The Battle of Malvern Hill

Robert Krick

Robert Krick speaking before Civil War enthusiasts at the Charlottesville Senior Center.

Regular listeners of our podcasts might know Rick Britton. He’s an historian and cartographer and a frequent guest on WINA’s Charlottesville Right Now with Coy Barefoot. Rick also organizes a Civil War lecture and day-trip series in conjunction with the Charlottesville Senior Center.

On Wednesday July 21st, National Park Service historian Robert E. L. Krick spoke on the Battle of Malvern Hill (the last of the famous Seven Days’ Battles). Fought on July 1st, 1862, Malvern Hill — located approximately 15 miles southeast of Richmond — pitted Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee’s 85,000 men against a similar number under Union Gen. George B. McClellan. In the afternoon, following a furious artillery engagement (during which the Federal guns maintained their defensive positions, as well as their superiority on the field), Confederate forces made repeated, futile assaults, losing over 5,000 in the bloody work. Although he had won the battle, McClellan withdrew that evening to Harrison’s Landing on the James River.

On Wednesday, July 28th, Rick Britton will conduct a tour of the Malvern Hill Battlefield. In the morning tour participants will take in Richmond’s wonderful National Park Service museum at Tredegar, then lunch nearby at the Tobacco Company. After lunch you’ll walk the fascinating Malvern Hill Battlefield. There is a fee for the tour. Call 974-6538 for more information.

This is the third in a six part series for 2010.

Charlottesville–Right Now: Rick Britton and Coy Continue Their Discussion On Civil War Battles

7.8.10- Historian Rick Britton and Coy Barefoot continue their countdown of the most important Civil War Battles which took place in Virginia. Today’s topics include, The Battle at Cross Keys, The Battle at Port Republic, and The Battle of Gaines’ Mill. Tune in next Thursday to listen as the countdown continues.

Embattled Eden

Troy Marshall

Troy Marshall speaking before a packed house at the Senior Center Wednesday.

Regular listeners of our podcast or our live streaming feed might know Rick Britton. He’s a historian and cartographer and a frequent guest on WINA’s Charlottesville Right Now with Coy Barefoot. Rick also organizes a Civil War lecture and day-trip series in conjunction with the Charlottesville Senior Center.

On Wednesday June 23, 2010 Troy Marshall, New Market Battlefield’s Director of Interpretation, delivered a powerpoint presentation entitled "Embattled Eden" about the trials and tribulations suffered by the hard-working citizens of the Shenandoah Valley during the Civil War’s horrific four years. At least five major military campaigns were fought up and down the Valley during the war. Additionally, Marshall covered the Valley’s most famous fighting unit, the five Virginia infantry regiments that made up the hard-fighting "Stonewall" Brigade (which, of course, won its nickname at First Manassas when it "stood like a stonewall" along with Confederate Gen. Thomas Jonathan Jackson).

On Wednesday, June 30th, Rick Britton will take a tour bus up to beautiful Winchester, Virginia, where the tour will visit the fabulous Museum of the Shenandoah (with its gardens, exhibits, and historic Glen Burnie mansion), and the Old Court House Civil War Museum. The bus tour departs from the Charlottesville Senior Center at 8:00 AM. There is a fee for the tour. Call 974-6538 for more information.

This is the second in a six part series for 2010.

The Battle of Big Bethel

Rick Britton

Rick Britton

Regular listeners of our podcast or our live streaming feed might know Rick Britton. He’s a historian and cartographer and a frequent guest on WINA’s Charlottesville Right Now with Coy Barefoot. Rick also organizes a Civil War lecture and day-trip series in conjunction with the Charlottesville Senior Center.

On Wednesday May 19th Rick Britton himself delivered a presentation on the Battle of Big Bethel, Virginia’s first Civil War land battle. Fought on June 10th, 1861, 41 days before the First Battle of Manassas, Big Bethel pitted Confederates "Prince John" Magruder and D. H. Hill, along with approximately 1,400 men, against Union Gen. Benjamin Butler’s force of 4,400 from Fortress Monroe and Newport News. Prior to the fight, D. H. Hill had ordered his North Carolinians to dig in, and it was these earthworks that helped the Southern troops hold the field and prevail against superior numbers.

On Wednesday, May 26th, Rick Britton will lead a tour down to the Virginia Peninsula where this early battle took place. The tour will tour historic Fortress Monroe — a must see since it’s scheduled for closing this year — as well as the Mariner’s Museum featuring the turret of the original U.S.S. Monitor and a full-scale reproduction of that revolutionary vessel that the tour will actually board. Bus tour departs from the Charlottesville Senior Center at 8:00 AM. There is a fee for the tour. Call 974-6538 for more info.

This is the first in a six part series for 2010.

Characters of Central Virginia: John Chaloner

Rick Britton

Rick Britton

Award-winning historian and cartographer Rick Britton is frequent guest on WINA’s Charlottesville Right Now with Coy Barefoot. In January and February of 2010 Rick presented six lectures in a new series entitled "Characters of Central Virginia: The Famous, the Infamous, & the Undeniably Odd". The series was held at the Charlottesville Senior Center.

Central Virginia has always been known for its fascinating inhabitants. This six-session series featured: Dr. Thomas Walker, discoverer of the Cumberland Gap into Kentucky; James Monroe, forgotten hero of the American Revolution; Dolley Madison, our nation’s first "First Lady"; Claudius Crozet who built the world’s longest railroad tunnel; Ben Ficklin, founder of the Pony Express; Cyrus McCormick who invented the reaper; the "Moon Ghost" who haunted southern Albemarle; self-made millionaire Samuel Miller; Maud Coleman Woods, "America’s Most Beautiful Blonde"; lunatic and philanthropist Archie Chaloner; Congressional Medal winner Frank Peregoy; and "Anastasia," the Romanov family pretender who once convinced the world!

In a county famed for its wealthy eccentrics, John Armstrong Chaloner stands alone at the head of the class. He began his professional life well-educated, well-heeled, and well-connected. He became a poet, a novelist, and a playwright (of sorts), a patron of the arts, a philanthropist, and a dabbler in eastern philosophy and the occult. He believed he had special powers and could contact those beyond the grave. Chaloner’s bizarre behavior, and weird writings, were the source of cocktail-party snickering for close to four decades. "Virginia was his earthly tabernacle," wrote J. Bryan III, "but in spirit he lived Through the Looking-Glass, a congenial neighbor to the Mad Hatter and the White Knight." Despite his many oddities, however, Chaloner was loved by Albemarle County’s poor and disadvantaged. It is doubtful whether we will ever see his like again.

Characters of Central Virginia: Frank Dabney Peregoy

Rick Britton

Rick Britton

Award-winning historian and cartographer Rick Britton is frequent guest on WINA’s Charlottesville Right Now with Coy Barefoot. In January and February of 2010 Rick presented six lectures in a new series entitled “Characters of Central Virginia: The Famous, the Infamous, & the Undeniably Odd”. The series was held at the Charlottesville Senior Center.

Central Virginia has always been known for its fascinating inhabitants. This six-session series featured: Dr. Thomas Walker, discoverer of the Cumberland Gap into Kentucky; James Monroe, forgotten hero of the American Revolution; Dolley Madison, our nation’s first “First Lady”; Claudius Crozet who built the world’s longest railroad tunnel; Ben Ficklin, founder of the Pony Express; Cyrus McCormick who invented the reaper; the “Moon Ghost” who haunted southern Albemarle; self-made millionaire Samuel Miller; Maud Coleman Woods, “America’s Most Beautiful Blonde”; lunatic and philanthropist Archie Chaloner; Congressional Medal winner Frank Peregoy; and “Anastasia,” the Romanov family pretender who once convinced the world!

Born in Nelson County and raised in Charlottesville, Tech. Sgt. Frank Dabney Peregoy was posthumously awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor in a ceremony at the Charlottesville City Armory on June 4, 1945. The National Guardsman — a member of the Monticello Guard, Company K, 116th Infantry — had performed an amazing feat of heroism in France on D-Day plus two. Brig. Gen. E. R. Warner McCabe presented the nation’s highest award to Bessie Kirby Peregoy, Frank’s widow. “You will have the comfort and consolation and satisfaction of knowing,” he told her, “that your heroic husband’s memory will live forever in the hearts of his country and his valiant deeds will live in the hearts of his fellow citizens.” This is his story.

Join us again next Thursday when Rick returns with the life of eccentric John Armstrong Chaloner who became a poet, a novelist, a playwright, a patron of the arts, a philanthropist, and a dabbler in eastern philosophy and the occult.

Characters of Central Virginia: ”Anastasia”

Rick Britton

Rick Britton

Award-winning historian and cartographer Rick Britton is frequent guest on WINA’s Charlottesville Right Now with Coy Barefoot. In January and February of 2010 Rick presented six lectures in a new series entitled "Characters of Central Virginia: The Famous, the Infamous, & the Undeniably Odd". The series was held at the Charlottesville Senior Center.

Central Virginia has always been known for its fascinating inhabitants. This six-session series featured: Dr. Thomas Walker, discoverer of the Cumberland Gap into Kentucky; James Monroe, forgotten hero of the American Revolution; Dolley Madison, our nation’s first "First Lady"; Claudius Crozet who built the world’s longest railroad tunnel; Ben Ficklin, founder of the Pony Express; Cyrus McCormick who invented the reaper; the "Moon Ghost" who haunted southern Albemarle; self-made millionaire Samuel Miller; Maud Coleman Woods, "America’s Most Beautiful Blonde"; lunatic and philanthropist Archie Chaloner; Congressional Medal winner Frank Peregoy; and "Anastasia," the Romanov family pretender who once convinced the world!

In this podcast Rick looks at the twists and turns of "Anastasia’s" life — her journey from a Berlin asylum to No. 35 University Circle in Charlottesville, Virginia — have fascinated the world for decades. The questions seem insurmountable: How had she escaped a Bolshevik firing squad? How had she escaped a Russia ripped to shreds by civil war? Chronically plagued by ill health and a fluctuating disposition, "Anastasia" consistently maintained her ersatz identity. Whether she was using the name Madame Tchaikovsky, or Anna Manahan, her claim remained the same. She said she was Her Imperial Highness Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna, improbable survivor of a royal dynasty and rightful heiress to all remaining monies and holdings that had belonged to her father, Csar Nicolas II of Russia.

Join us again next Thursday when Rick returns with the life of Tech. Sgt. Frank Dabney Peregoy. Born in Nelson County and raised in Charlottesville, Peregoy was posthumously awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor in a ceremony at the Charlottesville City Armory on June 4, 1945.