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Honoring The Courage And Heritage Of A Union Soldier

By The Pritzker Military Museum & Library

“The Pritzker Military Museum & Library will host a free public reception on Wednesday to officially launch its newest original work and to unveil an accompanying exhibit on the life and times of Civil War veteran and Valparaiso, Indiana, native Erasmus Corwin Gilbreath,” the museum says.
Good. Let’s start celebrating the glory, heritage and courage of the Union. Fuck the Confederacy. It’s time the North engaged the PR war.
Here’s more:

The event will begin at 4:30 p.m. on the Museum & Library’s main floor, and will be immediately followed by a formal discussion and recording for television by the book’s editor and others involved in its production, beginning at 6 p.m.
The Museum & Library’s third major publication, Dignity of Duty: The Journals of Erasmus Corwin Gilbreath, 1861-1898, will be released in hardcover and e-book formats and comprises three original documents assembled and edited by Gilbreath’s great-granddaughter, Susan Gilbreath Lane, who discovered the papers in an archive in the late 1970s.
The exhibit includes authentic photographs and artifacts from Gilbreath’s scrapbooks, hand-drawn maps commissioned for the book, additional materials on 19th Century America pulled from the PMML’s collection, and a dynamic online gallery and audio experience.
“Major Gilbreath was a mid-ranking field officer and family man who witnessed much of America’s 19th Century history – and he did it with a rifle and pen in hand,” said Museum & Library President & CEO Kenneth Clarke. “Journals like these are very rare.”
Severely wounded at the Battle of Fredericksburg during the Civil War – a wound that would haunt him for the rest of his life – Gilbreath not only went on to a successful 37-year military career, but also bore witness to the coming of age of America as we know it.
In his later journals, he shares many remarkable experiences, including a hazardous 175-mile journey by stagecoach in the Texas frontier during the Indian Wars; a shipwreck off the Gulf coast; travels in a wagon train pulled by mules with pet names; the second Great Chicago Fire; and the establishment of Fort Custer in the Montana Territory, where his daughter was born in a tent with his cook acting as a midwife.
To provide context for the book and exhibit, Lane will be joined by historian Frederick J. Chiaventone for the 6 p.m. recording of “Pritzker Military Presents” – one of two long-running series produced by the Museum & library for Chicago public television. Advance registration and a separate ticket are required to attend this program.
To learn more about the incredible life of this 19th Century American soldier, the new book and exhibit by the Pritzker Military Museum & Library, or the June 24 premiere event, visit dignityofduty.org or pritzkermilitary.org.

About Erasmus Corwin Gilbreath
Born in Ohio in 1840, Erasmus Corwin Gilbreath spent his formative years in Valparaiso, Indiana, where his parents settled in his youth.
Following the death of his father, Gilbreath studied law and worked to support his family until he was called upon in 1861 to assist in the raising of the 20th Indiana Volunteer Regiment.
Over the course of a 37-year military career, Gilbreath reached the rank of major twice – once as a volunteer and once with the regular Army – chronicling his experiences while serving in nearly every major battle of the Civil War; on various official assignments throughout the Indian Wars with his wife and children by his side; and finally in Puerto Rico during the Spanish-America.

See also:
* Lincoln Assassination Blood-Stained Handkerchief.
* The War Hero’s Battles.
* The Journals Of Erasmus Corwin Gilbreath.

Comments welcome.

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Posted on June 22, 2015