Joan of Arc monument in Philadelphia

Author: Scott Manning

  • Civil War Philly Sesquicentennial Parade and Review (April 16, 2011)

    Civil War Philly Sesquicentennial Parade and Review (April 16, 2011)

    On April 16, 2011, a series of groups put together the Civil War Philadelphia Sesquicentennial Parade and Review. The event was meant to coincide with the 150th anniversary of Philadelphia’s answering of President Lincoln’s call for volunteers to put down the rebellion in the South after the surrender of Fort Sumter. There were marching bands,…

  • Philly Mayor Nutter’s Civil War Speech (April 16, 2011)

    Philly Mayor Nutter’s Civil War Speech (April 16, 2011)

    The following is a video and transcript of Mayor Michael Nutter’s Speech at the Civil War Philadelphia Sesquicentennial Parade and Review on April 16, 2011. He gave this speech to a group re-enactors and onlookers in front of The Union League building on Broad Street. I apologize for the shaky camera and poor sound quality…

  • Battlefield Tip: Customize Your Maps

    Those I drag to battlefields will recall my continuous map checks, which start off with me yelling “Map Check!” each time we get out of the car. I unfold my Trailhead Graphics map and throw it on the hood. From there, I talk about where we were, where we are, and what happened on the…

  • Spartan Burial Practices and Honoring Fallen Soldiers

    Spartan Burial Practices and Honoring Fallen Soldiers

      In the United States, like other countries, we honor deceased veterans with unique headstones and even burial rights in national cemeteries. Yet, how do you honor veterans in a civilization that is composed entirely of those who serve in the military, like the Spartans of ancient Greece? This civilization was unique from its fellow…

  • Keegan on McPherson; McPherson on Keegan

    Keegan on McPherson; McPherson on Keegan

    British military historian John Keegan and Civil War historian James McPherson are two very prolific writers who may not be tied at the hip, but certainly overlap in some arenas. Back in 1995, Keegan, like others, heaped praise upon McPherson’s Battle Cry of Freedom: Not until 1988 did an American historian, James McPherson, succeed in…

  • How the Greeks Commemorated the Sesquicentennial of Xerxes’ Invasion

    How the Greeks Commemorated the Sesquicentennial of Xerxes’ Invasion

    With the sesquicentennial of the American Civil War quickly approaching, it is appropriate to examine how past civilizations commemorated the 150-year anniversaries of their major conflicts. One such group was the Greeks who commemorated the sesquicentennial of Xerxes’ invasion (480 BC) to the exact year (330 BC) by sanctioning Alexander the Great (r. 336-323) to…

  • Battlefield Tip: Bring Photos

    Last summer, I needed an extra set of visuals for friends, as I dragged them to Gettysburg, mentioned 20 different names they never heard before, and then spent the rest of the trip reminding them why each name was important. Civil War enthusiasts tend to know many of the generals down to the corps level,…

  • Churchill’s Earliest Warning About Hitler

    Churchill’s Earliest Warning About Hitler

    Throughout the 1930’s, Winston Churchill spoke out concerning German rearmament, Britain’s lack of comparable military strength, and Adolf Hitler. Churchill spent most of the decade a mere Member of Parliament and not a member of the British Cabinet. By July of 1939, the British newspapers would demand overwhelmingly that Churchill be made a member of…

  • You Find Graves of Colored Troops in the Darndest Places

    Last November, my wife and I toured the Chalmette Battlefield outside of New Orleans. To the east of the battlefield is the Chalmette National Cemetery. Established in 1864, the bodies of 15,000 troops from the American Revolution to the Vietnam War rest there. Nearly half of these remain unknown. The site is typical of most…

  • Great Civil War Map? Or Greatest Civil War Map?

    A few years ago, I came into possession of National Geographic’s Battles of the Civil War Wall Map. For trying to encapsulate the campaigns of the entire war on a 36″ x 23″ canvas, it does an amazing job. Dots cover the map, helping to provide some concept of how the battles were numerous and…

  • These Men Beat Hitler

    These Men Beat Hitler

    Years ago, my mom sent me an 8×11 photo of Churchill, FDR, and Stalin at the Yalta Conference. She knows my love for history and she envisioned me hanging this on my wall at work. I did. The photo has followed me from job to job in my career. I am astonished at the amount…

  • Book Review: These Honored Dead: How The Story Of Gettysburg Shaped American Memory

    Book Review: These Honored Dead: How The Story Of Gettysburg Shaped American Memory

    Desjardin, Thomas A. These Honored Dead: How The Story Of Gettysburg Shaped American Memory. New York: Da Capo Press, 2003. 288 pages. Thomas A. Desjardin’s These Honored Dead is a decent introduction to some of the popular myths that have spawned and lingered from Gettysburg since the battle occurred. The popularized version of Gettysburg from…