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Subject:
From:
Barry McMullan <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Barry McMullan <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 4 Aug 2011 14:37:10 -0700
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Leaders can and do make the difference. I still like his leadership skills that kept them all from running like the yankees,
Barry

From: Walter Waddell <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
Sent: Thursday, August 4, 2011 2:36 PM
Subject: Re: [VA-HIST] News from Virginia's Executive Mansion 08041932Z11

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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