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Subject:
From:
Walter Waddell <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Discussion of research and writing about Virginia history <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 4 Aug 2011 15:36:08 -0400
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As much as I admire Jackson; I must correct all of you to my opinion; it 
wasn't Jackson standing like a stonewall: it was his men! Few understand - 
they being the ones that have had the "experience".

Regards, Ray
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Alyson L. Taylor-White" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Thursday, August 04, 2011 7:27 AM
Subject: Fwd: News from Virginia's Executive Mansion


Hi All - here's news from the Executive Mansion in Richmond.
Alyson

Begin forwarded message:

> From: Virginia's Executive Mansion <[log in to unmask]
> >
> Date: August 3, 2011 4:17:18 PM EDT
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: News from Virginia's Executive Mansion
> Reply-To: [log in to unmask]
>
> Having trouble viewing this email? Click here
>
>
> MANSION E-NEWS
> AUGUST 2011
> In This Issue
> Web Renaissance
> Offical Bicentennial Book of the Mansion
> Fog of War Descends of Governor's Mansion
> No Picnic in Manassas or at the Mansion
>
> Quick Links
> Executive Mansion
> Virginia's Executive Chef
> Mansion Tours
> Governor McDonnell
> First Lady of Virginia
>  Governor's Mansion Web Renaissance
>
> The mansion's web presence has come about face in cyberspace with  its 
> newly launched website. This illuminating site is just a click  away at 
> www.executivemansion.virginia.gov. The interactive site  includes 
> information about the current Civil War exhibit at the  Mansion, the 
> history, mansion events, recipes from the Executive  Chef, menus of what 
> VIPs are served when they visit the Mansion and  much more. We encourage 
> you to continue to check back for updates.
> Mansion's Civil War Sesquicentennial Commemoration Exhibits
>
> The inaugural exhibit focuses on the death and lying in state of  General 
> Stonewall Jackson at the Mansion. The exhibit includes  Jackson's Death 
> Mask, which was made as his body lay at the Mansion.
>
> The Executive Mansion thanks the Valentine Richmond History Center  for 
> loaning the death mask to the Mansion. Other items featured in  the 
> exhibit were generously loaned by the Museum of the Confederacy,  the 
> Virginia Historical Society, and the Library of Virginia.
>
> Exhibits will continue throughout the Sesquicentennial and are  included 
> as part of regular mansion tours.
>
> For more information, click here.
>
>
> Author Mary Theobald matches book text with appropriate images
> VIRGINIA AUTHORS CHRONICLE HISTORY OF VIRGINIA'S GOVERNOR'S MANSION
>
> In 2013, Virginia's Executive Mansion-the oldest occupied governor's 
> residence in all the fifty states-marks its 200th anniversary. To 
> celebrate this bicentennial milestone, we are planning a yearlong  series 
> of special events at the Mansion and on Capitol Square.  Some  events are 
> inspired by historical occasions such as the antebellum  band concerts and 
> the informal receptions that Virginians have long  enjoyed.
>
> The Citizens Advisory Committee (CAC) is publishing a handsome  coffee 
> table book that will chronicle the riveting history of this  residence. 
> Research has revealed a wealth of human stories with a  visual treasure 
> trove of compelling images. The lively text is  peppered with ghost 
> stories, pets and pranks, famous and fashionable  faces and the rhetorical 
> building blocks that bring the mansion to  life. A must-read for lovers of 
> Virginia's venerable past. This  official book of the Mansion's 
> Bicentennial is scheduled to be  released in October of 2012.
>
>  MANSION PORTRAIT CONFIRMED AS AUTHENTIC GEORGE BINGHAM
>
> The Mansion's "Portrait of a Boy and His Dog" hanging in the ladies 
> parlor has been authenticated by Bingham specialists Fred R. Kline,  Dr. 
> Paul Nagel and author William Kloss, advisors to the Catalogue  Raisoonne 
> Supplement.
>
> George Celeb Bingham (1811-1879) was born in Augusta County Virginia  and 
> moved west in 1819 becoming Missouri's first artist. Bingham,  called the 
> "old master" of American art is best known for his iconic  "Fur Traders 
> Descending
> the Missouri".
>
> This endearing portrait, long attributed to Bingham, is of Colin  Dunlop 
> and was painted during Bingham's six month stay in Petersburg  in 1841. 
> The portrait was deeded to the Governor's Mansion in 1977  by the estate 
> of Martha Spottswood of Petersburg Virginia.
>
>
> THE FOG OF WAR DESCENDS ON THE GOVERNOR'S MANSION
>
> Peaceable, "Honest John" Letcher was a lawyer, journalist and  embattled 
> Civil War Governor
>
> Governor Letcher
> of Virginia. His transformation from dove to hawk transpired in  three 
> horrific months in early 1861. Moderate, John Letcher, an  advocate for 
> the gradual emancipation of slaves, had labored to  preserve the Union and 
> was prominent in the organization of the  failed February, 1861 Washington 
> peace conference. By April all hope  of peace had disappeared with seven 
> of the deep South states  seceding from the Union. Hopes of any 
> reconciliation were dashed  when President Lincoln called for troops to 
> suppress the rebellion.  Virginia seceded from the Union on April 17th, 
> 1861. Governor John  Letcher, now the hawk, embraced his responsibilities 
> to organize the  state for war and complete a smooth transition from State 
> to  Confederate control.
>
> Letcher's administrative skills were enacted immediately. On April  23rd, 
> Letcher offered Robert E. Lee the command of the States  defense forces, 
> Lee accepted. President Lincoln's invitation to  command the Union forces 
> had been turned down earlier in 1861.The  following month Letcher 
> orchestrated moving the Confederate capital  from Montgomery, Alabama to 
> Richmond, and on May 29 the city greeted  President Jefferson Davis with 
> cheers and celebration.
>
> Governor Pierpont
>
> Virginia was soon to have two governors, due to these actions and  the 
> vote for secession from the Union. Delegates from the northern  and 
> northwestern counties of the State refused to join the  Confederacy and 
> elected Francis Pierpont as their governor at the  Wheeling Convention. 
> Pierpont served in Alexandria and was protected  by the Union while acting 
> as governor presiding over the captured  portions of the state. Pierpont 
> prevailed after the war.  In 1865  President Andrew Johnson appointed him 
> as the provisional governor  of the reunited state of Virginia.
>
>
> THERE WAS NO PICNIC IN MANASSAS OR AT THE MANSION
>
>
> Battle at Bull Run - image from the Library of Virginia
> The first battle of Manassas, Bull Run, as it is called in the  north, on 
> July 21, 1861 was destined to bring a quick end to the  southern 
> disturbance. General McDowell's 30,000 troops were certain  to rout the 
> Confederate Army of General Beauregard. So confident  were 
> Washingtonian's, they made the thirty mile trip to witness the  spectacle 
> as sport. Senators and celebrators, politicians and  picnickers, braved 
> the sweltering heat to witness the Union triumph.  By early afternoon it 
> appeared that a glorious Union victory was at  hand. Then it all changed 
> when troops under John Letcher's close  friend, the relatively unknown 
> Colonel, Thomas Jackson, held their  ground against the Union advance. 
> Inspired by this example, General  Bernard Bee told his men to look to 
> Jackson who was standing "like a  stone wall," and to "rally 'round the 
> Virginians."  It was here that  Jackson's nickname originated. General 
> Johnson's southern  reinforcements arrived by rail and the tide turned. 
> The rebel  conquest was complete and devastating to the defeated Union 
> Army who  turned and ran, with the spectators, back to Washington.
>
> The march to Richmond had been stopped for now, and the fall and  winter 
> would be time for the Union troops to think tactics for the  encounters to 
> come in the spring of 1862.
>
> The Virginia Central Railroad brought the wounded, dying and dead  back to 
> Richmond and with them the horrors and reality of war. Both  sides were 
> sobered by the causalities and violence of the battle.  The dye had been 
> cast, war was inevitable, relative quiet prevailed  for the remainder of 
> 1861, and this would be the proverbial calm  before the bloody storm. Now 
> the weight of war was on the shoulders  of Governor Letcher, President 
> Davis, their generals and troops.
>
>
>
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> Virginia's Executive Mansion | Capitol Square | Richmond | VA | 23219
>

Alyson L. Taylor-White
804-920-2783




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