Monthly Archives: October 2025

Meeting of November 25, 2025

Join us at 6:30 PM, November 25, at Jack’s Restaurant & Bar, located at the Northwest corner of the Westgate Shopping Mall in San Jose, near Campbell (1502 Saratoga Ave, San Jose, CA 95129) and via ZOOM. This month’s topic is

David Hsueh on “Requiem for Innocence: Destruction of Nature and Animals in the Civil War”

Is This Death? by Alexander Gardner, Antietam Battlefield

Five days after the bloodiest single day in American history at Antietam, Union XII Corps acting commander Brig. Gen. Alpheus Williams rode across the devastated battlefield. The ground was still littered with corpses, and the stench of decay hung in the air. That evening, in a letter home to his daughter, Williams struggled to describe the scenes he had witnessed. One image, however, refused to leave him:

“The number of dead horses was high. They lay, like the men, in all attitudes. One beautiful milk-white animal had died in so graceful a position that I wished for its photograph. Its legs were doubled under, and its arched neck gracefully turned to one side, as if looking back to the ball hole in its side. Until you got to it, it was hard to believe the horse was dead.”

Unbeknownst to Williams, three days earlier, on September 19, the photographer Alexander Gardner had encountered the very same animal. He captured it in a haunting image later published in his Photographic Sketch Book of the War, titled “Confederate Colonel and Horse, Both Killed at the Battle of Antietam.” Williams’ words and Gardner’s lens together preserved the same tragic scene: an animal of striking beauty transformed into a casualty of war. Once overlooked, the photograph has, in recent decades, gained recognition as a powerful emblem of Antietam and of the Civil War itself, embodying not only the vast human slaughter but also the silent suffering of the animals drawn into the conflict.

This talk explores the wider devastation of the natural world during the Civil War: the destruction of landscapes, the slaughter of horses on the battlefield, and the displacement of other wildlife. It portrays the conflict not only as a human tragedy but also as an ecological catastrophe—a wound inflicted upon both creation and the divine. Its aim is to illuminate a different dimension of wartime destruction: the suffering borne by those who could not speak for themselves.

David Hsueh is a fourth-year political science student at the University of California, Berkeley. An avid history enthusiast since kindergarten, his first introduction to the American Civil War came through reading about President Lincoln. His true passion for the war began after his first viewing of the movie Gettysburg and his subsequent visits to the Gettysburg and Antietam battlefields seven years ago, at age 11. His main interests in the Civil War center on leadership decisions at the brigade-to-army level and on human-interest stories—both of generals and of the common soldier. A cinephile and film lover, he drew inspiration for the themes and topic of this talk from Andrei Tarkovsky’s Andrei Rublev and Robert Bresson’s Au Hasard Balthazar.

Quiz for November 25, 2025

Civil War Quiz: What Do You Know About Miscellaneous Topics of the Civil War?

Q#1 — What was a first for the commanders during the Battle of the Wilderness?

Q#2 — What event in the Battle of the Wilderness killed many wounded soldiers?

Q#3 — Which army won the Battle of the Wilderness?

Q#4 — What were two drawbacks when supplying troops with Henry or Spencer rifles?

Q#5 — In the movie Unforgiven with Burt Lancaster and Audrey Hepburn, Lancaster reloaded cartridges for Colt revolvers, Winchester 1873, and Sharps rifles. Why can’t Henry and Spencer cartridges be reloaded?

Q#6 — Why weren’t the bullets in the Henry and Spencer cartridges Minie balls?

Q#7 — Eight civilians were awarded the Medal of Honor during the Civil War. What was unique about Dr. Mary Edwards Walker?

Q#8 — What was unique about five of the eight civilian recipients awarded the Medal of Honor during the Civil War?

Q#9 — Why were these eight the only civilians to be awarded the Medal of Honor in history?

Q#10 — The Confederate Congress authorized a Medal of Honor in 1862. Why were no Confederate soldiers awarded the medal?

Q#11 — What was unique about Civil War soldiers awarded a Purple Heart?

Q#12 — Which state was the closest in distance to California at the start of the Civil War?

Q#13 — Which Confederate state was the closest in distance to California?

Q#14 — What were California’s major contributions during the Civil War?

Q#15 — Which states were added to the Union during the Civil War?

Meeting of February 24, 2026

Join us at 6:30 PM, February 24, at Jack’s Restaurant & Bar, located at the Northwest corner of the Westgate Shopping Mall in San Jose, near Campbell (1502 Saratoga Ave, San Jose, CA 95129) and via ZOOM. This month’s topic is

Kirstein Ta on “Ars Moriendi – The Good Death”

Dying far from home and loved ones was a harsh reality that soldiers had to face. Many turned to comrades, religious leaders, nurses, or doctors to help them facilitate “a good death”—a death reflective of character and legacy, based on faith, repentance, and acceptance of God’s will.

“Civil War soldiers were, in fact, better prepared to die than to kill, for they lived in a culture that offered many lessons in how life should end. But these lessons had to be adapted to the dramatically changed circumstances of the war. Soldiers and their families struggled in a variety of ways to mitigate the cruel realities and to construct a good death amid chaos.” —Drew Gilpin Faust

Kirstein Hansen-Ta is a new student of the Civil War. In July 2024, she inherited ten six-inch binders containing her family history, dating as far back as 1630 to the present day. As incredible as all this history is, she found none as fascinating as her family’s experiences during the Civil War. Several men on both sides of her family fought for the Confederacy, including her second great-grandfather and a number of uncles. She is happy to report that, with the exception of one, they all returned home.

Among the hundreds of pages in these binders, Kirstein came across what she considers the most valuable: four typewritten pages of a letter from an uncle describing all three of his older brothers and their time in the Confederate army. Additionally, he describes what life was like for the family during the Civil War. After reading these stories, Kirstein realized that the most intriguing part of the Civil War wasn’t necessarily the battles or the politics, but rather the people who lived through it.

Wanting to learn more about the Civil War, Kirstein discovered the website for the South Bay Civil War Round Table and officially became a member in October 2024. She looks forward to learning more about this significant time in our country’s history.

Meeting of October 28, 2025

Mark Costin on “The Civil War Campaigns Against the Apache and the Navaho”

At the conclusion of the Civil War New Mexico campaign, the victorious Union appointed James Henry Carleton as commander of the Department of New Mexico. Carleton considered the local Native American tribes, the Apache and Navajo, grave threats and pursued a relentless campaign against them. This talk describes these little-known campaigns, which had severe consequences for the Native Americans in the West.

Mark Costin is an engineer living in Sunnyvale, California, recently retired from working on functional safety for automated and autonomous vehicles. A longtime history enthusiast, Mark now has more time to devote to his hobby. He holds a Ph.D. in Systems Engineering from Case Western Reserve University, an M.Eng. from McMaster University, and a B.Eng. from McGill University.

Quiz for October 28, 2025

Civil War Quiz: What Do You Know About the 1863 New York City Draft Riots?

Q#1 — By what other name were the New York City draft riots referred to?

Q#2 — What was the name of the legislation that helped fuel the riots?

Q#3 — Which group of people did the Draft Law exclude?

Q#4 — Which ethnic group was the largest in confronting police during the rioting?

Q#5 — What action by President Lincoln that went into effect in 1863 helped fuel the riots?

Q#6 — What other city in the State of New York had already experienced rioting related to the military draft?

Q#7 — The first draft numbers were drawn in New York City on July 11, 1863, without incident. What was the date of the second draft number drawing that sparked the riot?

Q#8 — Which group led a furious crowd of around 500 in an attack on the assistant Ninth District provost marshal’s office at Third Avenue and 47th Street, where the draft was taking place?

Q#9 — Since the New York State Militia had been sent to assist Union troops at Gettysburg, what law enforcement organization was left to try to suppress the riots?

Q#10 — What was the name of the building located at 43rd Street and Fifth Avenue that provided shelter for 233 children and was attacked by a mob that looted the building of its food and supplies?

Q#11 — When New York Governor Horatio Seymour arrived in New York the day after the riot began, what action did he attempt to appease the crowd of rioters?

Q#12 — On July 15, what action did Colonel James Barnet Fry perform to quell the riot?

Q#13 — The exact death toll during the New York City draft riots is unknown. What is the estimate that was developed by historian James M. McPherson?

Q#14 — How many people were hanged over five days of the rioting?

Q#15 — Why was the Bull’s Head hotel on 44th Street burned by the rioters?

Bonus Question — On August 19, the government resumed the draft in New York. It was completed within 10 days without further incident. Across the nation, of the 750,000 selected nationwide for conscription, how many draftees were sent into active duty?