Saturday, March 12, 2011

Saint Patrick's Day in the Army of the Potomac by JC Sullivan



In his Civil War diary, a young Clevelander, “Captain Brevet” Thomas F. Galwey, described Saint Patrick’s Day in the Army of the Potomac. Published as “The Valiant Hours,” the diary described the great preparations for the day made by the Irish Brigade. 

General Thomas F. Meagher’s headquarters was adorned with an arbor of cedar and pine branches, which bore resemblance to a vestibule. On either side was a table with an immense pile of cakes. “In the middle, elevated on a pedestal, is a huge tub made of pork barrels, and painted green. It is surrounded with a festoon of flowers and shamrocks. This tub is full of good usquebaugh (sic), and a ladle hangs temptingly at its side.”

Saint Patrick’s morning began with sack races, mule races, pig chases and other activities. Meagher presided over events with other senior officers present, Generals Hooker, Butterfield and Meade. Meagher  “wore a white hat, blue swallow-tail coat with immense metal buttons, buckskin knee breeches and top boots and he carried a heavy dog whip, with the air of one used to the sport.”  Beginning at noon, steeplechase races were staged until darkness overtook the track.

Galwey, taking a page from future fashion magazines, described a colorful steeplechase jockey, Captain Jack Gossin of General Meagher’s staff. Gossin had served as an officer of Prince Lichtenstein’s Hussars of the Austrian Cavalry. He had resigned to fight in America under the green banner.  Gossin rode with the easy grace of horsemanship and was “the model of an Irish soldier-of-fortune – tall, splendidly shaped, with a pleasant if not handsome face. He wore a green silk vest, with white sleeves, a green skull cap, white breeches, and top boots.”

That evening, Lt. Fitz Harris, of the 39th New York (the Tammany Regiment), introduced Galwey to Captain Downing of his Company, who invited him to supper in their tent. “It was elegant,” wrote Galwey, “even if was a soldier’s supper.” Also in attendance was one Mr. Froantree, from Ireland, who was an agent of the Fenian Brotherhood. Galwey was a member of a Fenian ‘circle’.

After dinner in the 39th’s tent, Galwey and company smoked cigars and had a “grand bowl of rare ould Irish whiskey.”

General Hooker apparently became alarmed at the assemblage of such a large number of troops and their officers, who were far away from their commands. An alarm was sounded, which later proved false, that the enemy was preparing to attack. “Meanwhile from all sides came the clear tones of bugle and rattle of drums, and within a few minutes we were all on the way back to our various camps.”

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Captain Thomas K. O'Reilly, Hibernian Guards, Co B., 8th OVI


An Irishman in the American Civil War

By JC Sullivan
     

    
James K. O'Reilly was returning from Sunday Mass at Cleveland, Ohio’s St. Edward Church on Woodland Avenue when news posters announced the assault on Ft. Sumter, South Carolina. America's Civil War began on that April day. O'Reilly, born on the Market Square, Longford Town, County Longford in 1838, came to Cleveland in 1858 via New York City. He and his Irish friends James Butler and Thomas Francis Galwey were anxious to join Union forces before the fight was over. They hurried to the armory of the Hibernian Guards and enlisted for three months, officially becoming Co. B, 8th Ohio Volunteer Infantry. When it was all over, almost five years later, the 8th Ohio would have 97 men present for muster-out out of a total 990 that began the unit.

     Kenneth R. Callahan, an attorney with the Cleveland law firm of Buckley King and most recently a Common Pleas Court Judge in Cuyahoga County, is a direct descendent of Captain O'Reilly, his maternal great-grandfather. He honors the spirit of his colorful and gallant forebear by insuring Americans don't forget the deeds and valor of the 8th Ohio, a unit that fought fiercely in most of the major battles of the Potomac Army. He also wants to insure that history accurately reflects the role they played in turning the famous 'Pickett's Charge' at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania in July of 1863.

     By June, 1863, Confederate General Robert E. Lee's rag-tag forces had moved into the farmlands of Pennsylvania, rich in the much-needed resources of food, material and steed.   The march to Gettysburg was brutally hot. Unlike modern armies, neither side at Gettysburg had winter and summer uniforms - only ones made of heavy wool. Some were lucky to have shoes. During the march to Gettysburg it was frightfully hot. O'Reilly suffered sunstroke and went by horse-drawn ambulance there. "When he found out the 8th was positioned outside the Emmitsburg Road," said Callahan, "he left the hospital and ran out and joined the company there."  

     O'Reilly, deathly ill, arrived at Gettysburg after the first day of battle. Colonel Samuel Springs Carroll (of the Maryland Carrolls) ordered the Hibernians immediately into a cornfield between the Union lines on Cemetery Ridge and Confederate lines on Seminary Ridge, with orders were to push rebel sharpshooters back. With this advanced picket line established, O'Reilly's Hibernians spent the night there while the rest of the brigade was pulled out by General Hancock to support other areas. Confederate sharpshooters reminded them of their closeness throughout the evening by shooting at them.

     On the morning of the 3rd, General Lee, believing the center of the Union line to be weakened, opened up his attack with a two-hour artillery barrage. "Nothing more terrific than this story of artillery can be imagined," said Colonel Franklyn Sawyer. "The missiles of both armies passed over our heads. The roar of the guns was deafening, the air was soon clouded with smoke, and the shrieks and the startling crack of the exploding shells above, a round and in our midst; the blowing up of our caissons in our rear; the driving through the air of the fence rails, posts and limbs of trees; the groans of dying men, the neighing of frantic and wounded horses, created a scene of absolute horror."

  General Lee followed this up by sending fifteen thousand gray backs into the fray. The 15O - 18O men of the 8th Ohio poured rifle fire into the left flank of James J. Pettigrew's division. "They moved up splendidly," Sawyer wrote, "deploying into column as they crossed the long, sloping interval between us and their base. At first it looked like they would sweep our position, but as they advanced, their direction lay to our left." 

  "A moan went up from the battlefield distinctly to be heard amid the storm of battle," related survivor Galwey. The surprised Southerners, led by gallant officers on horseback, broke and retreated. "...the first sign of faltering came from Colonel J.M. Brockenbrough's brigade of Virginians who, under Pettigrew, were stationed in the extreme left of the advance, that is, directly in front of the 8th Ohio," Callahan related.

     With Sawyer admitting their 'blood was up', he then turned his men ninety degrees and fired into the flank of Joseph Davis' brigade. When Union commanders saw this development, they sent reinforcements down to turn the attack. The 8th advanced, cutting off three regiments, capturing their colors and many soldiers. Afterwards, an attempt was made to discharge Colonel Sawyer from the service for
it was believed he was drunk...they thought no commander in his right mind would attempt such a maneuver with such a small force.    
                                                                           
      Later that summer, after the battle of Gettysburg, the 8th Ohio was sent to New York City for riot duty. When the draft was instituted, provisions were made for purchasing one's way out through the process of buying a substitute. Naturally, many Irish and other immigrants could not afford to do so and objected to the practice.         

      While there, O'Reilly met his future bride, Susan O'Brien. "The whole thing was a drinking expedition," Callahan said. "Commander Sawyer was telling everybody not to get drunk but about an hour later he was arrested for drunkenness. I think they had a good time in New York City."

     In August, 1865, at the war's end, O'Reilly returned to New York City and married Susan O'Brien at St. Stephen's Parish Church. The couple came to Cleveland and resided at 189 Quincy Ave., where they raised seven children. Part of the time he worked for Thomas Jones & Sons Monument Co., which was located at E. 28th & Prospect Ave. Because of his disability from his Gettysburg sunstroke, however, he was never able to work for long periods of time. He tried to get a pension the rest of his life in a protracted struggle with the War Department, not unlike modern American veterans of other conflicts. His widow Susan was finally awarded one in 1930, thirty years after his death. In 1900, after a funeral Mass at St. Edward's Church, O'Reilly was laid to rest in St. John's cemetery, next to the church. His stone, erected by his daughter, says simply, "Captain J.K. O'Reilly."                               
 
     Callahan met Captain O'Reilly's daughter, Isabelle, in 1952. She blamed her father for the fact that she never married. "She claimed every time somebody came over to see her he pulled them into the parlor and kept them up until midnight telling stories about the Civil War."

   Callahan is a graduate of Cleveland's St. Ignatius High School and received his undergraduate degree from Cleveland's John Carroll University. He received his law degree from Cleveland-Marshall College of Law. Additionally, he studied art, history, anthropology and literature at both Trinity and University Colleges, Dublin. Callahan is a published author and a military historian. He and his spouse Martha are parents of Casey and Eoin.

     As of this writing, The Callahan and O'Reilly families of Cleveland have never been in touch with any surviving O'Reilly family in Longford. Although they know chances are slim to non-existent, the families would be delighted to hear from anyone who recognizes a family kinship. Ken Callahan can be reached via e-mail at callahan@buckleyking.com.
 
   The following letter is Comrade Galwey’s tribute to his friend and Captain, as printed in the Cleveland Plain Dealer.

New York, May 22nd, 1900

Editor of the Sunday Cleveland Plain Dealer

Sir:

     I desire as a comrade officer of the 8th Ohio Volunteer Infantry to say through the Plain Dealer (sic) a few words upon the military career of the late Captain J.K. O’Reilly, the news of whose recent death at 189 Quincy Street, Cleveland, has just reached us.

     During the twenty campaigns and more than sixty engagements in which the 8th Infantry gained its fame in the Civil War, O’Reilly’s influence and example, first among its non-commissioned officers and afterwards among its commissioned officers, contributed greatly to its fighting spirit, conduct and methods. He was fearless and quick-witted in the moment of danger or other emergency.

         The two bravest and most brilliant among the many brave and brilliant acts of that regiment were its bayonet charge across the Sunken or Bloody Lane at Antietam at the end of five hours close fighting, and its wheel to the left at Gettysburg, by which it struck the left flank of Pickett’s confederate column, and put it into disorder at that point, at the very moment when the front of that column had crossed the Emmittsburg Road and was shaking its battle flags at the “high water mark of the rebellion.”

            In both of those splendid manoeuvres O’Reilly was very conspicuous, if he was not to some extent the real author of each. He was at first a man of fine physique, and like many others who constantly exposed themselves, escaped almost unharmed by the enemy, but he suffered to the last from a sunstroke that befell him during fearful hot day on the march to Gettysburg, and I understand that this was the chief cause of his death.

     Cleveland is not today the quiet little city it was on the 16th of April, 1861, when, in defence of the Union, O’Reilly enlisted as a private in the Hibernian Guards, which became Company B of the 8th Ohio Infantry. But big and bustling as Cleveland has become, it will not, I imagine, forget the honor done to its name in the Civil War by such a man as O’Reilly.

Respectfully,

Thos. F. Galwey
15 West 123rd St.,
New York City
-30-


Author’s Note: Both Butler and Galwey relocated to New York City. Butler became keeper of General Grant’s Tomb.


BIBLIOGRAPHY

GALWEY, THOMAS FRANCIS,The_Valiant_Hours,_Narrative_of_"Captain Brevet,"_an_Irish-American_in_the_Army_of_the_Potomac. Harrisburg PA., Stackpole Co., 1961. Col. William S. Nye, Editor            

DOWNES, CAPTAIN THOMAS M.F., Co. B. 8th Ohio Infantry (Reenactment)from_a_speech_to_the_Ancient_Order_of Hibernians,_Boland-Berry
Division, Cleveland, Ohio 1989.

CALLAHAN, KENNETH, conversations, 1993 - 2009.
1

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Medalions for Veterans' Graves

Medallions for Veterans' Graves


The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is offering bronze medallions to attach headstones or markers, signifying a deceased's status as a veteran.

 The new item can be furnished instead of a traditional government. Headstone or marker for. veterans whose death occurred on or after 1 November 1990, and whose grave in a private cemetery is marked with a privately purchased headstone or marker.

Under federal law, eligible veterans buried in a private cemetery are entitled to either a government- furnished grave marker or the new medallion, but not both. Veterans buried in a national or state veterans cemetery will receive a government headstone or marker of the standard design authorized at that cemetery.

The medallion 'is available in three widths; five, three and 1.5 inches. Each bronze medallion features the image of a folded burial flag adorned with laurels and is inscribed with the word ''Veteran'' at the top and the branch of service at the bottom.

Next of kin will receive the medallion, along with a kit that will allow the family or the staff of a private cemetery to affix the medallion to a headstone, grave marker, mausoleum or columbarium niche cover.

More information about VA-furnished headstones, markers and medallions can be found at
www.cem. va.gov /cem /hm_hmtype.asp.

VA is currently developing an application form for ordering the medallion. Until it is available, applicants may use the form for ordering government headstones and markers, VA Form 40-1330. Instructions on how to apply for a medallion are found on the VA website at www.cem.va.gov/ hm_hm.asp.

Veterans with a discharge issued under conditions other than dishonorable, their spouses and eligible dependent children can be buried in a VA national cemetery. Other burial benefits available for all eligible veterans, regardless of whether they are buried in a national cemetery or a private cemetery, include a burial flag, a Presidential Memorial Certificate and a government headstone or grave marker. The new medallions will be available only to veterans buried in private cemeteries without a government headstone or marker. Families 'of eligible decedents may also order a memorial headstone or marker when remains are not available for interment. Information on VA burial benefits can be obtained from national cemetery offices, from the VA website, www.cem.va.gov or by calling VA regional offices toll-free at 800/827-1000.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Veterans Day, 2010

Cleveland, Ohio. today, the IAWV decorated the graves of several veterans at St. John's Catholic Cemetery, Cleveland:

Kelly, James, Co. B, 8th OVI (Hibernian Guards).  Born in Ireland, 03 Mar 1836.. Died 07 Jul 1863. Wounded at  Antietam, died from his wounds.

Garvey, John. Lt., Co. B, 7th Virginia (USA), wounded Antietam, died 11 Oct 1862.

Galwey, John. 19th Ohio Battery. Served in Western Theater. Survived the war. Died 16 Jun 1913.

O'Reilly, James K. Captain, Co  B, 8th OVI. Surved the war. Died May 1900.

O'Connor,Robert E., Captain  1755 Ordance Supply & Maintenance, WWII

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Our Logo

Thanks to Hibernian brother Owen Kilbane for contributing the logo you see on our page. It is of his design and and art work.

Friday, September 3, 2010

Commodore John Barry, USN

Commodore John  Barry

On September 13th, the Ancient Order of Hibernians will celebrate one of the major holidays of their order, Commodore John Barry Day. On June 14, 1794, President Washington appointed John Barry Commanding Officer of the United States Navy with the Commission Number One.

On September 13, 1803, at his home on Strawberry Hill, Philadelphia, Barry died after a long illness. He is buried at St. Mary‟s Catholic Church in Philadelphia.

By Joint Resolution, approved August 20, 1981, the U.S. Congress designated September 13th, the anniversary of his death, “Commodore John Barry Day as a tribute to the father of the United States Navy.”
By Joint Resolution, approved in December, 2005, Commodore John Barry has been recognized as the first flag officer of the United States Navy.

Monuments honoring John Barry have been raised in Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., New York, Boston and County Wexford, Ireland.

The John Barry Medal is presented by Hibernians throughout the United States to commemorate outstanding academic, cultural and civic achievement.

Hibernian efforts to honor John Barry at the Naval Academy
We hear about great naval heroes of the American Revolution, many were immigrants who bravely served their adopted country and risked their lives in America‟s hour of need. These heroes sailed under the 13 stars and stripes on the high seas. They won great victories over the most powerful naval power of its day – Great Britain. Their heroic deeds are historical and legendary.

One such naval hero is John Barry from County Wexford, Ireland. Although well known in Philadelphia and in the Irish American community, Barry is a forgotten hero at the US Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. Retired Rear Admiral William Holland recently declared, “Barry has long been overlooked in our Navy‟s history.”

On the 200th anniversary of Barry‟s death on September 13, 2003, the Washington, DC Hibernians held their annual wreath laying ceremony at the statue in Franklin Park. The then DC State Board President, John E. McInerney, raised this issue in his Barry Day speech. “Barry answered President Washington‟s call to organize the Navy under the Constitution,” said McInerney. “He accepted Naval Commission Number One signed by Washington with the rank of captain and was honored as a Commodore. Like so many other Irish immigrants, John Barry loved and lived for his adopted country and stayed faithful to her until the end of his days.”

Many historians are convinced that had it not been for John Barry, the American Revolution would have been lost. Dr. Benjamin Rush, signer of the Declaration of Independence, said in his eulogy at Barry's graveside, "He was born in Ireland, but America was the object of his devotion and the theater of his usefulness."
McInerney concluded his 2003 talk by saying that “Perhaps John Barry from Wexford needs to receive major recognition at the Naval Academy in Annapolis. Once Congress enacts the bill declaring John Barry as the first flag officer of the American Navy, that fact needs to be enshrined in Annapolis. Perhaps John Barry‟s memorial needs to stand proudly on the grounds of the Naval Academy – paid for by contributions by ordinary citizens.”

Congress on December 22, 2005 by Public Law 109-142 clearly recognized and declared Barry “as the first flag officer of the United States Navy.” Former Secretary of the Navy, John F. Lehman, wrote in February 2010 “It has always been an oddity that his (Barry) memory and example have been largely absent from the Naval Academy. … The time to rectify this absence is at hand.”

About three years ago Jack O‟Brien and McInerney proposed honoring Commodore John Barry at the Naval Academy at a DC state board meeting of the AOH in Washington. The project was approved. O‟Brien became the project director and coordinator, and McInerney, a writer, its public relations director. Previously, O‟Brien led the nation-wide effort to successfully erect the Irish Brigade Monument at the Antietam Civil War battlefield dedicated in 1997. McInerney was that project‟s public relations director.

O‟Brien discussed the project with his contacts at the Naval Academy. A statue was proposed but quickly shot down. The idea of a memorial was mutually acceptable. Following the Academy‟s guidelines, O‟Brien and McInerney submitted a proposal on August 29, 2008. On January 5, 2009 Vice Admiral Jeffrey L. Fowler rejected the proposal stating that a memorial to Commodore John Barry “would not be appropriate for placement on the Yard in an exterior location.” Viewing the rejection as only a minor stumbling block, the DC Hibernians filed an appeal with the Academy‟s Superintendent on February 8, 2009.

On June 16, 2009 the Superintendent wrote that he referred the matter to the Executive Director of the Memorials and Grounds Oversight Committee, who is also the President and CEO of the U.S. Naval Academy Alumni Association and Foundation. He is to make a determination on whether to convene the Committee. As of the date of this article, a hearing is to be held in mid-May 2010.

“The case to honor Commodore Barry at the Naval Academy is based three factors,” O‟Brien pointed out. “(1) He received naval commission number one signed by President Washington. (2) He was the first flag officer of the United States Navy. (3) He was the commanding officer of the Navy under Presidents Washington, Adams and Jefferson until his death in 1803.”

“It is important that we explain,” said O‟Brien, “how a fine officer and gentleman such as Commodore Barry can be an inspiration to future officers of the Navy and Marie Corps. We are asking that the Barry Memorial be placed in a prominent space in the Academy‟s Yard so that midshipmen, officers, and the public will know of the contributions of the Navy‟s first flag officer.”

At the 2008 AOH national convention in New Orleans, the Hibernians adopted a resolution approving of the Barry project. National President Seamus Boyle is backing the project and strongly supports the efforts of O‟Brien and McInerney. During the discussions with the Academy, McInerney brought up the deteriorating condition of Barry‟s original commission number one. He remembered visiting the Academy‟s museum as a college seminary student in 1964. “At that time Barry‟s commission was in good condition and could be read,” McInerney pointed out. “Today it is difficult to read because of its deteriorated state.” The DC Hibernians and the Academy agreed to send the document to a conservator. In the presence of Academy officials as well as Seamus Boyle, Keith Carney, O‟Brien and McInerney of the AOH, and Russ Wylie of the Friendly Sons of Saint Patrick, the document was removed from its original frame and examined. The DC Hibernians paid for the conservator‟s expenses. Today, Commission Number One is safely at the Naval Academy preserved for future generations to view.

Many prominent Americans are currently writing letters of support for the Barry Project. On May 4, 2010, Congressmen Peter King, Eliot Engel, Joseph Crowley, Richard Neil, and Christopher Smith signed a joint letter to the Academy‟s Superintendent endorsing the Barry Memorial. The conclusion of their letter strongly supported the Hibernian efforts “to erect a memorial on the public grounds of the United States Naval Academy. We trust that their appeal will receive the favorable consideration it deserves.”

Many other letters are currently been sent to the Academy‟s Superintendent supporting the Barry Project, including AOH National President Boyle, retired military officers, university and college presidents and professors, Senator Mikulski (member of the Board of Visitors), Governor Martin O‟Malley of Maryland, and members of Congress. Also, Irish American organizations and military associations are sending letters of support. On January 28, 2010 the Friendly Sons of Saint Patrick pointed out that Barry trained “many of the officers of the U.S. Navy who became the heroes of the War of 1812.”

Fran O‟Brien, President of Philadelphia‟s Navy League, wrote on November 13, 2009 that Barry was honored “with the first commission of our new country‟s navy, America owes Barry and his legacy nothing less than the rare honor of being memorialized at our country‟s premiere military educational institution.”
  
Recently Congressman Joe Sestak (PA), a retired admiral, wrote that Barry “served a pivotal role in both winning our nation‟s independence and setting the foundation of our military.” 

Father Joseph McShane, SJ, President of Fordham University concluded his July 31, 2009 testimonial by declaring a “memorial at the Naval Academy would provide a concrete teaching experience to your students as well as a reminder that the Navy honors men of courage who have served.”

Maryland‟s Governor O‟Malley wrote on March 11, 2010 that Barry‟s “victories and sacrifices to secure the birth and strength of this nation are too great in number to fully recount in this letter, but I hope that we can seize on this opportunity today to honor the life of a great Irish immigrant who would become one of our greatest Americans.”

For information and details on the letter writing  guidelines, please e-mail John McInerney at McInerneyVerret@aol.com or call (202) 213 – 2055. 

Monday, August 30, 2010