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  • G.A.R. Post to reopen

    Pa. Civil War vets' post reopening after decades
    DAN NEPHIN (Associated Press Writer)
    Published: February 9, 2010

    CARNEGIE, Pa. - For some 30 years Civil War veterans met in a room at the Carnegie Library to share memories of victory and defeat and comrades past. Part social hall and part museum, the Grand Army of the Republic post was home to a collection of swords, rifles and other wartime mementos - and where old soldiers gathered to socialize.

    But some time before the Capt. Thomas Espy Post's last member died in 1937, the room in the town library outside Pittsburgh was locked and all but forgotten. Beset by funding problems, the library did not have the means to deal with the treasures inside, said Carnegie Library executive director Margaret Forbes.

    With water-damaged plaster, rattling windows and peeling paint requiring more immediate attention in the century-old library, the post's belongings - including records, cotton tufts plucked from a Virginia battlefield, bullets, a canteen and a newspaper printed on wallpaper when Ulysses S. Grant entered Vicksburg, Miss. - had to wait.

    But now the post - one of about a half-dozen that remain largely intact - will reopen this month as part of the library's celebration of the 201st anniversary of President Lincoln's birth.

    The renovations come courtesy of Bill Brown, who learned of the room's existence and donated the funds to refurbish the space.

    "It was just a way to give back to the community," said Brown, 64, president and CEO of a company that makes equipment for steel mills. He declined to say how much he donated.

    Brown isn't a Civil War buff although he had ancestors who fought on both sides.

    "I could imagine the old Union soldiers sitting in there reliving their tales of battle and victory and defeat. I just thought it was neat," he said.

    Indeed, the room looks as if a veteran might return at any moment.

    Restoration included installing a dedicated ventilation system, reflective window coatings, and repainting the room its original color, which Forbes describes as "pumpkin chiffon pie" orange.

    The post occupies a roughly 24-by-24-foot room on the second floor of the library, which itself is undergoing a multimillion dollar restoration, along with the attached 425-seat music hall.

    Carnegie, about six miles southwest of Pittsburgh, formed when two municipalities agreed to merge and rename in exchange for industrialist Andrew Carnegie funding the library.

    At one time, nearly 7,000 GAR posts dotted the country. Some were in buildings that no longer exist or were converted to other uses after veterans died.

    The shuttered Espy post became a time capsule of sorts, making it one of a handful that survive as they once were, according to Stuart McConnell, a history professor at Pitzer College in Claremont, Calif., who wrote a book about the Grand Army of the Republic.

    "The post room is special, I think, in just the degree to which it's been preserved. There's a lot of original fixtures in there and original documents," he said.

    The post is also unusual because it was racially integrated, he said. Many posts, particularly in larger cities, formed along racial lines.

    Fortunately for the library, the members catalogued many relics, about 80 percent of which are still on hand, according to director Diane Klinefelter. They include a Bible resting on an oak stand with legs and braces carved in the shape of rifle stocks and bayonets.

    Over the years, some items disappeared.

    A couple years ago, a man returned two swords, a shotgun and a rifle, but didn't say how he got them.

    One of the swords belonged to Lt. Samuel H. Davis, who was killed in Cold Harbor, Va. The sword was shipped to his parents in Pittsburgh, but "being rebel sympathizers (they) refused to pay the express charges of one dollar on the sword of their loyal son who gave his life for his country," according to the post's records.

    Another man bought it from the shipping company, and 20 years later a post member who served with Davis tracked down the sword and bought it for the post.

    Forbes and Klinefelter hope other artifacts make their way back to the post, no questions asked. They may not be worth much money but the items have great historical value.

    "Each one of the artifacts opens up a chapter to just keep the interest - the understanding in what the Civil War was - alive," Forbes said.

    Forbes and Klinefelter hope descendants of the post's roughly 250 members can shed light on who they were.

    "I really do believe this is the beginning ... the room will reveal its stories," Forbes said.

    Espy, the Upper St. Clair man the post is named for, was 50 when he enlisted in the Union army on July 4, 1861. He was mortally wounded at Gaines Mills, Va. a year later, taken prisoner and died in a hospital.

    His jacket was once among the post's belongings but went missing long ago. Klinefelter hopes it finds its way back.


    Online at: http://progress-index.com/news/milit...cades-1.605523
    Sincerely,
    Emmanuel Dabney
    Atlantic Guard Soldiers' Aid Society
    http://www.agsas.org

    "God hasten the day when war shall cease, when slavery shall be blotted from the face of the earth, and when, instead of destruction and desolation, peace, prosperity, liberty, and virtue shall rule the earth!"--John C. Brock, Commissary Sergeant, 43d United States Colored Troops

  • #2
    Re: G.A.R. Post to reopen

    Very interesting ~ thanks for posting this. Good news for everyone in
    the S.U.V.C.W., and for historic preservation as a whole!
    Your most obedient servant and comrade,
    James C. Schumann
    Mess #3
    Old Northwest Volunteers

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: G.A.R. Post to reopen

      Fantastic news for the SUVCW. This is something that rarely happens and to see this epic building restored, it will be great for those brothers who will meet there, to bring back to life the stories, the memories, and the history shared there.
      Micah Trent
      Tar Water Mess/Mess No. 1
      Friends of Perryville Battlefield State Historic Site

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: G.A.R. Post to reopen

        In a word.
        WOW.
        Carnegie isn't that far from us. This may call for a trip come springtime.
        Becky Morgan

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        • #5
          Re: G.A.R. Post to reopen

          Here is a neat panoramic view of the room:



          Regards,
          Kevin French

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: G.A.R. Post to reopen

            My group has contributed greatly to the preservation and spread the word about the G.A.R Post in Carnegie. I can personally vouch that it is well worth the trip to view. We also have the priviledge of serving as the honor guard at the Opening this Friday night.
            [SIZE="4"][B][FONT="Garamond"]Mike Tommarello[/FONT][/B][FONT="Book Antiqua"][/SIZE]
            [I]"Iron City Mess"[/I]
            9th Pennsylvania Reserves
            Co. A[/FONT]

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            • #7
              Re: G.A.R. Post to reopen

              Some few years ago while visiting relatives back home in Indiana, in picturesque Valparaiso, Indiana, I walked downtown in the early morning before anyone was abroad. There, on the old courthouse square, was the town's GAR post. Beautifully maintained, ornate gold leaf signboards set-out meeting times and days for the veterans, the women's auxillary and, as I recall, the SVR. Standing there, it sent a surge of empathetic nostalgia coursing through me. The facade (I have no idea what was inside, alas) was just as it would have been 90 short years ago. Once the youth of the community, then the leaders, then the respected but redundant old gaffers, the men and boys we honour congregated there. Now gone. All gone. God bless 'em; UCV and GAR.
              Last edited by David Fox; 02-11-2010, 06:05 PM.
              David Fox

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              • #8
                Re: G.A.R. Post to reopen

                Outstanding! Looks like the day it was closed.

                Out here in Idaho, in little Payette, ID (bout 90 mins from Boise and home of slugger Harmon Killebrew) the GAR post had 3 members. To open it, the members petitioned the Benecia CA arsenal for a suitable cannon to place in front. They were sent a CS made 6 lb bronze field gun. It turned out to be the only surviving example of its type from the Paxton Foundary in Vicksburg. When the last of the vets died, his widow could not maintain the gun so it was placed in a town park. For years it was played on by kids, stuffed with trash and coke cans and had a hole drilled on the underside of the tube to let water out.

                Several of us discovered this treasure and after getting it appraised ($500K) we got it moved inside the local historical society before folks could figure out what it was worth. Last thing we wanted to see was it heading out of town in the back of a pickup, or it suffering more abuse in the park.

                There it sits today and I think they are trying to raise money for a repro carriage. This is the only item of note left from the GAR post...but its a biggee.
                Soli Deo Gloria
                Doug Cooper

                "The past is never dead. It's not even past." William Faulkner

                Please support the CWT at www.civilwar.org

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: G.A.R. Post to reopen

                  Originally posted by Micah Trent View Post
                  Fantastic news for the SUVCW. This is something that rarely happens and to see this epic building restored, it will be great for those brothers who will meet there, to bring back to life the stories, the memories, and the history shared there.
                  Did you find something indicating SUVCW meetings will be held there? I tried to find contact info for the Dept. of Penn. but apparently they don't have a web presence. I think it would be a great place for them to meet but I didn't see anything indicating they had a hand in this restoration or the ongoing vision of the room's use. Crossing my fingers, though.

                  Doug Cooper, great job getting that cannon out of the hands of would-be thieves. My first encounter with these entrepreneurs came recently and it's heartbreaking to conclude something with such significant history could be just taken and sold as scrap. Kudos to you and yours.
                  Joe Marti

                  ...and yes, I did use the search function...

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