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Interesting find. I look forward to the fruits of your further research into this picture. It truly is worth a thousand words, or more.
Thank you for this post. As an avid reader of Civil War history, I always look forward to learning from your research.
Ditto.
My great-grandfather was a GAR member who apparently attended the 1892 annual encampment. I have his cane from that event.
I admit to being ignorant of things Protestant, having been raised as a Catholic, but how can a church be both Methodist and Episcopal? I thought they were different things.
I interviewed with a law firm to form an association of sorts and the owner of the firm bragged that no one knew more about the Civil War than he did. I told him, “We’ll see about that.” Then he started pontificating about it, and I corrected him (politely) when he made a particularly boneheaded statement that he’d probably been making to less informed people for decades. He was shocked that I had the temerity to correct him and glad to learn what was correct. We work really well together now.
I like your picture and I really like how you’re bringing what to most people is some boring “group photo” to life and I look forward to your completed story someday.
Methodism emerged from the Church of England as a revival movement, and its largest denomination (the Methodist Episcopal Church) kept the word “episcopal” in its name. The Episcopal Church, meanwhile, is what became of America’s Anglican Church after the Revolution.
So, the Methodist Episcopal Church and the Episcopal Church are closely related, but they’re different denominations.
Man. That’s a rough paragraph. A hard thing to contemplate.
Thanks for the post!
Great post (from a fellow Civil War buff). I look forward to see what you come up with.
Bruce Catton is exceptional, and his series on the Army of the Potomac is the most captivating and heartbreaking history I’ve ever read. He has a way of communicating what it meant to be in that war that is unparalleled.
Agree, and you can see it in their faces and body posture.