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Tennessee Valley Civil War Round Table

Education and Preservation

Month

March 2018

“How An Irregular Navy Shaped the Entire War”, Kent Wright

Privateers, the “militia of the sea,” initiated by Jefferson Davis alone, jolted the entire world to attention and forced Uncle Sam and John Bull to make instant policy decisions which impacted literally every industrialized nation. Davis’s private sea wolves proved that a real war had started. Their unleashing was the first offensive strategy in the war and the real reason Lincoln declared the blockade. They cleared the way for CS Navy Captains Raphael Semmes, John Maffitt, and others to plunder worldwide legally and spared American-born soldiers and sailors from the gallows. Their work essentially done by early 1862, these experienced Confederate seafarers quickly adapted to blockade running which helped to arm the South well enough to continue fighting. By their precedent-setting action, Queen Victoria’s subjects became blockade runners with virtual immunity from prison. Meanwhile, British shipbuilders and sailors happily sailed high-tech cruisers through the loopholes in British law to put a fearsome fleet into Confederate hands. Not bad work for a little irregular navy.

 

Kent Wright is a veteran of the nuclear navy and a mechanical engineering graduate of Iowa State University. He combines his lifetime experiences with his passion for history by focusing on the naval operations on river and sea, in home waters and abroad, during the War for Southern Independence. He has, through years of research, uncovered many startling facts which may change your mind about everything you have ever heard about Civil War naval history and a great deal of military history too. Prepare to be surprised as he shares fascinating discoveries and weaves British history into his topic.

March 8th Round Table Meeting: Debbie Watts, “Captain Ryman”

On Thursday, March 8, it will be a special treat for the TVCWRT. An Award-winning actor/playwright/director Tom Dolan and author/musician/educator Debbie Mathis Watts Debbie Wattsportray Music City’s Legend Captain Tom Ryman and Bettie Baugh Ryman in the multi-media musical stage play “The Ryman Diaries”. The play is being staged at various venues, including the downtown Nashville Public Library. Playwright Debbie Watts and veteran actor Tom Dolan are in their fourth year of production with The Ryman Diaries, a stage play depicting the life and adventures of Captain Tom Ryman, the Cumberland River pilot whose fortune helped him to build Nashville’s Gospel Tabernacle, which was later re-named the Ryman Auditorium.  The couple tell of their adventures during the Civil War; Bettie the hero whose family narrowly escaped the Battle of Franklin, and Tom, who relates of his time in captivity with the Union Army.

Debbie will also be promoting the book version which includes the monologues from the play, as well as Bettie Ryman’s recipes.

To read more about their company, Tennessee Stage and Film, and their other plays and productions, go to: http://wattsd2.wix.com/rymandiaries.  The Ryman Diaries will be performed at the Palace Theatre, Crossville, Tennessee, April 20th and 21st and at the STAAR Theatre in historic Antoinette Hall in Pulaski on August 25th and 26th.

In the fall, The Ryman Diaries will be performed at the Arts Center, Murfreesboro.  Tom and Debbie will debut “From Tennessee, To The White House With Love: Tennessee’s First Ladies,” on April 7th at a free performance at the Metro Library Auditorium, 615 Church St., Nashville, TN.

The play is based on Watts’ book, with additional dialog from Dolan. The actors penned seven original songs for the production. Film clips feature flashbacks of young Bettie and historical stills provided by the Metro Archives. “Both Bettie and Tom had the hearts of musicians, so it was totally fitting that they would play and sing,” said Watts, who worked as a writer-producer at TNN: The Nashville Network. “They were true romantics who laid the musical foundation for Middle Tennessee.”

A veteran educator, professional pianist-vocalist, and author, Watts’ theatrical roles include Mollie in “Mousetrap” and Agnes in “I Do, I Do”. Dolan has received national acclaim starring as Elwood P. Dowd in “Harvey”, Dr. Albert Schweitzer in “Memoirs from Africa”, and Sam Clemens in “Mark Twain Live”.

The Campaigns and Battles of General Nathan Bedford Forrest

We are a most favored Round Table, to have as one of our members a soldier-scholar such as John Scales. In this, his third book, he presents a thorough but concise review of each of Nathan B. Forrest’s battles and campaigns, as well as a careful evaluation of Forrest’s contributions for good or ill to the outcome of the American Civil War

John’s straight narrative format guides us from Forrest’s first documented activities, as a Lieutenant Colonel leading a battalion of cavalry in 1861, though his surrender as a Lieutenant General in 1865. Drawing from his military experience as a general officer, John provides valuable evaluations of General Forrest’s maturing as a leader, tactician, and strategist. These evaluations are based on the careful comparison of original reports, letters, memoirs, as well as other evidence provided by Forrest, his soldiers and fellow commanders, and his foes. These evaluations are also based on years of careful research into the routes traveled by Forrest and his soldiers to every skirmish site and battlefield on which they fought.

The actual “trails” identified this book are John’s unique gifts to civil war historians and enthusiasts; he provides excellent maps but also detailed driving instructions and GPS positions, allowing readers to closely follow the trails taken by Forrest and his soldiers on literally every one of their campaigns during the war. Aided by the magnificent topographical maps of Hal Jespersen, John clearly illustrates and describes every one of Forrest’s battles during the war.

The assessment of Forrest’s strengths and shortcomings that concludes the book is very balanced and well-considered. This man was a magnificent tactical leader, a strategist and first-rate interpreter of military intelligence. Yet even as an experienced senior cavalry commander, his temper and penchant for front-line leadership made him less effective than he might have been, and gave his superiors good reasons for not entrusting him with the highest responsibilities.

This is not a book for someone searching for an N. B. Forrest biography. This is not the book for someone uninterested in criticism as well as praise for Forrest’s military actions. This is the best history and tour guide of Forrest’s military operations yet written. Get a copy and follow the trails!

 

Reviewed by David Lady

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