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Michael D. Pierson - Lt. Spalding in Civil War Louisiana: A Union Officers Humor, Privilege, and Ambition

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Lt. Spalding in Civil War Louisiana: A Union Officers Humor, Privilege, and Ambition: summary, description and annotation

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In July 1862, Union Lieutenant Stephen Spalding wrote a long letter from his post in Algiers, Louisiana, to his former college roommate. Equally fascinating and unsettling for modern readers, the comic cynicism of the young soldiers correspondence offers an unusually candid and intimate account of military life and social change on the southern front. A captivating primary source, Spaldings letter is reproduced here for the first time, along with contextual analysis and biographical detail, by Michael D. Pierson. Lt. Spalding in Civil War Louisiana lifts the curtain on the twenty-two-year-olds elitist social attitudes and his consuming ambition, examining the mind of a man of privilege as he turns to humor to cope with unwelcome realities.
Spalding and his correspondent, James Peck, both graduates of the University of Vermont, lived in a society dominated by elite young men, with advantages granted by wealth, gender, race, and birth. Caught in the middle of the Civil War, Spalding adopts a light-hearted tone in his letter, both to mask his most intimate thoughts and fears and distance himself from those he perceives as social inferiors. His jokes show us an unpleasantly stratified America, with blacks, women, and the men in the ranks subjected to ridicule and even physical abuse by an officer with more assertiveness than experience.
His longest story, a wild escapade in New Orleans that included abundant drinking and visits to two brothels, gives us a glimpse of a world in which men bonded through excess and indulgence. More poignantly, tactless jests about death, told as his unit suffers its first casualties, reveal a man struggling to come to terms with mortality. Evidence of Spaldings unfulfilled aspirations, like his sometimes disturbing wit, allows readers to see past his entitlement to his human weaknesses. An engrossing picture of a charismatic but flawed young officer, Lt. Spalding in Civil War Louisiana offers new ways to look at the society that shaped him.

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Lt. SPALDING in
CIVIL WAR LOUISIANA
Lt Spalding in Civil War Louisiana A Union Officers Humor Privilege and Ambition - image 1
Lt. SPALDING in
CIVIL WAR
LOUISIANA
Lt Spalding in Civil War Louisiana A Union Officers Humor Privilege and Ambition - image 2
A Union Officers Humor,
Privilege, and Ambition
MICHAEL D. PIERSON
Louisiana State University Press
Baton Rouge
Published by Louisiana State University Press
Copyright 2016 by Louisiana State University Press
All rights reserved
Manufactured in the United States of America
First printing
Designer: Laura Roubique Gleason
Typeface: Miller Text
Printer: McNaughton & Gunn
Binder: Dekker Bookbinding
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Pierson, Michael D., author.
Title: Lt. Spalding in Civil War Louisiana : a union officers humor, privilege, and ambition / Michael D. Pierson
Other titles: Lieutenant Spalding in Civil War Louisiana
Description: Baton Rouge : Louisiana State University Press, 2016. | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2016027017 | ISBN 978-0-8071-6439-6 (cloth : alk. paper) | ISBN 978-0-8071-6440-2 (pdf) | ISBN 978-0-8071-6441-9 (epub) | ISBN 978-0-8071-6442-6 (mobi)
Subjects: LCSH: Spalding, Stephen F., 18401863. | United States. Army. Vermont Infantry Regiment, 8th (18611865) | United StatesHistoryCivil War, 18611865Campaigns. | LouisianaHistoryCivil War, 18611865Campaigns. | Port Hudson (La.)HistorySiege, 1863. | SoldiersVermontBiography.
Classification: LCC E533.5 8th .P54 2017 | DDC 973.7/32dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016027017
The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources. Picture 3
To Jeremy S. Abramson, MD,
Brianne McGree, NP,
and the rest of the people at the
Center for Lymphoma at Massachusetts General Hospital,
in appreciation of their knowledge, talent, and compassion
CONTENTS

Spaldings Letter

Promotion and Self-Promotion: Spalding and the Seventh New York State Militia

Racial Hierarchy: Spalding and Jim

Masculinity: Spaldings Fourth of July

Rank and Insubordination: Spalding and the Awkward Court-Martial

Facing Death: Spalding and the Unfunny Joke

Spaldings Premonition
PREFACE
Entering the Archive
What is it that confers the noblest delight? What is that which swells a mans breast with pride above that which any other experience can bring him? Discovery!
Mark Twain, The Innocents Abroad, 1869
Walking into an archive is a wonderful thing to be able to do, a strange blend of vacation and work. Very exciting work. Some of that excitement comes from the disconcerting act of walking into a new institution, one with its own customs and hierarchies. There are librarians to meet and talk with about your project and their rules. Some libraries, like the Historic New Orleans Collection or the American Antiquarian Society, hit a perfect balance between helping you find what you are looking for and making sure that their holdings are not damaged or stolen. But no matter how friendly the staff may be, on that first morning all of this is just an infuriating delay keeping me from the letters, diaries, and records that Im there to see.
Theres just no doubt about itthe moment of diving into the archives is the best of all professional worlds. You never know what you might find. Who knows whats stored away somewhere, unseen for who knows how many years? Even our popular culture toys with the idea that at this moment even scholars who read old books can be exciting. Consider the opening of two popular novels, both of which have aroused Hollywoods interest. A. S. Byatts novel Possession starts when a down-on-his-luck graduate student named Roland Mitchell stumbles upon an old book that will launch the novels action and change his life. Deborah Harknesss All Souls Trilogy begins at the same moment, with researcher Diana Bishop picking up a book from a librarian who tells her that it has not been taken out in ages. This kind of research seems romantic and mysterious. Clearly, whatever Roland and Diana find will be theirs and theirs alone; no one else will know about it. It will be new knowledge.
And when knowledge is new, it gains a special appeal. It is hard otherwise to explain the appeal of archaeology, which is (or so Ive heard) usually a dirty and physically taxing way to spend the day. But clearly people dont think of it that wayindeed, I dont think of it that way. What could be better than to unearth something that has not been seen for ages and that can tell you something that no one has known before? Accounts of archaeological finds can keep readers glued to the pages of National Geographic or David Winfred Nobles reports in Tuesdays Science section of the New York Times. Like many others, Ive read Ivor Nol Humes accounts of excavating Virginias colonial past and wanted to join his next expedition, whatever it may be. Consider the way he starts his book, Martins Hundred, which is about a series of digs in Virginia. Despite his New World focus, Hume starts in Egypt: When, on November 26, 1922, Howard Carter knocked a small hole through the blocked doorway leading to Tutankhamuns tomb, his sponsor, Lord Carnarvon, asked: Can you see anything? Peering into the shadows beyond the light from his flickering candle, Carter answered, Yes, wonderful things. Hume then elaborates on all of the wonderful things archaeologists can uncover, and his list does not include gold and silver. Rather, he says, he wants to have the opportunity to peer into the past and to see wonderful things that no one has seen before. What keeps us going is the hope that it might happen.
My own research adventures have been less dramaticat least in their physical dimensions. I have never whisked dirt off of a long-buried skull (thank heavens!), let alone an entire buried colonial settlement. Sitting in a climate-controlled library with manuscripts is just not the same as sifting through Egyptian dust or Virginian clay. And unlike the characters in Possession, I have only rarely found things in archives that the librarians did not know were there. When I have discovered things, they have been minor, to say the least. I once bought a copy of a first edition of Alexander S. Webbs The Peninsula: McClellans Campaign of 1862, printed in 1881, and quickly noticed that it had been annotated by a Union veteran. His notes, though, are brief. The most remarkable one is on the margin of page 113, which discusses the capture of Confederate general J. J. Pettigrew at the Battle of Fair Oaks. The sentence is underlined, and next to it is written: Gave him my rubber blanket. N. P. H. But I know that I only want to think this marginalia matters because it is, in a way, mine. I found it.
But really I have never found anything significant in an archive that was unknown to the librarians. Archived collections of letters from the Civil War have been read by too many people to contain secret stashes of documents. All of my discoveries have been, therefore, hiding in plain sight. This book is about the Stephen F. Spalding Letter, held by the Vermont Historical Society. Its existence has long been known; it is even listed on the Societys website for all to see. The Societys notation for it even reads like advertising copy, as if to draw in even the remotely curious: Letter, July 8, 1862, from Stephen F. Spaulding [
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