Shelby Foote on Lincoln’s Centralization of Powers
Civil War Chat
by Phil Leigh
2d ago
(April 17, 2024) Lincoln took unto himself powers far beyond any ever claimed by a Chief Executive. In late April 1861, for security reasons, he authorized simultaneous raids on every telegraph office in the Northern states, seizing the originals and copies of all telegrams sent and received during the past year. As a result of this and other measures, sometimes on no stronger evidence than the suspicions of an informer nursing a grudge, men were taken from their homes in the dead of night, thrown into dungeons, and held without explanation or communications with the outside world. Writs of Ha ..read more
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Plain Speaking on Confederate Monument
Civil War Chat
by Phil Leigh
4d ago
(April 15, 2024) Provided below is an email from Bo Traywick, a VMI graduate and former member of the school’s Board of Visitors, to a newspaperman who asked for his thoughts on Arlington Cemetery’s Reconciliation Monument. * Dear Jeff, It was nice chatting with you and Jim today. During our conversation, you brought up the monument at Arlington Cemetery. You referred to it as the Confederate Monument. This is incorrect. It is (was!) The Reconciliation Monument. It was put up at the invitation of the United States government after the Spanish/American War, when some prominent ex-Confederates l ..read more
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$0.99 Sale Price on Kindle Version of *Pat and Tom* Novel
Civil War Chat
by Phil Leigh
6d ago
(April 11, 2024) For the next week the Kindle version of the Pat and Tom novel is available at a 75% discount,    Pat and Tom is both a prequel and a sequel to Tom Hindman’s Western Adventure. Before he set forth on his campaigns in the Trans-Mississippi, Tom fought as a member of the largest Confederate army outside of Virginia at the battle of Shiloh on April 6-7, 1862. He and his hometown buddy, General Pat Cleburne, each commanded troops during the fight which was the largest one of the Civil War up to that date. After Tom returned from the Trans-Mississippi he rejoined the Army ..read more
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Mark Twain, America’s Solar Eclipse Next Month, and the Civil War.
Civil War Chat
by Phil Leigh
3w ago
(March 26, 2024) A Mark Twain character and America’s approaching April 8, 2024, solar eclipse have a connection to the Civil War. Twain reportedly modeled the protagonist in A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court—Hank Morgan—after Christopher Spencer, inventor of one of the earliest repeating rifles. In the plot, Morgan is transported back to Arthur’s Court where his superior “magic” threatens Merlin who wants him executed. But Morgan realizes England is due for a solar eclipse and warns he will destroy the sun if they try to execute him. When the eclipse begins, he states he will revers ..read more
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Consider Firepower
Civil War Chat
by Phil Leigh
1M ago
(March 4, 2024) My last 3 posts provided historical context pertinent to my newest novel, Tom Hindman’s Western Adventure. After authoring 13 non-fiction history books, last year I released my first novel: Firepower. The shift to historical fiction was deliberate for three reasons. First, is a point summarized by Rudyard Kipling: “If history were taught in the form of stories, it would never be forgotten.” I’ve always seen history as grand story. Second, if novels become sufficiently popular, they can change public opinion. Consider how Michael Shaara’s Killer Angels rehabilitated Longstreet’s ..read more
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Could the South Have Won Missouri?
Civil War Chat
by Phil Leigh
1M ago
(March 3, 2024) Serious Civil War students realize that Missouri and Kentucky are represented in the thirteen stars of the Confederate Battle and National flags. Missouri’s star was added in November 1861 when a pro-southern state government passed a secession ordinance in Neosho, in the state’s southwest corner. Among the states represented by the 13-star flag, Missouri ranked second in population behind Virginia. Richmond’s war department assigned Missouri to the Trans-Mississippi District, which encompassed the vast region west of the Mississippi River. Economically, Missouri dominated the ..read more
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Confederate Trans-Mississippi
Civil War Chat
by Phil Leigh
1M ago
The first opportunity for the Confederacy to win the Civil War in the Trans-Mississippi Department, was to win it in Missouri. The potential stakes were big in the vast region mapped below. (March 1, 2024)  At its peak, the Confederacy’s Trans-Mississippi Department stretched from the Mississippi River to the southeastern border of California and from Keokuk, Iowa to the mouth of the Rio Grande. Missouri, which had been admitted to the Confederacy in November 1861, might have been the leading state in that vast area if the Southerners had maintained control of it. With 1.1 million white ..read more
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Chapter One: Tom Hindman’s Western Adventure
Civil War Chat
by Phil Leigh
1M ago
(February 29, 2024) Provided below is the first chapter of my latest novel, Tom Hindman’s Western Adventure. At ten o’clock in the morning on 23 May 1862 Confederate Major General Thomas C. Hindman called on Major Francis Shoup at the latter’s tent near Corinth, Mississippi. The Indiana born Shoup was head of artillery for one of the Army of Mississippi’s four corps.  General P.G.T. Beauregard had assumed command of the army after its previous commander was killed at the Battle of Shiloh on 6 April. Yesterday Beauregard and Hindman agreed that the latter would assume command of all C ..read more
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General Tom Hindman’s Western Adventure
Civil War Chat
by Phil Leigh
1M ago
(February 28, 2024) Today I release my newest book, Tom Hindman’s Western Adventure: A Trans-Mississippi Civil War Novel. It is a sequel to my last novel, Pat and Tom. which is about the antebellum friendship between Confederate generals Pat Cleburne and Tom Hindman as well as their experiences when both were members of The Army of Tennessee and its predecessors. The sequel can be read independently without having read Pat and Tom. My new novel is available at Amazon in both Kindle ($4.99) and paperback ($18.59) versions. You can get an autographed copy of the paperback from me for $25.00. I w ..read more
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My 2024 Lee-Jackson Day Speech
Civil War Chat
by Phil Leigh
2M ago
Provided below is a copy of a speech I gave at the Sons of Confederate Veterans Stonewall Brigade’s Lee-Jackson Day commemoration on January 12, 2024. Physicist Niels Bohr once said, “The opposite of a fact is a falsehood. The opposite of a profound truth may be another profound truth.” Newtonian physics is a profound truth, but Newtonian laws are not a complete truth because they are subject to relativity. Pride can block our ability to recognize a new truth. If we believe that one idea is so universal that it explains everything, we can be too invested in that idea to consider different pers ..read more
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