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The Dispatch - FALL 2023

The Dispatch - FALL 2023
‍Fall 2023 Edition

"Forget Not His Deeds"


 GENERAL MEADE SOCIETY OF

PHILADELPHIA, INC.

P.O. BOX 394
ABINGTON, PA 19001

Founded 1996

 

The General Meade Society of Philadelphia is an educational non-profit & 501(c)(3) organization chartered by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The mission of the society is to promote and preserve the life and service of Maj-Gen. George Gordon Meade, (USA), commander of the Army of the Potomac.

 

 

The Executive Board of the General Meade Society of Philadelphia meets at the Cannstatter Volksfest Verein, 9130 Academy Road in Northeast Philadelphia. Meetings are held on the second Thursday of January, April, September and December; the starting time is 7:00 p.m., meetings are open to all society members, friends and guests.


To Contact the Meade Society:
https://generalmeadesociety.org

‍Seasons Greetings From the Editor

Dear Members and Friends of the General Meade Society:

As the year draws to a close and the holidays approach, we at the General Meade Society take this opportunity to express our heartfelt gratitude for your continued support and dedication to preserving our history.

This past year has been one of both challenges and achievements for the Society, but we've witnessed the unwavering commitment of our members to keep our legacy going and our programs running.

As we reflect on the past year, we're reminded of the profound significance of the history we strive to preserve. The lessons learned from past triumphs and tragedies all serve as a guidepost for navigating the present and shaping the future.

In this season of reflection and celebration, we encourage you to spend time with your loved ones, cherish traditions, and create new memories. May you find joy in the simple pleasures and embrace the spirit of generosity and goodwill that this time of year brings.

We look forward to another year of exploring our past together, uncovering hidden stories, and sharing our knowledge with the community. We wish you and your families a joyous holiday season and a prosperous New Year.

With warmest regards,

John Jacoberger
Webmaster/Editor


During the last half of  2023, the General Meade Society continues to be strengthened with YOUR dues and donations !

Just a reminder that 2024 dues are encouraged and welcomed for your continued support of our organization. For your convenience, you can now pay your dues or donate to the General Meade Society using your credit or debit cards ! Many of you have done that during this year, and you have our sincere THANKS !!Go to our website www.generalmeadesociety.org

During the remainder of the year, we were able to donate financial  support to the following organizations:

The Friends of Laurel Hill Cemetery
The GAR Museum & Library
The Army Heritage Center
Eden Cemetery (on behalf of O.V. Catto)
Wreaths Across America
Youngs Memorial Cemetery Foundation (in honor of Pres. T. Roosevelt)

I want to take this opportunity to personally thank CAROL INGALD for all of her help and magnificent work as our membership chair for the last decade !!

Carol has relinquished that position, and NANCY KELSEY has volunteered to become the new membership chair. Congratulations to Nancy, and she is already doing a magnificent job !

Please note that the General Meade Society has a new address: P.O. Box 394, Abington, PA 19001. The old address, P.O. Box 45556, Phila. PA 19149 is NO LONGER VALID ! 

Again, on behalf of our Board, THANK YOU for your generous support. We look ahead to next year to continue our mission to "forget not his deeds"!

 

 Jerry McCormick, Treasurer
‍THE MEADE SOCIETY REMEMBERS
THE WOLFORDS

On Wednesday, November 15th, a joint memorial service was held at First Presbyterian Church in Germantown for Faith & Dave Wolford, both long time members and supporters of the General Meade Society. Faith passed away in July, 2020 and Dave this past October.


Ken Garson, Tom Kearney, and myself attended and expressed condolences on behalf of the Meade Society. Ken and I also attended the Committal service afterward at Westminster Cemetery in Bala Cynwyd.

Faith and Dave would always sign up early for our annual Fall Excursion Bus Trips, and after Betty & I would get everyone settled in at the hotel on the first day of the trips, we'd head for the hotel lounge and always find the Wolfords there enjoying a martini ! We always enjoyed that time with them.

They were good friends to us, and all who knew them.

                                                                                                                  - Jerry Mc Cormick

Meade Society Annual Brunch & Awards Ceremony

 

On Sunday, November 12th, the General Meade Society held its annual Brunch & Awards Ceremony. Once again, it was held at the Cannstatter Volksfest Verein in NE Philadelphia. A Silent auction was also held to benefit the Fund for Historic Preservation, with proceeds amounting to $300.00.


Forty one attended and enjoyed a fabulous buffet brunch provided by the Cannstatter.

This year's Legion of Honor(president's) awards went to Dyanne Glass and General (RET) Carol Eggert of Comcast's Department of Military and Veterans'' Affairs, noted for their generosity and support of the General Meade's mission to support the legacy of Major O.V. Catto. Ms. Glass accepted the award and brought greetings and thanks from General Eggert.

The Award of Merit (the General Meade Society's highest award of recognition) was presented to Bob Hanrahan. Bob has been a longtime supporter of the Society and has provided financial support on numerous times through his standing with the William Penn Foundation. He has also spoken from time to time about his interest in the U.S. Navy and his first-person portrayal of Major General John Gibbon, USA (1827-1896)

A special award was presented this year to Carol Ingald. For over ten years, Carol has done a spectacular job as Chair of our Membership Committee, keeping and following up on all those who join and processing payments. Because of other pressing duties, Carol had to step down from this position, but our Board wanted to make sure she was recognized and honored for her efforts . Well done, Carol !!

Congratulations go to Zach Margolies, longtime GMS member and supporter who won the GRAND PRIZE in the free prize raffle. and EVERYONE went home a WINNER with a prize!

Special thanks go to the Palmas (Bob, Mary, and Alex) for organizing and conducting the Silent Auction, and to Joe Hauptmann who handled the Registration Table, especially and especially to all who donated auction items and books for door prizes.
 
                                                       -Jerry McCormick

‍Gettysburg tells the story of more than a battle −
The military park shows what national ‘reconciliation’ looked like for decades after the Civil War

On Nov. 19, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln traveled to Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, to dedicate a cemetery at the site of the bloodiest battle of the Civil War. Four months before, about 50,000 soldiers had been killed, wounded or captured at the Battle of Gettysburg, later seen as a turning point in the war.

 

In his now-famous address, Lincoln described the site as “a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that (their) nation might live,” and called on “us the living” to finish their work. In the 160 years since, 1,328 monuments and memorials have been erected at Gettysburg National Military Park – including one for each of the 11 Confederate states.

 

Abraham Lincoln, seated at center, before delivering the Gettysburg Address. Library of Congress/Getty Images

 

Confederate memorials in the American South have attracted scrutiny for years. In October 2023, a statue of Gen. Robert E. Lee was melted down in Charlottesville, Virginia, six years after plans to remove it spurred the violent “Unite the Right” rally.

 

Gettysburg has received relatively little attention, yet it occupies a unique space in these debates. The battlefield is one of the most hallowed historic sites in the country, and, unlike other areas with memorials to Confederate soldiers, is located in the North. The military park’s history offers a window into the United States’ attitude toward postwar reconciliation – one often willing to overlook racial equality in the name of national and political unity.

 

The ‘Mecca of Reconciliation’

Today, Gettysburg draws nearly a million visitors each year. In addition to visiting the museum, visitors can drive or walk among the monuments and plaques that cover the landscape, dedicated to both Union and Confederate troops. There are markers that explain the events of the battle, as well as monuments dedicated to individual people, military units and states.

 

As with any war memorial, particularly for a civil war, Gettysburg commemorates an event whose survivors held dramatically different views of its meaning. In his book “Race and Reunion,” historian David Blight identifies three main narratives of the Civil War. One emphasizes the “nobility of the Confederate soldier” and cause, while another focuses on the emancipation of slaves. The third is the “reconciliationist” view, with the notion that “all in the war were brave and true,” regardless of which side they fought for.

 

We are cultural geographers who study commemorative landscapes, with a focus on issues of race and memory. In our view, Gettysburg is a prime example of that reconciliation narrative: a site that aims to reconcile the North and the South more than it addresses the racial motivations of the conflict. The park’s own administrative history refers to Gettysburg as an “American Mecca of Reconciliation.”

 

No praise, no blame

From 1864 until 1895, the battlefield was under the administration of the Gettysburg Battlefield Memorial Association, which placed markers along military units’ battle lines.

 

Starting in 1890, the U.S. War Department began actively preserving Civil War battlefields. Congress approved the creation of a commission of Union and Confederate veterans to mark the armies’ positions at Gettysburg with tablets that each bore “a brief historical legend, compiled without praise and without censure.” These policies were also included in the Regulations for the National Military Parks, published in 1915.

  

This guiding idea – “without praise and without censure” – was also evident at ceremonies for the battle’s 50th anniversary in 1913. Reconciliation was central in speeches and formal photographs, many featuring elderly veterans from both sides shaking hands.

 

Union and Confederate veterans pictured at 50th anniversary events in Gettysburg, Pa. Liljenquist Family Collection of Civil War Photographs/Library of Congress

 

At the time, there were no monuments to Confederate states; most markers, both for Union and Confederate troops, were for individual battle units.

 

State memorials

In 1912, the Virginia Gettysburg Commission had submitted plans for an equestrian statue of General Lee and other figures, with an inscription saying the state’s sons “fought for the faith of their fathers.” The chairman of the Gettysburg National Park Commission, however, had warned that such a statue would likely not be approved by the War Department because “inscriptions should be without ‘censure, praise or blame.‘” The chairman said that while “they fought for the faith of their fathers” might be true for Virginians, “it certainly opens the inscription to not a little adverse criticism.”

 

Eventually, the state commission agreed to inscribe simply, “Virginia to her sons at Gettysburg” – creating the first Confederate state monument.

 

But enforcement of the no praise, no blame policy was uneven.

 

Efforts to erect a monument for Mississippi, for example, began in the early 1960s. The state commission’s intended inscription read:

 

On this ground our brave sires fought for their righteous cause

Here, in glory, sleep those who gave to it their lives

To valor they gave new dimensions of courage

To duty, its noblest fulfillment

To posterity, the sacred heritage of honor.

 

The park superintendent pointed to two objections, however: first to the use of “righteous” and second to “here,” since Southern soldiers’ bodies were mostly relocated after the battle.

 

Mississippi Supreme Court Judge Thomas Brady, who collaborated on the inscription, wrote to the monument commission expressing his frustration over the objection to the “righteous cause” language. Even the “South’s most bitter critics … never questioned that the South felt that its cause was righteous,” he noted.

 

“The South has had the most to forgive in this matter and the South has forgiven,” Brady wrote. “Let us hope that the North has done likewise.”

 

In late 1970, a new superintendent was put in place at Gettysburg. Mississippi’s commission asked him to revisit the “righteous cause” wording – and expressed “genuine pleasure” that the new superintendent was a fellow Mississippian.

 

The monument was dedicated in 1973, with the “righteous cause” language included in its inscription.

The Mississippi state monument at Gettysburg today. Katrina Stack FinkelsteinCC BY-ND

 

‘Unfinished work’

From the start, the policies for monuments at Gettysburg called for a commemorative landscape that would recall the actions of those who fought and died on the battlefield. In reality, several monuments scattered over the landscape perpetuate the Lost Cause myth, which argues that the Confederate states’ chief goal was simply to protect the sanctity of state rights – whitewashing the atrocities of slavery and romanticizing the antebellum South.

 

In recent decades, however, the park has begun to do more to emphasize slavery in its historical exhibits and descriptions.

 

National Park management policy treats commemorative works as historic features reflecting “the knowledge, attitudes, and tastes of the persons who designed and placed them.” As a result, the monuments cannot be “altered, relocated, obscured, or removed, even when they are deemed inaccurate or incompatible with prevailing present-day values.”

 

The Gettysburg website notes that legislation and compliance with federal laws would be required to move many monuments.

 

When Lincoln traveled to Gettysburg, he called for Americans to dedicate themselves “to the unfinished work” of the Union dead, and to dedicate a portion of the battlefield to their memory. A century and a half later, however, the site also illustrates a messy postwar debate: the U.S.’s struggle to reconcile sharply opposed understandings of the Civil War.

 

 

Authors:

 

Katrina Stack

PhD Student, University of Tennessee

 

Rebecca Sheehan

Professof of Geography, Oklahoma State University


Why wasn't Major General Meade there to accept Lee's surrender?


“On April 9, 1865, Major General Meade was approaching Appomattox Court House from the east leading the Army of the Potomac when Lee finally surrendered. Unfortunately, the stalwart Pennsylvanian, who did not allow his personal honor to get in the way of service to his country, was not present in Wilmer McLean’s front room. Still, Meade would meet with Lee on April 10. 1865


The two men had served together as Engineers in the old US Army and during the Mexican War. Receiving the courtesy of passing through the Confederate lines, Meade made his way to Lee’s headquarters. Dismounting in front of the enemy commander, Meade greeted him cordially. Lee, recognized his comrade from the old days and was delighted to see Meade one again., Lee was taken aback by his appearance, and commented “What are you doing with all that gray in your beard” to which Meade replied “You have to answer for most of it.” The two former enemies then entered Lee’s tent and chatted at length about the old days together in the Old Army and in Mexico amicably.


‍Spring Trip To Gettysburg
Saturday, June 10, 2023
 

The group consisting of 40+ eager historians including: members of the Del Val CWRT; the Meade Society; Patriotic Order, Sons of America; Legion Post 405 at the Union League; etc. travelled to Gettysburg to take a special 'Behind the scenes' tour of the construction work at Little Round Top.

 

The tour conducted by Gettysburg Military Park Superintendent Steve Sims (Steve is a West Point graduate; Army Engineer and huge fan of his predecessor General George G. Meade).

 

After lunch along Steinwehr Ave. the group visited the new WWII Museum outside of Gettysburg.  Our 2 WWII veterans: Jake Ruser and Benjamin Berry were thrilled to see items from their honored past.

 

Afterwards, the group was treated to a special WWII themed tour of graves of fallen  heroes of action in the ETO in WWII in the Gettysburg National Cemetery by Ranger/Historian Dan Vermilya.

 

The trip culminated with a real PA Dutch Smorgasbord at Yoder's famed restaurant in New Holland.  A wonderful trip full of memories.

 

Superintendent Sims informed us that the work on Little Round Top will continue for at least 8 more months. Look for an opening in Spring 2024.

 

-Andy Waskie


ANNUAL MEADE SOCIETY FALL TRIP 2023 
THE HUDSON VALLEY, 
THE ROOSEVELTS, AND WEST POINT October 21-23, 2023 
October 21-23 2023
 

This year's Fall Excursion departed from the Union League Golf Club Torresdale parking lot on October 21st and traveled to Sagamore Hill, NY to see the estate of President Theodore Roosevelt where there was a wreath laying at his grave. Later in the day the group went to Tarrytown, NY for a tour of Sleepy Hollow Cemetery.

 

On Saturday the group went to Hyde Park, NY for a guided tour of the Franklin D. Roosevelt estate.  There were visits to local sites, including the Vanderbilt Mansion in Hyde Park and Washington's Headquarters in Newburgh, NY.

 

Monday morning after breakfast there was a narrated cruise on the Hudson River then an afternoon guided to at the US Military Academy at West Point before returning to Philadelphia. 

 

Thanks to Bernice Kaplan, we have some pictures of the visit to the grave of President Theodore Roosevelt in Young's Cemetery, Oyster Bay, NY where an honor ceremony was held and attended by our group and two descendants of "Teddy" Roosevelt.

 

Young's Cemetery is less than a mile away from ' Sagamore Hill', the Roosevelt home.

 

‍Upcoming Events

 

 

For complete details and registration (if required) click on the above links


J‍oin the General Meade Society

 

Not a member?    

 

Consider joining our organization or making a tax-deductible contribution to support our organization and related causes.

 

Membership can be completed online here or by mailing the following form along with your payment.

 

Contributions can be made via debit/credit cards online here.


‍Board of Directors - Officers

 

Andy Waskie, PhD, President

Mike Peter, Vice President

Jerry McCormick, Treasurer

Michael Wunsch, Corresponding Secretary

Joe Hauptmann, Recording Secrretary

 

 

‍Board Members

 

Albert El

Herb Kaufman

Tom Kearney

Nancy Kelsey

Alex Palma

Jeanne O'Toole


 

 

Tom O'Toole

Alex Palma

Joe Perry

Joseph Pugh

Bill Linhard

John Voris


‍Visit our website:  generalmeadesociety.org

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The General Meade Society of Philadelphia, Inc.

P.O.Box 394

Abington, PA  19001