Soldiers' Graffiti (and Julia Wilbur) at Historic Blenheim
/Stories behind Civil War graffiti at Historic Blenheim in Fairfax, VA.
Read MoreBlogging about abolitionist Julia Wilbur, the Civil War, Alexandria, women's rights, and more
Stories behind Civil War graffiti at Historic Blenheim in Fairfax, VA.
Read MoreWhat Maddy McCoy and others learned when they went page by page through more than a century of Fairfax County paperwork.
Read MoreLearning about Civil War photography from Dean DeRosa and Bob Zeller.
Read MoreAlexandria Archaeology held a reception and model unveiling on Saturday night.
Read MoreMy son’s recent move (his 4th in 4 years) made me think about moving in the 1800s.
Read MoreEsther Bubley took photographs of Tomball, Texas, in 1945. I visited a different Tomball last week.
Read MoreWhat do Langston Hughes, Myrna Loy, and Blanca Verala have in common? They all lived in D.C., as did hundreds more writers you do and do not already know.
Read MoreA National Gallery exhibit shows the early career of photographer Gordon Parks.
Read MoreAs we prepare to vote in the 2018 mid-terms, I looked back to 1862’s election.
The House of Representatives had about 245 members after secession. The Republicans maintained their majority, but lost 22 seats. The speaker of the House—Galusha Grow, from Pennsylvania—was one of the men who lost re-election.
State legislatures elected Senators until 1917. The Senate after secession had 49 members; the Republicans gained three seats.
What did this mean for Lincoln and his policies? Dissatisfaction with the war loomed large. The Battle of Antietam had happened in September 1862; many people had read about or seen the photographs that made the deaths all too real. The President had released his Emancipation Proclamation to go into effect on January 1, 1863.
According to an article by Catherine Whittenberg in Civil War Magazine:
Much like the Battle of Antietam, the midterm elections offered no one a clear-cut victory. On the one hand, Democrats won the governorships of New York and New Jersey, legislative majorities in New Jersey, Indiana and Illinois, and gained 28 seats in the U.S. House. “That the election was a serious Administration reverse nobody ever doubted,” historian Allan Nevins wrote, calling the results “a vote of no confidence.” Under a parliamentary system, he noted, Lincoln’s administration would have been compelled to resign.
But historian James McPherson has argued that while the 1862 elections may have been something of a rebuke, they were hardly an overwhelming censure. The party of Lincoln had managed to hold on to all but two of 18 governorships, and to legislative majorities in all but three states. The Republicans gained seats in the Senate and kept a majority in the House “after experiencing the smallest net loss of House seats in twenty years—indeed the only time in those two decades that the party in power retained control of the House.”
“Peace Democrats”—also known more disparagingly as Copperheads—made gains, which would cause problems for Lincoln. In New York, Indiana, and New Jersey, Democrats won races for governor.
One great benefit in writing about Julia Wilbur has been talking with other authors about their biographies. Such as—Candice Shy Hooper, author of Lincoln’s Generals’ Wives.
Read MoreResearcher John Lustrea shared tales of Clarissa (“Clara”) Jones, whose Civil War nursing service included time at the Lyceum in Alexandria, Va.
Read MoreHere’s a short hand-out that I used at a writing-for-publication workshop last week.
Read MoreJulia Wilbur and other “dutiful daughters” (and nieces, aunts, et al.) often had their hands full.
Read MoreHere’s how Julia Wilbur—and finally liberated African Americans—celebrated July 4, 1865, in Washington, DC.
Read MoreJulia Wilbur does New York City--July 1863, right before the Draft Riots. I follow her footsteps in 2018.
Read MoreJulia Wilbur’s experiences as a teacher from 1844 to 1859 ring true today. Equal pay for equal work, anyone?
Read MoreIn which I learn more from the author about the life of female government employees (including Julia Wilbur) in the 1860s.
Read MoreMy own panel, and lots more learned (and a shot in the arm) from colleagues.
Read MoreA conversation at Ford's Theatre on April 16--D.C. Emancipation Day--between historian Kate Masur and journalist Michele Norris about this fascinating book and its original author, John E. Washington
Read MoreJulia Wilbur records what she felt and saw the day after Lincoln's assassination.
Read MorePaula Tarnapol Whitacre's website with a focus on her forthcoming biography on abolitionist Julia Wilbur.