GENERAL BENJAMIN BUTLER Monday, Jul 25 2011 

GENERAL BENJAMIN BUTLER
Adam Goodhart’s 1861: The Civil War Awakening
BOOK NOTES by Bill Norris

Butler had grown up in Lowell, Massachusetts the famous textile mill town. His mother was a poor widow who ran a boarding house for female textile mill working women. Growing up in this hard scrabble life he chose law for his profession. Not getting clients from the prominent white shoe attorneys, he had to do it his own way. He mastered the law to the point that he could pull a thread out of any case and make it fall to pieces.

He was making a princely income of $18K and had developed a political career as a state legislator, a leader in the Democratic Party and a candidate for governor in 1860. Having led a volunteer militia was his only qualification for an appointment as Major General by Lincoln. Butler had voted for Jefferson Davis as the party’s nominee and opposed Negroes being enrolled in the militia. His peers said he was less a major general than a politician. He was assigned to Fortress Monroe on the Chesapeake at the James River, a Federal installation deep in the Confederacy’s territory.

Within a day of his arrival at the Fortress three runaway slaves arrived at the facility seeking asylum. Shortly after, their owners came to retrieve them. The Fourth Amendment of the Constitution and the Fugitive Slave Act required their return to their owners. But, Butler reasoned, confiscating the property of Confederates, whether a rifle or a slave, was a necessary part of the conflict. He refused to release them. Within days the issue reached Lincoln. Newspapers deplored the idea of returning the slaves to the South.

Within a week the issue came to Lincoln’s desk. He issued no order to Butler. Meanwhile, “contraband” as they were called, by the hundreds arrived at the fort for freedom. Soon there were a thousand under his command. Butler took them in. He declared that when they reached the fort they became free. It would be fourteen months before Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, resolving the issue upon which Butler, with his keen legal mind, had taken a stand.

For the capture of New Orleans, Butler was sent out with Captain Farragut to take the city. He became the senior military official in charge of the surrendered city. Thousands of blacks streamed into city from the surrounding plantations. He was one of the first Union commanders to enlist Negro troops, which he did without authorization from the Lincoln Administration. They served in the bayou country and most honorably in the Union battle for the Mississippi River Confederate position at Port Gibson. He fought to secure equal treatment, including equal pay for black soldiers (at which he was unsuccessful) as well as to protect them from being re-enslaved. Butler’s legal background served him well in the issue of fugitive slaves.

After the war Butler reentered politics as a radical Republican. He was instrumental in passing the federal Civil Rights Act of 1875, which mandated equal treatment for blacks in the public accommodations, including restaurants, hotels and trains. The law was never enforced in the South, and the U.S. Supreme Court ruled it unconstitutional in 1883. Not until the 1960 were those right reinstated. 7/25/11

ACADIANS…Cajuns Tuesday, Jul 5 2011 

5/14/02  wcn

1632 – 1654 French colonists crossed the Atlantic to a Canadian colony operated by the Company of New France.  They were from 7 provinces in the west central region ofFrance, due south ofNormandy. La Rochellewas the port nearby.  Seeking to escape the religious Protestant/Catholic wars and the famines and epidemics that followed, they chose to immigrate. (more…)

Bill Norris on Discovery Channel Sunday, Feb 20 2011 

Bill Norris at Discovery Channel Shoot in South Louisiana

Upcoming Discovery Channel History Research Program

BIENVILLE:FATHER OF LOUISIANA Monday, Jan 3 2011 

BIENVILLE:FATHER OF LOUISIANA by Philemina Hauck, University of South Louisiana, 2006, 156 pps.

BOOK NOTES by Bill Norris

1/1/11 

    The Le Moyne brothers were two of twelve sons and two daughters born to Charles and Catherine Le Moyne in Canada. The father who distinguished himself in the service of France was an early settler in Montreal, gaining great wealth and a noble title. The sons grew up in a world of French and Native American languages and government services. The older son, Iberville, established himself in military service, exploration and founding of Louisiana. Twelve years younger, Bienville, joined Iberville in his adventure to Louisiana in 1699, becoming elevated to commandant and governor by the age of 22 with his older brother’s untimely death. Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne was baptised as an infant in 1680. The title of de Bienville came to him ten years later from a brother who was killed in a skirmish with Iroquois. (more…)

The treason of Gen. James Wilkinson Wednesday, Jun 23 2010 

An Artist in Treason: The Extraordinary Double Life of General James Wilkinson. Andro Linklater,  New York: Walker & Company., 2009, 392 pps. Book Notes by Bill Norris 2010

James Wilkinson was born into the colonial, aristocratic, landed gentry near Baltimore.on March 24th, 1757 The time was that of the Seven Years War, known in America as the French Indian War. Tobacco was a principal crop for planters. His family had experienced terrible indebtedness. In 1774 James opted to study medicine in Philadelphia, a leading city in America. After two years of a three year course, he felt himself qualified to practice. While in Philadelphia he saw a military parade of British red coats marching to fife-and-drum with artillery pieces rolling. He seized upon the military life as one that could fulfill his ambitions. (more…)

Indigo in Louisiana Friday, Jun 18 2010 

INDIGO IN LOUISIANA  Bill Norris, Ph.D.

6/17/2010

The dye, so common in blue jeans, was derived from the indigo plant, a native plant of India. While later synthesized, it was a new plantation crop for America beginning in 1622. Indigo drove and paid for the slave trade and the clearing of tens of thousands of acres as the plantation system swept the entire hemisphere. Egyptians, Greeks and Romans used the dye. The crop was well known in Africa. (more…)

SPANISH COLONIAL LOUISIANA 1763 – 1803 Thursday, Apr 29 2010 

SPANISH COLONIAL LOUISIANA  Lecture by Dr. Ida Altman, UNO

Notes by Bill Norris   2002

Spanish history in Louisiana has been overlooked because of the dominance of the French among the colonists before, during and after Spanish controlled colonial Louisiana. Numerous major events took place between 1763 when Spain received the colony from France and 1803 when the Spanish king retroceded the colony back to France. For instance, there were the two devastating fires in New Orleans in 1788 and 1794, the first yellow fever epidemic hit in 1776, and the Point Coupee Slave Revolt took place in 1795. Governor Galvez used New Orleans as a base to take West Florida from the English. And a sugar refining process was developed by Etienne de Bore that launched sugar as a major export. (more…)

Gen. James Wilkinson, Commander-in-Chief of LA Territory 1803 Wednesday, Mar 10 2010 

An Artist in Treason: The Extraordinary Double Life of General James Wilkinson. Andro Linklater, New York: Walker & Company., 2009, 392 pps. Notes by Bill Norris

James Wilkinson was born into the colonial, aristocratic, landed gentry near Baltimore on March 24th, 1757 The time was that of the Seven Years War, known in America as the French Indian War. Tobacco was a principal crop for planters. His family had experienced terrible indebtedness. In 1774 James opted to study medicine in Philadelphia, a leading city in America. After two years of a three year course, he felt himself qualified to practice. While in Philadelphia he saw a military parade of British red coats marching to fife-and-drum with artillery pieces rolling. He seized upon the military life as one that could fulfill his ambitions. (more…)

West Florida by Stanley Clisby Arthur Wednesday, Mar 3 2010 

  WEST FLORIDA          4/30/02 Bill Norris

Stanley Clisby Arthur, The Story of The West Florida Rebellion. Baton Rouge, Claitor’s Publishing, 1975. pps 164.

With the Treaty of Trent ending the Seven Years War (known in this country as the French-Indian War) in 1763, the British acquired all of Canada, ousting France, and all of Spain’s possessions including Florida. The French gave Spain all holdings west of the Mississippi River and the Isle of Orleans. The Isle of Orleans was drawn by a line following Bayou Manchac to Amite R. to Lake Maurepas to Lake Ponchatrain to the Gulf and back up the Ms River.

The land north of the Isle of Orleans up the 31 degree latitude, stretching from the Ms R. to Apalatchicola was West Florida. That was deeded to Britain and held from 1763 to 1779. (more…)

MARIE THEREZE COINCOIN METOYER – Cane River Creoles Saturday, Jan 23 2010 

 

MARIE THEREZE COINCOIN METOYER – Cane River Creoles

The Forgotten People: Cane River’s Creoles of Color. Gary B Mills, BR: LSU Press, 1977, 277 pps.

 Marie Thereze Coincoin (MTCM) was born into slavery near Natchitoches in1742 to natives of Togo, Africa, Francois and Marie Francois who had been enslaved a decade earlier. According to a descendant of MTCM at Yucca Plantation, “Coincoin” was a name given to the fourth child in a family, a tribal tradition from Africa. She gave birth to 4 children of African blood prior to her relations with Pierre Metoyer (pronounced “met-wire” by her descendants). They had ten children together. She died 1817 at age 75. (more…)

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