The National Tribune Civil War Index
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The National Tribune Civil War Index

A Guide to the Weekly Newspaper Dedicated to Civil War Veterans, 1877-1943

Richard Sauers

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eBook - ePub

The National Tribune Civil War Index

A Guide to the Weekly Newspaper Dedicated to Civil War Veterans, 1877-1943

Richard Sauers

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The National Tribune was the premier Union veterans’ newspaper of the post-Civil War era. Launched in 1877 by a New York veteran to help his comrades and sway Congress to pass better pension laws, a short time later the National Tribune began publishing firsthand accounts penned by the veterans themselves, and did so for decades thereafter. This rich, overlooked, and underused source of primary material offers a gold mine of eyewitness accounts of battles, strategy, tactics, camp life, and much more.From generals to privates, the paper printed articles and long serials on everything from major battles such as Gettysburg and Antietam, to arguments about which battery fired the shot that killed General Leonidas Polk, whether Grant’s army was surprised at Shiloh, and just about every topic in between. Unbeknownst to many, a number of Confederate accounts were also published in the paper.Decades in the making, Dr. Rick Sauers’ unique multi-volume reference work The National Tribune Civil War Index: A Guide to the Weekly Newspaper Dedicated to Civil War Veterans, 1877-1943 lists every article (1877-1943). The first two volumes are organized by author, his unit, title, and page/column location. The third volume—the main index—includes a subject, author, and unit guide, as well as a “Unit as Sources” index that lists articles that mention specific commands but are written by soldiers who were not members of that unit. As an added bonus, this reference guide includes the contents of both the National Tribune Scrapbook and the National Tribune Repository, two short-lived publications that included articles by veterans, and a listing of the major libraries that have National Tribune holdings.Thanks to Dr. Sauers, Civil War researchers and writers worldwide now have easy access to the valuable contents of this primary source material.

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Informations

Année
2017
ISBN
9781940669748
images

Volume 1: 1877 - 1903

1877
October
No Related Articles
November
11:3. “President Lincoln a Duelist.”
December
No Related Articles
1878
January
30:1-3. Porter Farley (140th NY), “Reminiscences of Gettysburg.” [Rochester Democrat & Chronicle]
February
33:1-3. “Andersonville.”
34:1-3, 35:1-3, 39:1-2. “Extracts of the Report on the Treatment of Prisoners of War by the Rebel Authorities.”
March
41:1-3, 42:1-3, 43:1-3. “Libby Prison,
Richmond, Va.”
April
54:1-2. “The Truth of History.” [Harrisburg Telegraph, W. H. H. Davis vs. Simon Cameron on the enlistments of troops in 1861]
May
No Related Articles
June-December
Missing from Microfilm
1879
January
No Related Articles
February
No Related Articles
March
19:1. G. N. Bachelor, “Soldiers’ Anecdotes.” [Rosseau at Perryville]
19:2. “An Incident of Gettysburg.” [Boston Transcript, Barlow-Gordon Affair]
April
32:1. “An Iowa Mother Who had 11 Sons in the U.S. Army—Their Record.” [Elizabeth Uprigh, Butler County]
32:1. “Another Lincoln Anecdote.”
May
35:3. E. H. Ropes (3rd NJ Art), “A
Reminiscence of Gettysburg—Gen. Webb’s Brigade.”
June
42:1-3, 43:1. “Decoration Day.” [speech of William McCandless at Gettysburg on May 30]
44:3. Obit: James Shields.
48:1. “Foraging for Chickens.” [Pvt. Justice of an IN regiment in May 1864]
48:2. “A Memory of the War. The Amputation of Gen. [A. V.] Rice’s Limb.” [Kennesaw Mt]
July
56:1. Godfrey Hardy (31st NJ), “A War Incident.”
August
64:1. John Duncan (15th KY), “An Anecdote of Gen. Rosseau.”
September
66:3. George C. Morgan (98th OH), “A Reminiscence of Chickamauga—Gen. Steedman’s Division.”
67:3. “The Secret Intelligence Among Southern Negroes During the War.” [Toledo Blade]
October
74:2. J. T. Wolverton, “An East Tennessee Anecdote.”
74:3, 75:1. “Johnny Clem, ‘The Drummer Boy of Chickamauga.’”
November
85:3. JM (48th PA), “A Soldier’s Beautiful Letter.” [written 6/25/64]
88:1. “The Angel of Castle Thunder.”
December
No Related Articles
1880
January
2:3. John Duncan (15th KY), Letter about Perryville.
February
10:1-2. Reuben P. Reed (55th IL), “The Battle of Shiloh from My Own Standpoint.”
March
22:2-3. “The Death of John Wilkes Booth.” [interview with Capt Edwin P. Doherty in the New Orleans Picayune]
April
No Related Articles
May
39:1. “How Lincoln Squelched a Marquis.” [of Hartington]
39:2. “His Conscience was Relieved.” [Anecdote on John B. Bachelder’s lecture at Buffalo]
June
43:3. W. H. Riland (93rd PA). His Service.
July
49:1-3, 50:1-2. “Close Quarters.” [CSA soldier’s escape from train to Fort Delaware on 2/2/6?]
55:1-3. “Sentenced and Shot.”
August
No Related Articles
September
66:1-3. “The Battle of Groveton or Second Bull Run.” [Fifth Corps soldier]
October
73:1-3. “Antietam. One of the Great Battles of the War.”
November
No Related Articles
December
No Related Articles
1881
January
No Related Articles
February
11:3. “How Sickles Saved His Life.” [Gettysburg]
March
No Related Articles
April
25:1-3, 26:1-2. “An American Andre. How a Great-Grandson of Martha Washington was Hanged During the Civil War as a Spy.” [William O. Williams & Walter G. Peter on 6/9/63]
May
32:1-3. Henry T. Owen, “The Turning of the Tide. Gen. Pickett’s Grand Charge at Gettysburg.” [Philadelphia Times]
35:2. John B. Gordon, “On the Picket Line.” 35:3. “The First Bull Run Fight.” [Postmaster King in the New York Times and Messenger]
38:1-2. “The Youngest Soldier.”
38:3. “Queer Happenings in War.” [Detroit Free Press; covers Franklin, Fort Wagner, and White River]
June
43:2. “Andersonville.” [current view]
44:1. A. R. Mullen (PA), William Dyas (117th NY), J. T. Suter (IL), “Young Soldiers.”
July
Not on Microfilm
August 20
1:1-2. “Three November Days. What Benjamin F. Taylor Saw in 1863. Bragg’s Defeat. Mr. Taylor’s Account of the Battles Before Chattanooga . . .”
1:3-4. “Bull Run to Washington. The Great Skedaddle by a Survivor.” [National Republican]
1:5. Obit: Robert Patterson.
2:1-2. “The Ghost of a Lantern.” [signal corps in January 1862]
3:1-3. “In Front of Yorktown.” [Porter’s Division]
3:3. “Fighting for Posterity.” [Anecdote about J. A. Early]
5:2-4. Biog: William W. Dudley (19th IN).
August 27
1:1-2. “In Front of Yorktown,” Part 2.
1:3-4. “At Chancellorsville.” [Philadelphia Times]
3:1-3. “Three November Days,” Part 2.
3:3. “The Old Man Wants Them Guns.” [anecdote about G. H. Thomas at Nashville]
September 3
1:1-2. “In Front of Yorktown,” Part 3.
1:3-4. “Harrison’s Landing, 1862. The Rebel Shelling of the Union Army.” [7/31/62]
3:1-5, 5:3-4. “Three November Days,” Part 3.
7:3. “A Daring Expedition.” [William B. Cushing and gunboat Monticello, San Francisco Chronicle]
7:4. (4th MI Cav), “A Close Shave.” [Philadelphia Press, about Dick McCann’s Confederate cavalry]
September 10
1:1-2. PDH, “The Attack on Lee’s Mills.” [4/16/62]
1:3-4. “Petersburg Revisited. An Irishman’s Idea of the Crater.” [Philadelphia Times]
2:5. “Historical Drumsticks.” [Niles Mirror, concerning sticks carried by the 24th MI]
3:1-4. J. S. Slater (13th NY), “Malvern. The End of the Seven Days.”
September 17
1:3-4. “Appomattox Court House. The Place Where Lee Surrendered.” [Philadelphia Times]
1:5. Obit: Ambrose E. Burnside.
3:1-5. J. S. Slater (13th NY), “At Gaines’s Mill. Scenes and Incidents of the Battle.” [National Republican]
5:2. Obit: James Starr (6th PA Cav, Meade ADC), John G. Parr (139th PA), K. R. Breese (USN), William M. Gregg (23rd, 179th NY).
5:4. Biog: Silas M. Bailey (8th PA Res).
September 24
3:1-4. J. S. Slater (13th NY), “The Grand Review. A Never-to-be-forgotten Scene.”
3:1. Henry H. Brownell, “Marching Home.” [poem]
October 1
1:1-2. George Reynolds (15th IA), “Gen. McPherson’s Death.”
1:2. “Suit Against Gen. Banks.” [versus William R. Hodges of New Orleans]
1:3-4. J. S. Slater (13th NY), “Yellow Jackets.” [bees at Malvern Hill]
3:1-3. “Torn Battle Flags. Wrecks and Relic...

Table des matiĂšres