Blake Barber
Posts by Blake Barber:
Dr. Curt Fields – A Portrayal of General Ulysses S. Grant
In November, Roundtable members will be treated to a fine, informative, and entertaining presentation by Dr. Curt Fields as he portrays General Ulysses S. Grant. Dr. Fields, a physician from Collierville, Tennessee, has cultivated the persona of General Grant to the extent that he is considered now the preeminent living historian portraying Grant.
Dr. Fields is the National Park Service representative for General U. S. Grant. He has portrayed the commanding general of the Union Army in films, posters, and re-enactments. Dr. Fields has a bachelor and a master’s degree in Education from the University of Memphis, Tennessee. He later earned a second master’s degree in Secondary Education and a Ph.D. in Educational Administration and Curriculum from Michigan State University, among his other academic achievements.
He was selected to portray General Grant at the 150th anniversary of Lee’s surrender to Grant at Appomattox Court House, Virginia, in 2015. He was featured as General Grant, and as a Grant authority, in the Discovery Channel three-part documentary series “How Booze Built America.”
Dr. Fields, the same height and body style as General Grant, represents a true-to-life image of the man as he would have looked. He researches extensively in order to share an accurate portrayal. His presentations are in first person, quoting from General Grant’s memoirs, articles, and letters, statements he made in interviews, and first-person accounts of people who knew the General or were with him and witnessed him during events.
In international demand, Dr. Fields has been featured not only by the National Park Service, but also, the Grant Presidential Library and a myriad of documentarians and filmmakers. Dr. Fields is simply the best in the field. Recently honored by both the US Army and Navy for his work on Grant’s life and legacy, the Kentucky Civil War Roundtable is fortunate to have him accept our invitation.
Bryan Bush and Harold Edwards – The Battle of Perryville: As It Was & As It Looks Now
I am pleased to present to the Kentucky Civil War Roundtable our speakers for the upcoming 2024/2025 Season. Beginning on September 9, 2024, we will have two speakers: Bryan Bush, the Manager of the Perryville Battlefield State Historic Site, and Harold Edwards, the most active individual in the restoration of the Perryville Battlefield, and the longest sitting member of the Perryville Battlefield Commission. They will discuss The Battle of Perryville, Kentucky, as it was on October 8, 1862, and as it looks today.
On November 25, 2024, we will be totally entertained by Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant, starring Dr. E.C. “Curt” Fields, Jr. of Collierville, Tennessee. You cannot miss this program; it is one of the most talked-about programs in Civil War circles.
Then, on March 17, 2025, we will hear from Dr. Caroline E. Janney, the John L. Nau Professor of the History of the Civil War at the University of Virginia. She will speak about her remarkable and award-winning book and its riveting story, Ends of War: The Unfinished Fight of Lee’s Army after Appomattox. It will be a memorable evening.
On April 28, 2025, we will hear from Donna Dodd Terrell, a long-time lawyer in the U.S. District Court in Lexington, Kentucky, who will speak on the “Lionesses of White Hall”, the women in the Life of Cassius Marcellus Clay. After hearing the remarkable story of Cassius Marcellus Clay as set forth by Mel Hankla last year, here will be the story of the women in Cassius Clay’s life. It will be a story you will never forget.
On May 12, 2025, we will hear from Phillip Seyfrit, the Madison County Historical Property Director, on the Battle of Richmond, Kentucky, as it was on August 29 and 30, 1862, and as it looks today. The lectures will mirror, for The Battle of Richmond, what we heard in September from the principal actors in the restoration of the Perryville Battlefield.
OUR SPEAKERS
BRYAN BUSH: THE BATTLE OF PERRYVILLE “AS IT WAS ON OCTOBER 8, 1862”
A native of Louisville, Kentucky, Bryan graduated from Murray State University with a degree in History and Psychology and received his master’s degree from the University of Louisville in 2005. With a passion for history, especially the Civil War, Bryan has been a member of numerous historical and preservation societies and Roundtables and has written for numerous magazines such as Kentucky Civil War Magazine, North/South Trader, The Kentucky Civil War Bugle, The Kentucky Explorer, and Back Home in Kentucky.
In 1999, Bryan published his first book, The Civil War Battles of the Western Theater. Since then, he has published fourteen books on the Civil War and the history of Louisville such as Louisville During the Civil War: A History and Guide, Favorite Sons of Civil War Kentucky, and The Men Who Built the City of Progress: Louisville During the Gilded Age.
An avid reenactor for more than fifteen years, Bryan served on the Board of Directors of the Old Bardstown Museum and Village: The Battles of the Western Theater Museum in Bardstown and was a Board Member for the Louisville Historical League and is the official Civil War guide for Cave Hill Cemetery in Louisville. In December 2019, Bryan became the Park Manager for the Perryville Battlefield State Historic Site.
HAROLD EDWARDS: THE BATTLE OF PERRYVILLE; “AS IT LOOKS NOW”
A native of Danville, Kentucky, educated in the Boyle County Schools and the University of Kentucky, Harold has had a life-long interest in Kentucky frontier and Civil War History. Living near the Perryville Battlefield, Harold has had a passion for preserving the town of Perryville as well as the lands that make up the Perryville Battlefield.
Currently, Harold is in his sixteenth year serving on the Perryville Battlefield Commission. He is in his third year on the Mainstreet Board of Perryville, Kentucky. He is the Vice Chairman of the Boyle Landmark Trust and has just received the Ida Lee Willis Award for Historic Preservation.
He is currently working on the preservation of the Dye House on the Perryville Battlefield, a two-story structure that briefly served as the headquarters of Confederate General Simon B. Buckner before becoming a field hospital. Bloodstains can still be seen on the floors beneath the windows inside the house where the surgeons worked, operating on the wounded and amputating limbs.
Harold is also working on the Crawford House, situated on the Harrodsburg Road, just outside of the town of Perryville, a marvelous structure that served as Confederate General Braxton Bragg’s Headquarters before and after the battle. ■
Mack Cox – An American Story: The Redd Family Paintings
A Kentucky native, Mack Cox is a collector and an independent scholar of early Kentucky material culture. He received his BS and MS degrees in geology from Eastern Kentucky University and pursued an oil and gas career from which he retired in 2017. He and his wife, Sharon, began collecting early Kentucky material about 2005 with a focus on furniture and art. In 2011, their collection was covered in The Magazine Antiques and was described in 2013 as “one of the finest assemblages of antebellum Kentucky material.”
Mack currently serves on the Henry Clay Memorial Foundation, and on advisory boards for the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts (MESDA) in North Carolina, Colonial Williamsburg Art Museums, and The Magazine Antiques. He is a regional representative for MESDA’s Object Database and previously served on the collections committee for the National Society of Colonial Dames in Kentucky. He has lectured on Kentucky material, especially furniture, at numerous Kentucky locations as well as before the Decorative Arts Trust in Philadelphia, MESDA, Colonial Williamsburg, Historic Deerfield in Massachusetts, Winterthur in Delaware, and the Washington DC Decorative Arts forum.
The title of Mack Cox’s lecture is: An American Story: The Redd Family Paintings.
It is the story of the marriages, mentorship, and geography that entwined the lives of two of Kentucky’s most important artists, Matthew Harris Jouett (1788-1827) and Oliver Frazer (1808 to 1864), and their descendants, as well as the travels and adventures of the Redd family and their portraits as they moved from the first owners to the present, with the backdrop of war, financial crisis, and cultural revolution. Mack’s talk will be a fascinating story.
Mel Stewart Hankla – The Return of Cassius Marcellus Clay!
Our speaker on Tuesday, April 9, 2024, will be Mel Stewart Hankla, a Kentucky original, just like the subject of his talk!
Born and raised in Jamestown, Kentucky, Mel earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Western Kentucky University. He then earned his doctorate in Education Administration through the cooperative Doctoral Program at the University of Louisville and Western Kentucky University.
Mel is the founder of American Historic Services, LLC, where he is a noted collector, researcher, writer, and lecturer on Kentucky’s heritage. He is the co-founder and past president of the Contemporary Long Rifle Association and editor of its magazine, American Tradition. As a writer and collector, Mel authored the magnificent book, Into the Bluegrass: Art and Artistry of Kentucky’s Historic Icons.
Mel is a builder of traditional Kentucky long rifles; his craftsmanship and skill led to the National Endowment of the Arts awarding to him a Folk Arts Apprenticeship Grant to study under the legendary Kentucky rifle smith, Hershel House.
As a historical actor and educator, Mel worked for 20 years with the Kentucky Humanities Council presenting Chautauqua characters of frontiersmen Simon Kenton and General George Rogers Clark. In 2012 Mel was cast for the leading role in the PBS documentary “An Audacious American:” The Story of Kentucky Abolitionist, Cassius Marcellus Clay. It is from his work on that film that we will hear from him on April 9th. Please come and bring a friend. It promises to be a delightful evening.
Joseph M. Beilein Jr. – A Man by Any Other Name: Behind the Many Masks of William Clarke Quantrill
Joseph M. Beilein Jr. is an associate professor of history at Penn State Erie, The Behrend College, where he teaches courses on the Civil War and military history, and American history more broadly. Dr. Beilein will discuss his findings from his latest book, A Man by Any Other Name: William Clarke Quantrill and the Search for American Manhood. In the book, Beilein brings to life a unique vision of William Clarke Quantrill, the notorious guerrilla in Missouri and Kansas who died in Kentucky.
Few men of the Civil War era were as complicated or infamous as William Clarke Quantrill. Before the war, he shifted from being a fastidious, northern-born schoolmaster to rough frontiersman to confidence man, developing certain notions and skills on his way to becoming a proslavery bushwhacker. He is considered the architect of the Confederate raid on Lawrence, Kansas in August 1863 that led to the murder of 180 mostly unarmed men and boys. Beilein will offer a new look at the life of Quantrill, examining him in the context of nineteenth-century (white) manhood so that we might get a better sense of the man behind the iconic, disreputable name, including a brief but bloody and fascinating time bushwhacking in Kentucky in 1865. There, at Wakefield, Kentucky, between Taylorsville and Bloomfield, he was mortally wounded, dying in Louisville twenty days later.
Beilein is also the author of Bushwhackers: Guerrilla Warfare, Manhood, and the Household in Civil War Missouri (Kent State, The Civil War Era in the South, 2016) as well as the editor of William Gregg’s Civil War: The Battle to Shape the History of Guerrilla Warfare (UGA, New Perspectives on the Civil War Era, 2019) and co-editor (with Matthew C. Hulbert) of The Civil War Guerrilla: Unfolding the Black Flag in History, Memory, and Myth (UPK, New Directions in Southern History, 2015).
William C. Davis – “John Breckinridge and the Flight of the Confederate Government, the Fall of Richmond, His Escape, and His Exile: Preparing A Screenplay.”
WILLIAM C. “JACK” DAVIS, retired Executive Director of the Virginia Center for Civil War Studies and Professor of History at Virginia Tech, previously spent 31 years in editorial and marketing management in the book and magazine publishing industry. He has consulted for numerous film and television productions and was senior advisor for the A&E and History Channel series “Civil War Journal.” Davis is the author or editor of more than sixty books on the subject of Civil War and Southern history, and most recently co-edited with Sue Heth Bell, The Whartons’ War: The Civil War Correspondence of General Gabriel C. Wharton & Anne Radford Wharton, 1863-1865. He is currently working with Ron Maxwell, director of the epic films “Gettysburg” and “Gods and Generals,” on two docudrama series for television. ■
Brian Steele Wills – “Confederate General William Dorsey Pender: The Hope of Glory”
President’s Report | Welcome Back to Lexington: Brian Steel Wills
Brian Steel Wills is the Director of the Center of the Study of the Civil War Era and Professor of History at Kennesaw State University in Kennesaw, Georgia. A native Virginian, Brian was for many years a professor of history at the University of Virginia’s College at Wise, Virginia. While there, he was named the Kenneth Asbury Professor of History and received the Outstanding Faculty Award from the Commonwealth of Virginia.
Brian is the author of numerous books relating to the Civil War, including his most recent work, The River Was Dyed with Blood: Nathan Bedford Forrest and Fort Pillow. He also wrote A Battle from the Start: The Life of Nathan Bedford Forrest, reprinted as The Confederacy’s Greatest Cavalryman: Nathan Bedford Forrest, which was History Book Club and a Book of the Month Selection. He has also authored The War in Southeastern Virginia; No Ordinary College: A History of the University of Virginia’s College of Wise; Gone with the Glory: The Civil War in Cinema; George Henry Thomas: As True as Steel; and Confederate General William Dorsey Pender: The Hope of Glory, the subject of his talk for our September meeting. Brian has also published an updated edition of the James I. “Bud” Robertson, Jr. Civil War Sites in Virginia. ■
Dr. Patrick Lewis – “My Countrymen, You Are Substantially Free”: Finding Juneteenth in Kentucky
Dr. Patrick Lewis is the Director of Collections & Research at the Filson Historical Society and co-editor of Ohio Valley History journal. A Trigg County native, he graduated from Transylvania University and holds a Ph.D. in History from the University of Kentucky. He previously worked for the National Park Service and the Kentucky Historical Society and has won grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the National Historical Publications and Records Commission, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and the James Graham Brown Foundation. Lewis is author of For Slavery and Union: Benjamin Buckner and Kentucky Loyalties in the Civil War (University Press of Kentucky, 2015) and co-editor of Playing at War: Identity & Memory in American Civil War Era Video Games, under contract with LSU Press. ■
President’s Report | What Is Juneteenth?
Juneteenth (short for “June Nineteenth”) marks the day when federal troops arrived in Galveston, Texas in 1865 to take control of the state and ensure that all enslaved people be freed. Juneteenth honors the end to slavery in the United States and is considered the longest-running African American holiday.
Although the Emancipation Proclamation came into effect on January 1, 1863, the Federal government could not enforce it in places still under Confederate control. And even after Confederate General Robert E. Lee had surrendered at Appomattox Court House in April 1865, slavery remained relatively unaffected in Texas. Freedom finally came on June 19, 1865, when 2,000 Union troops arrived in Galveston Bay, and Union General Gordon Granger stood on Texas soil and read General Order No. 3: “The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free.”
This day came to be known as “Juneteenth,” by the newly freed people in Texas. Although it has long celebrated in the African American community as a second “Independence Day,” this monumental event has, until recently, remained largely unknown to many Americans.
In 1979, Texas became the first state to make Juneteenth an official holiday. In June 2021, Congress passed a resolution establishing Juneteenth as a national holiday. President Biden signed it into law on June 17, 2021.
Incidentally, General Granger, who died at Santa Fe, New Mexico in 1876, was married to the former Maria Letcher, daughter of a Lexington, Kentucky physician. Granger is buried in the Lexington Cemetery. ■
Kent Masterson Brown
Peter Cozzens – “Andrew Jackson, the Creek Indians, and the Epic War for the American South.”
Peter Cozzens is a former Army captain and Foreign Service Officer for the U.S. Department of State. The members of the Kentucky Civil War Roundtable will be the first to hear from Peter about his findings in this remarkable new book, A Brutal Reckoning: Andrew Jackson, the Creek Indians, and the Epic War for the American South, due to be published later this month.
Peter is an international-award winning author of eighteen books on the American Civil War and the American West. Among his books on the Civil War are This Terrible Sound: The Battle of Chickamauga and A Shipwreck of Their Hopes: The Battles of Chattanooga. Both of those books were Main Selections of the History Book Club and Military Book Club and were chosen by Civil War Magazine as two of the 100 greatest works ever written on the American Civil War. Peter has also authored a series of remarkable books on the Indian Wars. His first, The Earth is Weeping: The Epic Story of the Indian Wars for the American West, received the Gilder Lehrman Prize in Military History and the Caroline Bancroft Prize in Western History and was judged the Best Book of 2016 by Amazon, the San Francisco Chronicle, the London Times, the Seattle Times, the Minneapolis Star Tribune, and Newsday. In 2021, Peter published his most recent book, Tecumseh and the Prophet: The Shawnee Brothers Who Defied a Nation, winner of the George Washington Prize and the Spur Award of the Western Writers of America.
Peter and his wife, Antonia Feldman, live in Kensington, Maryland. ■
President’s Report
I must say with the March 2023 meeting, the Kentucky Civil War Roundtable is off to a fabulous start! I do not believe I can recall in recent memory such a great turnout of members and such enthusiasm as I witnessed in that meeting. Our speaker, James Hessler’s subject matter, the wild life of Major General Daniel E. Sickles, was undoubtedly what drove so many members to attend. And why not? Having been such an unbelievable rake, among other things, Sickles captures the attention of people today just like he did in his lifetime. Jim gave the Roundtable a marvelous lecture. I can state with complete honesty, he had a fabulous time being in Lexington with the Roundtable. He told me as he left, and again by email when he returned home, that he never enjoyed himself more. Like the Kentucky Civil War Roundtable of yesteryear, let’s always strive to make the Kentucky Civil War Roundtable the largest and best such organization in America, and we will continue to draw great speakers, with great topics, to Lexington.
A word about our April lecture. We will have one of the most noted Civil War and Indian War scholars in America addressing us about Andrew Jackson, the Creek Indians, and the Indian war for the American South. The Kentucky Civil War Roundtable, on occasion, has had speakers address its members on subjects far removed from the Civil War. This lecture will be a special one about an aspect of American History rarely discussed. Get ready for a most interesting talk by one of America’s foremost military history scholars. ■
Kent Masterson Brown