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From immigrant cooper to war hero and customs inspector in Canada, a land he tried to attack twice...

12/4/2013

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Past blogs have brought you the story of some of the 258 Irish heroes awarded the Medal of Honor. Of well over 30 countries who took home Medals of Honor since its founding, no other country has come even close to this many medals coming to their own countries. 

And to start it all of was the story of Doctor Bernard JD Irwin whom has also been covered in earlier blogs. His 1861 deed was the first ever awarded by date of action, and an Irishman he was.

Captain John Lonergan, pictured above and yet another Irishman, came to the US in 1848 to escape the Great Famine and also British rule of his homeland. His father would take him under wing in the new country..in Vermont.. as a cooper in the making of barrels. The same occupation Allan Pinkerton took up on arrival to the US. It would be in that work that he would stumble onto events that raised his curiousity and soon led him in a venture that saw him creating letterhead with the picture of a lone eye. His eye. His private eye that was for rent in helping his customers solve crimes. An occupation that would bring him fame..and onto the CW battlefields as the founder of what would one day beome the CIA.

John was very proud of his native upbringing and like many, quite opposed to the British rule he was under. He was probably involved in Fenian activities before the Civil War and actually started up a company of Irishmen to fight in the war. He wanted some military experience that he could use to battle his goal of having the British rule overturned back home. His company was mostly Irish but he also had a handful of Americans and Canadians in the unit.

Not  long after formation his men would take part if a forced seven day March to Gettysburg and would arrive partway through the first day's horrendous slaughter. It would not be long before he volunteered to take action when one of the Union batteries of heavy guns were being hauled off the battlefield by the enemy. He roared in and saved 4 guns and another 2. But then he came under heavy fire from the Codori farm house and so his men surrounded the house and covered all exits and demanded that all the Confederates had to immediately surrender by FALLING  OUT and turn their weapons over to the company of men. An officer then came out and turned over his sword ... then other officers followed and then the men... 83 in total.  About twice the men he had in his own command.

Later that day he was scoulded by his commanders. They argued that he did not follow the rules. After all, when forming a group of men is called for... the command was to FALL IN... not FALL OUT.  His response was...But sir, the men were already in. I needed them to fall out ...and all chuckled. 



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On the first day of the 3 day July 1863 battle, the Confederates had pushed the Union soldiers back out of the town. The above image shows the town in the light yellow colour. Item "A" shows the south end of town and "B" shows the Wills house of which you have read much in recent blogs. Pickett's famous charge on day three is shown by the grey arrow, item F, with the Union Blue, item "C" pushing back  in a westerly direction. Item "D" is the High Water Mark, a term given to the high point...or furthest point the enemy made in their advance, before the battle came to a decisive victory for the Northern troops. Item "E" is the Codori Farm where Lonergan's actions took place and for which he would be awarded the Medal of Honor many years later... in October of 1893.

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In mid July 1863 Lonergan's company of heroes were allowed to return to Burlington Vermont as they were only a very short term regiment that had by then fulfilled their terms of service. The townsfolk gave them a wonderful reception.

Now... 150 years after that very reception, the townsfolk in Burlington Vt. again have reminded the world of their appreciation of John Lonergan and his men by hosting a reception an unveiling of this plaque on the property of Burlington City Hall. 

Both Lonergan and Irwin spent the last years of their lives in Canada and died here, and both were repatriated back to the US for burial. Irwin died at Cobourg Ontario were he had a summer home for many years. Lonergan died at Montreal Quebec  after serving for about 16 years with the US Customs Office as an inspector on the Grand Trunk Railway line.

Lonergan also was a leader in the Fenian movement and played a role in both attacks against Canada after the Civil War. He was twice rebuffed but ending up coming to Canada to work instead of capturing the Colony as a  means of pressuring England to end its rule of Ireland.


On another matter, there is more news on several fronts, and I will bring you some of these on Friday,

cheers.

Bart












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"Little to be remembered" speech recalled now by millions all around the world.

12/2/2013

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Last Friday's blog brought to your attention that 2 wks ago the United States and millions around the world took time to remember the horrible assassination of President John F Kennedy and to recall the 150th anniversary of President Abe Lincoln's famous Gettysbourg Address in Pennsylvania.

In that blog  I brought you some very old pictures of the route Lincoln took to give his few remarks and noted that whilst many think the exact location of the event was at the Gettysburg National Cemetery, it actually took place  about 40 yards away at the neighbouring Evergreen Cemetery.
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This photo was supposed to have been taken by Alexander Gardner, a well respected photographer in CW days. It has been suggested by some that he is actually in the picture in the bottom right and it was his assistant that took the image. He is looking at the camera whilst most others are looking in the opposite direction. Regardless, as amazing as it sounds, this image may also include that of President Lincoln. 

By very close examination here is what has been detected by some....

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This has been extracted from the first picture above, and enlarged. You can see Lincoln identified in the middle.

The president traveled to the town of Gettysburg with quite a number of cabinet members and other dignitaries... including some foreign officials. Here is one of these...

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William McDougall was in the Cabinet of Upper Canada, in the PROVINCE  then called CANADA immediately before the 1867 Confederation. As such he was in DC to visit Lincoln on trade matters as mentioned in a previous blog and was invited to attend the meeting to take place at Gettysburg and accepted. Here he is on the podium just a few feet away from the President when he gave his "few appropriate remarks" so requested by founding cemetery committee. Fellow speaker Eward Everett spoke first. And did so for 2 1/2 hours.

(McDougall would later attend all three conferences and would become one of the Canada's founding Fathers of Confederation.)

When the Gettysburg Address was delivered, the National Gettysburg Cemetery had only been a few months old. It had been created in haste as thousands of bodies lay on the various battlefields from actions between 1 and 3 July and the residents of the small town of 2500 were getting quit concerned about epidemics. Many soldiers were buried right were they were killed and in very shallow graves. Fears were that the elements and wild animals would soon have many of these exposed to the population.

By the time of the Address, upwards of 1000 burials had then been made on the new cemetery grounds over the past few months. Double that amount would join the resting in the next few months.

The committee that created the cemetery asked well known orator Edward Everett to give a speech at the opening and as a backup they asked the President to also attend and give.."a few appropriate remarks."

Everett's speech was 13,607 words long and then the President gave his somewhat shorter speech. It was  272 words. Here is that speech... 



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There were five versions of this speech, and even at that, the one above may well have been tweaked at the Wills house or on the train to Gettysburg before its being presented on Nov. 19th, 1863.

Because it was so short and over so quickly, many newspapers that covered the story were rather flippant about its importance. Here is what one had to say....

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But the detractors aside, the speech obviously became famous over the years not only for its brevity but the powerful use of words so telling in and of themselves.

This year the very paper that published the detraction 150 years ago now did a retraction. It was somewhat of a spoof in that it also used the same forescore  conversations and also kept it brief. It was also 272 words long. And here is a portion of that report for your perusal...  

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Gee....it only took 150 years to correct.

Progress. Hmmmm! 

See you Wednesday.

Bart


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    Author;
    Bart Armstrong, C.D.,
    Recipient, Sovereign's Medal for Volunteers 

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