Hinman vs McElroy
There seems to be an impression that Wilbur Hinman’s “Si Klegg” is the genuine article, and that the McElroy books are derivative works. I have found that this impression is a false one. I recently acquired a 1910 Copy of McElroy’s Si Klegg: His Transformation from a Raw Recruit to a Veteran. In the Preface, the book states that:
Parenthetical elements are my comments. Anybody know of any legal action between McElroy and Hinman?
My book is annotated as Book Number 1. There are seven numbered volumes. Numbers two through seven were serialized in the National Tribune starting in 1897, and running for seven years. All were reprinted in 1910, evidently. Here are the titles in order:
Si Klegg His Transformation From A Raw Recruit To A Veteran (Book 1)
Si Klegg: Thru the Stone River Campaign and In Winter Quarters at Murfreesboro (Book 2)
Si & Shorty Meet Mr. Rosenbaum, the Spy, Who Relates His Adventures (Book 3)
Si Klegg. Experiences of Si and Shorty on the Great Tullahoma Campaign (Book 4)
Si Klegg The Deacon's Adventures at Chatta-Nooga in Caring for the Boys (Book 5)
Si and Shorty, with their Boy Recruits, Enter on the Atlanta Campaign (Book 6)
Si Shorty and the Boys are Captured at Kenesaw and taken to Andersonville (Book 7)
There is one more called “Further Mishaps to Si Klegg & Shorty. The Second Year of Their Service”. I’m not sure where this one goes in the series. Si and Shorty enlist shortly before Perryville in Book 1, so their second year would start about the time of the Battle of Chickamauga. That would be between books 4 and 5. I have it ordered, so I can soon let y’all know.
Scott Fugate
WIG
There seems to be an impression that Wilbur Hinman’s “Si Klegg” is the genuine article, and that the McElroy books are derivative works. I have found that this impression is a false one. I recently acquired a 1910 Copy of McElroy’s Si Klegg: His Transformation from a Raw Recruit to a Veteran. In the Preface, the book states that:
“Si Klegg, of the 200th Ind., and Shorty, his Partner”, were born more than 25 years ago (ed - i.e. 1885) in the brain of John McElroy, editor of THE NATIONAL TRIBUNE, who invented the names and characters, outlined the general plan, and wrote a number of the chapters. Subsequently, the editor, having many more important things pressing upon his attention, called in an assistant (ed – presumably one Wilbur Hinman) to help on this work, and this assistant, under direction and guidance of the editor, wrote some of these chapters. Subsequently, without the editor’s knowledge or consent, the assistant adopted all the material as his own, and expanded it into a book which had a limited sale and then passed into the usual oblivion of short-lived subscription books.
Parenthetical elements are my comments. Anybody know of any legal action between McElroy and Hinman?
My book is annotated as Book Number 1. There are seven numbered volumes. Numbers two through seven were serialized in the National Tribune starting in 1897, and running for seven years. All were reprinted in 1910, evidently. Here are the titles in order:
Si Klegg His Transformation From A Raw Recruit To A Veteran (Book 1)
Si Klegg: Thru the Stone River Campaign and In Winter Quarters at Murfreesboro (Book 2)
Si & Shorty Meet Mr. Rosenbaum, the Spy, Who Relates His Adventures (Book 3)
Si Klegg. Experiences of Si and Shorty on the Great Tullahoma Campaign (Book 4)
Si Klegg The Deacon's Adventures at Chatta-Nooga in Caring for the Boys (Book 5)
Si and Shorty, with their Boy Recruits, Enter on the Atlanta Campaign (Book 6)
Si Shorty and the Boys are Captured at Kenesaw and taken to Andersonville (Book 7)
There is one more called “Further Mishaps to Si Klegg & Shorty. The Second Year of Their Service”. I’m not sure where this one goes in the series. Si and Shorty enlist shortly before Perryville in Book 1, so their second year would start about the time of the Battle of Chickamauga. That would be between books 4 and 5. I have it ordered, so I can soon let y’all know.
Scott Fugate
WIG
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