July 9, 2022
MY CORNER by Boyd
Cathey
The Confederate Navy:
Men Who Went to Sea for the Cause
CSS Shenandoah
A Review
of the Roster of North Carolinians in Confederate Naval Service: Confederate
States Navy & Marine Corps.
Compiled and edited by Lt. Colonel (Ret.)
Sion H. Harrington III. Wake Forest: Scuppernong Press, 2021. 427 pp;
Introduction, pp. III-IX; Appendices I-VII; Index of Geographical and
Historical Place Names. Illustrations (b & w). Price: $50.00.
The monumental series, North Carolina Troops, 1861-1865: A
Roster, began during the “Civil War” Centennial in 1961, under the
direction of Dr. Louis Manarin, and has continued until recently, reaching now
twenty volumes, covering artillery, cavalry, and sixty-eight regiments of North
Carolinians who served in the Confederate forces. The last five volumes have
been dedicated to Junior and Senior Reserves, Thomas’s Legion, Miscellaneous
Battalions and Companies, and Generals, Staff Officers and Militia.
Lt. Colonel Sion Harrington (ret.), who was the North Carolina
State Archives Military History Archivist (until his retirement in 2011)
understood, however, that despite the enormous labor and work that had gone
into the North Carolina Troops Roster—now in its sixtieth year—that
there were thousands of additional combatants who served in Confederate naval
and marine service who had not been properly counted in the original work.
Beginning in 2003, Colonel Harrington began his own thorough
research into those naval Confederate veterans. And the work was painstaking
and consumed much of his spare time. But with an excellent military and
academic career, slowly he was able to accumulate accurate and comprehensive
records for approximately 3,000 naval and marine personnel who were in some way
connected to North Carolina, either as natives who volunteered from the Tar
Heel State or who may have enlisted from North Carolina but were not residents.
Over the years, Colonel Harrington made contact with military
historians, researchers and repositories that had collected archival material
on naval veterans, as far away as Australia. And diligently he researched every
type of document which might reveal naval service, including not just the
accustomed archival sources and official records, but journals, private
collections, correspondence, and other primary sources. The result is a superbly
done, even elegant hard-back volume which does true honor to those men who
served in naval service.
In addition to a complete alphabetical listing (including name
spelling variations), each entry contains biographical information with
citations as to the sources used. Harrington dedicates two appendices to his
references, one listing his hundreds of sources and another giving
abbreviations for those sources as used in the text. In some cases the
information for an entry is voluminous and extends long after the war
concerning the individuals’ later life (and information on an earlier career is
also included). In other cases where the information is sketchy or
questionable, we are presented with what is available, clearly referenced.
Several appendices add considerably to the usefulness of the
volume. As a kind of complete glossary, Appendix IV, “Rank/Rates and Special
Terms Mentioned in the Roster,” offers carefully defined and detailed
descriptions of the naval and military terminology employed. Appendix V,
“Confederate Ships and Floating Batteries Mentioned in the Roster,” includes
significant historical material about hundreds of Confederate seagoing vessels,
their service and final disposition—it is one of the most complete surveys of
Confederate naval vessels I have seen.
There is also Appendix VI, “Confederate Naval Stations, Yards, and
Activities Mentioned in the Roster,” an immeasurably helpful section assisting
the reader in understanding and visualizing how and where the Confederate Navy
operated under the pressure of war.
Harrington’s Appendix VII, “Interesting Tidbits from The
Roster of North Carolinians in Confederate Naval Service,” offers us some
truly fascinating material, some of it humorous, some incredible, some tragic
about the four-year existence of the Confederate Navy and its personnel.
Indeed, it is one of the more engrossing portions of the roster—and one that in
many ways humanizes the men who served the cause of Southern independence
against incredible odds.
There is also a very helpful place name index for geographical
entities and locations, and other non-personal items mentioned in the volume.
On a personal note, let me add that as the North Carolina
State Archives Registrar for nearly two-decades I worked down the hall from Si
Harrington. In those years he almost single-handedly reorganized the Military
History Collection at the North Carolina State Archives, making it a national
model as a usable repository not only for fellow historians but also for
interested citizens and genealogists.
His work was a tremendous contribution to the history of North
Carolina. And like his professionalism
at the North Carolina State Archives, he invested the Confederate naval roster,
completed in his off hours, with the same kind of professionalism, and dedication
and devotion to our Confederate history and heritage.
Roster of North Carolinians in Confederate Naval Service, then,
will interest not only descendants of North Carolinians who served in naval
service, but also historians, genealogists, researchers, and anyone with an
interest in a less studied aspect of our Confederate history.
[This review was originally published by Confederate
Veteran magazine, July/August 2022, vol.80, number 4, and is reprinted with
permission]
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