rites to the dying. Afterward, serving in north Mexico, he ventured out of the U.S. garrison to minister to the locals, despite warnings of the danger. In 1847 he said a mass at the village of Ceralvo, and never made it back. His body was found a few days later, stabbed through by lances. He was mourned by both the U.S. troops and the Mexicans he served.

Read the full text here: http://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/112386#ixzz1ieU77jX3
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Baptists & the civil war on display at library

By 5 January 2012. Filed in History.

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Baptist Press – Baptists & the civil war on display at library – News with a Christian Perspectivehttp://www.sbcbaptistpress.org/BPnews.asp?ID=36898NASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP) — To commemorate the 150th anniversary of the beginning of the American Civil War, the Southern Baptist Historical Library and Archives is presenting a display on Baptists and the war.

The display cases, located on the fourth floor of the Southern Baptist Convention building in Nashville, Tenn., illustrate what caused the war — particularly the issue of slavery — how Baptists reacted and served as chaplains and how Baptists responded after the war.

Rabbi-Chaplains of the Civil War

By 12 December 2011. Filed in History.

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Rabbi-Chaplains of the Civil War - NYTimes.com

Rabbi-Chaplains of the Civil War – NYTimes.comhttp://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/12/11/rabbi-chaplains-of-the-civil-war/Rabbi Dr. Arnold Fischel arrived at the White House on the morning of Dec. 11, 1861, prepared to act as a one-man lobby for the constitutional rights of Jews. He had traveled alone from New York, on his own dime, bringing several letters of recommendation from prominent Republicans and one from the Board of Delegates of American Israelites, then just three years old and the country’s only national Jewish organization.

One of Abraham Lincoln’s private secretaries told Fischel that there was little chance of a meeting. But the rabbi was persistent, taking his place among hundreds of people hoping to see the president, some of whom had been waiting for three days. To Fischel’s surprise, Lincoln immediately received him with “marked courtesy.” The rabbi stated the reason for his visit: On behalf of the American Jewish community, including several thousand soldiers fighting for the Union, he hoped the president might reconsider a discriminatory law forbidding his people to serve as chaplains.

It was a controversial proposition, and one that had its roots in the very onset of the war. Five months earlier, Lincoln had called a special session of Congress and requested a $400,000,000 budget to fight the Confederacy, a portion of which provided for the inclusion of chaplains in the Volunteer Army. The ink had barely dried on the proposed draft when Representative Clement Vallandigham, a non-Jew, objected to its wording — that a chaplain be a “regularly ordained clergyman of some Christian denomination.”

Chaplain (MAJ) Charles J. Watters

By 30 November 2011. Filed in History.

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Chaplain (MAJ) Charles J. Watters – On Point Online

Chaplain (MAJ) Charles J. Watters – On Point Onlinehttp://armyhistoryjournal.com/?p=746Throughout the history of warfare, there has been a desire for religious guidance and assistance during man’s most difficult times. These religious men not only helped in administering comfort and spiritual peace to their flocks, but at times led them into battle, assisted the wounded, and sometimes paid the ultimate sacrifice for their God and for their country.

OUT OF OUR PAST: Brave chaplain earns Medal of Honor

By 16 November 2011. Filed in History.

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OUT OF OUR PAST: Brave chaplain earns Medal of Honor | Palladium-Item | pal-item.com

OUT OF OUR PAST: Brave chaplain earns Medal of Honor | Palladium-Item | pal-item.comhttp://www.pal-item.com/article/20111114/LIFESTYLE/111140305/OUT-OUR-PAST-Brave-chaplain-earns-Medal-HonorOnly three Wayne County men have received the nation’s highest honor for military bravery — the distinguished Medal of Honor. Two of them were in the Civil War.

The first one, Elihu Mason, was discussed last week.

The second one was a chaplain from Boston Township named John Milton Whitehead.

The Rev. Whitehead was born near Boston, Ind., (when it was called New Boston) on March 6, 1823. He later became an Army chaplain in the 15th Indiana Volunteer Infantry.

The Great Harvest: Revival in the Confederate Army during the Civil War

By 29 September 2011. Filed in History.

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The Great Harvest: Revival in the Confederate Army during the Civil War | Acton Institute

The Great Harvest: Revival in the Confederate Army during the Civil War | Acton Institutehttp://www.acton.org/pub/religion-liberty/volume-21-number-3/great-harvest-revival-confederate-army-during-civi“Oh for a revival throughout the Confederacy!” exclaimed the editor of the Macon (GA) Daily Telegraph in 1862. The paper was commenting on an outpouring of the Gospel throughout the town, while reporting on food shortages, ordinances, and the latest news from the front lines of the American Civil War. The war’s second season was a reality check for many Southerners as the Federal blockade, inefficiencies of the Confederate government, and devastating casualties of Shiloh and Antietam dimmed the glow of many sunshine secessionists. Austerity fell upon Dixie, and fell hard, and in such times as in other places and in other conflicts, people turned to faith. Indeed revival would soon spread throughout the region; not in the plantations, parlors, or the pews but in the ranks of the Confederate Army. The great revival of 1863 would be a homespun harvest.

York First Baptist preacher was chaplain of the 130th Pennsylvania Infantry

By 5 August 2011. Filed in History.

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York First Baptist preacher was chaplain of the 130th Pennsylvania Infantry - Cannonball

York First Baptist preacher was chaplain of the 130th Pennsylvania Infantry – Cannonballhttp://www.yorkblog.com/cannonball/2011/08/york-preacher-was-chaplain-of.htmlChaplains became quite common during the Civil War serving in the field with the armies. Many regiments had their own designated chaplains, and often there were brigade chaplains as well as or instead of regimental clergy. Most were licensed ministers from churches in the region where the regiment was raised or organized. The chaplains offered spiritual comfort and admonition, and at times stayed behind to minister to the wounded.

The 130th Pennsylvania was primarily raised in Cumberland and York counties (companies B, C, I, and K came from York County) in August 1862 under the command of Col. Henry I. Zinn of Cumberland County, with York’s Levi Maish as lieutenant colonel. Brigaded with the 108th New York and 14th Connecticut (equally raw recruits).

With nearly 1,000 men in the ranks initially, the chaplain of the 130th had his work cut out as he ministered to the young men, many of which were going away from home for the first time. Some would never return.

Catholic Military Chaplains: America’s Forgotten Heroes

By 21 July 2011. Filed in History.

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Catholic Military Chaplains: America's Forgotten Heroes | Focus on History

Catholic Military Chaplains: America’s Forgotten Heroes | Focus on Historyhttp://www.tfp.org/tfp-home/focus-on-history/catholic-army-chaplains-americas-forgotten-heroes.html“War is Hell” General William Tecumseh Sherman once noted. Indeed there is nothing to celebrate about warfare; however unfortunately it has been present with mankind in his fallen nature since departing from the Garden of Eden. War was a common affair throughout the Old Testament. Saint Augustine understood the sometimes unfortunate necessity of war and as a result outlined the “Just War” clauses to allow moral principles to still be applied. Later in more modern periods Saint Joan of Arc was called to battle by Our Lord, and in the twentieth century Our Lady noted at Fatima that war was a “punishment for sin.” In other words man’s own sinfulness often leads to war due to a lack of God in society.

This helps us in our current age understand that at certain times war is necessary to defeat evil; or in self defense. While often it is hard to tell throughout history whether a war was just or not, in the end it is truly left to the judgment of God.

However, regardless Catholic chaplains have served throughout history on the battlefield to serve those who have fought wars whether from a sense of duty, or simply being caught up in the times and circumstances.

Victory Update Vol. 11-4

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