Hi Celesta, Plang, Mike, Stan and J.D.,
Joe Johnston was the cautious (possibly overly cautious) Confederate Commander who drove Sherman crazy by refusing to fight him but forcing Old Cump to come after himself. As a result Sherman made bloody errors like the frontal assault at Kennesaw Mountain (what a great name for a baseball czar!). But Johnston moved too slowly for Jefferson Davis (who disliked the man - they got on each other's nerves). So when Johnston reached the outskirts of Atlanta, Davis replaced him with John Bell Hood. Johnston would resume command when Hood lost Atlanta, and was defeated in Tennessee.
He resumed driving Sherman crazy in the Carolinas, and Sherman got to respect Johnston's abilities. Johnston recipricated. Sherman tried to get a gentler peace arrangement for Johnston and his men to surrender under (similar to the one Grant gave Lee on April 9, 1865 at Appomatox). But this was after Lincoln's assassination, so Secretary of War Stanton forced a harsher set of peace terms on Johnston. But the Sherman - Johnston friendship actually survived the peace term embroglio. When Sherman died in January 1891, Johnston was a pall bearer. He stood hatless in the rain as a mark of respect, telling a friend that Sherman would have done the same for him. Two weeks or so later Johnston died of pneumonia.
The Sultana disaster has been the subject of at least three books since the 1950s (two in the 1990s). It has never been forgotten (the survivors formed a memorial group). But the victims were mostly soldiers returning home, or some local southerners going to St. Louis. It's not like the cream of society on the Titanic, or various prominent theatrical and literary people on the Lusitania. Ironically enough, if the wreckage of the Titanic and Lusitania are still available for underwater study, Sultana is not like that. The channels of the Mississippi River constantly change, and what was once water becomes mud, then rich land. The wreckage of the Sultana was located about half a century ago on a farmer's bean field (or something like that) underground.
[Imagine planting corn and finding a smokestack! ]
J.D., before blaming either of the Mayor Dailys (or is it Mayor Dailies) or John Charles Daily for that matter (remember him?), let's just leave the fault in the hands of science, or nature, or the Deity. New York City is also on a fault, which I believe is called "the Raritan Fault." In any case, the fault, dear J.D.,
is not in the stars but in ourselves.
Plang, there is a possibility that New York City can be victimized by sea as well. We are overdue for a return hurricaine (the last violent one to hit the area is the 1938 one that touched New York City, but battered Long Island and New England - in particular Rhode Island). There is a chance for a future major tsunami started by a possible land slide in (I believe) the Canary Islands, where one island has a chance of partly slipping a large chunk of ground into the sea (causing a major "ripple" affect). Finally, if global warming continues - well the sea level may not affect me in Flushing, but the Rockaways, Coney Island, and Fire Island may become things of the past.
Best wishes,
Jeff
Joe Johnston was the cautious (possibly overly cautious) Confederate Commander who drove Sherman crazy by refusing to fight him but forcing Old Cump to come after himself. As a result Sherman made bloody errors like the frontal assault at Kennesaw Mountain (what a great name for a baseball czar!). But Johnston moved too slowly for Jefferson Davis (who disliked the man - they got on each other's nerves). So when Johnston reached the outskirts of Atlanta, Davis replaced him with John Bell Hood. Johnston would resume command when Hood lost Atlanta, and was defeated in Tennessee.
He resumed driving Sherman crazy in the Carolinas, and Sherman got to respect Johnston's abilities. Johnston recipricated. Sherman tried to get a gentler peace arrangement for Johnston and his men to surrender under (similar to the one Grant gave Lee on April 9, 1865 at Appomatox). But this was after Lincoln's assassination, so Secretary of War Stanton forced a harsher set of peace terms on Johnston. But the Sherman - Johnston friendship actually survived the peace term embroglio. When Sherman died in January 1891, Johnston was a pall bearer. He stood hatless in the rain as a mark of respect, telling a friend that Sherman would have done the same for him. Two weeks or so later Johnston died of pneumonia.
The Sultana disaster has been the subject of at least three books since the 1950s (two in the 1990s). It has never been forgotten (the survivors formed a memorial group). But the victims were mostly soldiers returning home, or some local southerners going to St. Louis. It's not like the cream of society on the Titanic, or various prominent theatrical and literary people on the Lusitania. Ironically enough, if the wreckage of the Titanic and Lusitania are still available for underwater study, Sultana is not like that. The channels of the Mississippi River constantly change, and what was once water becomes mud, then rich land. The wreckage of the Sultana was located about half a century ago on a farmer's bean field (or something like that) underground.
[Imagine planting corn and finding a smokestack! ]
J.D., before blaming either of the Mayor Dailys (or is it Mayor Dailies) or John Charles Daily for that matter (remember him?), let's just leave the fault in the hands of science, or nature, or the Deity. New York City is also on a fault, which I believe is called "the Raritan Fault." In any case, the fault, dear J.D.,
is not in the stars but in ourselves.
Plang, there is a possibility that New York City can be victimized by sea as well. We are overdue for a return hurricaine (the last violent one to hit the area is the 1938 one that touched New York City, but battered Long Island and New England - in particular Rhode Island). There is a chance for a future major tsunami started by a possible land slide in (I believe) the Canary Islands, where one island has a chance of partly slipping a large chunk of ground into the sea (causing a major "ripple" affect). Finally, if global warming continues - well the sea level may not affect me in Flushing, but the Rockaways, Coney Island, and Fire Island may become things of the past.
Best wishes,
Jeff
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