Friday, April 29, 2022

Prattville Dragoon at the Ladies Memorial Association 156th Annual Program

 Dragoon Tyrone Crowley and his wife Carol, together with 30-40 other members of SCV Camps

from across the River Region, attended the 156th Annual Program of the Ladies Memorial

Association at Oakwood Cemetery in Montgomery on Tuesday 26 April 2022 at 2 p.m.  It was

an impressive and moving ceremony, presided over in fine manner by LMA President Mrs.

Leslie Kirk.  Colonel John Eidsmoe began the ceremony with a powerful Confederate Memorial

Day Prayer, thanking Heaven for our ancestors and urging that we never forget what they left

us nor abandon the memory of those who later died to preserve what was left us by the

Founding Fathers.  After the Color Guard posted the colors, Mrs. Loretta Martin, President of

the Cradle of the Confederacy UDC Chapter #94 and two other UDC members led us in

salutes to the Christian Flag, the U. S. Flag, the Alabama State Flag, and the Confederate Flag,

after which we all sang “Dixie”.  Mrs. Kirk then introduced special guests Alabama Secretary of

State John Merrill and Montgomery City Council President Charles Jinright, who are faithful

supporters of this memorial service.  Mrs. Kirk gave a brief but moving speech lamenting the

prejudice and persecution suffered by those who support Confederate Heritage but pledging to 

continue to dedicate her life and efforts to perpetuating the tradition of holding the LMA 

Ceremony each April as has been done since 1866, and urging us all to do the same.  Then she

introduced the guest speaker, Secretary of State John Merrill.  Mr. Merrill first spoke at the LMA

Ceremony several years ago and was immediately attacked for doing so by local news media,

but responded by returning every year since, even though this year he and Councilman Jinright

were told the LMA would understand if he didn’t come.  Both men replied, “I’ll be there”, and

both spoke about the importance of remembering our ancestors and the heritage they left us.

- Tyrone Crowley, Prattville Dragoons



Wednesday, April 27, 2022

Prattville Dragoons SCV Camp 1524 Annual Spring Picnic

Over thirty members, friends and family of the Sons of Confederate Veterans Camp 1524 enjoyed a beautiful spring day at Confederate Memorial Park on Saturday April 23rd.  Everyone enjoyed a picnic with smoked BBQ provided by the camp along with side dishes folks brought to share.  Mrs. Schwartz made a cake in the likeness of the Camp 1524 banner complete with Battle Flag in icing.  In addition, the camp officers elected to serve for the coming year were sworn in and, old weathered flags removed from cemeteries were burned in a retirement ceremony.  New 1st Lt Rob Schwartz also entertained folks with some great guitar playing and singing as part of the program.  The picnic was scheduled to coincide with the Living History Encampment and Battle Reenactment at Confederate Memorial Park so attendees were able to see the soldiers barracks and watch the Union and Confederate soldiers reenact a skirmish around the chapel at the park.  The Dragoons set up a table to sell flags, tags, ballcaps, mugs and other Confederate wares from the camp stores to passers-by and raise money for the camp treasury.  It was a most enjoyable springtime event celebrated as part of Confederate History and Heritage month.  

                                          








Thursday, April 21, 2022

Daniel Pratt - Founder of Prattville and Supporter of the Confederacy

Introduction 

There is a historical marker at the main intersection in Prattville, Alabama, where Prattville’s Main Street crosses U S Highway 31, with the title “Pratt Gin Factory”.  The last sentence on the marker states, “Pratt’s many industries were of great aid to Confederacy during Northern blockade”.  Daniel Pratt was indeed, besides being one of the foremost industrialists in the South, one of the foremost supporters of the Confederate States of America.  

Pratt’s Early Life

Daniel Pratt was born in 1799 and grew up in Temple, New Hampshire. He received only a grade school education but was, according to his father, a “mechanical genius”.  For this reason, when Pratt was 16 years old his father apprenticed him to Aaron Putnam, a house carpenter in the nearby town of Wilton.  Apparently Pratt was the genius his father estimated him to be, because after four years as a carpenter apprentice, he came south to Savannah, Georgia, at the age of 20 in 1819, and became a well-known and sought-after builder of houses there.  Some of the homes he built can still be seen today.

Gin Manufacturer

While in Georgia, Pratt met and was employed by cotton gin manufacturer Samuel Griswold, became his partner, and then undertook the manufacture of gins on his own.  Just as he had done as a builder of homes, Pratt achieved both fame and fortune as a manufacturer of cotton gins.  By the 1850s, he had moved to Alabama, to the present site of Prattville, and had the largest gin factory in the world, shipping gins to all the industrialized areas of the world, from Europe to Latin America, in addition to large sales within the United States.  Then came the War Between The States.

Pratt’s Views On Important Topics Of His Time 

Like Jefferson Davis, Pratt was not in favor of immediate secession, though he had no doubt it was permissible under the Constitution.  In fact, if we look at the principal leaders within the Confederate government we see that most were moderates who did not believe immediate secession was wise and in fact could lead to disaster for the South.  Pratt thought the South should spend a decade building up its industrial infrastructure before asserting its constitutional right to secede.  In his view, the South would be fighting the only kind of war sanctioned by Christianity:  a war of self-defense.  But it required preparation… 

Pratt’s plan for the South before the War, as he described it in a letter to the American Cotton Planter in 1859, was that "the South ought to maintain her rights at all hazards", but that "I would pursue a somewhat different course from that of our politicians".  He believed that the South should spend ten years building up her manufacturing and other commercial enterprises, stop making "flaming fiery speeches and threats" and instead "to go quietly and peaceably to work, and make ourselves less dependent on those who abuse and would gladly ruin us".

In September 1863, while a state legislator trying to encourage his fellow citizens following the losses at Gettysburg and Vicksburg, Pratt wrote a letter in the Autauga Citizen, asking Alabamians, "Are you willing to live under a government you can have no control over, and be taxed to the last dollar to pay for the loss of all that was near and dear to you?"  This is what surrender meant, and Pratt knew it.

Regarding slavery, Pratt believed that there were three reasons for slavery--two practical and on religious.  1)  The South's economy would have collapsed without slavery to gather and ship cotton,  a joint enterprise between the North which provided the slaves and the South which used them.  2) Slavery improved the lives of black people, from a primitive one to a more civilized one. He believed this is why the American Colonization Society, which Abraham Lincoln supported, did not achieve its goal of repatriating the Africans; the slaves saw the benefits they had received and did not wish to return to their native lands.  3) Slavery was not prohibited by God's law, in Pratt’s view.  He saw slavery as God's way of Christianizing Africans and bettering their lot in life.  He asserted that the Bible tells the servant to be faithful to his master, and nowhere does it condemn slavery neither in the Old Testament nor the New.

Pratt understood too that originally slavery was legal in all states, including his home state of New Hampshire; it was only those states that found it unprofitable that eventually outlawed it. Regarding Reconstruction, Pratt was entirely opposed to it, to the end of his days.  Before all else, he was a practical man.  To give the vote to ex-slaves, many of whom were unable to read and write, while at the same time disenfranchising all men who had served in the Confederacy in any capacity, which would mean almost all white men in the defeated states, was simply not a practical or just thing to do, in his view.

Political Life 

Pratt did not care for politics, but once he realized that he was recognized as a leader in industrial and political matters and was urged by men he respected to do so, he ran for office at the local and state level.  He was elected by a large majority to serve as representative for Autauga County in the Alabama Legislature from 1861 to 1863.  He was also proposed as candidate for governor in 1870 but lost to a younger candidate (Lindsay).  He was elected Intendant (mayor) of Prattville in 1866 and held that office until his death in 1873.  Aside from his political life, Pratt has also been credited with providing the design for the Alabama State Capitol Building constructed in 1850-1851, the central building of the Capitol we see in Montgomery today. 

War Between the States 

When secession was voted on and approved by the people of the State of Alabama, Pratt joined the effort wholeheartedly, helping to recruit and outfit the first Confederate unit to leave Autauga County, the Prattville Dragoons.  He spoke at meetings around Autauga County, offering all support possible to men who volunteered to fight for the Confederacy.  His help in outfitting the Prattville Dragoons included providing them horses, equipment, and fine black uniforms that sometimes caused Dragoons to be mistaken for officers.  Pratt also provided funds for outfitting other Autauga County units, and his wife Esther was president of the Ladies’ Aid Society in Prattville, which made clothing for soldiers.  

With respect to his business, the departure of working men to fight the war was a setback.  He lost twelve employees when the Dragoons mustered and rode away to war, and fifteen more when his nephew Merrill formed Company K of the 1st Alabama Regiment and went away to defend the Confederate States.  A year later, he managed to get some of these men transferred back home by  sending a request to Governor John Gill Shorter.  Governor Shorter requested that General Braxton Bragg transfer some of Pratt’s workers back to Prattville, stating that the Prattville Manufacturing Company (Pratt's cotton mill) was "worth a regiment of men to the Confederacy" due to its production of fabric for uniforms at a low price.  Pratt’s other industries also produced knapsacks, skillets, wooden buttons, and horse brushes for the Confederacy.

During and after the War, Pratt actively sought in various ways to relieve the suffering of the poor in Autauga County, providing jobs to workers or charity in those cases where it was needed.  Col J H Livingston, a eulogist, said the following:  "Born and reared in poverty, (Daniel Pratt) well knew how to appreciate the wants of the needy.  Strangers he clothed and fed, and to the sick he administered comfort.  He considered the poor of every creed, and bestowed his charities with a lavish hand".  While serving as a state representative in 1862, Pratt sponsored a bill to authorize an Autauga county tax to support families of soldiers away at war; it was enacted into law and this relieved some of the suffering of families in Autauga County. 

After the War, Pratt gave a lot and two-story building to the black people of Prattville, to use as a church and school. This became known as Ward's Chapel, and to this day there is a black church with that name on Fourth Street in Prattville.  

Pratt’s Final Days

The War Between The States ended badly for Pratt, though with his Northern connections he was able to obtain a pardon rather soon and get back to recovering his losses, which were calculated by his business associate and Autauga County historian Shadrach Mims at more than half a million dollars in the money of the time.   Notwithstanding that loss, by the end of his life in 1873, Daniel Pratt had recovered enough wealth to leave a respectable inheritance to his nephew Merrill and his daughter Ellen.  Ellen's husband, Henry Fairchild DeBardeleben, took her inheritance and became a principal figure in the coal and iron industry in Birmingham.  One of his undertakings was one that Pratt had begun during the War, the Red Mountain Company, which built the Oxmoor furnaces. 

A month after his death, the citizens of Prattville, in an official town meeting assembled "to pay public tribute to the memory of our belated friend and fellow-citizen, the Honorable Daniel Pratt, deceased."  Five of Prattville's leading men came to the podium and honored Pratt with their words. 

Shadrach Mims, the aforementioned Autauga County historian and Pratt’s business partner, wrote this about Pratt, which describes his life and philosophy fairly well:  "(Daniel Pratt) seemed to think that really money had no other value than to subserve a valuable purpose.  He regarded himself only as a steward." 

- Tyrone Crowley

Sources

1. Evans, Curt. The Conquest of Labor. Louisiana State University

Press, 2001.

2. Tarrant, S.F.H., ed. The Honorable Daniel Pratt: A Biography, with

Eulogies on His Life and Character. Richmond, Va.: Whittet &

Shepperson, 1904.

3. Prattville Progress, 8 September 1983, pp. 1 and 11, “Pratt’s design was Capitol idea”.



 




Sunday, April 17, 2022

Prattville Dragoons SCV Camp 1524 Chaplain's Column for April 2022 - April is a Time for Remembrance and Celebration, “Christ is Risen”

 

April is Confederate History month. While those in the SCV honor our ancestor(s) year- round, we take time in this month especially for our entire community and Southland to share in that remembrance. I look to forward to seeing many of you on the 23rd to celebrate at Confederate Memorial Park.

A week before that we will celebrate the Lord’s resurrection. It is truly the greatest event in human history. God became man, suffered torture and crucifixion, died, and rose again to defeat death and save us from sin. We have all read and experienced the story of Passion Week, but how many know the story of Longinus?

Matthew 27:54 states, “When the centurion and those with him who were guarding Jesus saw the earthquake and all that had happened, and they were terrified, and exclaimed, ‘Surely he was the Son of God.’ Longinus was the centurion quoted. He was the head of the Legion that was in charge of the torture and crucifixion/ execution of Jesus. He and his troops were at Golgotha and witnessed the final moments of the Christ! He is also believed to be the one who pierced the heart of Jesus with a spear to confirm death. It is believed that Longinus had an eye affliction that was cured by the blood and water that poured out of the body of Jesus.

He was also in charge of guarding the tomb of Jesus. All were present at the resurrection. Only Longinus and one other soldier refused to be bribed about what they had seen of the resurrection by the Jewish and Roman authorities. The two of them then asked to be baptized by the apostles and they left the Roman military service for good.  

Longinus and his comrades went back to his hometown Cappadocia and preached the Gospel of Jesus Christ. His fiery words converted many of his brethren. This also got him in trouble with the local Roman authorities. He was offered a chance to flee, refused, put before Pontius Pilate, and was beheaded as a martyr for the faith. On October 16th of each year, the Orthodox him in celebration of the “Holy Martyr Longinus the Centurion.”

The point of this is here is a man who helped torture and crucify Jesus, converted after all he had witnessed, preached the gospel unto death as a martyr by the same man, Pilate, as who had sentenced our Lord and Savior! He was literally the first convert of the crucifixion!        

His story shows it is never too late for any of us. Use this Easter as a chance to confess your sins and accept Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior! 

 

Amen and Happy Easter!


Remember those on our prayer list. 

Friday, April 15, 2022

Prattville Dragoons First Seasonal Maintenance of 2022 at Robinson Springs Cemetery

Six Dragoons of the Sons of Confederate Veterans Camp 1524 showed up for volunteer work at Robinson Springs cemetery in Millbrook Alabama on Friday morning April 8th. Compatriot Mike Thomas had come the day before with a zero turn mower and did a wonderful job cutting the lawn and then the rest of the helpers showed up Friday morning and finished cutting and trimming and blowing everything.  After a job well done, the men enjoyed a little time of fellowship afterwards. Dragoons participating included ( L to R in picture) Thomas Griffith, Larry Spears, 1st Lt Rob Schwartz, Mike Thomas, Quartermaster Bill Myrick and Comms Ofc Doug Butler who took the picture also.   Color Sgt John Dennis worked there a day earlier but is not shown in this photo. This is an outstanding ongoing community service activity of the camp.  




Wednesday, April 13, 2022

Prattville Dragoons SCV Camp 1524 Commander's Column for April 2022 – Polarization of America as Reflected in Social Media Engagement

I read one of those advice columns recently where a mother asked if her daughter was wise in dumping her boyfriend when she learned he voted for Donald Trump.  Responses ranged from a resounding affirmative to one person saying that the boyfriend “dodged a bullet”.  It reminded me of some such odd couples like political analysts Mary Matalin and James Carville who are far right and left (respectively) on political issues.  Trump spokesperson Kellyanne Conway was married to a man who was a member of an anti-Trump Republican group called The Lincoln Project.   Both couples are still married.  But, this also reminds me of the old adage that marriages often fail due to conflicts around money, religion, sex and, politics. 

Nonetheless, the success and longevity of those political power couples’ marriages are surely a product of a maturity in being able to separate these disagreements  from priorities on which they base their union.  But the polarization of American society today would seemingly threaten such relationships which don’t agree on such basic tenants.  The two political parties have become reflections of the morality, ethics and conservatism or progressivism of the country’s society especially in regards to platforms and endorsements regarding right to life or choice, sexual orientation, and racial issues like affirmative action, diversity and critical race theory.  I cannot personally conceive how a couple could have a strong lasting relationship and disagree on such current political issues. 

This polarization is also reflected in social media interaction where people friend and like those largely within their social sphere and echo chambers.  A recent post commemorating April as Confederate History and Heritage month brought a reaction by thousands using vulgarities and posting white flags of surrender and images of the WBTS and western American Indian scorched earth terrorist William Tecumseh Sherman and a regurgitation of the slavery-was-the-cause-of-secession-and-the-Civil-War narrative.  It is hypocritical and ignorant to hitch your position of greater morality around the neck of Sherman and not acknowledge what he did to the Southern civilian populace allowing his troops to rape, pillage and burn their way to the sea and later to eradicate the buffalo on which the plains Indians depended for their way of life as well as his “extermination and relocation of thousands of indigenous people”.  (https://www.history.com/news/shermans-war-on-native-americans)  These same ignorant people decry the wicked Southern plantation owners without recognizing the millions of Southerners who took up arms to protect their homes and families who never owned a slave.  These same phony people decry the slavery of the 17-19th centuries ignoring the Africans who instigated and profited from the slave trade and who continue it to this day.   These are the same types of folks who stand on their soapbox condemning the Saudi Arabians as murderous butchers when they seek to establish a professional golf league to challenge the PGA on which they are profiting themselves, all the while filling up their cars with gasoline from Arabian crude. 

So they grandstand and puff out their chests with their self-perceived moral superiority but, why the venomous and militantly aggressive responses?  No one likes to be wrong and when they have sounded loudly from the rooftops or across the internet their false doctrine and beliefs, they defend it with rage.  The 100-character limits on the internet posts encourage click-bait responses and quick derogatory unilateral debate.   No dialogue.  No need for first person source references or historical quotes to support your position.   Lemmings will run off the cliff before they recognize the error of their ways.  This pertains to an admission of poor judgement in who you voted for or belief in the infallibility of the medical community in regards to vaccinations and government pandemic mandates or error in a perception and understanding of historical truths.  A herd mentality.  They cling to their political correctness which is preached to them by their schools, their employers, their churches and oftentimes their own families.    90% of Americans have been educated in the public school system.  An indoctrination by the government school in the historical faultlessness of that very government yields a close-mindedness to any alternative possibility.   All else is a conspiracy.  As General Patrick Cleburne warned, "Surrender means that the history of this heroic struggle will be written by the enemy, that our youth will be trained by Northern school teachers; learn from Northern school books their version of the war, and taught to regard our gallant dead as traitors and our maimed veterans as fit subjects of derision."  And so it is. 

Monday, April 11, 2022

Dragoons of SCV Camp 1524 Assist in Placing Headstone for Revolutionary War Soldier

Color Sgt John Dennis and compatriot Darrell Haywood of the Sons of Confederate Veterans Camp 1524 assisted the Old Autauga Historical Society in placing a new headstone on the grave of Revolutionary War soldier William Kirkland at the historic Pea Ridge Cemetery near Burnsville AL on Saturday April 10, 2022.  The following is a write-up provided by Larry Caver of the OAHS regarding William Kirkland and Pea Ridge Cemetery,

    "William and his family were settlers of Western Autauga County.  William was one of 30 known veterans of the American Revolutionary War who chose to settle in Old Autauga County.  In the early days, churches were scarce in some areas.  William and his family would travel over Big Mulberry Creek into Dallas County to attend church services at Pea Ridge Methodist Episcopal Church.  Several families from Autauga County in those days did the same.  William died in 1838 and was buried at his church along with another patriot, James Porter, of Dallas County.  The cemetery has graves dating back to at least 1825.  The church is long gone but the graves of many of the early settlers of north western Autauga County and northeastern Dallas County remain.  The OAHS is committed to seeing that one day all 30 of our Revolutionary veterans here in old Autauga have proper grave markers."