Showing posts with label Rob Grandchamp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rob Grandchamp. Show all posts

Saturday, September 02, 2017

'No, Sarah!' Did someone else write Sullivan Ballou letter?

A lithograph of Sullivan Ballou, mortally wounded at the First Battle of Bull Run.

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Rob Grandchamp was 12 or 13 when he first watched Ken Burns' Civil War documentary mini-series on PBS in 1990 and heard the reading of 2nd Rhode Island Major Sullivan Ballou's now-famous letter to his wife. Like millions of others, he was captivated by the beautifully written, and deeply moving, prose.

"My very dear Sarah," began the letter, purportedly written from Camp Clark in Washington on July 14. 1861. "The indications are very strong that we shall move in a few days — perhaps tomorrow. Lest I should not be able to write again, I feel impelled to write a few lines that may fall under your eye when I shall be no more …"

Rob Grandchamp
As Paul Roebling read the words of "Ballou" and the tremendous "Ashokan Farewell" played in the background, tears welled in eyes across America. (See video below.)

"But, O Sarah," the letter continued, "if the dead can come back to this earth, and flit unseen around those they loved, I shall always be near you in the garish day, and the darkest night amidst your happiest scenes and gloomiest hours always, always, and, if the soft breeze fans your cheek, it shall be my breath; or the cool air cools your throbbing temples, it shall be my spirit passing by. Sarah, do not mourn me dear; think I am gone, and wait for me, for we shall meet again."

"Sullivan Ballou was killed at week later at the First Battle of Bull Run," historian David McCullough intoned at the end of the letter reading.

Like many, Grandchamp gave the TV series high marks. "I think that Burns did a marvelous job with the documentary,"  he said, "and it serves as a great introduction to the war for many people."  And at the time, Grandchamp assumed, like most of the public, that Ballou was the actual author of the letter to Sarah.

Years after Burns' documentary, however, Grandchamp dug deeper. His doubts about the authenticity of the letter grew. In the fall 2017 issue of America's Civil War magazine, Grandchamp — a native Rhode Islander who now lives in Vermont — lays out the case that Ballou did not write the letter, among the most famous of the Civil War. Another man, Horatio Rogers, was its author, he asserts.

In this Q&A, Grandchamp — a prolific Civil War author — answers my questions about his research on the Ballou letter, whether he has heard Burns' take on the mini-controversy, and more:


What motivated you to research the story of the letter?

Grandchamp: I like a good mystery. Years ago, I was volunteering at the Providence Public Library and actually discovered a piece of Ballou’s shirt collar that was used to identify his body parts after his remains were desecrated after Bull Run. In my day job, I work for the Federal government as an analyst, figuring out complex problems. As the years went on I, as I did more research on Rhode Island’s role in the Civil War, could not help but notice that Ballou was not really a major player in the conflict; his death was all but forgotten by the local papers. Rather they focused heavily on Colonel John Stanton Slocum of the Second Rhode Island, whose last words were “Now show them what Rhode Island can do.” I discovered Ballou’s letters at the Rhode Island Historical Society and spent a good amount of time reading each one of them. After reading the letters documented to be Ballou’s and comparing his style of writing to the others, I was convinced he did not write the famous July 14 letter.


Tell us more about your research on the letter.

Grandchamp: I analyzed the Ballou letters and compared the known originals in his hand to the famous letter. What it came down to for me was that the Ballou family had carefully preserved all of Sullivan’s letters sent to Sarah during his short time in the army. The original of the famous letter has never been seen by anyone alive today. The prevailing theory is that Sarah was buried with the letter in 1917 when she died; I could find no record of that in her obituary. I pondered and thought, "Why would the family not have kept the famous letter with the rest of his papers." It is strange to think she was buried with it.

A post-war image of Horatio Rogers, the man who
Rob Grandchamp believes really wrote the
famous letter attributed to Sullivan Ballou.
Rogers became a prominent jurist and lawyer
after the Civil War.
Numerous manuscript copies abound, but it was not seen in public until 1868. The letter, if it existed in 1861, would have been a great recruiting tool by the State of Rhode Island to motivate young men to enlist. There is another letter documented to Ballou dated July 14, 1861, in the collection of the Rhode Island Historical Society, but the tone and style of the letter is so radically different from the famous letter that there is no way, as supported by my research and the analysis of others, that he wrote the famous July 14, 1861, letter.

I also traced the history of the letter and tracked down numerous copies of it at repositories around the country. Research at Stanford University provided the Burns connection to it. Dr. Don Fehrenbacher found a copy in Illinois and sent it to Ric Burns. In his letter to Ric Burns [Ken's brother], the professor told him to only use material for the project that could be documented as being historically accurate. It is unknown if the film company did any research on Ballou. My research indicates it was written by his very good friend, Horatio Rogers, who had the talent and skill to write it as a memorial to his friend.

What can you tell us about Rogers?

Grandchamp: Horatio Rogers was one of Ballou’s closest friends. They attended Brown, served in the state legislature, and practiced law together. Rogers even witnessed Ballou’s will. Rogers wanted to go to war early on, but his friend Ballou persuaded him to stay home. After Ballou’s death, Rogers became an officer in the 3rd Rhode Island Heavy Artillery in August 1861. He worked his way up through the ranks and, in 1863, became colonel of the 2nd Rhode Island, Ballou’s regiment. He led the regiment at Chancellorsville and Gettysburg.

Resigning in 1864, he became attorney general of Rhode Island and later an associate justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court. Rogers was a very talented man who owned one of the largest private libraries in Rhode Island at the time. He was also an author who published several books and wrote a biographical sketch of Ballou that was published in 1868, the first time the letter was seen in public. Rogers had the talent and the motivation to write the letter.

What has been the reaction to the piece, and have you heard from Ken Burns?

Ken Burns
Grandchamp: So far reaction has been positive among the people I know in the Rhode Island historical community who I shared my early research with. They know I did not just go off on a tangent on this, but did a lot of in-depth research to prove my hypothesis. Regarding Ken Burns and Florentine Films, when I was doing research for the article, I called, wrote, e-mailed, and even sent a carrier pigeon! Despite this, no one from his company ever got back in touch with me. I would really like to see what Mr. Burns' reaction would be.

What message do you have for those who believe Ballou absolutely wrote the letter?

Grandchamp: The evidence is clear he did not write it. My credentials include an M.A. in American history, service as a National Park ranger, work in the museum field, and I am the author of 11 books and dozens of articles. I also have nearly 20 years of experience researching Rhode Island’s role in the Civil War. My aim in writing this piece was not to discredit Ballou’s service and sacrifice. He was a brave man in combat, but as one 2nd Rhode Island officer wrote, he had no business being there; he had no training and obtained the position of major through political connections. Ballou was trying to leverage his military service into political gain after the war. Unfortunately, he fell in his first battle. History is not always black and white, as my research has shown.

If you could visit with Ballou today, what would you ask him?

Grandchamp: I would ask him point blank if he wrote the letter. Knowing his answer would be no, I would ask him what his opinion of it was.

What are your future plans?

Grandchamp:  I got married about a month ago to a lovely school teacher named Elizabeth, and a family is planned down the road. She thinks my Civil War studies are interesting, and is still getting used to living in an old farmhouse in the mountains of Vermont that looks like a mini-version of the New England Civil War Museum. For now, I am working on two projects. One is a complete roster of the soldiers of the 7th Rhode Island Infantry, the regiment that my ggg-uncle Alfred Sheldon Knight served in. I have been tracking down burial locations for members of the regiment and have found the final resting places for nearly two-thirds of the men. My winter project -- winter is nearly half the year in Vermont -- is quite ambitious -- I am going to write an annotated bibliography of Rhode Island in the Civil War era.

Have something to add (or correct) in this post? E-mail me here.

Read Grandchamp's article in America's Civil War Magazine.

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Author Q&A: A Connecticut Yankee at War

A Connecticut Yankee at War is Rob Grandchamp's ninth Civil War book.
Thousands of brilliant men served in both armies during the Civil War. One of my favorites is Newton Manross, a captain in the 16th Connecticut from Bristol. Highly educated, he had degrees from Yale and the University of Gottingen in Germany and traveled to Panama, where he predicted the construction of the Panama Canal decades before shovels turned earth. A 37-year-old acting professor of chemistry and philosophy at Amherst (Mass.) College when the war broke out in 1861, Manross was killed at the Battle of Antietam.

Another soldier with Connecticut ties, George Gaskell -- the subject of 29-year-old Rob Grandchamp's ninth Civil War book -- was equally remarkable. In A Connecticut Yankee At War, The Life and Letters of George Lee Gaskell (Pelican Publishing Company), Grandchamp provides context and then steps out of the way to let the soldier's letters to his sister and his hometown newspaper tell a fascinating story.

A farm boy from Sterling, Conn., near the Rhode Island border, Gaskell spoke five languages, traveled the world extensively before the Civil War and wrote eloquently. "In my years studying the Civil War," Grandchamp writes, "I have read many -- perhaps too many -- letters written by soldiers of the period. The ones written by George Gaskell are among the best."

Sergeant James Nichols, George Gaskell's
boyhood friend, was killed at
Salem Church. No photo of Gaskell
is known to exist.
(Courtesy Rob Grandchamp)
A little more than seven months after the Rebels fired on Fort Sumter, Gaskell enlisted as 2nd lieutenant in Battery G of the 1st Rhode Island Light Artillery. The unit fought at some of the bloodiest battles of the war, including Malvern Hill, Antietam and Gettysburg.

"God in his great mercy has permitted me to once more write you that I am again spared, spared when thousands as brave and perhaps better men have fell," Gaskell noted in a letter to his sister a week after Antietam. Of the fighting he witnessed in the farm fields near Sharpsburg, Md., he added: "Never in my life have I witnessed such valor as that displayed by the Southern forces who fought with despair driving us several times, but our artillery was too much for them."

By the end of the war, Gaskell had risen to a command of black troops in the 14th Rhode Island Heavy Artillery in the Deep South. After the war, he married a Louisiana woman and briefly served as the mayor of Plaquemine, La. He later moved with his family to Ohio, where he operated a grocery store until his death at 86 in 1926.

An 11th-generation Rhode Islander, Grandchamp, an analyst for the Federal government, lives in "beautiful old farmhouse" filled with Civil War books in a quiet village in the Green Mountains of Vermont. He recently answered questions via e-mail about his 200-page book and more.

What fascinated you so much about George Lee Gaskell?

Grandchamp: My interest in George Gaskell started while I was working on a history of Battery G, 1st Rhode Island Light Artillery. I found his letters at the U.S. Army Military History Institute at Carlisle (Pa.) Barracks and without them my book The Boys of Adams’ Battery G would not have been possible. I was amazed by his letters because Gaskell was far from the typical Union soldier. True, he was a farm boy from Sterling, Conn., but he was educated, spoke five languages -- English, French, Arabic, Swahili, and Latin -- and went to Africa on a trading voyage before the Civil War.

His letters are so vivid in their description of Civil War combat, but they also contain details of the flora and fauna of the South, as well as the people and culture he experienced there. It was also interesting to note that he also served in the U.S. Colored Troops and these add another whole layer to his life. He stayed behind in Reconstruction Louisiana, married, and became a successful businessman. I began to do research on his life and all the pieces fell together. The letters are about the best Civil War correspondence I have ever read, and I have read thousands of soldiers' letters! I had to select a topic for my M.A. thesis at Rhode Island College and this is where the project started in 2009-2010. George seemed like an interesting guy to study, and I wrote a much more academic version of A Connecticut Yankee at War as my masters thesis in 2010.

A private in the 1st Rhode Island Light Artillery, George Gaskell participated in severe
 fighting at Antietam. (Map courtesy Rob Grandchamp)

If you could go back in time and be with George at one event during his service, what would that be and why?

Grandchamp: Tough question. For Civil War combat, it would have to be Antietam to see and experience what he did fighting at Dunker Church. His descriptions of what happened there are some of the best I have ever read. I feel that the most interesting part of his life in the Civil War was his experiences as an officer in the U.S. Colored Troops in Louisiana. His experiences of fighting a guerrilla war in the Southern bayou are almost the same as our troops fighting terrorists overseas today.

Tell us about George's experience at Antietam, the bloodiest day of the war.

Grandchamp: At Antietam, Battery G, First Rhode Island Light Artillery was in the thick of the fight at Dunker Church and Bloody Lane. George wrote vivid descriptions of the battle and his role there as the unit was nearly overrun twice. A row of guns outside the present-day National Park Service visitor center marks their final position. Battery G fought in two parts of the battle, and his letters provide an eyewitness account to the destruction of the Second Corps and the savage fighting around the Dunker Church. Even more harrowing are his post-battle letters from Harpers Ferry in the fall of 1862, telling of the terrible disease that inflicted the command.

Gaskell's Battery G fought near the Dunker Church at Antietam. This Alexander Gardner
image shows the bodies of Confederate artillerymen near the church. (Library of Congress)
George's letters and his newspaper columns in the Windham (Conn.) County newspaper provided you with an excellent window into his life. What didn't you find in your research that you wished you had?

Grandchamp: I would say what I wished I had located was a picture of George or his sister Mary to whom he wrote the majority of the letters. Even if it was him as an old man, I would love to look upon his face.

What was the greatest challenge in researching the book?

Grandchamp: The greatest challenge was chronicling George’s post-war life in Louisiana. Living in Rhode Island at the time I researched the book, I could easily travel to town halls, cemeteries, libraries, etc. in Connecticut, but at the time due to school, work and life, I could not go there. I was very fortunate to befriend a local historian in Plaquemine, La., who happened to work in the mayor’s office (George was mayor of the town for a short time), and she did me yeoman service pulling together material from Louisiana to work with.

My greatest personnel challenge was staying awake during a 10-hour car ride to Ohio. George spent the last 30 years of his life as a grocer in Cincinnati, and while I was working in Luray, Va., in the summer of 2010, I took a very long car ride to do research there. I was very fortunate to visit Spring Grove Cemetery and find the small block of granite that marks his final resting place. I put a small American flag on his grave, saluted, and parted, knowing that I had done my best to tell the story of this remarkable man. The most gratifying aspect of researching the book was getting to visit his final resting spot in Ohio, far from the rolling hills of Windham County that he loved so much.

Finally, you have already written nine books about the Civil War. What's next?

Grandchamp: I am going to be taking a personal break from writing Civil War books for the next few years and focus on family and serving in my community on the local library board. I really enjoy doing book reviews and hope to continue with those and the occasional article. My next book when I get around to it -- the research is done; I just need to write it --  is a history of the 7th Rhode Island Infantry Veterans Association. While there have been some great books on Civil War veterans, no one has chronicled the post-war struggles of a group of men from one regiment.

George Gaskell is buried next to his wife in Spring Grove Cemetery in Cincinnati.
(Photo courtesy Rob Grandchamp)