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Information: The first column shows data points from Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893 in red. The third column shows data points from Doubleday, Major Abner in blue. Any data they share in common is displayed as purple boxes in the middle "Shared" column.
Name Entries
Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893
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Doubleday, Major Abner
Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893
Name Components
Surname :
Doubleday
Forename :
Abner
Date :
1819-1893
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Dates
- Name Entry
- Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893
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- Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893
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Doubleday, Major Abner
Name Components
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Doubleday, Major Abner
Dates
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- Doubleday, Major Abner
Citation
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Doubleday, the son of Ulysses F. Doubleday and Hester Donnelly, was born in Ballston Spa, New York, in a small house on the corner of Washington and Fenwick streets. As a child, Abner was very short. The family all slept in the attic loft of the one-room house. His paternal grandfather, also named Abner, had fought in the American Revolutionary War. His maternal grandfather Thomas Donnelly joined the army at 14 and was a mounted messenger for George Washington. His great grandfather Peter Donnelly was a Minuteman. His father, Ulysses F., fought in the War of 1812, published newspapers and books, and represented Auburn, New York for four years in the United States Congress. Abner spent his childhood in Auburn and later was sent to Cooperstown to live with his uncle and attend a private preparatory high school. He practiced as a surveyor and civil engineer for two years before entering the United States Military Academy in 1838. He graduated in 1842, 24th in a class of 56 cadets, and was commissioned a brevet second lieutenant in the 3rd U.S. Artillery. In 1852, he married Mary Hewitt of Baltimore, the daughter of a local lawyer.
Doubleday initially served in coastal garrisons and then in the Mexican–American War from 1846 to 1848 and the Seminole Wars from 1856 to 1858. In 1858 he was transferred to Fort Moultrie in Charleston Harbor serving under Colonel John L. Gardner. By the start of the Civil War, he was a captain and second in command in the garrison at Fort Sumter, under Major Robert Anderson. He aimed the cannon that fired the first return shot in answer to the Confederate bombardment on April 12, 1861. He subsequently referred to himself as the "hero of Sumter" for this role.
Doubleday was promoted to major on May 14, 1861, and commanded the Artillery Department in the Shenandoah Valley from June to August, and then the artillery for Major General Nathaniel Banks's division of the Army of the Potomac. He was appointed brigadier general of volunteers on February 3, 1862, and was assigned to duty in northern Virginia while the Army of the Potomac conducted the Peninsula Campaign. His first combat assignment was to lead the 2nd Brigade, 1st Division, III Corps of the Army of Virginia during the Northern Virginia Campaign. In the actions at Brawner's farm, just before the Second Battle of Bull Run, he took the initiative to send two of his regiments to reinforce Brigadier General John Gibbon's brigade against a larger Confederate force, fighting it to a standstill. (Personal initiative was required since his division commander, Brig. Gen. Rufus King, was incapacitated by an epileptic seizure at the time. He was replaced by Brigadier General John P. Hatch.)[8] His men were routed when they encountered Major General James Longstreet's corps, but by the following day, August 30, he took command of the division when Hatch was wounded, and he led his men to cover the retreat of the Union Army.
Doubleday again led the division, now assigned to the I Corps of the Army of the Potomac, after South Mountain, where Hatch was wounded again. At Antietam, he led his men into the deadly fighting in the Cornfield and the West Woods, and one colonel described him as a "gallant officer ... remarkably cool and at the very front of battle." He was wounded when an artillery shell exploded near his horse, throwing him to the ground in a violent fall. He received a brevet promotion to lieutenant colonel in the regular army for his actions at Antietam and was promoted in March 1863 to major general of volunteers, to rank from November 29, 1862. At Fredericksburg in December 1862, his division mostly sat idle. During the winter, the I Corps was reorganized and Doubleday assumed command of the 3rd Division. At Chancellorsville in May 1863, the division was kept in reserve.
At the start of the Battle of Gettysburg, July 1, 1863, Doubleday's division was the second infantry division on the field to reinforce the cavalry division of Brigadier General John Buford. When his corps commander, Major General John F. Reynolds, was killed very early in the fighting, Doubleday found himself in command of the corps at 10:50 am. His men fought well in the morning, putting up a stout resistance, but as overwhelming Confederate forces massed against them, their line eventually broke and they retreated back through the town of Gettysburg to the relative safety of Cemetery Hill south of town. It was Doubleday's finest performance during the war, five hours leading 9,500 men against ten Confederate brigades that numbered more than 16,000. Seven of those brigades sustained casualties that ranged from 35 to 50 percent, indicating the ferocity of the Union defense. On Cemetery Hill, however, the I Corps could muster only a third of its men as effective for duty, and the corps was essentially destroyed as a combat force for the rest of the battle; it would be decommissioned in March 1864, its surviving units consolidated into other corps.
On July 2, 1863, Army of the Potomac commander Maj. Gen. George G. Meade replaced Doubleday with Major General John Newton, a more junior officer from another corps. The ostensible reason was a false report by XI Corps commander Major General Oliver O. Howard that Doubleday's corps broke first, causing the entire Union line to collapse, but Meade also had a long history of disdain for Doubleday's combat effectiveness, dating back to South Mountain. Doubleday was humiliated by this snub and held a lasting grudge against Meade, but he returned to division command and fought well for the remainder of the battle. He was wounded in the neck on the second day of Gettysburg and received a brevet promotion to colonel in the regular army for his service. He formally requested reinstatement as I Corps commander, but Meade refused, and Doubleday left Gettysburg on July 7 for Washington.
Doubleday's staff nicknamed him "Forty-Eight Hours" as a compliment to recognize his tendency to avoid reckless or impulsive actions and his thoughtfulness and deliberateness in considering circumstances and possible responses. In recent years, biographers have turned the nickname into an insult, incorrectly claiming "Forty-Eight Hours" was coined to highlight Doubleday's supposed incompetence and slowness to act.
Doubleday assumed administrative duties in the defenses of Washington, D.C., where he was in charge of courts martial, which gave him legal experience that he used after the war. His only return to combat was directing a portion of the defenses against the attack by Confederate Lieutenant General Jubal A. Early in the Valley Campaigns of 1864. Also while in Washington, Doubleday testified against George Meade at the United States Congress Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War, criticizing him harshly over his conduct of the Battle of Gettysburg. While in Washington, Doubleday remained a loyal Republican and staunch supporter of President Abraham Lincoln. Doubleday rode with Lincoln on the train to Gettysburg for the Gettysburg Address and Col. and Mrs. Doubleday attended events with Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln in Washington.
After the Civil War, Doubleday mustered out of the volunteer service on August 24, 1865, reverted to the rank of lieutenant colonel, and became the colonel of the 35th U.S. Infantry in September 1867. He was stationed in San Francisco from 1869 through 1871 and he took out a patent for the cable car railway that still runs there, receiving a charter for its operation, but signing away his rights when he was reassigned. In 1871 he commanded the 24th U.S. Infantry, an all African-American regiment with headquarters at Fort McKavett, Texas. He retired in 1873.
In the 1870s, he was listed in the New York business directory as lawyer.
Doubleday spent much of his time writing. He published two important works on the Civil War: Reminiscences of Forts Sumter and Moultrie (1876), and Chancellorsville and Gettysburg (1882), the latter being a volume of the series Campaigns of the Civil War.
In the summer of 1878, Doubleday lived in Mendham Township, New Jersey, and became a prominent member of the Theosophical Society. When two of the founders of that society, Helena Blavatsky and Henry Steel Olcott, moved to India at the end of that year, he was constituted as the president of the American body. Another prominent member was Thomas A. Edison.
Doubleday died of heart disease in 1893. Doubleday's body was laid in state in New York's City Hall and then was taken to Washington by train from Mendham Township, and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia.
Although Doubleday achieved minor fame as a competent combat general with experience in many important Civil War battles, he is more widely known as the supposed inventor of the game of baseball, in Elihu Phinney's cow pasture in Cooperstown, New York, in 1839.
The Mills Commission, chaired by Abraham G. Mills, the fourth president of the National League, was appointed in 1905 to determine the origin of baseball. The committee's final report, on December 30, 1907, stated, in part, that "the first scheme for playing baseball, according to the best evidence obtainable to date, was devised by Abner Doubleday at Cooperstown, New York, in 1839." It concluded by saying, "in the years to come, in the view of the hundreds of thousands of people who are devoted to baseball, and the millions who will be, Abner Doubleday's fame will rest evenly, if not quite as much, upon the fact that he was its inventor ... as upon his brilliant and distinguished career as an officer in the Federal Army."
However, there is considerable evidence to dispute this claim. Baseball historian George B. Kirsch has described the results of the Mills Commission as a "myth". He wrote, "Robert Henderson, Harold Seymour, and other scholars have since debunked the Doubleday-Cooperstown myth, which nonetheless remains powerful in the American imagination because of the efforts of Major League Baseball and the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown." At his death, Doubleday left many letters and papers, none of which describe baseball or give any suggestion that he considered himself a prominent person in the evolution of the game, and his New York Times obituary did not mention the game at all. Chairman Mills himself, who had been a Civil War colleague of Doubleday and a member of the honor guard for Doubleday's body as it lay in state in New York City, never recalled hearing Doubleday describe his role as the inventor. Doubleday was a cadet at West Point in the year of the alleged invention and his family had moved away from Cooperstown the prior year. Furthermore, the primary testimony to the commission that connected baseball to Doubleday was that of Abner Graves, whose credibility is questionable; a few years later, he shot his wife to death and was committed to an institution for the criminally insane for the rest of his life. Part of the confusion could stem from there being another man by the same name in Cooperstown in 1839.
Despite the lack of solid evidence linking Doubleday to the origins of baseball, Cooperstown, New York, became the new home of what is today the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in 1937.
There may have been some relationship to baseball as a national sport and Abner Doubleday. While the modern rules of baseball were formulated in New York during the 1840s, it was the scattering of New Yorkers exposed to these rules throughout the country, that spread not only baseball, but also the "New York Rules", thereby harmonizing the rules, and being a catalyst for its growth. Doubleday was a high-ranking officer, whose duties included seeing to provisions for the US Army fighting throughout the south and border states. For the morale of the men, he is said to have provisioned balls and bats for the men.
eng
Latn
Citation
- BiogHist
- BiogHist
<p>Doubleday, the son of Ulysses F. Doubleday and Hester Donnelly, was born in Ballston Spa, New York, in a small house on the corner of Washington and Fenwick streets. As a child, Abner was very short. The family all slept in the attic loft of the one-room house. His paternal grandfather, also named Abner, had fought in the American Revolutionary War. His maternal grandfather Thomas Donnelly joined the army at 14 and was a mounted messenger for George Washington. His great grandfather Peter Donnelly was a Minuteman. His father, Ulysses F., fought in the War of 1812, published newspapers and books, and represented Auburn, New York for four years in the United States Congress. Abner spent his childhood in Auburn and later was sent to Cooperstown to live with his uncle and attend a private preparatory high school. He practiced as a surveyor and civil engineer for two years before entering the United States Military Academy in 1838. He graduated in 1842, 24th in a class of 56 cadets, and was commissioned a brevet second lieutenant in the 3rd U.S. Artillery. In 1852, he married Mary Hewitt of Baltimore, the daughter of a local lawyer.</p>
<p>Doubleday initially served in coastal garrisons and then in the Mexican–American War from 1846 to 1848 and the Seminole Wars from 1856 to 1858. In 1858 he was transferred to Fort Moultrie in Charleston Harbor serving under Colonel John L. Gardner. By the start of the Civil War, he was a captain and second in command in the garrison at Fort Sumter, under Major Robert Anderson. He aimed the cannon that fired the first return shot in answer to the Confederate bombardment on April 12, 1861. He subsequently referred to himself as the "hero of Sumter" for this role.</p>
<p>Doubleday was promoted to major on May 14, 1861, and commanded the Artillery Department in the Shenandoah Valley from June to August, and then the artillery for Major General Nathaniel Banks's division of the Army of the Potomac. He was appointed brigadier general of volunteers on February 3, 1862, and was assigned to duty in northern Virginia while the Army of the Potomac conducted the Peninsula Campaign. His first combat assignment was to lead the 2nd Brigade, 1st Division, III Corps of the Army of Virginia during the Northern Virginia Campaign. In the actions at Brawner's farm, just before the Second Battle of Bull Run, he took the initiative to send two of his regiments to reinforce Brigadier General John Gibbon's brigade against a larger Confederate force, fighting it to a standstill. (Personal initiative was required since his division commander, Brig. Gen. Rufus King, was incapacitated by an epileptic seizure at the time. He was replaced by Brigadier General John P. Hatch.)[8] His men were routed when they encountered Major General James Longstreet's corps, but by the following day, August 30, he took command of the division when Hatch was wounded, and he led his men to cover the retreat of the Union Army.</p>
<p>Doubleday again led the division, now assigned to the I Corps of the Army of the Potomac, after South Mountain, where Hatch was wounded again. At Antietam, he led his men into the deadly fighting in the Cornfield and the West Woods, and one colonel described him as a "gallant officer ... remarkably cool and at the very front of battle." He was wounded when an artillery shell exploded near his horse, throwing him to the ground in a violent fall. He received a brevet promotion to lieutenant colonel in the regular army for his actions at Antietam and was promoted in March 1863 to major general of volunteers, to rank from November 29, 1862. At Fredericksburg in December 1862, his division mostly sat idle. During the winter, the I Corps was reorganized and Doubleday assumed command of the 3rd Division. At Chancellorsville in May 1863, the division was kept in reserve.</p>
<p>At the start of the Battle of Gettysburg, July 1, 1863, Doubleday's division was the second infantry division on the field to reinforce the cavalry division of Brigadier General John Buford. When his corps commander, Major General John F. Reynolds, was killed very early in the fighting, Doubleday found himself in command of the corps at 10:50 am. His men fought well in the morning, putting up a stout resistance, but as overwhelming Confederate forces massed against them, their line eventually broke and they retreated back through the town of Gettysburg to the relative safety of Cemetery Hill south of town. It was Doubleday's finest performance during the war, five hours leading 9,500 men against ten Confederate brigades that numbered more than 16,000. Seven of those brigades sustained casualties that ranged from 35 to 50 percent, indicating the ferocity of the Union defense. On Cemetery Hill, however, the I Corps could muster only a third of its men as effective for duty, and the corps was essentially destroyed as a combat force for the rest of the battle; it would be decommissioned in March 1864, its surviving units consolidated into other corps.</p>
<p>On July 2, 1863, Army of the Potomac commander Maj. Gen. George G. Meade replaced Doubleday with Major General John Newton, a more junior officer from another corps. The ostensible reason was a false report by XI Corps commander Major General Oliver O. Howard that Doubleday's corps broke first, causing the entire Union line to collapse, but Meade also had a long history of disdain for Doubleday's combat effectiveness, dating back to South Mountain. Doubleday was humiliated by this snub and held a lasting grudge against Meade, but he returned to division command and fought well for the remainder of the battle. He was wounded in the neck on the second day of Gettysburg and received a brevet promotion to colonel in the regular army for his service. He formally requested reinstatement as I Corps commander, but Meade refused, and Doubleday left Gettysburg on July 7 for Washington.</p>
<p>Doubleday's staff nicknamed him "Forty-Eight Hours" as a compliment to recognize his tendency to avoid reckless or impulsive actions and his thoughtfulness and deliberateness in considering circumstances and possible responses. In recent years, biographers have turned the nickname into an insult, incorrectly claiming "Forty-Eight Hours" was coined to highlight Doubleday's supposed incompetence and slowness to act.</p>
<p>Doubleday assumed administrative duties in the defenses of Washington, D.C., where he was in charge of courts martial, which gave him legal experience that he used after the war. His only return to combat was directing a portion of the defenses against the attack by Confederate Lieutenant General Jubal A. Early in the Valley Campaigns of 1864. Also while in Washington, Doubleday testified against George Meade at the United States Congress Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War, criticizing him harshly over his conduct of the Battle of Gettysburg. While in Washington, Doubleday remained a loyal Republican and staunch supporter of President Abraham Lincoln. Doubleday rode with Lincoln on the train to Gettysburg for the Gettysburg Address and Col. and Mrs. Doubleday attended events with Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln in Washington.</p>
<p>After the Civil War, Doubleday mustered out of the volunteer service on August 24, 1865, reverted to the rank of lieutenant colonel, and became the colonel of the 35th U.S. Infantry in September 1867. He was stationed in San Francisco from 1869 through 1871 and he took out a patent for the cable car railway that still runs there, receiving a charter for its operation, but signing away his rights when he was reassigned. In 1871 he commanded the 24th U.S. Infantry, an all African-American regiment with headquarters at Fort McKavett, Texas. He retired in 1873.</p>
<p>In the 1870s, he was listed in the New York business directory as lawyer.</p>
<p>Doubleday spent much of his time writing. He published two important works on the Civil War: Reminiscences of Forts Sumter and Moultrie (1876), and Chancellorsville and Gettysburg (1882), the latter being a volume of the series Campaigns of the Civil War.</p>
<p>In the summer of 1878, Doubleday lived in Mendham Township, New Jersey, and became a prominent member of the Theosophical Society. When two of the founders of that society, Helena Blavatsky and Henry Steel Olcott, moved to India at the end of that year, he was constituted as the president of the American body. Another prominent member was Thomas A. Edison.</p>
<p>Doubleday died of heart disease in 1893. Doubleday's body was laid in state in New York's City Hall and then was taken to Washington by train from Mendham Township, and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia.</p>
<p>Although Doubleday achieved minor fame as a competent combat general with experience in many important Civil War battles, he is more widely known as the supposed inventor of the game of baseball, in Elihu Phinney's cow pasture in Cooperstown, New York, in 1839.</p>
<p>The Mills Commission, chaired by Abraham G. Mills, the fourth president of the National League, was appointed in 1905 to determine the origin of baseball. The committee's final report, on December 30, 1907, stated, in part, that "the first scheme for playing baseball, according to the best evidence obtainable to date, was devised by Abner Doubleday at Cooperstown, New York, in 1839." It concluded by saying, "in the years to come, in the view of the hundreds of thousands of people who are devoted to baseball, and the millions who will be, Abner Doubleday's fame will rest evenly, if not quite as much, upon the fact that he was its inventor ... as upon his brilliant and distinguished career as an officer in the Federal Army."</p>
<p>However, there is considerable evidence to dispute this claim. Baseball historian George B. Kirsch has described the results of the Mills Commission as a "myth". He wrote, "Robert Henderson, Harold Seymour, and other scholars have since debunked the Doubleday-Cooperstown myth, which nonetheless remains powerful in the American imagination because of the efforts of Major League Baseball and the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown." At his death, Doubleday left many letters and papers, none of which describe baseball or give any suggestion that he considered himself a prominent person in the evolution of the game, and his New York Times obituary did not mention the game at all. Chairman Mills himself, who had been a Civil War colleague of Doubleday and a member of the honor guard for Doubleday's body as it lay in state in New York City, never recalled hearing Doubleday describe his role as the inventor. Doubleday was a cadet at West Point in the year of the alleged invention and his family had moved away from Cooperstown the prior year. Furthermore, the primary testimony to the commission that connected baseball to Doubleday was that of Abner Graves, whose credibility is questionable; a few years later, he shot his wife to death and was committed to an institution for the criminally insane for the rest of his life. Part of the confusion could stem from there being another man by the same name in Cooperstown in 1839.</p>
<p>Despite the lack of solid evidence linking Doubleday to the origins of baseball, Cooperstown, New York, became the new home of what is today the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in 1937.</p>
<p>There may have been some relationship to baseball as a national sport and Abner Doubleday. While the modern rules of baseball were formulated in New York during the 1840s, it was the scattering of New Yorkers exposed to these rules throughout the country, that spread not only baseball, but also the "New York Rules", thereby harmonizing the rules, and being a catalyst for its growth. Doubleday was a high-ranking officer, whose duties included seeing to provisions for the US Army fighting throughout the south and border states. For the morale of the men, he is said to have provisioned balls and bats for the men.</p>
Wikipedia.org article for Abner Doubleday, viewed May 12, 2020
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Wikipedia.org article for Abner Doubleday, viewed May 12, 2020
<p>Doubleday, the son of Ulysses F. Doubleday and Hester Donnelly, was born in Ballston Spa, New York, in a small house on the corner of Washington and Fenwick streets. As a child, Abner was very short. The family all slept in the attic loft of the one-room house. His paternal grandfather, also named Abner, had fought in the American Revolutionary War. His maternal grandfather Thomas Donnelly joined the army at 14 and was a mounted messenger for George Washington. His great grandfather Peter Donnelly was a Minuteman. His father, Ulysses F., fought in the War of 1812, published newspapers and books, and represented Auburn, New York for four years in the United States Congress. Abner spent his childhood in Auburn and later was sent to Cooperstown to live with his uncle and attend a private preparatory high school. He practiced as a surveyor and civil engineer for two years before entering the United States Military Academy in 1838. He graduated in 1842, 24th in a class of 56 cadets, and was commissioned a brevet second lieutenant in the 3rd U.S. Artillery. In 1852, he married Mary Hewitt of Baltimore, the daughter of a local lawyer.</p> <p>Doubleday initially served in coastal garrisons and then in the Mexican–American War from 1846 to 1848 and the Seminole Wars from 1856 to 1858. In 1858 he was transferred to Fort Moultrie in Charleston Harbor serving under Colonel John L. Gardner. By the start of the Civil War, he was a captain and second in command in the garrison at Fort Sumter, under Major Robert Anderson. He aimed the cannon that fired the first return shot in answer to the Confederate bombardment on April 12, 1861. He subsequently referred to himself as the "hero of Sumter" for this role.</p> <p>Doubleday was promoted to major on May 14, 1861, and commanded the Artillery Department in the Shenandoah Valley from June to August, and then the artillery for Major General Nathaniel Banks's division of the Army of the Potomac. He was appointed brigadier general of volunteers on February 3, 1862, and was assigned to duty in northern Virginia while the Army of the Potomac conducted the Peninsula Campaign. His first combat assignment was to lead the 2nd Brigade, 1st Division, III Corps of the Army of Virginia during the Northern Virginia Campaign. In the actions at Brawner's farm, just before the Second Battle of Bull Run, he took the initiative to send two of his regiments to reinforce Brigadier General John Gibbon's brigade against a larger Confederate force, fighting it to a standstill. (Personal initiative was required since his division commander, Brig. Gen. Rufus King, was incapacitated by an epileptic seizure at the time. He was replaced by Brigadier General John P. Hatch.)[8] His men were routed when they encountered Major General James Longstreet's corps, but by the following day, August 30, he took command of the division when Hatch was wounded, and he led his men to cover the retreat of the Union Army.</p> <p>Doubleday again led the division, now assigned to the I Corps of the Army of the Potomac, after South Mountain, where Hatch was wounded again. At Antietam, he led his men into the deadly fighting in the Cornfield and the West Woods, and one colonel described him as a "gallant officer ... remarkably cool and at the very front of battle." He was wounded when an artillery shell exploded near his horse, throwing him to the ground in a violent fall. He received a brevet promotion to lieutenant colonel in the regular army for his actions at Antietam and was promoted in March 1863 to major general of volunteers, to rank from November 29, 1862. At Fredericksburg in December 1862, his division mostly sat idle. During the winter, the I Corps was reorganized and Doubleday assumed command of the 3rd Division. At Chancellorsville in May 1863, the division was kept in reserve.</p> <p>At the start of the Battle of Gettysburg, July 1, 1863, Doubleday's division was the second infantry division on the field to reinforce the cavalry division of Brigadier General John Buford. When his corps commander, Major General John F. Reynolds, was killed very early in the fighting, Doubleday found himself in command of the corps at 10:50 am. His men fought well in the morning, putting up a stout resistance, but as overwhelming Confederate forces massed against them, their line eventually broke and they retreated back through the town of Gettysburg to the relative safety of Cemetery Hill south of town. It was Doubleday's finest performance during the war, five hours leading 9,500 men against ten Confederate brigades that numbered more than 16,000. Seven of those brigades sustained casualties that ranged from 35 to 50 percent, indicating the ferocity of the Union defense. On Cemetery Hill, however, the I Corps could muster only a third of its men as effective for duty, and the corps was essentially destroyed as a combat force for the rest of the battle; it would be decommissioned in March 1864, its surviving units consolidated into other corps.</p> <p>On July 2, 1863, Army of the Potomac commander Maj. Gen. George G. Meade replaced Doubleday with Major General John Newton, a more junior officer from another corps. The ostensible reason was a false report by XI Corps commander Major General Oliver O. Howard that Doubleday's corps broke first, causing the entire Union line to collapse, but Meade also had a long history of disdain for Doubleday's combat effectiveness, dating back to South Mountain. Doubleday was humiliated by this snub and held a lasting grudge against Meade, but he returned to division command and fought well for the remainder of the battle. He was wounded in the neck on the second day of Gettysburg and received a brevet promotion to colonel in the regular army for his service. He formally requested reinstatement as I Corps commander, but Meade refused, and Doubleday left Gettysburg on July 7 for Washington.</p> <p>Doubleday's staff nicknamed him "Forty-Eight Hours" as a compliment to recognize his tendency to avoid reckless or impulsive actions and his thoughtfulness and deliberateness in considering circumstances and possible responses. In recent years, biographers have turned the nickname into an insult, incorrectly claiming "Forty-Eight Hours" was coined to highlight Doubleday's supposed incompetence and slowness to act.</p> <p>Doubleday assumed administrative duties in the defenses of Washington, D.C., where he was in charge of courts martial, which gave him legal experience that he used after the war. His only return to combat was directing a portion of the defenses against the attack by Confederate Lieutenant General Jubal A. Early in the Valley Campaigns of 1864. Also while in Washington, Doubleday testified against George Meade at the United States Congress Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War, criticizing him harshly over his conduct of the Battle of Gettysburg. While in Washington, Doubleday remained a loyal Republican and staunch supporter of President Abraham Lincoln. Doubleday rode with Lincoln on the train to Gettysburg for the Gettysburg Address and Col. and Mrs. Doubleday attended events with Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln in Washington.</p> <p>After the Civil War, Doubleday mustered out of the volunteer service on August 24, 1865, reverted to the rank of lieutenant colonel, and became the colonel of the 35th U.S. Infantry in September 1867. He was stationed in San Francisco from 1869 through 1871 and he took out a patent for the cable car railway that still runs there, receiving a charter for its operation, but signing away his rights when he was reassigned. In 1871 he commanded the 24th U.S. Infantry, an all African-American regiment with headquarters at Fort McKavett, Texas. He retired in 1873.</p> <p>In the 1870s, he was listed in the New York business directory as lawyer.</p> <p>Doubleday spent much of his time writing. He published two important works on the Civil War: Reminiscences of Forts Sumter and Moultrie (1876), and Chancellorsville and Gettysburg (1882), the latter being a volume of the series Campaigns of the Civil War.</p> <p>In the summer of 1878, Doubleday lived in Mendham Township, New Jersey, and became a prominent member of the Theosophical Society. When two of the founders of that society, Helena Blavatsky and Henry Steel Olcott, moved to India at the end of that year, he was constituted as the president of the American body. Another prominent member was Thomas A. Edison.</p> <p>Doubleday died of heart disease in 1893. Doubleday's body was laid in state in New York's City Hall and then was taken to Washington by train from Mendham Township, and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia.</p> <p>Although Doubleday achieved minor fame as a competent combat general with experience in many important Civil War battles, he is more widely known as the supposed inventor of the game of baseball, in Elihu Phinney's cow pasture in Cooperstown, New York, in 1839.</p> <p>The Mills Commission, chaired by Abraham G. Mills, the fourth president of the National League, was appointed in 1905 to determine the origin of baseball. The committee's final report, on December 30, 1907, stated, in part, that "the first scheme for playing baseball, according to the best evidence obtainable to date, was devised by Abner Doubleday at Cooperstown, New York, in 1839." It concluded by saying, "in the years to come, in the view of the hundreds of thousands of people who are devoted to baseball, and the millions who will be, Abner Doubleday's fame will rest evenly, if not quite as much, upon the fact that he was its inventor ... as upon his brilliant and distinguished career as an officer in the Federal Army."</p> <p>However, there is considerable evidence to dispute this claim. Baseball historian George B. Kirsch has described the results of the Mills Commission as a "myth". He wrote, "Robert Henderson, Harold Seymour, and other scholars have since debunked the Doubleday-Cooperstown myth, which nonetheless remains powerful in the American imagination because of the efforts of Major League Baseball and the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown." At his death, Doubleday left many letters and papers, none of which describe baseball or give any suggestion that he considered himself a prominent person in the evolution of the game, and his New York Times obituary did not mention the game at all. Chairman Mills himself, who had been a Civil War colleague of Doubleday and a member of the honor guard for Doubleday's body as it lay in state in New York City, never recalled hearing Doubleday describe his role as the inventor. Doubleday was a cadet at West Point in the year of the alleged invention and his family had moved away from Cooperstown the prior year. Furthermore, the primary testimony to the commission that connected baseball to Doubleday was that of Abner Graves, whose credibility is questionable; a few years later, he shot his wife to death and was committed to an institution for the criminally insane for the rest of his life. Part of the confusion could stem from there being another man by the same name in Cooperstown in 1839.</p> <p>Despite the lack of solid evidence linking Doubleday to the origins of baseball, Cooperstown, New York, became the new home of what is today the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in 1937.</p> <p>There may have been some relationship to baseball as a national sport and Abner Doubleday. While the modern rules of baseball were formulated in New York during the 1840s, it was the scattering of New Yorkers exposed to these rules throughout the country, that spread not only baseball, but also the "New York Rules", thereby harmonizing the rules, and being a catalyst for its growth. Doubleday was a high-ranking officer, whose duties included seeing to provisions for the US Army fighting throughout the south and border states. For the morale of the men, he is said to have provisioned balls and bats for the men.</p>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abner_Doubleday
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http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tamucush/00080/00080-P.html
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tamucush/00080/00080-P.html
Frederick M. Dearborn collection of military and political Americana, Part III: The Civil War: The Union, 1804-1915.
Title:
Frederick M. Dearborn collection of military and political Americana, Part III: The Civil War: The Union, 1804-1915.
Autograph letters and documents of officers and statesmen associated with the Union in the Civil War collected by Frederick Myers Dearborn.
ArchivalResource: 8 boxes (4 linear ft.)
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- Frederick M. Dearborn collection of military and political Americana, Part III: The Civil War: The Union, 1804-1915.
Approved Pension File for Mary Doubleday, Widow of Major General Abner Doubleday, U.S. Army (WC-374300)
Title:
Approved Pension File for Mary Doubleday, Widow of Major General Abner Doubleday, U.S. Army (WC-374300)
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Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893. Autograph letter signed : Monterrey, Mexico, to W[illiam] S[tarke] Rosecrans, 1847 Feb. 5.
Title:
Autograph letter signed : Monterrey, Mexico, to W[illiam] S[tarke] Rosecrans, 1847 Feb. 5.
Reporting on the melancholy of the Monterrey area in the wake of the defeat of the Mexican army by U.S. troops led by Zachary Taylor, and warning that the "outrage after outrage" committed by the volunteer officers may "bring a stain upon the American name which we can never efface." He comments on the nature of glory and fame, and on Rosencrans' conversion to Catholicism. Since the city is nearly deserted he spends his time reading ("Spanish literature is little better than an echo of the old European writers") and occasionally visiting "the dark eyed and dark skinned Senoritas." He reports that the Monterrey aristocracy is "boiling over with patriotism" and that Taylor is at Saltello in preparation for an attack. In a postscript he adds a report on the surrender of Major General John P. Gaines along with the words, "Hurrah for our side. Another chance of being shot at."
ArchivalResource: 1 item (4 p.) ; 27 cm.
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- Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893. Autograph letter signed : Monterrey, Mexico, to W[illiam] S[tarke] Rosecrans, 1847 Feb. 5.
Philip Case Lockwood memorial collection of Civil War portraits and autographs, 1862-ca. 1886.
Title:
Philip Case Lockwood memorial collection of Civil War portraits and autographs, 1862-ca. 1886.
Scrapbook collection of Civil War photographs and autographs, assembled by Philip Case Lockwood.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (.38 linear ft.)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00542/catalog View
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- Philip Case Lockwood memorial collection of Civil War portraits and autographs, 1862-ca. 1886.
Vlasich, James A. Beginnig the Tribute The origin of the Baseball Hall of Fame : typescript 1990.
Title:
Beginnig the Tribute The origin of the Baseball Hall of Fame : typescript 1990. c1990.
The manuscript written by James A. Vlasich, includes the book outline by chapter and footnotes for each chapter. This was published in 1990 by Bowling Green Popular Press. This book starts with the origins of baseball, Abner Doubleday, the Clark family and the start of the Hall of Fame and Museum.
ArchivalResource: 1 box : (.5 linear feet)
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- Vlasich, James A. Beginnig the Tribute The origin of the Baseball Hall of Fame : typescript 1990.
Photographic Portrait File
Title:
Photographic Portrait File
ArchivalResource:
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- Photographic Portrait File
Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893. Report of inspection, signed twice : Fort Brown, Texas, 1873 Mar. 31.
Title:
Report of inspection, signed twice : Fort Brown, Texas, 1873 Mar. 31.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (2 p.)
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- Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893. Report of inspection, signed twice : Fort Brown, Texas, 1873 Mar. 31.
Beale, James, b. 1844?. James Beale papers, 1862-1895.
Title:
James Beale papers, 1862-1895.
Printer, of Boston, and Union soldier. Autograph collection and letters (1878-95) to Beale by most of the principal officers involved in the Gettysburg campaign, commenting on military strategy and personalities. Correspondents include Abner Doubleday, Rutherford B. Hayes, Joseph Hooker, James Longstreet, Fitz-John Porter, and William Tecumseh Sherman.
ArchivalResource: 1 box.
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- Beale, James, b. 1844?. James Beale papers, 1862-1895.
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts Civil War collection, 1724-1933 (inclusive); 1861-1912 (bulk).
Title:
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts Civil War collection, 1724-1933 (inclusive); 1861-1912 (bulk).
A collection of images, manuscripts, and printed material, mostly relating to the Massachusetts soldiers and regiments in the American Civil War. Some material relates to other Union regiments and the Confederate States of America.
ArchivalResource: 47 linear feet (143 boxes, 2 volumes)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00124/catalog View
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- Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts Civil War collection, 1724-1933 (inclusive);, 1861-1912 (bulk).
Record Group 94: Records of the Adjutant General's Office, 1762 - 1984
Series: Letters Received, 1871 - 1894
File Unit: Consolidated Military Officer's File of Colonel Abner Doubleday, 24th U.S. Infantry
Title:
Record Group 94: Records of the Adjutant General's Office, 1762 - 1984
Series: Letters Received, 1871 - 1894
File Unit: Consolidated Military Officer's File of Colonel Abner Doubleday, 24th U.S. Infantry
ArchivalResource:
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Cooke, John Esten, 1830-1886. Annals of the war; chapters of unwritten history, 1877 March 24-1888 July 7.
Title:
Annals of the war; chapters of unwritten history, 1877 March 24-1888 July 7.
The Philadelphia Weekly Times newspaper published articles written by various people about the Civil War. Among the writers were John Esten Cooke, Abner Doubleday, Mary W. Early, G.N. Galloway, F.E. Garnett, Henry Heth, R.M.T. Hunter, George L. Kilmer, Armistead L. Long, Sarah Magruder, Henry B. McClellan, John Singleton Mosby, Thomas L. Rosser, Ella B. Washington, and Julia Wheelock-Freeman. Topics include generals A.P. Hill, Stonewall Jackson, Robert E. Lee, James Longstreet, and George Gordon Meade; Confederate president Jefferson Davis; battles and campaigns, especially Gettysburg; the sieges of Charleston, Chattanooga, Knoxville, Petersburg, and Vicksburg; Sherman's march to the sea; African-American Confederates; prisons and prisoners; regimental actions; naval operations; the Confederacy; the British view of the war; hospitals; women in the war; songs; and civilian life, especially in Richmond.
ArchivalResource: 1.29 cubic ft. (1, 813 leaves)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32448917 View
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- Cooke, John Esten, 1830-1886. Annals of the war; chapters of unwritten history, 1877 March 24-1888 July 7.
Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893. Papers, 1861-1879.
Title:
Papers, 1861-1879.
Two letters and two photographic items documenting Doubleday's Civil War military career.
ArchivalResource: 4 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/70971695 View
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- Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893. Papers, 1861-1879.
Manuscript collection, 1704-1974, 1759-1829 (bulk)
Title:
Manuscript collection, 1704-1974, 1759-1829 (bulk)
Collection relates primarily to American Revolution, including commissions and warrants for officers, regimental rosters and muster rolls, discharge certificates and certificates of service, orderly books, and correspondence concerning military conditions and battles. Includes correspondence of George Washington regarding Morristown encampment, 1780, Yorktown operations, 1781, provisions for Dragoons, 1778-1780, and other matters; diary of Mathew Gregory on siege of Yorktown, 1781; orderly books and muster rolls for units at Boston, 1776, Connecticut, 1782, and Verplanks Point, 1782; letter about Battle of Guilford's Courthouse, 1781; newspaper clippings on evacuation of New York, 1785-1791; and other materials regarding military affairs. Papers, 1768-1805, of Dr. Solomon Drowne, physician for French troops in American Revolution, include correspondence, travel documents, and notes concerning care of French soldiers. Correspondents include Jean Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, comte de Rochambeau, Lt. Hyacinthe de Silly, and Louis XVI, King of France. Papers, 1773-1815, of Benjamin Tallmadge, include diploma from Yale, 1773, military commissions, letters concerning military operations, 1780-1782, particularly in Connecticut and on Long Island Sound, business and political matters, 1792-1815; also, manuscript version of Tallmadge's memoirs, 1858.
ArchivalResource: ca. 500 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/155472906 View
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- Fraunces Tavern Museum. Manuscript collection, 1704-1974, 1759-1829 (bulk)
Lincoln, George Burt, 1817-1890. Collection, 1792-1894.
Title:
Collection, 1792-1894.
Correspondence, legal and printed and scrapbook materials related to George Burt Lincoln.
ArchivalResource: 1 box ; 40 x 26 x 7 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/18886136 View
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- Lincoln, George Burt, 1817-1890. Collection, 1792-1894.
Record Group 94: Records of the Adjutant General's Office, 1762 - 1984
Series: Carded Records Relating to Civil War Staff Officers, 1890 - 1912
File Unit: Doubleday, Abner -- Brigadier General
Title:
Record Group 94: Records of the Adjutant General's Office, 1762 - 1984
Series: Carded Records Relating to Civil War Staff Officers, 1890 - 1912
File Unit: Doubleday, Abner -- Brigadier General
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1759015 View
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Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893. Report of insurrection signed : Fort Brown, Texas, 1873 May 31.
Title:
Report of insurrection signed : Fort Brown, Texas, 1873 May 31.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (2 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270994249 View
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- Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893. Report of insurrection signed : Fort Brown, Texas, 1873 May 31.
Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893. Papers, [ca. 1852]-1981.
Title:
Papers, [ca. 1852]-1981.
The writings of Doubleday, reflecting on his career in the military; also an annotated and edited partial transcript of the papers and an annotated article on his military activity in Florida (ca. 1852-1981). Manuscripts tell of his experinces in the Third Seminole War, the Mexican War, fighting the Apaches in Texas, and the Civil War. One volume is devoted to the battle of Gettysburg where Doubleday commanded the First Corps of the Army of the Potomac; this volume compiles extracts of official military reports, letters, and diaries along with newspaper clippings and maps. Another volume accounts the battles of Monterey and Buena Vista, his trip to Parras, Mexico, and another journey to Mexico to investigate George Gardner's claim against the United States for a mine supposedly destroyed during the war with Mexico. Two volumes contain drafts of chapters of his military biography, mostly relating to the Mexican War and hostilities with the Seminoles and the Apaches. The final two volumes relate military anecdotes and "Some Experience of Wit, Humor, and Repartee in Army and Navy Life".
ArchivalResource: .6 linear ft. (5 v., 1 box)
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- Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893. Papers, [ca. 1852]-1981.
Frémont, John Charles, 1813-1890. ALS, [n.d.] : to Major General [Abner] Doubleday, New Jersey.
Title:
ALS, [n.d.] : to Major General [Abner] Doubleday, New Jersey.
Fremont agrees with Doubleday's recollection of an event in 1856. "Personal incidents like this go far in making history interesting. They show undeniably how they germinate ..."
ArchivalResource: 2 p. ; 20 x 12 cm.
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- Frémont, John Charles, 1813-1890. ALS, [n.d.] : to Major General [Abner] Doubleday, New Jersey.
Ralph Waldo Emerson letters from various correspondents, ca. 1814-1882.
Title:
Ralph Waldo Emerson letters from various correspondents, ca. 1814-1882.
Letters from colleagues and friends to American Transcendentalist, essayist, poet, and philosopher, Ralph Waldo Emerson.
ArchivalResource: 36 boxes (12 linear ft.)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00123/catalog View
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- Ralph Waldo Emerson letters from various correspondents, ca. 1814-1882.
Memorabilia, [ca. 1862-1962]
Title:
Memorabilia, [ca. 1862-1962]
Collection consists of typescripts of journals kept by Gray while an aide-de-camp to General Abner Doubleday of the 4th New York Heavy Artillery Regiment, 1862. Also included is correspondence from William Gray Harmon, owner of his great-grandfather's "Journal," concerning use of an excerpt by City College for a centennial celebration of the Emancipation Proclamation, 1962.
ArchivalResource: ca. .5 cubic ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/155502823 View
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- Gray, William Cullen Bryant. Memorabilia, [ca. 1862-1962]
Doubleday, Ulysses, 1824-1893. Ulysses Doubleday order book, 1862-1865.
Title:
Ulysses Doubleday order book, 1862-1865.
Order book (248 pages) concerning Doubleday's service as a major in the 4th N.Y. Artillery, as lieutenant colonel of the 3rd U.S. Colored Troops, and as colonel commanding a brigade of the 45th U.S. Colored Troops at the Battle of Five Forks. Consists of correspondence, inspection records, rosters of officers, military lessons, newspaper clippings, and material pertaining to armaments and arrangement of artillery of Forts Ethan Allen and Marcy in Virginia and to other military matters. Also includes biographical sketch of Doubleday's brother, Abner.
ArchivalResource: 1 item.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/70984785 View
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- Doubleday, Ulysses, 1824-1893. Ulysses Doubleday order book, 1862-1865.
Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893. Letter signed : Fort Brown, Texas, to the Acting Asst. Adjutant General in San Antonio, 1872 Nov. 14.
Title:
Letter signed : Fort Brown, Texas, to the Acting Asst. Adjutant General in San Antonio, 1872 Nov. 14.
Certifying the destruction of property.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 p.) ; (8vo)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270537704 View
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- Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893. Letter signed : Fort Brown, Texas, to the Acting Asst. Adjutant General in San Antonio, 1872 Nov. 14.
Robert Anderson Papers, 1819-1948, (bulk 1836-1870)
Title:
Robert Anderson Papers 1819-1948 (bulk 1836-1870)
United States Army officer. Correspondence, letterbooks, printed material, writings, and official documents relating to Anderson’s military duty in the Black Hawk War, Mexican War, and Civil War, and to his writings on coast defense, ordnance, and artillery tactics. Includes papers of his daughter, Eba Anderson Lawton, historian and biographer of her father.
ArchivalResource: 5,000 items; 19 containers plus 1 oversize; 5 linear feet
http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms010047 View
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- Anderson, Robert, 1805-1871. Papers of Robert Anderson, 1819-1948 (bulk 1836-1870).
Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893. Letter signed : Fort Brown, Texas, to the Acting Ass't. Adjutant General in San Antonio, 1872 Sept. 13.
Title:
Letter signed : Fort Brown, Texas, to the Acting Ass't. Adjutant General in San Antonio, 1872 Sept. 13.
Certifying the destruction of property.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 p.) ; (8vo)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270537698 View
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- Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893. Letter signed : Fort Brown, Texas, to the Acting Ass't. Adjutant General in San Antonio, 1872 Sept. 13.
Century Company records
Title:
Century Company records
The Century Company published the Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine, which was widely regarded as the best general periodical of its time, performing a role as cultural arbiter during the 1880s and 1890s. It was founded in New York City in 1881 and also published the children's magazine St. Nicholas, dictionaries, and books. The Century Company records date from 1870 to the 1930s and chiefly contain correspondence with contributors, readers, public figures, and literary agents. A number of manuscripts and proofs in the collection are extensively edited and taken with annotations on letters provide a detailed record of the outlook, standards, and functions of the company.
ArchivalResource: 60.4 linear feet; 151 boxes
http://archives.nypl.org/mss/504 View
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- Century Company records, 1870-1924
The Morrow-Boniface family papers, 1862-1974, (bulk 1862-1865).
Title:
The Morrow-Boniface family papers, 1862-1974, (bulk 1862-1865).
Contains: biographical information on Henry A. Morrow and Isabella B. Pumfrey (1879-1970); diaries of Henry A. Morrow (1864-1877) and Isabella M. Boniface (1915-1937); correspondence to and from Henry A. Morrow (1865-1879); reports by Henry A. Morrow and Abner Doubleday concerning various Civil War expeditions including the battles at Gettysburg, Pa. and Fredericksburg, Va. (1862-1865); Henry A. Morrow's eulogy from the OMAHA DAILY BEE (1891); legal documents and personal memorabilia of Isabella M. Boniface and Isabella B. Pumfrey (1901-1974).
ArchivalResource: 1 box.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/23450971 View
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- The Morrow-Boniface family papers, 1862-1974, (bulk 1862-1865).
Luvaas, Jay. The Jay Luvaas collection, 1861-1877.
Title:
The Jay Luvaas collection, 1861-1877.
Contains photocopies and typed transcriptions of: diaries of Robert Taggart who served with the 38th Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment (1861-1862) and Alfred Thompson who served with the 49th Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment (1862-1864); and correspondence of Samuel P. Bates (1863-1877), Abner Doubleday (1874-1877), Joseph Hooker (1876), Abraham Lincoln (1863), O.O. Howard (1874-1875), Charles S. Brown who served in the 21st Michigan Infantry Regiment (1864-1865), Steve R. Clark who served in the 13th Ohio Cavalry Regiment (1863-1865), Robert M. Erwin who served in the 28th Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment (1861-1865), Alfred Thompson who served in the 49th Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment (1862-1864) and George H. Wilson who served in the 58th Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment (1863).
ArchivalResource: 1 box.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/22768074 View
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- Luvaas, Jay. The Jay Luvaas collection, 1861-1877.
Howard, O. O. (Oliver Otis), 1830-1909. Papers 1876-1882.
Title:
Papers 1876-1882.
Letters, Dec. 6, 1876, and May 20, 1882, of Brig. Gen. Oliver Otis Howard relating to accounts of the battle of Gettysburg by Howard, Gen. Winfield Scott Hancock, Gen. Abner Doubleday, and Capt. David Hall.
ArchivalResource: 2 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/6440027 View
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- Howard, O. O. (Oliver Otis), 1830-1909. Papers 1876-1882.
Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893. Autobiography, 1846-1858.
Title:
Autobiography, 1846-1858.
Details Doubleday's assignment to Florida, including patrolling the Everglades and the campaign against the Seminoles in 1857.
ArchivalResource: .5 in.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/70951456 View
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- Doubleday, Abner, 1819-1893. Autobiography, 1846-1858.
Inventory of the Everette B. Long Papers 1949-1981
Title:
Inventory of the Everette B. Long Papers 1949-1981
Everette Beach Long, one of America's foremost experts on the Civil War, was born on 24 October 1919, in Whitehall, Wisconsin to Cecil Everettee and Florence (Beach) Long. He attended Miami University in Oxford, Ohio from 1937 to 1939 and Northwestern University from 1939 to 1941. In 1942, E. B. Long married Barbara Conzelman. Devoting himself to historical research and teaching, and a prolific writer of historical works focusing on the American Civil War, Long was the director of research for Doubleday's multi-volume , written by Bruce Catton from 1955 to 1965. He was a member of the advisory council of the National Civil War Centennial Commission. Long was a member of the Chicago Civil War Round Table and served as its president from 1955 to 1956. He was a member of the Friends of the Chicago Public Library and was its president in 1960. Long died on 31 March 1981 in Chicago, Illinois, the day after the publication of his last work, . The E. B. Long Papers (1949-1981) consist of thirty-four boxes (40 linear ft), including: personal correspondence, manuscripts by Long and others, articles, booklets, essays, clippings, photocopies, research notes, maps, brochures, and photographs. While most of the materials in this collection are dated in the twentieth century, there are several original Civil War documents of the nineteenth century. Of further interest are the drafts of Allan Nevins's , which were edited by E. B. Long, and the nine long index boxes of Long's research notes on the Civil War. The papers have been divided into the following categories: personal correspondence, manuscripts by Long, manuscripts by others, general files covering a wide range of subjects, drafts of Allan Nevins' , research notes on the Civil War, index card files of articles, and miscellaneous volumes of clippings. The correspondence is arranged both chronologically for general correspondence and alphabetically for correspondence with specific individuals, resulting in some overlapping of dates. Correspondents include Bruce Catton, the Civil War Round Table, Doubleday and Company, Allan Nevins, Lowell Reedinbaugh, and John Y. Simon. Centennial History of the Civil War The Saints and the Union: The Utah Territory in the Civil War Ordeal of the Union Ordeal of the Union
ArchivalResource:
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- Resource Relation
- Inventory of the Everette B. Long Papers Ragan MSS 00080., 1949-1981
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Anderson, Robert, 1805-1871.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Beale, James, b. 1844?
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Bliss, William W.
California Street Cable Railroad Co. (San Francisco, Calif.)
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6gv1fmm
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founderOf
Abner Doubleday applied for a patient for the San Francisco Cable Car System.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- California Street Cable Railroad Co. (San Francisco, Calif.)
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Century Company
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Clay, Cassius M.
Dearborn, Frederick M. (Frederick Myers), b. 1876
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6mm013c
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dearborn, Frederick M. (Frederick Myers), b. 1876
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dellenbaugh, Frederick Samuel, 1853-1935
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Doubleday, Thomas Donnelly, 1816-1864
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Doubleday, Ulysses, 1824-1893.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 1803-1882
Fort Moultrie (S.C.)
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w63c2k9c
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associatedWith
Abner Doubleday was stationed at Fort Moultrie prior to the Civil War.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Fort Moultrie (S.C.)
Fort Sumter
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6nq5968
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associatedWith
Abner Doubleday was stationed prior and at the beginning of the Civil War.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Fort Sumter
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Fraunces Tavern Museum.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Frémont, John Charles, 1813-1890.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Gardner, George A.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Gray, William Cullen Bryant.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Howard, O. O. (Oliver Otis), 1830-1909.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Lincoln, George Burt, 1817-1890.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Lockwood, Philip Case, 1844-1897
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Luvaas, Jay.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Meade, George Gordon, 1815-1872.
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. Commandery of the State of Massachusetts, collector.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6c099t4
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. Commandery of the State of Massachusetts, collector.
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. Commandery of the State of Massachusetts, collector.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6c099t4
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. Commandery of the State of Massachusetts, collector.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Prentiss, Benjamin N.
Rosecrans, William S. (William Starke), 1819-1898,
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6zs2vdx
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Rosecrans, William S. (William Starke), 1819-1898,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Rosenberry, Walter S.,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Taylor, Zachary, 1784-1850.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army
United States. Army. Artillery Regiment, 1st
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6xd5sxv
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memberOf
Abner Doubleday was assigned to the 1st Artillery Regiment during the Mexican-American War.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army. Artillery Regiment, 1st
United States. Army. Artillery Regiment, 3rd.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w61k7sks
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memberOf
Abner Doubleday was assigned to the 3rd Artillery Regiment after graduating from the US Military Academy.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army. Artillery Regiment, 3rd.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army. Infantry Regiment, 24th
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army. Infantry Regiment, 35th
United States. Army of the Potomac. Corps, 1st.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6wm741v
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memberOf
Abner Doubleday was part of the Command Structure of the 1st Corps.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army of the Potomac. Corps, 1st.
United States. Army of Virginia. Corps, 3rd (1862)
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w66t7dn3
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memberOf
Abner Doubleday was part of the command structure of the 3rd Corps.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army of Virginia. Corps, 3rd (1862)
United States Military Academy
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w67x01xt
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alumnusOrAlumnaOf
Abner Doubleday graduated in the Class of 1838.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States Military Academy
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Vlasich, James A.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Long, E. B. (Everette Beach), 1919-1981
eng
Latn
Citation
- Language
- eng
American wit and humor
Citation
- Subject
- American wit and humor
Antietam, Battle of, Md., 1862
Citation
- Subject
- Antietam, Battle of, Md., 1862
Apache Indians
Citation
- Subject
- Apache Indians
Apache Indians
Citation
- Subject
- Apache Indians
Baseball
Citation
- Subject
- Baseball
Buena Vista, Battle of, Mexico, 1847
Citation
- Subject
- Buena Vista, Battle of, Mexico, 1847
Bull Run, 2nd Battle of, Va., 1862
Citation
- Subject
- Bull Run, 2nd Battle of, Va., 1862
Cable cars (Streetcars)
Citation
- Subject
- Cable cars (Streetcars)
Chancellorsville, Battle of, Chancellorsville, Va., 1863
Citation
- Subject
- Chancellorsville, Battle of, Chancellorsville, Va., 1863
Civil War, 1861-1865
Citation
- Subject
- Civil War, 1861-1865
Fredericksburg, Battle of, Fredericksburg, Va., 1862
Citation
- Subject
- Fredericksburg, Battle of, Fredericksburg, Va., 1862
Gettysburg, Battle of, Gettysburg, Pa., 1863
Citation
- Subject
- Gettysburg, Battle of, Gettysburg, Pa., 1863
Mexican War, 1846-1848
Citation
- Subject
- Mexican War, 1846-1848
Mexican War, 1846-1848
Citation
- Subject
- Mexican War, 1846-1848
Mexican War, 1846-1848
Citation
- Subject
- Mexican War, 1846-1848
Monterrey, Battle of, Monterrey, Mexico, 1846
Citation
- Subject
- Monterrey, Battle of, Monterrey, Mexico, 1846
Seminole Indians
Citation
- Subject
- Seminole Indians
Seminole War, 3rd, 1855-1858
Citation
- Subject
- Seminole War, 3rd, 1855-1858
Seminole War, 3rd, 1855-1858
Citation
- Subject
- Seminole War, 3rd, 1855-1858
Soldiers
Citation
- Subject
- Soldiers
South Mountain, Battle of, Md., 1862
Citation
- Subject
- South Mountain, Battle of, Md., 1862
Americans
Citation
- Nationality
- Americans
Authors
Citation
- Occupation
- Authors
Military officers
Citation
- Occupation
- Military officers
Soldiers
Citation
- Occupation
- Soldiers
New Jersey
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Abner Doubleday died at Mendham, New Jersey on January 26, 1893.
Citation
- Place
Auburn
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Abner Doubleday spent his childhood in Auburn, New York.
Citation
- Place
Fort Moultrie
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Abner Doubleday served at Fort Moultrie prior to the Civil War.
Citation
- Place
Fort McKavett
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Abner Doubleday was stationed and retired at Fort McKavett.
Citation
- Place
Florida East Coast
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Abner Doubleday served in the Third Seminole War.
Citation
- Place
Citation
- Place
Mexico
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Abner Doubleday served in Mexico during the Mexican-American War.
Citation
- Place
San Francisco
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Abner Doubleday was stationed in San Francisco after the Civil War.
Citation
- Place
Fort Sumter (historical)
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Abner Doubleday served at Fort Sumter prior and at the onset of the Civil War.
Citation
- Place
District of Columbia
AssociatedPlace
Residence
A portion of Abner Doubleday’s Civil War Service was in Washington, DC.
Citation
- Place
Virginia
AssociatedPlace
Residence
A portion of Abner Doubleday’s Civil War Service was in Virginia.
Citation
- Place
West Point
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Abner Doubleday attended the US Military Academy and graduated Class of 1838.
Citation
- Place
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>
Citation
- Convention Declaration
- Convention Declaration 118