The Bermuda Diaries

Very pleased to make this new website public!

What began some eight years ago for me as a passing interest in a Bermuda-related photograph (of NC blockade runner/pilot Thomas Mann Thompson) has since resulted in two magazine articles, and continuing on with the identification and documentation of nearly seventy-five images taken by photographer Samuel W. Gault during his time in Bermuda from 1861 to 1865.

With a desire to share that research, I have compiled an online database for any others who may be interested in photographer Gault, Bermuda photography, American Civil War, Royal military or just general 19th century Bermuda history, etc. to be able to research. Here is the link:

Bermuda Through the Lens of Samuel Walter Gault, 1861-1865

The site was created through a software called Omeka, which is a web-publishing platform used internationally for the display of library, museum, archives, and scholarly collections. (It’s the same one we use for the North Carolina, State Troops and Volunteers project.)

The site not only allows interaction and the ability to share images and stories, but also is user-friendly for research purposes, whether you are a scholar or hobbyist. A full word/phrase search engine is included, and images can also be browsed by a topical tag. Additionally, you can directly submit your own images and stories for inclusion. There are currently over 45 images, from private collections as well as Universities, Museums, and Historical Societies, that have been kind enough to grant permission. And I am optimistic that many more will be added in the coming months as I gain additional permissions.

So please, enjoy, share, bookmark, and visit again soon! I am rather partial to the result here, but I encourage you to take a look and find out for yourself. Likewise, please let me know what you think, or any recommendations you may have for improvements!

Hope Springs Eternal

Bethlehem Christian Church

I was honored to be invited to the pulpit at Bethlehem Christian Church in Suffolk on Sunday, May 4, to speak during the 11 AM service.

For those who missed it, the service was live streamed and available for playback on both Facebook and Youtube.

The link to the church’s Facebook page is https://www.facebook.com/BCCSuffolkVA. The live video will appear at the top of the timeline. Prior live streams will be visible in the timeline, and will also be available on the Videos tab.

The link to the church’s Youtube channel is https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5YGD7JdgLUG8DAA8Vh7U5A, or you can enter “BCCSuffolk” in the Youtube search feature. The live video will appear on the channel’s Home tab.

News from the Tar Heel Faces Photograph Project

Private John Dolphin Harris,
Company A, 50th North Carolina Troops

Some updates! A little over a year ago, I announced that we were transitioning and reviewing/revising much of the content from our Facebook page State Troops and Volunteers to a more permanent location. I am happy to report the progress at our website:

Tar Heel Faces

This site was created through Omeka, which is a web-publishing platform used for the display of library, museum, archives, and scholarly collections.

The site not only allows us to share images and stories, but also is much more user-friendly for research purposes. A full word/phrase search engine is included, and images can also be browsed by a topical tag. For example, if you want to find soldier images from a particular County or Regiment, we now have that capability. Additionally, you can directly submit your own images and stories for inclusion.

I could go on and on about all of the bells & whistles of the site, but I encourage you to take a look and find out for yourself! Likewise, let me know what you think, or any recommendations you may have for improvements.

The 250th Anniversary of South Quay Baptist Church

Memorial table and portrait of South Quay’s longest-serving minister, Rev. James E. Jones.

I had the distinct privilege of speaking at the homecoming celebration held on Sunday, March 16, recognizing South Quay Baptist Church for its 250th anniversary. It was a packed-house, with standing room only and just a wonderful day of sharing history, fellowship, and worship!

The pictures below are courtesy of South Quay’s Facebook page.

Additionally, the following resolution was passed by the Senate of Virginia as SR219 commending South Quay on this great honour and outlining the Church’s history:

SENATE RESOLUTION NO. 219

Offered January 23, 2025

Commending South Quay Baptist Church.

—————

Patron—Jordan

—————

WHEREAS, South Quay Baptist Church of Suffolk, one of the oldest Baptist congregations in the Commonwealth, will celebrate its 250th anniversary on March 1, 2025; and

WHEREAS, South Quay Baptist Church was a mission church of Mill Swamp Baptist Church and located originally along the Blackwater River on the border of Southampton and Nansemond Counties; the church was organized with a bi-racial congregation of 42 members on March 1, 1775, under the leadership of the Reverend David Barrow, a noted anti-slavery and liberty advocate; and

WHEREAS, South Quay Baptist Church moved to its current location in then-Nansemond County in 1835, becoming commonly known as “Reedy Branch Church” due to its location along Reedy Branch in the South Quay community; and

WHEREAS, during the Civil War, by order of Governor William Smith, South Quay Baptist Church served as the temporary courthouse for Nansemond County during its military occupation between 1864 and 1865; and

WHEREAS, the Reverend Putnam Owens of South Quay Baptist Church ordained former slaves Israel Cross and Joseph Gregory, both members of the church, who went on to establish Cool Spring Baptist Church, now First Baptist Church of Franklin, in 1866 and Mount Sinai Baptist Church located in Nansemond County in 1868; and

WHEREAS, South Quay Baptist Church, in the wake of Reconstruction, erected a new building in 1889 after the church was destroyed by a fire, and said building comprises today’s present church building; and

WHEREAS, over the course of time, South Quay Baptist Church has greatly expanded in membership and completed a parsonage, fellowship hall, and Sunday school classrooms to better serve the growing community; and

WHEREAS, South Quay Baptist Church has provided the community uplifting spiritual guidance, proclaiming the word of the Lord and encouraging deep, personal relationships with Jesus Christ, and these efforts have been complemented by joyful occasions for worship, fellowship, and abundant opportunities for charity and outreach, making the church an integral and cherished part of the City of Suffolk and Southampton County; now, therefore, be it

RESOLVED by the Senate of Virginia, That South Quay Baptist Church hereby be commended on the occasion of its 250th anniversary; and, be it

RESOLVED FURTHER, That the Clerk of the Senate prepare a copy of this resolution for presentation to South Quay Baptist Church as an expression of the Senate of Virginia’s high regard for the church’s history, heritage, and contributions to the Commonwealth.

Juneteenth 2024

Typically on a day like today the history nerd in me tries to attend a lecture or do something to commemorate the event. Unfortunately, I was unable to participate in any of the local Juneteenth activities due to some other obligations, but that did not keep me idle.

This afternoon, I decided to take a walk and reflect on the occasion. I walk a lot around downtown. My normal stroll from the office takes me across the railroad tracks following Main Street to Suffolk’s historic Cedar Hill Cemetery. I find a lot of inspiration there. Today, I intentionally took a different route… and headed along Market Street to Oak Lawn Cemetery.

For those not familiar, Oak Lawn is located across the street from City Hall – adjacent to the City Registrar and Social Services building. Though there was a cemetery there prior, this was established officially as “Oak Lawn Cemetery” in 1885 and thereafter became the final resting place of a literal “Who’s Who” of Suffolk African-American leaders and their families. But I digress…

So why did I go there? Well I’m not quite sure one can begin to talk about history without going to the source of it all and for me that has always been through visits to cemeteries. To this very point, I recalled from a prior visit some years back that there were a number of veterans buried at Oak Lawn. Specifically, Union veterans, which made me ask who are they and what is their story? I really wasn’t sure what I would find, and quite candidly, did not really think I would make a Juneteenth connection, as this celebration really started off as a Texas holiday (I should mention that here on the east coast, most freed slaves recognized January 1st as “Emancipation Day” and held celebrations & parades of this well into the early 1900s).

Today though, I can now tell a Suffolk-centric Juneteenth story, of course only after a little sleuthing later this evening, chasing some rabbit holes (literally) at the cemetery, and some good old fashioned fate on my side.

Allow me to introduce you to Redmond Parker.

Redmond Parker was a native of Hertford County, North Carolina, and by occupation a farmer when he enlisted on December 12, 1863 at Camp Hamilton/Fort Monroe in Company E of the 1st Regiment United States Colored Cavalry. One website focusing on this regiment’s history (1stuscoloredcavalary.wordpress.com) described the early organization as including “free men, freedom seekers and white officers from the United States and abroad.” In researching Parker’s compiled service records from the National Archives, the Company muster book described him as being twenty years old and 5’8” tall, with black eyes, hair, and complexion.

Parker was briefly promoted to Sergeant of his Company, but then reduced to ranks as a Private by February 1864 for unknown reasons. His service with the regiment continued on though without interruption, the regiment serving on the peninsula until May of 1864. They then participated in the battles comprising the Bermuda Hundred Campaign and the Siege of Petersburg up to August of 1864. Following this, Parker’s Company E was detached to serve at Fort Powhatan and Harrison’s Landing from August 1864 to May 1865. After the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia and Tennessee occurred, the regiment was ordered to Texas.

And that is where we make our Juneteenth connection. The regiment left Virginia on June 10, 1865 from City Point (Hopewell), and by the time they reached Texas soil – of course sometime shortly after June 19 – U.S. Army Major General Gordon Granger had issued his General Order No. 3, announcing the freedom of all slaves in Texas.

As for Redmond Parker, while initially I was unsure of his actual status, I located a Freedman’s Bureau record confirming that he was a slave in 1863, and preliminary research suggests he was on the Hertford County plantation of Oris Parker. Thus, it is presumed he either escaped or was freed by passing Union troops, enabling him to go Fort Monroe and join the Union army. But regardless of status, he and his comrades arrived to a newly freed Texas in the summer of 1865. That irony of their situation and freedom some time before was probably not lost on them. The 1st Regiment Colored Cavalry spent their time here occupied in patrols along the Rio Grande. On February 4, 1866, the regiment and Redmond Parker were mustered out at Brazo Santiago following twenty six months of service.

After the War, Parker came to Virginia and settled in Princess Anne County (now Virginia Beach), taking a position as a laborer for a wage of $10.00 a month. In the early 1870s, he married Vinnie Jenkins and began a family, settling in the Holy Neck community of Nansemond County. It was here that he and his wife raised six children. Parker later took a civil service job at the Norfolk Navy Yard, initially as a general laborer and worked his way up through the trades as a mason and a teamster. He continued in this employment for several decades to come.

At the age of 74, Redmond Parker passed away from a stroke on December 29, 1918. An obituary in the Norfolk Ledger-Star noted that he was “one of Suffolk’s oldest and most respected colored citizens… he was a member of the local camp of old veterans, having served in the Civil War.” His funeral was conducted at the First Baptist Church, Mahan Street, followed by burial at Oak Lawn.

And so on this June 19th, not only do you know a real Juneteenth story, you know one with a connection to Suffolk.

#Juneteenth

#fredonhistory

The Battle of Hampton Roads

Here’s to some Friday evening local #fredonhistory in honor of the 162nd anniversary of the battle of Hampton Roads, March 8-9, 1862.

From my collection of images is this cabinet card of Confederate States Navy Commander William Augustin Webb.

Born in 1824 in Virginia, William A. Webb hailed from a strong maritime family – his father Thomas Tarleton Webb serving several decades in the U.S. Navy and reached the distinguished rank of Captain. Following in his father’s footsteps, the younger Webb entered the Navy at an early age, and also quickly demonstrated his capabilities. By 1854 he had been promoted to Lieutenant.

Upon the outbreak of the War Between the States, Webb resigned and offered his services to Virginia and ultimately the Confederacy. He was commissioned a 1st Lieutenant and initially assigned to duty in Florida, but returned to Virginia for service with the James River Squadron by the spring of 1862. Here, Webb was placed in command of the Teaser, a converted eighty-foot tugboat armed with only two guns – 32 lb and 12 lb cannon.

It was in this service in March of 1862, the Teaser (and Webb) would distinguish itself in its supporting role alongside the CSS Virginia (Merrimack) as it clashed with unprepared wooden gunboats and ultimately the U.S.S Monitor. In the after-action report of Captain Franklin Buchanan, he noted that the Squadron and “W. A. Webb, of the Teaser, deserves great praise for their gallant conduct throughout the engagement. Their judgment in selecting their positions for attacking the enemy was good; their constant fire was destructive, and contributed much to the success of the day. The general order under which the squadron went into action required that, in the absence of all signals, each commanding officer was to exercise his own judgment and discretion in doing all the damage he could to the enemy, and to sink before surrendering.”

After the battle, Webb went on to serve in a variety of roles with the CS Navy and was promoted to Commander by 1863. There is much more I can add about his time from this point until War’s end, but I will save that story for another day!

More importantly, if you want to learn more about the Battle of Hampton Roads, I invite you out to The Mariners’ Museum and Park this weekend as they commemorate this historic event with opportunities to view artifacts, as well as enjoy a number of lectures and programs for all ages.

Update on the Roanoke Minute Men Project and a Happy New Year!

First, I would like to wish you all a blessed and prosperous new year as we go into 2016!

Now, for an update that many have been asking for …

When I began the Roanoke Minute Men Project in the spring of 2015, I underestimated the response it would create.  For years, I had “tinkered” with writing a history of Company A or the 14th North Carolina Troops, but had never felt like I could add to the histories already out there in the public (such as, The Anson Guard).   But slowly that changed, as I collected more and more accounts that had previously gone unpublished, or those that took up a mere footnote in some other history text.  That gave me the courage to start my journey, and so I began simply with my rough file of notes, a list of soldiers names, and this website to chart my course publicly.

Since that time, I have managed (part-time) to put together a detailed roster of the Company, to include individual service records, which encompasses on its own eighty-five plus pages of text.  This does not include the background and family history data that I ultimately intend to add.

Additionally, I have now collected and transcribed over a dozen period letters and accounts, ranging from the early days of the Company’s formation through 1864 (still looking for an 1865 letter!)   While a dozen letters may not seem like a lot, I started my journey with only three letters, a diary, and several post-War accounts.  Today, I wrap up the year having gone through and transcribed all of those, and have on hand as I type this FIFTEEN (yes, 15!) more letters sitting on my desk to transcribe.   To say I am excited about the stories these letters tell is an understatement, and this progress has helped to encourage my efforts into the new year.

I have also been blessed to correspond with and meet numerous Roanoke Minute Men descendants and family historians who have shared their own research with me, and have had the opportunity to do research at some of the South’s foremost academic institutions and historical archives.  I can not say enough good things about the staffs at the Rubenstein Library at Duke UniversityWilson Library at UNCState Archives of North Carolina, North Carolina Museum of History, Virginia Historical Society, and countless smaller libraries, local historical societies and courthouses that I have had the pleasure to work with over the past year.

From here, I still have a long way to go before I reach the finished product, but in the meantime please do not forget I am always looking for more letters, diaries, family histories, and images of the soldiers themselves to add to this history and honor the story of those brave veterans of the Roanoke Minute Men.

As always, I thank you all for the assistance, input, and kind words you have provided along the way, and I look forward to “charging on” into the new year!

Regards,

Fred

roanokeminutemen at gmail dot com

 

HistoryMobile Rolling into Historic Downtown Suffolk

Press Release from the City of Suffolk Division of Tourism

VIRGINIA’S CIVIL WAR 150 HISTORY MOBILE
ROLLING INTO HISTORIC DOWNTOWN SUFFOLK

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SUFFOLK, VA (March 3, 2015) History is on the move in Virginia as the Civil War 150 HistoryMobile rolls into Suffolk for a two day visit on Friday, March 13th, and Saturday, March 14th, from 10:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. both days. The exhibit, an initiative of the Virginia Sesquicentennial of the American Civil War Commission, will be located at the Suffolk Visitor Center, 524 North Main Street. Admission to the HistoryMobile is free and open to the public. These “history days” are presented by the Suffolk Division of Tourism partnering with the Suffolk Public Library, Riddick’s Folly House Museum and the Hilton Garden Inn Suffolk Riverfront.

In addition to the HistoryMobile exhibit, the event also includes tours and a living history reenactment at Riddick’s Folly House Museum; guided tours of historic Downtown Suffolk and the Great Dismal Swamp National Wildlife Refuge; and a genealogy workshop and a history presentation. Stop by the Historic Seaboard Station Railroad Museum to browse the large selection of Historical Society publications and learn about the importance and history of railroads in Suffolk while viewing the HO scale railroad model of 1907 Suffolk.

The HistoryMobile uses immersive spaces and interactive exhibits to draw together stories of the Civil War and emancipation from the viewpoints of those who experienced it across Virginia—young and old, enslaved and free, soldier and civilian. Visitors will encounter history in ways they may have never experienced before. The HistoryMobile exhibit is divided into four sections: Battlefront, Homefront, Journey to Freedom, and Loss-Gain-Legacy. From the bewildering sense of chaos experienced by soldiers, to the last letter written by a dying son to his father after sustaining a mortal wound, to a hushed conversation between a husband and wife considering the great risks and rewards of fleeing to freedom, the HistoryMobile presents the stories of real people in Virginia whose lives were shaped by the historic events of the 1860s, and invites visitors to imagine, “What Would You Do?”

The Civil War 150 HistoryMobile crosses the state visiting museums, schools, and special events. Its tour began in July 2011, and since then it has made over 120 stops and attracted visitors from every state and a number of other countries.
In addition to learning more about Virginia’s history, the HistoryMobile also provides visitors with information from Virginia Tourism about the many historic sites and destinations that they can explore today.

Admission to the Virginia Civil War 150 HistoryMobile is free and open to the public. For additional information on event happenings in conjunction with the HistoryMobile visit such as tour reservations, associated costs and times contact the Suffolk Visitor Center at 757-514-4130 or visitsuffolk@suffolkva.us. Space is limited on tours. Advance reservations are required.

Friday, March 13, 2015 Activities

10am-5pm HistoryMobile open to schools and public

10am-4pm Riddick’s Folly House Museum open for hourly tours ($5 per person)

10am Washington Ditch Boardwalk Guided Walk ($5 per person; reservations required)

11am-4pm Suffolk Seaboard Station Railroad Museum open to public for tours (donation)

12pm Great Dismal Swamp’s Underground Railroad Network to Freedom Pavilion Tour ($5 per person; reservations required)

3pm Historic Downtown Narrated Bus Tour ($5 per person, reservations required)

6pm Legends of Main Street: A Suffolk Ghost Walk ($10 per person; reservations required)

Saturday, March 14, 2015 Activities

10am-5pm HistoryMobile open to public

10am-4pm Riddick’s Folly House Museum open for hourly tours ($5 per person)

10am-4pm Period reenactments on the grounds of Riddick’s Folly (free)

10am-1pm Genealogy Workshop with the “Daughters of the American Revolution” at Morgan Memorial Library

10am Washington Ditch Boardwalk Guided Walk ($5 per person; reservations required)

10am-3pm Suffolk Seaboard Station Railroad Museum open to public for tours (donation)

12pm Great Dismal Swamp’s Underground Railroad Network to Freedom Pavilion Tour ($5 per person; reservations required)

2pm-3pm “The Battle of Suffolk: Through Soldier’s Letters,” a presentation by Kermit Hobbs at Morgan Memorial Library

3pm Historic Downtown Narrated Bus Tour ($5 per person, reservations required)

6pm Legends of Main Street: A Suffolk Ghost Walk ($10 per person; reservations required)