Saturday, November 12, 2011

Alternative Treatment Can Help Vets with Cancer, PTSD

Reprinted with permission - Douglass Karr and Mesothelioma Cancer Alliance

Alternative Treatment Can Help Vets with Cancer, PTSD

Unfortunately, all too often many veterans return from active service and find it difficult to reintegrate into day to day life. After a tour of duty, the activities of daily life can seem mundane by comparison. Going from living in "survival mode" to the relative safety of civilian life can be a shock to the system, and some vets have trouble adapting to the dramatic change. Further, some veterans who have not fully processed the events of their tour of duty, especially if there was conflict or trauma, can exhibit symptoms of PTSD, which can further impair their readjustment to civilian life.

There is a relatively new alternative treatment available now that can help soldiers in making this adjustment and processing any trauma they experienced. It is called EFT, which stands for Emotional Freedom Techniques. It works with the body's energy meridian system (the same system used in acupuncture.) However, instead of using needles, specific acupressure points on the face and body are tapped with the fingers, accessing the meridians and rebalancing them.

There are 14 meridian channels that run throughout the human body. Whenever a difficult or painful emotion is felt, this means one or more of the meridians are out of balance. In EFT, tapping the meridian points while holding the painful thought, memory or emotion in mind causes the unbalanced meridians to rebalance. Almost instantly, the unpleasant or negative feeling evaporates.

It may sound too good to be true, but more and more people, including veterans, are reporting relief from conditions which had previously impeded their enjoyment of life. Symptoms such as anxiety, depression, insomnia and flashbacks, which very often plague sufferers of PTSD, can be rapidly relieved with EFT, often permanently.

EFT can also help with physical issues, even debilitating conditions such as cancer. Mesothelioma is a very serious type of cancer sometimes called the "asbestos cancer," since it is often linked to asbestos exposure. From less serious cancers to terminal cancers, EFT can help in every area, from processing the diagnosis and helping with stress levels to managing symptoms and making cancer treatments easier to handle.

EFT Master Dawson Church is the head of a campaign to try and get EFT included as part of the PTSD treatment protocol in V.A. hospitals. He has spoken in front of Congress twice and seems to be making headway in getting the V.A. to open up to this life changing tool. Dawson Church is also involved in the Iraq Vets Stress Project, which connects vets with EFT practitioners and resources offering relief from PTSD. There are many free and low cost resources available to veterans through their website: www.stressproject.org/find.html

The motto of EFT is "try it on everything," since it is so easy to use, can be self-administered, is non-invasive and has few if any side effects. From physical to emotional issues, EFT can make a big difference, and is at least worth a try.

Click here for a video explanation and demonstration of the EFT process: www.youtube.com/watch?v=nPLDCkNwwHQ

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Memorial Day 2011. St. Patrick's West Park.


Peggy Calvey Patton, Post Historian, and Commander John C. Sullivan, decorate veterans' graves.

Audie Murphy, America's most decorated soldier of WWII


http://www.audiemurphy.com/

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Fr. Abram Ryan, Catholic Chaplain and Poet of the Confederacy

Father Ryan as Chaplain

He Was Under Fire in Fifty-Two Battles and Forty Odd Skirmishes.


Abram Ryan was born at Norfolk, VA.When Father Ryan was asked to become a chaplain in the Confederate army says a Southern journal, there was not a Corporal’s Guard, zero men of his own faith or race in the regiment, but he accepted the post, and served until the end of the war. He was under fire in fifty-two battles and in forty odd skirmishes. The stone of which his memorial cross is made was quarried from a place where, for ten hours, he was under fire while ministering to wounded and dying Federals and Confederates. To all appeals of the soldiers and officers to go to the rear during battle he turned a deaf ear. Wheresoever the fighting was the heaviest there was Father Ryan, with his well known rubber lined and canvas covered canteen, which held two gallons of water, and his pack containing lint, ligatures and medicines.

It never made any difference to Father Ryan whether the close of the day’s battle found him within or without the Confederate lines. He cared nothing for the political aspect of the war; he simply did his work as a priest of God. He was the faithful priest the good Samaritan first, last and always. The men of both sides loved him with a fervor which is undiminished to this day where wearers of the blue and the gray meet together to tell of the sad days when everything was topsy-turvy in Virginia. It generally turned out that the forlorn hopes sent to charge impregnable positions by the Federals were Irish soldiers. Father Ryan soon found this out, and therefore he was always present at the outer line of the Confederate defense in order to administer the last rights to the dying Irish Catholic.

He saw the desperate charge of the Irish Brigade at Marye’s Heights - a feat that dwarfs the glories of the Six Hundred “into the mouth of hell.” Amid the awful cannonading of General Burnside’s artillery aimed at those heights, after the Irish Brigade had charged into the very mouths of sixty-seven cannon, Father Ryan, with long hair flying in the breeze, knelt amid the bodies of more than a thousand Irish dead and ministered to the dying. This act of saintly heroism was observed by General Burnside, who immediately ordered his troops to cease firing whilst Father Ryan stood on the battle line.

Reprinted from the Connecticut Catholic Transcript 6/22/1900. Additional information added by JC Sullivan. Originally Courtesy Phillip Gallagher, CN

Friday, April 29, 2011



ENSIGN WILLIAM IGNATIUS HALLORAN, U.S. Navy
by
JC Sullivan

     “The telegram of his death arrived at 2:30 a.m., Friday, December 12th, by a Western Union kid in an olive drab uniform riding a bike in the dark.” That’s how Lawrence Halloran described receiving notice that the family’s son and brother, Ensign William Ignatius Halloran, U.S. Navy,  was dead, the first Ohioan and Clevelander to fall in World War II.
     December 7th, 1941, in the words of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, was a day that will “live in Infamy”. On that day the Japanese navy attacked the U.S. Pacific fleet anchored at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. It was also the birthday of Stella Halloran of West 111th St., Cleveland. At Pearl Harbor, 1,177 sailors aboard the USS Arizona died when ship was bombed and capsized. Among those entombed is Bill Halloran, Lawrence and Stella Halloran’s  twenty-six year old son.
     Bll Halloran was a 2nd generation Irish-American, grandson of Irish-born (Galway) John and Edna Halloran. He attended Cathedral Latin High School, then located on E. 107th St. off Euclid Avenue, and later transferred to John Marshall High School. He went on to Ohio State University where he majored in Journalism.  In campus affairs, he was president of the Catholic Newman Club, president of the Interracial Council and an important member of the Lantern staff, the school newspaper. After graduation he worked for United Press in Columbus and Cleveland as a sports editor.
     In 1940 Halloran volunteered for active duty in the Naval Reserves.  He attended  the Naval Reserve Midshipmen’s School at Northwestern University where he received his  commission as Ensign in June the following year. His first assignment was to the battleship West Virginia. Classmates at Ohio State received a postcard from him that was mailed at sea from the USS Arizona, three days before the attack at Pearl Harbor.  Today, the ship is still a commissioned vessel in the  US Navy because  her crew is still aboard.
   His younger brother Lawrence, Beverly Hills, Michigan, now 84 years old, said  athough Bill Halloran had never seen war, he had described it as "…impractical, crazy and un-Christian’.  Lawrence  remembered him as  "a great guy, a lot of fun," who loved sports and organized local teens into baseball teams.
     Today, a blue star in a home’s window still signifies a  family member in the service. After December 7th, the star in the Halloran home’s window was replaced with a gold star, signifying a family member had perished in the war. After the loss of her son, Stella Halloran became active in the affairs of the Gold Star mothers. As President she attended many war bond drives on Cleveland’s public square.
     All three of the Halloran boys, William, Lawrence and John, joined the Navy during the war. Lawrence served aboard the USS Halloran, a destroyer escort named for his brother William and later decommissioned at Charleston, S.C. Naval Base. It took kamikaze hits during the battle for Okinawa that killed four, wounded twenty-three and put 304 holes in the ship. “Halloran House”, a dormitory at Ohio State University, is named for him, as is Halloran Park on West 117th Street south of Lorain Ave.
     Besides his brothers and parents, Lawrence and Stella, a sister Estelle also survived him.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Irish Units in the Confederacy



IRISH MEN IN THE CONFEDERACY

 by

J.C. Sullivan

    

     Much has been written about the Irish in the military service of the United States. Irish Medal of Honor recipients, too, are well documented. However, a lesser known aspect of the American Civil War is our service in the Confederate States of America (CSA).

In 1861, several cities in the American south and Midwest had large Irish populations, namely New Orleans, Savannah, Galveston, Mobile, Memphis, Charleston, Nashville, St. Louis and Louisville. Many Irishmen joined local militia units that were also social in nature. Members drilled, marched and learned to use firearms.  In Border States, such as Kentucky, Missouri and Tennessee, Irish served in both the Federal and Confederate armies and navies. Sometimes brother fought against brother. In some units, Irish-born soldiers, if not wholly composing the units, numbered at least two thirds of the unit.

     During the evening just prior to the battle of Fredericksburg it was reported CSA musicians played “The Bonnie Blue Flag”. During the battle itself, Meagher's Irish Brigade was decimated as they attacked Marye’s Heights.  A Confederate Irish Unit (possibly the 2nd Georgia) was opposing them.  An officer in that unit was Willie Mitchell, who was the son of John Mitchell, General Meagher's friend, fellow prisoner in Australia and fellow Young Ireland member. Following the war, Mitchel was imprisoned with Jefferson Davis. Upon release he later edited a Pro-Southern newspaper in Richmond. 

 In his diary, later published as The Valiant Hours, Cleveland’s Thomas F. Galwey, Co. B, 8th OVI, reported that after the battle of Fredericksburg both USA and CSA troops ceased-fire so the dead could be collected and buried. ”Jim Gallagher told us that he had met a man from the 16th Mississippi Regiment (an Irish regiment, it seems). They all, Confederate and Federal parted on good terms and bade one another a sincere goodbye.”

     The state of Alabama fielded several units. Montgomery was the terminus of the Louisville & Nashville railroad. Traditionally, Irish worked the railroads and it should not be surprising to find Irish communities in Montgomery and Mobile during these times. Irish units reportedly were the Alabama Light Dragoons and Mobile Dragoons.  Co. B, 24th Alabama Inf. (Emmett Guards); 24th Alabama Cavalry Battalion

The 24th Alabama Cavalry Battalion was organized on 31 December 1863, with three companies. Like their Federal counterparts, young men staffed the units. Most served under General Joseph Wheeler in the Cavalry Corps, assigned to the Brigades of Philip Dale Roddey and Moses Wright Hannon. In January, 1865, they were transferred into James Hagan's Brigade. The battalion was involved in the Atlanta Campaign at Resaca and the siege of the city. As they withdrew southward they continued to confront Union forces throughout Georgia and the Carolinas. They eventually surrendered with the Army of Tennessee at Durham Station, Orange County, North Carolina, 26 April 1865.

Another unit, Co. I, 8th Alabama Infantry (Emerald Guards), was from Mobile. The 8th was the first Alabama unit to enlist “for the war.” Co. I had 104 Irish-born out of 109. Patrick C. Loughry, who was killed in action at the battle of Seven Pines, commanded them. C. P. B. Branegan, later killed at Gettysburg, succeeded him. John McGrath assumed command, only to be wounded at the battle of The Wilderness, Spotsylvania. He was forced to retire on 27 December, 1864.

Instead of butternut and gray, the men of the Emerald Guards wore dark green uniforms. Their banner was unique as well. On one side was a Confederate First National flag ("Stars and Bars") on one side with a full-length figure of George Washington in the center. On its opposite side was a green field, with a harp surrounded by a wreath of shamrocks, and the slogans, "ERIN GO BRAGH!" (Ireland Forever!) and "FAUGH A BALLAGH!" (Clear The Way!). An enlistment banner for the unit at that time proclaimed: “Men of the Auld Sod! Sons of Erin!  The deep green uniforms of Company I, 8th Alabama Emerald Guard should be seen again on the Field of Honor! Good men of Irish origin or ancestry are needed to command and fill the ranks. March under the green banner once again.  Contact Major Michael Kelley for information.”

At the Battle of Frazier’s Farm they engaged Meagher’s Irish Brigade. The 8th Alabama fought in some of the bloodiest and most savage battles of the Civil War - Sharpsburg (Antietam), 2nd Battle of Manassas (Bull Run), Gettysburg, Wilderness, Spotsylvania and Cold Harbor. When rumors of surrender reached them they became indignant and “tore their battle-flag into shreds to retain as mementos. Of 1,377 men on its roll, the 8th lost 300 killed or mortally wounded, over 170 died of disease, and 236 were discharged or transferred; 16 officers and 153 men surrendered.”
More on the unit can be found on two websites - http://www.tarleton.edu/~kjones/wilcox.html#8th-Inf
http://www.37thtexas.org/html/CoI8thAla.html

     The state of Louisiana fielded several Irish volunteer units, among them:

 13th Louisiana Infantry - Capt. O'Leary's "Southern Celts", Co. B, St. Mary's Volunteers;

 1st Louisiana Infantry - "Emmett Guards", Co. D, E. The First Louisiana was one of two brigades of Louisiana infantry which served with the 2nd Corps Army of Northern Virginia.  7,534 officers and men served in the various regiments during the war. 1,743 1st Brigade, sons of Louisiana, gave their lives for their country, in the war. A larger number of the Brigade was captured when they were overrun at Rappahannock Station, Virginia, November 7, 1864.

 7th Louisiana Infantry – Co. C - "Sarsfield's Rangers"; “Irish Volunteers”. Of the 974 men in the 7th, 331 were born in Ireland. Mustered into service for the duration of the war on June 5, 1861. Though composed mainly of farmers, laborers, and clerks, Gen. Richard Taylor referred to the 7th as a "crack regiment". The original colonel of the regiment was Harry T. Hays, who went on to become a
distinguished general with the 7th coming under the command of his lieutenant colonel, Davidson B. Penn for the remainder of the war. The unit’s major engagements were:

Sharpsburg (Antietam). Brigade at this time did not number over 550 men. The command was reduced, losing more than one-half (323 killed and wounded);

Gettysburg. Total loss: 7 officers and 29 men killed, 22 officers and 178 men wounded, and 4 officers and 91 men missing;

Winchester. 2 officers and 10 men killed, 8 officers and 59 men wounded, making a total of 12 killed and 67 wounded. On June 13, 2 men killed 3 officers and 8 men wounded, and 3 men missing. Total of the two days' operations: 14 killed, 78 wounded, 3 missing.

      Of the total wartime rolls of 1,077 men, 190 were killed and 68 died of disease. The regiment suffered only a ten percent desertion rate, a trivial number when compared with other regiments with such diverse ethnic backgrounds.

6th Louisiana Infantry - "The Emeralds", Co. B, F. Commanded by Colonel Isaac Seymour;
    The 6th was composed of almost all Irish laborers from New Orleans. Organized at Camp Moore, Louisiana on June 2, 1861 the unit was almost immediately sent to Virginia, where it participated in the First Battle of Manassas (Bull Run). After the battle the 6th was placed in an all-Louisiana brigade that included the Seventh, Eighth, and Ninth Louisiana and Wheat's Special Battalion. The brigade, initially commanded by Brig. Gen. Richard Taylor, became known throughout the Army of Northern Virginia as the "Louisiana Tigers." When it surrendered to the US government on April 9, 1865, less than 60 of the original 1,146 that fought throughout the war were present.

Colonel Charles de Choiseul, descendant of a commander of the original Wild Geese, was promoted to commander of the Wheat’s “Tigers.” Upon learning of this he said, “I am the victim of circumstances, not of my own will. Whether the Tigers will devour me, or whether I will succeed in taming them, remains to be seen. What is more likely, is that they will remain in their high state of undiscipline. For the officers, at least the majority of them, are worse than the men. " (Letter, Charles de Choiseul to Emma Louise Walton, September 5, 1861} An incident in November of that year appears to validate de Choiseul’s perception.

Two members of the “Tigers” shared a bottle of whiskey with members of the 21st Georgia Volunteers but the Georgian took off with their bottle. When a fight broke out several “Tigers” were ordered confined to the guardhouse for brawling. A small group of drunken comrades attacked the guard in an attempt to liberate the prisoners and Col. Harry Hayes of the 7th La. was struck. Privates Michael O'Brien and Dennis Corcoran admitted to being the ringleaders of the attack. In December, military justice had its day.

 According to the papers of Randolph Abbot Shotwell, “The doomed men (O'Brien and Corcoran) maintained a remarkable coolness, never flinching when the priest bade them farewell and stepped aside, never flinching when at the curt word of command, twenty-four muskets came up to a direct level, never flinching when again the command rings out 'Aim!' Nor was there a sound - for I had covered my eyes - when amid the painful silence came the word 'Fire!' and was drowned in the crashing volley that ensued. Both men fell forward riddled with bullets. Death was instantaneous. "

 On July 1 during the first day's fighting at Gettysburg, the 6th Louisiana, now a part of Brig. Gen. Harry T. Hays' Louisiana Brigade, was engaged north of town. At dusk on July 2 the brigade breached the Federal line on Cemetery Hill. Although Hays' attack was successful, it was not supported, and Federals drove them off Cemetery Hill from the Eleventh Corps. The 6th Louisianans forever resented this lost opportunity.

 Rev. James B. Sheeran, a native of Ireland, was the Chaplain of the 14th Louisiana Regiment. He published his diary as Confederate Chaplain. A prisoner of war, Fr. Sheeran spent time at Fort McHenry before being released from Fort McHenry. He became an itinerant clergyman after the war and founded Holy Rood Church, Morristown, New Jersey, where he is interned

     In his doctoral dissertation, Catholic Military and Naval Chaplains, 1776 - 1917, Dom Aidan Henry Germain, S.T.L., J.A., J.C.B., called out both federal and confederate chaplains. Among the Irish surnamed Catholic Chaplains in the CSA were the following priests:

Bannon, John, St. Louis;
Croghan, C.J., Hospital, Montgomery, White Sulphur Springs, VA.
Cunningham, James T., 3rd Mississippi Regiment Infantry
Jordan, William H., 18th North Carolina
O’Connell, Laurence P., Hospital, Montgomery, White Sulphur Springs, VA
O’Keefe, M. Virginia. Assigned to General Blanchard.
O’Riely, Thomas, Kinston, LaGrange, Marietta, Newman and Griffin, GA.
Ryan, Patrick, Post Chaplain, Charleston;
Sheeran, James, C.SS.R, 14th LA Infantry;
Whelan, Peter, Savannah, “Montgomery Guards”, 1st Georgia Volunteers.
               
Just why did we fight? The popular notion that we have all been taught is that it was to end slavery. Author James B. McPherson, however, attempts to answer the question in a much more scholarly light in What They Fought For, 1861 – 1865. Confederates fought for as many different reasons than did Federals. On the southern list was, and remains, the right of a state to secede from the Union. Intertwined in their cause was the moral issue of slavery. Surprising to some is the fact that many on either side did not fight to save the ‘peculiar institution.” What is known, however, is that all thought the fight would be of a short duration – how wrong they were. Many, like Cleveland’s “Hibernian Guards” and Savannah’s “Montgomery Guards” were initially local social and militia units, the latter being popular throughout the nation at the time.

Be that as it may, nowhere in the Constitution is there any mention of the union of the states being permanent.  A textbook written by Judge William Rawle, was used at West Point before the war. A View of the Constitution states, “The secession of a State depends on the will of the people of such a State.” Interestingly, no Confederate leader was ever brought to trial for treason. To do so would have a meant a trial and resulting verdict on the issue of the constitutional legality of secession. The verdict   had already been set by popular thought of the time and the decisions of victories in battle.

Why have we Irish historically been so eager to fight? David Walsh, published in the International Workers Bulletin, December, 1994, declared the Civil War era to have been a time “When Great Ideals Gripped The American People.” "In 1863, a 33-year-old Ohio private wrote that he had not expected the war to go on so long, but no matter how long it took it must be prosecuted, "for the great principles of liberty and self government at stake, for should we fail, the onward march of Liberty in the Old World will be retarded at least a century, and Monarchs, Kings and Aristocrats will be more powerful against their subjects than ever."

Perhaps the answer to my question lies in the words of the Ohio private. Irish liberty, indeed, was retarded for centuries when “Monarchs, Kings and Aristocrats” were more powerful than any of us. Reflecting further another question comes to mind. What are the forces of evil that bring brother to fight brother, or in the case of a Federal infantryman named Driscoll, father to kill son? If we could isolate and identify when evil is disguised as good, could we then prevent holocausts from occurring? Perhaps it is up to the voice of the Irish to take the lead. After all, haven’t we earned the right to do so?   

-30-


Bibliography:  The Valiant Hours, Galwey, Thomas F., Stackpole Co., Harrisburg, PA, p.67
Fortin, Maurice S., ed. Colonel Hilary A. Herbert's 'History of the Eighth Alabama Volunteer Regiment, C.S.A. in Alabama Historical Quarterly, XXXIX (1977), 5-321'
Hoole, William Stanley, ed. History of the Eighth Regiment Alabama Volunteers (Infantry). (University, AL:
Confederate Publishing Co., 1985 [reprint of an article first published in Perry & Smith's Directory of the City of Montgomery, Alabama (1866)])
Trueheart, Charles William. Rebel brothers: the Civil War letters of the Truehearts. (College Station, TX:   
Texas A&M University Press, c1995)
A Civil action, 11/11/99, By William Gordon http://www.nj.com/features/ledger/d8e823.html,
Staff Writer
http://archives1.archives.nd.edu/calendar/cal1865a.htm, Notre Dame Archives Calendar, 1865
Dissertation, Catholic Military and Naval Chaplains, 1776 – 1917, submitted to the Faculty of the Philosophy of the Catholic University of America in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy, Washington, D.C., 1929.

http://www.wsws.org/articles/1999/may1999/mcp1-m19.shtml. James B. McPherson’s What They Fought For: When Great ideals gripped the American people. David Walsh, 5 December e1994.

http://www.geocities.com/pelicanregt/ - Homepage of the 7th Louisiana.

http://www.users.fast.net/%7eezifra/6thla/

http://home.earthlink.net/%7esdriskell/1stlabrg/1stbhis.htm
                      

Friday, April 22, 2011

Revolutionary War General John Sullivan

A brief story revealing General Sullivan's character. Upon realizing the incongruity of going off to war for freedom, his enterprising slave won his freedom from Sullivan.

http://seacoastnh.com/blackhistory/patriots.html

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Fr. Peter Whelan, O.S.B., C.S.A.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

To describe the life and times of one immigrant to the American South could be also be aptly titled "Holy Men in Modern Times." One chapter would describe Wexford-born Peter Whelan. Oh, he was human, to be sure, but his devotion to God and his fellow man is evident in the way he chose to live his life. He was also a Confederate Chaplain to Irish-Americans in the Montgomery Guards, part of the 1st Georgia Volunteers.

     Peter Whelan was born in 1802 in County Wexford, Ireland. He attended Birchfield College in Kilkenny for two years, where he received classical and mathematical education. He may have been influenced by the desperate appeal of John England, the bishop of the new diocese of Charleston, South Carolina. Priests were sorely needed, particularly in the South. He was ordained a priest of the Benedictine Order in Charleston on November 21, 1830. He offered his first Mass in the state of Georgia in 1835 in the home of Robert Semmes. In 1854 a yellow fever epidemic claimed the life of Savannah's first Bishop, Frances Gartland in 1854. Father Whelan was summoned to Savannah and was stationed there for the remainder of his life.

     In September 1861 Bishop Augustine Verot was named the third Bishop of the Savannah Diocese, which was formed in 1850. Arriving at his new post from Florida, he was asked to send a chaplain to Fort Pulaski. The Fort, on the Savannah River, guarded the approaches to the city. It was thought to be impregnable as no artillery shells could be directed at it from any nearby land.   Part of the garrison there were Catholic troops, in particular the Montgomery Guards, mostly Irish from Savannah.

     The militia unit was organized on August 20, 1861. Not having their own banner, Captain Lawrence J. Guilmartin contacted the Sisters of Mercy in Savannah. After Mass on Saint Patrick's Day, 1862, a presentation ceremony was held. Private Bernard O'Neill was appointed standard-bearer and Major John Foley presented it to him.

     Father Whelan was present on April 10, 1862 when Federal forces began an artillery bombardment of the Fort. Using new 'rifled' artillery, the rounds were able to reach the outer walls from Tybee Island, more than a mile away. Thirty hours later, with one wall breached by the shot, it was determined that the entire ammunition magazine was in danger of exploding. If that happened the entire garrison would be killed. Colonel Charles H. Olmstead agreed to surrender. Now prisoners-of-war, Father Whelan and the Montgomery Guards were transported to Governor's Island, New York. Bernard O'Neill hid the banner on his person.

     Wartime conditions persisted for prisoners and Father Whelan, through the office of Father William Quinn, pastor of St. Peter's Church, Barclay St., New York, applied for the position of Prison Chaplain so he could offer daily Mass at Castle William. Through Father Quinn he was discharged and put on parole. Father Whelan could have left but he chose to remain with his men and minister to them. He eventually returned to Savannah where the Vicar General assigned him the task of overseeing the spiritual needs of the confederate military posts in Georgia.

On one occasion another Confederate chaplain, the Reverend James Sheeran of the Fourteenth Louisiana, on leave from Virginia, visited him. In his diary he observed, “He stands nearly six feet with drab hair, coarse ill shaped countenance, round or swinging shoulders, long arms, short body and long legs, with feet of more than ordinary size.... One day he met a brother priest, to whom nature was no more liberal than to himself. "Well," said he, "...your mother and mine must have been women of great virtue....because they did not drown us when the first saw us. None but mothers of great...patience would have raised such ugly specimens of humanity."

     During May of the same year Fr. William Hamilton, pastor of Assumption Church in Macon, accidentally came upon Andersonville Prison and stopped to learn how many Catholics were there. His experience led him to petition the Vicar, suggesting a priest be provided; Father Whelan was asked. He arrived at Andersonville on June 16, 1864. Even though other priests and the Bishop visited briefly, Whelan remained for four months.  Although he never penned his feelings, a pastor from Macon did. "I found the stockade extremely filthy:  the men all huddled together and covered with vermin....they had nothing under them but the ground."


At the fall of the Confederacy, Father Whelan returned to Savannah and served there until 1868. During this time he was called to be a defense witness in the trial of Andersonville Prison Commandant Henry Wirz. At the trial, evidence was not introduced that demonstrated that Wirz had constantly written Richmond to obtain better food and supplies for the prisoners. Testifying on behalf of his fellow Catholic, Whelan said, "He may sometimes have spoken harshly to some of the prisoners but during my time in the stockade I never heard that he had taken a man's life, and I have seen him commit no violence."

At the age of sixty-nine, and in failing health from his wartime tribulations, he administered his last baptism in 1871 and died in February of the same year. The funeral procession was reported in the Savannah Evening News as the longest ever seen in the city. After a 10:00 a.m. Mass a procession of eighty-six carriages and buggies of civilians, religious societies and Irish organizations escorted his mortal remains through Savannah's crowd-lined streets to the Catholic Cemetery. Colonel Olmstead led Confederate Army and Navy veterans. An officer who knew Father Whelan said, "I followed this good old man to his grave with a sense of exultation as I thought of the welcome that awaited him from the Master whose spirit he had caught and made the rule of his life."



Bibliography
Gilliam Bowen, Diocese of Savannah
Father Whelan of Fort Pulaski and Andersonville, Georgia Historical Quarterly, Spring, 1987.

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.
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