An interesting development in the world of Civil War
research. I am forwarding a press release.
John Bell Hood Papers
Discovered
Significant
historical find changes how Hood has been portrayed
(El
Dorado Hills, CA)— The Battle of Franklin Trust Chief Operating Officer Eric A.
Jacobson announced today at Carnton Plantation the discovery of several hundred
documents, letter and orders of Confederate General John Bell Hood.While
conducting research for an upcoming book on the general, West Virginia’s Sam
Hood, a collateral descendent and student of the career of Hood, was invited to
inspect a collection of the general’s papers, held by a descendent.
Savas
Beatie will be publishing this upcoming book by Sam Hood's entitled John
Bell Hood: The Rise, Fall, and Resurrection of a Confederate General in
spring 2013, a detailed point by point defense of General Hood’s career.
As
timing would have it, John Bell Hood: The Rise, Fall, and Resurrection of a
Confederate General was completed before this recent document
discovery.Much of his book argues that known evidence before the recent cache
find has been misinterpreted or blatantly misused by many
latter-day
authors.Hood critically notes several authors who he believes perpetuated the
use of Hood as a target for Lost Cause architects.Some of the newly discovered
information on the Atlanta Campaign, the Spring Hill affair, and the Battle of
Franklin will be included in Sam Hood’s upcoming book, but since the total
collection will take several months to transcribe, more important information
on John Bell Hood - the man and the soldier - cannot, by necessity, be revealed
until later.
Sam
Hood said, “General Hood is certainly no stranger to controversy. During his
colorful military career and with historians ever since, he has remained a
controversial and tragic figure of the Civil War. Long noted for the loss of
Atlanta and what some consider reckless behavior at the November 30, 1864
Battle of Franklin after a lost opportunity for possible victory at Spring Hill,
he has often been the subject of ridicule and blame for the demise of the
Confederacy in the West."
Eric
Jacobson, who has viewed a portion of the collection said, “This is one of the
most significant Civil War discoveries in recent history.These documents also
tell us as much by what they don’t say.One major example is the discovery of
Hood’s medical journal, kept by his doctor, John T. Darby, during the war.As
they are being transcribed it will be interesting to see what, if any, use of
painkillers is mentioned, and how judicious his doctors were in prescribing
opiates.Hood was much more multi-faceted than how he has been portrayed by some
as a simple minded and poorly equipped commander.”
Jacobson
has been one of only a few contemporary Army of Tennessee historians to give
Hood the benefit of fatigue, fog of war and failures of subordinates as part of
the breakdown of the Army of Tennessee in late 1864.
Some
of the items found include recommendations for promotion, handwritten by
Stonewall Jackson and James Longstreet.Also uncovered was wartime
correspondence between Gen. Hood and generals R. E. Lee, Braxton Bragg, Louis
T. Wigfall, and other senior commanders, as well as his four general officer
commission papers. Roughly seventy post-war letters from other Civil War
notables were also discovered, mostly concerning the controversy with
Confederate General Joseph E. Johnston and used to compose Hood's memoir Advance & Retreat. Sam Hood added,
“This is just the tip of the iceberg on the expansive collection.”
“I
spent five days photocopying and inventorying,” added Sam Hood. “I held in my
hands documents signed by Jefferson Davis, Longstreet, Jackson and Lee.”
Keith
Bohannon, professor of history at the University of West Georgia, says most of
Hood’s biographers assumed that Hood’s papers, other than those known to be
archived, were lost or destroyed. “Some of John Bell Hood’s official papers
were presumably sold to the Federal government near the time of his death in
1879,” Bohannon said. Hood and his wife, Anna Marie, both died in New Orleans
from yellow fever and left behind ten orphaned children. Before his death at
age 48, Hood was in poor financial condition and was working to sell this
information to better the financial plight of his family, according to
Bohannon.
“I have been fighting t
correct some of the misperceptions and vicious myths of General Hood for
years,” added Sam Hood.“These documents will
shed a lot of light that will change some of those views.”
No comments:
Post a Comment