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 Surrender of Secession - Westville, GA 1865

                        Oct 24-28, 2012

Event website (click here): Surrender of Secession

FaceBook Group: http://www.facebook.com/Herb.Coats.Number1#!/groups/158448534216254/ 

Late 1865, brings word of Lee and Johnstons surrender and the end to the war. Shattered veteran begin to return from the war and try to rebuild their lives and fortunes. Federal forces fsall upon the town and place it under martial law. The economy is shattered and the currency wortheless. Despite this, the war an dthe killing is over and people can begin to rebuild. Following the Federal forces are carpetbaggers and other vile Yankees. Despite many being opportunists, they do bring much needed greenbacks and jobs that will revive the economy of Westville. Men are pressured into signing Oaths so they can gain employment and feed their families. The cotton trade continues to boom as new brokers pay in Yankee Greenbacks. The Freedmans Bureau moves in and helps ease blacks from slave labor to contract labor. Many find that emancipation does not mean equality. Will you be part of these dramatic events and immerse yoruself in a small Southern town in 1865? You can by attending the "Surrender of Secession - Westville, GA - 1865" on October 24-28th, 2012. 

SCAR is again hosting this exciting third part of the Westville trilogy. You won't want to miss this event. Open to Federal and civilian impressions if you meet the minimum guidelines. For invitation please contact Jim Butler for Mens role and Linda Nyland for womens roles.  A Yahoo group has also been created for REGISTERED participants only for detailed discussion in the event.

Last Updated (Wednesday, 05 October 2011 22:00)

 
Perryville_StarkweatherPerryville_CoA

24th Illinois Campaigner Battalion

             at 150th Perryville

              Oct 4-7, 2012

Battalion Website: http://24thillinoisperryville150th.webs.com/

FaceBook Group: http://www.facebook.com/Herb.Coats.Number1#!/groups/166287790091917/

Several like minded campaigner organizations have come together to field a battalion in an authentic manner at the Sesquicentennial of the Battle of Perryville reenactment. This recreation of the definitive battle of the 1862 Kentucky Campaign will be held on the original battlefield in the rolling hills of central Kentucky.

The Hairy Nation Boys, SCAR, 48th New York, Independent Rifles, Armory Guards, and Friends invite other like minded Living Historians to fall in with the "1st Hecker Regiment" recreated for this anniversary event.

We will proudly be portraying the men of the 24th Illinois Volunteer Infantry at the reenactment.  We will  also take part in the preservation march/ tactical on Friday Oct 5th. We need as many men as possible to be on site by Thurs at 7pm for this march/tactical. If you can not make it there by Thursday, please contact your company commander for Friday camp directions. A staff member will be present to assist with this. Registration funds cover registration, rations, and the balance goes to the Friends of Perryville as a donation. You must abide by all posted event rules. You agree to abide by all the Safety, Event and Uniform guidelines posted. Plan to stay the entire event unless there is an actual emergency.  DO NOT register thru the event website.

 The organization of this effort is as follows:

Battalion Organization 

Co. A: Capt. Geo. A. Guenther - SCAR - Sean Cooper
Co. B: 1st Lt. Andrew Jacobi - 48th NY - Joe Blunt

Co. C: 1st Lt. Wm. Blanke - Armory Guards & Friends - Jordan Roberts
Co. D: Capt. Leopold Decker - Trans-Miss - Michael Comer
Co. E: 1st Lt. Arthur Erbe (of Co. H) - Eastern Co. - Pete Berezuk
Co. F: 2nd Lt. Hugo Gerhardt - Hairy Nation Boys - John Wickett
Co. G: 1st Lt. Peter Hand - Independent Rifles- Pat Landrum
Co H: Cpt. Frederick Hartman - open

Staff

Regiment commanded by Sr. Capt. August Mauf (of Co. E) - Jim Butler
Adjutant - 2nd Lt. Julius Pann - Herb Coats
Sgt Major - William Vocke - Johnny Lloyd
QM Sgt - John F. Goss - Joe Caridi

Regimental Sutler - Joe Smotherman

General Information and Goals

What to expect

- Participate in a campaigner friendly reenactment over the weekend on the original battlefield

- Regimental Duties including company and battalion drill, fatigue details, 'on the campaign' camp structure, functioning battalion commissary, etc.

- Participate with the voluntary preservation and rolling tactical starting at dawn on friday morning. Make a note and plan ahead as this event requests everyone to be there by Thursday night at 7 pm to take part in the Friday morning march and tactical. At 9 pm on Thurs night we march off to our Thurs night camp. By Friday afternoon we will arrive at our weekend camp. If you can't make the preservation march (Thurs night arrival), then that is fine. Just please notify your company commander if you cannot participate in the early march/tactical.

- Help raise awareness for the Perryville Battlefield Park.  Main event website (DO NOT REGISTER HERE): http://www.perryvillebattlefield.org/html/commemoration_2012.html

Contact Jim Butler, Sean Cooper of Herb Coats for info.

Last Updated (Tuesday, 16 August 2011 23:10)

 
Shiloh_Riverboat

        150th Shiloh - The Grand Adventure
15th Iowa Campaign Regiment adjunct - SCAR Co. E

                              March 30-April 1st, 2012

Matt Woodburn is hosting this effort to provide us a unique experience. From 'steaming' down the river to Pittsburg Landing to landing along its muddy shores. We will march thru the original battlefield as much as possible and into the main event site. After fighting we will find refuge in an abandon camp. Rations will also be issued.  SCAR will part of Co mapnay E and we have some surprises for those men that have signed up with us. Registration is full right now. You can be added to a waiting list by contacting Jim Butler at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it   If you do not get a slt on the boat, then you may meet as the landing on Saturday morning and march into the site with us.

Event website: http://www.westernindependentgrays.org/shiloh150/index2.htm

From Matt Woodburn:
During the crisis of war in 1862, soldiers were tightly crammed aboard transport ships to rush as many men as possible to the front. Modern maritime law doesn’t think so highly of that method and we have to follow modern law. That being said we will likely have to transport one wing at a time to ferry the entire regiment to “our” Pittsburg Landing. You have a great logistical team in place to see that all of this happens for you, so you need not worry. We intend to embark from Savannah via a gang plank laid on the dirt bank as you might have seen in period wood cuts. We want to avoid modern marinas that would detract from our experience. And while modern maritime law has requirements of today’s paddle wheelers, our ship has given us permission to cover or hide as many of those modern intrusions as feasible. It will not be perfect, but being dimly lit with candles and intrusions covered with patriotic bunting, etc., we will have as close an experience as we can have in 2012. Look at your friend’s faces as it may be the last day you see them alive. Look at your plate of food as it may be your last meal. Look at the passing bank and the stars in the sky as they are the same ones that the original boys saw in 1862. The sound of the paddle wheel and the lapping waves against the bank will be the same too. If you do these things, you’ll make your visit back.

The Minnehaha reached Pittsburg Landing at 4:00am as recorded by 1st Sgt. W. P. L. Muir. Another source says it was 4:30am. As such we will operate through the night as they did, but with two trips our times will be a little off. On April 6th, 1862 at “7 o’clock we ate breakfast on board the Minnehaha…” At “10 o’clock we are ordered ashore, with knapsacks, overcoats, 2 blankets, an extra suit of clothes, haversacks filled with hard tack and a big high hat with a brass eagle on the side.” Ammunition was distributed after they disembarked and for the first time they loaded their rifles. The regiment was ordered by General Grant to hold the road going to the landing as wounded and panicked men made their way to the landing in an effort to board a boat. The 15th held the road for about an hour during which time they also “were engaged in making coffee,” according to Cpl. W.H. Goodrell. When the battle really started going badly for the Federals ahead, one of General Grant’s staff members passed the order for the 15th Iowa and the nearby 16th Iowa to move up to support General Prentiss. One of Grant’s staff officers took the 15th into the fight according to the 15th Iowa’s Asst. Surgeon, Dr. W.H. Gibbon. This same Dr. Gibbon bravely set up his field hospital that day only 250 yards behind the Federal battle line. The 15th Iowa lead the two regiments toward the fighting two miles away. During this march it was noted by Cyrus Boyd that the 15th Iowa’s Lt. Col. Dewey swears a lot and drinks whiskey from a pint bottle on his horse. Upon reaching a field where the Confederates were concealed in woods and behind tents, the enemy opens fire on the 15th and their battle baptism begins. Col. Reid gives an order that initially faces the regiment away from the enemy, but then faces them properly to begin firing. In Col. Reid’s official report of the battle he says they fired by file as the men had not yet learned proper firing commands. And so for the 15th Iowa began the great battle which was later to be called the Battle of Pittsburg Landing by the Federals or the Battle of Shiloh by the Confederates. It was the largest battle to be fought on American soil at that time.

As you read the experiences of the original 15th Iowa, know we will to the best of our ability execute all of the same. You will be fed breakfast aboard our paddle wheeler, you will initially hold a road to the landing, you will boil coffee during this time and be issued ammunition, you will be lead to the first days battle by some of “Grant’s staff,” we’ll see that our Lt. Col. Dewey spouts off a few foul words between swigs of whiskey, etc., etc. And if we time it right, we’ll arrive at the event site just in time to go into the first day’s battle. We intend to have a fully mounted staff, a horse drawn wagon or two for our regiment, couriers, fifers and drummers, a color guard of all Iowans, surgeons, a sutler, and oh yeah, a paddle wheeler! And if all that gets boring, as I’ve said before, we’ll throw a chair through a window and see what that scares up.

 

Picketts_Mill_Earthworks-sm

     Picketts Mill Outpost - Federal

              Jan 27-29, 2012

The AG is hosting a picket post event January 27-29 of 2012 at Pickett's Mill. They plan is to have no more than 50 men per command on each side, 100 total. James has a spot for us on the back part of the PM property. It is a 24 hour picket post. Scenario is the Dalton area January 1864. No mega battle, no flanker maneuvers, no setting the woods on fire, no hos, no Den of Sin, etc. Just a picket post along one of the smaller creeks in the park. An impression hasn't been chosen yet, but it is super flexible. Think western federal (sack coat and hardee hat, and a great coat!!!!) 
Sean Cooper has been asked to be the federal commander for the event. SCAR has voted to support this effort. Basically this will run as a 24 hour picket post and we will treat it as such. We will be splitting the company into 3 reliefs and will try and do 2 hours on and 4 off. More information will be coming down the line. I look forward to seeing you in the field.  Contact Sean Cooper to sign up at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 
The member units of the SCAR are able to sign up for webhosting now.  We are asking for submissions by 1 November, 2009, for any unit requesting this service.  Right now the Salt River Rifles, Mossy Creek Mess, 21st Ohio, and possibply the 48th NY, Co. D are on board.  Units will recieve a customized website and the ability to manage content from any computer.  No HTML or CSS experience required.  You will simply post your news and photograhs, and the site will do much of the work.  The sites will also feature a custom URL and email addresses.  Visitors to the site will be able to subscribe to your news feeds and content will be ever changing.  You will get out what you put in.  Again, deadline is 1 November, 2009.  Contact Brian McGarrahan or Jim Butler for more information.

Last Updated (Saturday, 19 September 2009 22:54)