Not Colonel Mustard in the Library with a Candlestick Portrait of G.G. Green (Special Collections) Colonel Green is just one of the many people I’ve Read More »

Not Colonel Mustard in the Library with a Candlestick Portrait of G.G. Green (Special Collections) Colonel Green is just one of the many people I’ve Read More »
By the late 1930s, there were only a handful of Civil War veterans left in Pasadena. Unlike in earlier days, there were no big groups Read More »
…And I further declare and make known, that such persons of suitable condition, will be received into the armed service of the United States to Read More »
“Under a heavy fire carried his wounded commanding officer from the field.”– from the Medal of Honor citation of Thomas F. Ellsworth, 55th Massachusetts Infantry Read More »
When the Civil War began, the United States had no official medals or other decorations that could be awarded to soldiers or sailors for bravery Read More »
The local Civil War veterans, especially the Union Army veterans, tended to socialize together both locally and on “road trips.” Some were to reunions at Read More »
Last week’s column may have given you the unfortunate idea that old soldiers simply died in bed, of old age or disease, or both. While Read More »
As the veterans of the Civil War grew older, they faced many problems. One of the main political lobbying efforts of the Grand Army of Read More »
There is a clichéd image of Confederates going west after the war, of gunfighters and bounty hunters, outlaws and ranchers, all escaping poverty and ruin. Read More »
“John McDonald, Esq., “Chairman Pasadena Memorial Statue Committee: “Dear Sir: As per your instructions received from H. H. Kitson, sculptor, Boston, Mass., we have this Read More »