Reconciliation? Not Exactly

Reconciliation? Not Exactly

Post-War reconciliation? Historian Caroline Janney offers a different view.

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The Alexanders of Alexandria

The Alexanders of Alexandria

The Alexander family? The city on the Nile? No one is 100% sure how Alexandria, Virginia, got its name.

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Arlandria: Then and (Almost) Now

Arlandria: Then and (Almost) Now

The story of Arlandria, from rural outpost to diverse urban neighborhood, presented by University of Mary Washington professor Krystyn Moon.

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Female Soldiers of the Civil War

Female Soldiers of the Civil War

A ceremony at Arlington Cemetery honored female soldiers of the Civil War--women who hid their identities and fought side-by-side with men.

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Finding Descendants from Alexandria's Contraband and Freedmen Cemetery

Finding Descendants from Alexandria's Contraband and Freedmen Cemetery

Char McCargo Bah explained how she found descendants from among more than 1,750 people buried in Alexandria's Contraband and Freedmen Cemetery--who can now celebrate their ancestors, many of whom escaped slavery.

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Appomattox Statue, Then and Now

Appomattox Statue, Then and Now

The Confederate veteran has stood on Alexandria's main north-south thoroughfare for more than 100 years. Once grass grew between the cobblestones at his feet.

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The Pacific Northwest: Far Away, but Not Untouched by the Civil War

The Pacific Northwest: Far Away, but Not Untouched by the Civil War

The Civil War in the Pacific Northwest? Not as intense, but no part of the country was immune.

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Julia Wilbur's Alexandria: The "Slave Pen"

 On the first morning after the Union occupation of Alexandria, May 22, 1861, Michigan troops came upon what had been a flourishing slave-trading establishment on Duke Street, less than a mile from the Potomac River.

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Julia Wilbur's Alexandria

My friend Mary visited from Connecticut and asked for a tour of Julia Wilbur sites in Alexandria. (She is a fellow history nut, writer, and great friend, as I am not sure who else would indulge me on a hot summer day!) We didn't have much time, but off we went to some of the spots on a map I built:

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Civil War Medicine: Surgeon Training

One of the many things I learned this week from Von Barron, aka Captain Turner Kitt, was that no surgeon working in the field, north or south, lasted all four years of the Civil War.

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Mary Surratt and Julia Wilbur

Mary Surratt and Julia Wilbur never met, and certainly would not have gotten along if they had. But both had to figure out how to survive in what could be an unfriendly world for a woman on their own. 

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Last Mercy Street Episode

No word yet on Mercy Street returning next year. A few points from the last episode:

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Cemeteries in Old Alexandria

Last night's episode of Mercy Street included a poignant scene in which the Green and Fairfax families attempted to bury Tom Fairfax. No matter one's sympathies, seeing a funeral disrupted at gunpoint was not pleasant.

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Harriet Jacobs and Julia Wilbur: Two Other "Heroines"

With my own research in mind, I can't resist proposing Julia Wilbur and Harriet Jacobs as two other real-life heroines of Mercy Street.

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Mansion House Hospital Today

As you have watched "Mercy Street," have you wondered whatever happened to Mansion House Hospital?

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"Contrabands" in Alexandria

One of Mercy Street's characters with perhaps the most compelling back story (not that we know much of it, at least not now) is Aurelia, the African American laundress who is victimized by the brutish steward, Mr. Bullen. I don't remember if they specifically refer to her as a "contraband," but I know the word came up during the program. Here's a little background.

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What did you think of "Mercy Street?"

The first episode of the PBS drama "Mercy Street" aired last night. Mansion House Hospital was noisy, chaotic, and rather dark. 

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Fast Forward to LBJ

What else could LBJ have accomplished if not for the Vietnam War? Perhaps the same could be said for Lincoln...or maybe Lincoln became great because of the war. I will leave that for others to debate.

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December 6, 1865: 13th Amendment

We are now on a new round of "150th" anniversaries--the period of Reconstruction after the Civil War. At a National Archives program earlier this week, the presenters focused on on "The 13th Amendment at 150."

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Eric Foner on Reconstruction

To kick off the D.C. Historical Studies conference, historian Eric Foner spoke to a very full auditorium at the National Archives last night on "Reconstruction and the Fragility of Democracy."

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