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The North Carolina CWRT is fortunate to have among its membership quite a few Civil War authors
of note. Here follows a run-down of "the famous among us":
Mark L. Bradley Mark is the author of the critically-acclaimed Last Stand in the
Carolinas: The Battle of Bentonville, considered by many to be the definitive account of the largest Civil
War land battle to take place here in our own home state. He followed that effort up with This
Astounding Close: The Road to Bennett Place, which takes us from the battle at Bentonville to the closing
moments of the war for Sherman's and Johnston's armies, the surrender at Bennett Place. In order to
complete the story of North Carolina in the Civil War, his most recent effort takes on Reconstruction in
Bluecoats and Tar Heels: Soldiers and Civilians in Reconstruction North Carolina. He has also
written several articles for Blue & Gray Magazine and Civil War Regiments.
In November 2003, at a joint meeting of the North Carolina Literary and Historical Association
and the Federation of North Carolina Historical Societies, Mark was awarded the R.D.W.
Connor Award for the year’s best article in the “North Carolina Historical Review.” His article,
entitled “‘This Monstrous Proposition’: North Carolina and the Confederate Debate on Arming
the Slaves,” appeared in the April issue. Congratulations, Mark!
Mark is a past president (2000) and Program Chairman of the NC CWRT. He holds a B.A.
in History from North Carolina State University, an M.A. in History from UNC-Chapel Hill, and
a Doctorate in History from UNC-Chapel Hill. He is currently a staff historian with the Center of Military
History in Washington, DC.
Chris J. Hartley Chris, a native of Wilkes County, North Carolina, has an understandable
interest in General James B. Gordon, one of North Carolina's finest cavalrymen and himself a native of Wilkesboro,
NC. General Gordon (not to be confused with his cousin, John B. Gordon) was a landowner and successful
businessman and politician when the Civil War broke out, and he raised an infantry company and joined the
Tarheel Cavalry in the Army of Northern Virginia. His story is chronicled in Stuart's Tarheels: James B. Gordon
and His North Carolina Cavalry, and Chris used many never-before-published sources to tell the story of Gordon
and the North Carolina Cavalry Brigade of the ANV.
In addition to Stuart's Tarheels, Chris is also the author of A True History of Company I, 49th Regiment
North Carolina Troops, and of a history of Wilkes County during the Civil War entitled To Restore the Old Flag.
He has also published several articles about the war. He's currently working on a book about General George Stoneman's
1865 raid into the Piedmont and western part of North Carolina.
Chris is a graduate of UNC-Chapel Hill. He lives in Clemmons, NC and works as the director of advertising and
promotions for Blue Rhino Corp. in Winston-Salem, NC.
Martin W. Husk Martin is the author of The 111th New York Volunteer
Infantry: A Civil War History. The book chronicles the history of the 111th New York
Volunteer Infantry's service from muster in August 1862 until the end of the war. Drawing on
many first-hand accounts and primary sources, the book provides details on the towns from
which the regiment was organized and the backgrounds of the men who served in its ranks.
Battles in which the regiment fought, including Harpers Ferry, Gettysburg and Petersburg, are
covered in detail, with close unit-level coverage as well as information on the overall
strategy and the regiment's place in the greater conflict. An appendix covers in depth the
October 1864 capture of eighty-three men from the regiment and their subsequent imprisonment
at Salisbury Prison.
Martin lives with his family in Cary, North Carolina.
Clint Johnson Clint, who has resided in Winston-Salem since 1989,
is a native of Florida and descendant of Confederate soldiers from Florida, Georgia and
Alabama. He started studying the war in grade school when a teacher told an exciting story
about the Battle of Natural Bridge (in Florida on March 6, 1865), where a militia of old
men and young boys banded together to stop an invasion.
Clint's articles have appeared in more than sixty magazines and newspapers. His
books include: Touring the Carolinas' Civil War Sites, Touring Virginia's and West
Virginia's Civil War Sites, Civil War Blunders, In the Footsteps of Robert E. Lee,
In the Footsteps of J.E.B. Stuart and Bulls-Eye & Misfires: 50 People Whose
Obscure Efforts Shaped the American Civil War (Dec. 2002 Military History Book Club
selection). His most recent Civil War travel guide is The 25 Best Civil War Sites: The
Ultimate Traveler's Guide To Battles, Monuments and Museums.
Lee B. Kennett Military historian and author Lee Kennett had written books on both
World Wars as well as French military history when he decided to focus on Gen. William T. Sherman and his
famous March to the Sea. In Marching Through Georgia: The Story of Soldiers and Civilians During Sherman's
Campaign, Lee presents views of the campaign from both "fronts", relating experiences of the soldiers who
fought it and of the civilians who witnessed it. By blending descriptions of life in antebellum Atlanta and Savannah
with those of the battlefields themselves, he gives us a vivid picture of life in the South both before and after "Uncle
Billy" and his men came along and changed things forever.
Lee's most recent work is a biography of General
Sherman, published in May of 2001, entitled Sherman: A Soldier's Life. In it, he explores the life and exploits
of the controversial commander whose name is written indelibly in America's history books.
Ralph Kirshner In a new autobiography entitled The Class of 1861: Custer,
Ames, and Their Classmates after West Point, Ralph has allowed the West Pointers of '61 to tell their
stories in their own words. Using letters, journals, and published writings, the life stories and careers of
these men are related by the men themselves. We learn not just of their Civil War battles, but of their
post-war experiences as well, and how better to do that than in their own words? Also included in the
book is a foreword by George Plimpton, who was the great-grandson of Adelbert Ames.
Ralph is a graduate of McGill University in Montreal, and he holds an M.L.S. from Long Island University
and an M.A. from the University of Maine.. He is a contributor to the Dictionary of American Biography
(articles on Bell Wiley and T. Harry Williams) and the American National Biography (entries for Generals
Emory Upton, Thomas Lafayette Rosser, and P.M.B. Young).
Richard M. McMurry When Richard joined the staff of North Carolina State
University as a professor of history, we were fortunate to have him also join our round table. When he left
Raleigh to return to his native Georgia, we made him an honorary lifetime member! In addition to his numerous
articles for magazines and scholarly journals, Richard has written several excellent books on the Southern war
effort, the most recent being Atlanta 1864: Last Chance for the Confederacy, in which he examines that
campaign's major role in deciding the war's outcome. In Two Great Rebel Armies: An Essay in Confederate
Military History, Richard compares and contrasts the Army of Northern Virginia and the Army of Tennessee,
and he takes on the youngest full general in the Confederacy with John Bell Hood and the War for Southern
Independence.
Besides being a lifetime member, Richard is also a former editor of our newsletter. He is currently
living in Roanoke, Virginia.
Herbert M. Schiller Herb has chosen as the topics of his books some campaigns
that don't often get as much "press time" as others. In his first book, Bermuda Hundred Campaign, he
took a look at Union Major General Benjamin Butler's attempt in the spring of 1864 to threaten the cities of
Richmond and Petersburg from his base at Bermuda Hundred Landing. In Sumter is Avenged! : The Siege
and Reduction of Fort Pulaski, he covered the Federals' attack on and destruction of the fort that had
enabled Savannah to thrive as a Confederate seaport. In destroying Fort Pulaski, the Yanks ensured that
the Union blockade of Confederate shipping would be effective. Herb also wrote The Autobiography of Major
General William F. Smith 1861-1864, and compiled the Civil War writings of a North Carolina Confederate officer
in Captain's War: The Letters and Diaries of William H. S. Burgwyn, 1861-1865, published in 1993.
Ronald Watson In the recently-published From Ashby to Andersonville: The Civil War
Diary and Reminiscences of Private George A. Hitchcock, 21st Massachusetts Infantry, Ron presents the tale of
a young soldier's personal war story, from his service in the Army of the Potomac to his capture at Cold Harbor and
subsequent imprisonment at Andersonville. Unlike many prisoners, Pvt. Hitchcock survived to tell his story, and Ron
provides the historical backdrop for that story in a book that is both "riveting and heartbreaking".
Ron is a retired high school principal, and he and his wife Carolyn live in Pittsboro, North Carolina.


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