Wednesday, June 6, 2012

148th Battle of New Market, May 2012

Finally got around to putting up the photos from my first reenactment on the year!  This is the one where I turned double agent and went as a Confederate civilian with the 3rd Arkansas.  I can say it was better to just watch a battle for once and not have to fight in it.  As you can probably see my other passion is photography and it's a little hard to do both at once. 

The slideshow is from my Shutterfly page (which you are welcome to follow--if you can't find the button to subscribe send me an email at jdbatt@comcast.net and I will add you to it)

If you had to choose one to submit to this year's CWPT photo contest....which one would you pick for me? I like so many I can't decide.

  

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Decided to keep a sketch journal

I finally found something constructive to do in camp besides waste money at the sutlers.   Why not keep a sketchbook!  I found a small hardcover notebook with blank pages, wrapped it in 1860s newsprint, and got myself some cedar pencils.  So now I can sketch things I see during the course of my service in the Union Army. 

Here's what I've done so far.







Saturday, June 2, 2012

The Soldier's "Pocket Pal" - Over 150 Years Old?



Music is of course a well-known staple at reenactments. The overwhelming majority of soldiers knew how to play a simple musical instrument, and even those who had no musical skill whatsoever tried to play them anyway.  

When I was a kid, I don't remember exactly how old I was, my parents gave me a Hohner Pocket Pal harmonica for either christmas or my birthday.  It came with a book and accompanying audio cassette tape entitled "Harmonica for the musically hopeless."  I never really took the time to learn how to play this fairly crude instrument, but I kept it all these years and I used to very much enjoy listening to the music on the tape.

Well, some of my slightly more musically-inclined friends have tried to get me to learn how to play an instrument in camp.  At first I tried "the bones", a simple cow jawbone scraped across the teeth with a metal or wooden rod.  This did seem excitingly easy to play, but the excitement wore off after about the end of the first song, when I realized it could only produce one clicking sound with little variation.  Then I remembered this harmonica entombed in my 'junk' dresser drawer.  I fished it out and was pleased to find I still had the original cardboard case and its songbook, albeit without the cassette.

Then I got to wondering what the harmonicas soldiers might have had looked like, and if they were any different from the cheapest harmonicas of today.  After a quick search on the world's repository of infinite knowledge, the electronic wonder that makes your very enjoyment of this page possible, the results I found rather astounded me.

Hohner Musikinstrumente GmbH & Co. is a German company that has manufactured musical instruments for over 150 years.  It was founded in 1857 by Matthias Hohner (born 1833 – died 1902). Matthias Hohner, who was originally a clockmaker, started making harmonicas (by hand) in 1857 with his wife and a single employee. 650 were made in the first year. Hohner harmonicas quickly became popular, and during Matthias' lifetime he built the largest harmonica factory in the world. During the American Civil War, Matthias Hohner gave harmonicas to family members in the United States, who in turn gave them to the fighting soldiers. In Germany he also became famous for his accordions and other hand-held air-powered instruments.

Even Wikipedia has a well-referenced article about Hohner and all the various types of harmonicas it produced throughout the years.  Their 150th anniversary was in 2007. This is the sort of thing you might never think to look up.

 If you want your very own Hohner harmonica to use in camp along with some historical info to tell the public, you can buy one of these with an accompanying info sheet at Fall Creek Sutlery.

Here is an amusing little picture on a postage stamp of a barefoot German boy, wearing appropriate clothing, fishing pole in the crook of his arm, wailing away on his Hohner.  


(source: National Music Museum, Alan G. Bates Harmonica Collection)

I found my Pocket Pal fits nicely into my upper vest pocket.