NEXT MEETING
Then next meeting of Captain James W. Bryan Camp 1390
will be at 6 p.m. Tuesday, June 11, at Amazen Seafood Restaurant, 339 Prien
Lake Road, Lake Charles.
Our guest speaker will be former Texas Division SCV Commander Granvel
Block, who will give us an update on the I-10 Confederate Memorial Plaza in
Orange. Please make plans to attend this important and entertaining meeting.
CAMP MEETING SCHEDULE FOR 2013
Please see the list below for meeting
dates and places for 2013. The restaurants have been contacted and their
calendars marked accordingly. Meetings last from 6 p.m.-8 p.m.
Amazen Seafood Restaurant (Lake Charles) June 11, August 13, and October
8 (Nomination of officers).
Pitt Grill (Sulphur) - July 9, September 10, November 12
(elect officers).
The camp Christmas party date would be December 10 with the location to
be determined.
Commander’s Comments
Well
we had another beautiful month in which to honor our ancestors. The good lord
has surely blessed us all not with just the weather, but a wonderful organization
to be a part of, all of our compatriots with like minds, and of course by
giving us the brave men and women who fought for the ideal of equality, and
to right the wrongs of a government run amok.
We have several things happening this month, our celebration and re-dedication at our Confederate monument, and the most important part the placing of the flags on our heroes resting places. To me that is the least we can do these people who fought and died trying to preserve a way of life and freedom that they were entitled to. We have sent out a schedule of the activities and times for our Memorial Day festivities. We will need all the help we can get with the flags if you can be of any assistance please let me or Luke know so we can get the job done as quickly as possible.
We also have the State convention this month I hope many of you can make it, It will be in Ruston this year, If you need more information it will be brought up at our next meeting. I was ask by Ted Brode if we could have the next one in the Lake Charles area, It would be a lot of work and will require everyone's help, but I think we could do it up nicely. This will be a topic for discussion at the next meeting.
We had a cleanup day at Burr's Ferry this weekend many camps were there and when we left, the park looked really good. A big thanks to Al Cochran and Jim Ross, for their help
Our next meeting will be at Amazen Seafood in Lake Charles on the 11th of June. The meeting will start at 6:30. I am hoping to have Granvel Block as our quest speaker, He is a Texas Commander and the one responsible for the flags to be put up in Orange along I-10. Hope to see you at the placing of the flags
Best regards.
We have several things happening this month, our celebration and re-dedication at our Confederate monument, and the most important part the placing of the flags on our heroes resting places. To me that is the least we can do these people who fought and died trying to preserve a way of life and freedom that they were entitled to. We have sent out a schedule of the activities and times for our Memorial Day festivities. We will need all the help we can get with the flags if you can be of any assistance please let me or Luke know so we can get the job done as quickly as possible.
We also have the State convention this month I hope many of you can make it, It will be in Ruston this year, If you need more information it will be brought up at our next meeting. I was ask by Ted Brode if we could have the next one in the Lake Charles area, It would be a lot of work and will require everyone's help, but I think we could do it up nicely. This will be a topic for discussion at the next meeting.
We had a cleanup day at Burr's Ferry this weekend many camps were there and when we left, the park looked really good. A big thanks to Al Cochran and Jim Ross, for their help
Our next meeting will be at Amazen Seafood in Lake Charles on the 11th of June. The meeting will start at 6:30. I am hoping to have Granvel Block as our quest speaker, He is a Texas Commander and the one responsible for the flags to be put up in Orange along I-10. Hope to see you at the placing of the flags
Best regards.
Archie Toombs, Cmdr. Camp 1390
CONFEDERATE MEMORIAL DAY
June 3
The schedule for decorating
Confederate Veteran’s graves and the wreath dedication at our Confederate
Monument, “The South’s Defenders,” at the courthouse, is as
follows:
Friday,
May 31 - “west of the river” – (beginning @ 7:30
a.m.)
(1) Big
Woods Cemetery
(2)
Antioch Cemetery (adjacent to Big Wood) (3) Nibletts Bluff Cemeter
(4)
Farquar Cemetery
(5) Dutch
Cove Cemetery
Saturday,
June 1- “east of the river”-(beginning @ 5:30 p.m.) -
Dedication at the Monument, followed by placing flags at the following
cemeteries:
(1)
Orange Grove Cemetery
(2)
Sallier Cemetery
(3)
Catholic Cemetery
(4)
Corporate Cemetery
(5)
Bilbo Cemetery
Shelby Wolfe, center, received the first annual
Benjamin Warren Burns Scholarship at the
May meeting of Capt. J. W. Bryan Camp 1390
At left is Charles Richardson and left, Andy
Buckley, members of the scholarship committee.
FIRST BURNS SCHOLARSHIP AWARDED
Shelby Wolfe of Grand
Chenier was presented the first Benjamin Warren Burns Scholarship by Captain
James W. Bryan Camp 1390, Sons of Confederate Veterans at its May meeting.
The annual
scholarship is for $500 per semester. Shelby is a history major at McNeese
State University.
The scholarship is named in honor of the late Benjamin Warren Burns of
Lake Charles. He was a longtime member of Camp 1390
John Burleson, living historian, gave an excellent program on the Confederate Navy at the May Meeting of Captain James W. Bryan Camp 1390.
A CONFEDERATE CATECHISM
[The following was excerpted from
A Confederate Catechism by Lyon
Gardiner Tyler, Third Edition, Nov. 21, 1929.]
What was the
cause of secession in 1861?
It was the fact that the Union consisted from the first two
jarring nations having different interests, which were brought to the breaking
point in 1861 by the intemperate agitation in the North against everything
Southern. The breaking point was nearly reached in 1785 when the North sought
to stop the development of the South by giving the Mississippi River to Spain,
in 1801 when it attempted the immoral act of turning the presidential ticket
upside down and making Aaron Burr President, and in 1833 went it imposed upon
the South a high protective tariff for the benefit of Northern manufacturers.
The breaking point was finally reached in 1861, when after unmitigated abuse of
the South, a strictly Northern President was elected by strictly Northern votes
upon a platform which repudiated the decision of the Supreme Court of the
United States authorizing Southerners to carry their slaves into the
territories. This decision gave no material advantage to slavery, as none of
the remaining territorial domain was in any way fit for agriculture, but the
Southerners resented the attitude of Lincoln and his party as a challenge to
their constitutional rights and as a determination on the part of the North to
govern the Union thereafter by virtue of a mere numerical majority. The
literature of those times shows that such mutual and mortal hatred existed as,
in the language if Jefferson, “to render separation preferable to eternal
discord.” The choice was between remaining in such a Union of hate, and
seceding. There was no real peace, and the South seceded because it wanted peace and
not strife or war.
WHO WAS LYON GARDINER TYLER?
Lyon Gardiner Tyler (1853-1935), author of A Confederate Catechism, was
the son of President John Tyler and
First Lady Julia
Gardiner Tyler, born at Sherwood
Forest Plantation. He graduated in 1875 at the University of
Virginia. From 1888 to 1919, he served as the 17th president of the College of
William and Mary (W&M), and is widely credited for restoring the
college's financial condition following the deterioration which took place in
the wake of the War for Southern
Independence.
During
his presidency, he opened the college to women, established it as a
state-funded institution, and founded the William and Mary Quarterly, now a highly respected history journal.
During his lifetime, he published a number of works documenting his family's
history, supporting his father's administration, and promoting new
interpretations of Virginia history during the Federal period. Tyler
was a meticulous researcher and prolific author, using primary source materials
to generate detailed portraits of history.
New Book
The Vicksburg 28th/29th Louisiana
Infantry
The Vicksburg 28th/29th Louisiana Infantry
Regiment was involved in the 1862-63 defense of the "Gibraltar of the
Mississippi," Vicksburg, from the first attack by the Union fleet of
Admiral Farragut, to the final siege by Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant. The regiment
had its finest hour in the war during the Battle of Chickasaw Bayou, Miss. on
Dec. 28, 1862, when it was compared to the Spartans at the Battle of
Thermopylae in Ancient Greece, for holding off an enemy force many times its
size. The regiment was made up of men from throughout Louisiana who endured
incredible hardships and danger for their sacred cause of Southern Independence.
Included in the book is a roster of the regiment, photographs, maps, footnotes,
bibliography and index. The author, Michael Dan Jones, is the former Commander of
Captain James W. Bryan Camp 1390, Sons of Confederate Veterans of Lake Charles,
Louisiana. His camp is named in honor of the senior captain of the regiment,
who was also the first Mayor of Lake Charles, Louisiana. The book, $16.95, is
available on CreateSpace.com, Amazon.com and other online booksellers.
VICKSBURG
HOSTS
LINCOLN
EXHIBIT
Beginning
Saturday and Sunday, May 25 & 26, 2013, and as part of Vicksburg National
Military Park's Sesquicentennial commemoration, the park will host the
traveling exhibit "Lincoln and the Constitution." The exhibit will be
housed at Pemberton Headquarters, located at 1018 Crawford Street in downtown
Vicksburg, and be on display to the public from 9:00 am to 4:00 pm each day.
Beginning June 1, 2013, the exhibit can be seen daily from 9:00 am to 4:00 pm
running through July 2013.
The
exhibit was developed by the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, PA,
and has been circulating around the country under the sponsorship of the
American Library Association. It depicts several themes including the Civil War
as a constitutional crisis, secession, slavery, civil liberties, and Lincoln's
legacy. Discussing the critical issues of the day, the exhibit highlights the
ideals born from this conflict and how Lincoln sought to transmit these to
future generations.
Admission
to Pemberton Headquarters and the exhibit is free. Admission to the
Vicksburg National Military Park is $8.00 per personal vehicle, and all
applicable Vicksburg and National Park Service annual passes are accepted. The
park is open from 8:00 am to 5:00 pm daily and information regarding entrance
fees or programs can be found on the park's website at www.nps.gov/vick or calling
601-636-0583.