Grade Level: Middle School
Time:
2 to 4 days
History is, in essence, interpretation. As layers of summary and analysis are piled upon any given historical event, alternate points of view are trimmed away and minority voices are silenced. The value of studying history through primary documents is that we get a first-hand view of the event, allowing us to make our own judgements.
In these lessons, we look at the Civil War using the letters of
“The Gray Eagle” Union General Robert Huston Milroy. These lessons
should be of interest to any student of the Civil War, and even more so to
A couple of options here to get the ball
rolling. A short biography of
Milroy is available at Gale's Biography Resource Center (free to Indiana classrooms, libraries and students through INSPIRE.)This background material can be presented either in an overhead / lecture
format or by having the students seek out and report relevant information as
part of a worksheet assignment (see worksheet).
A more in-depth analysis of Milroy’s personal politics and military
career can be found in the works of Jonathan Noyalas, some of which are available through INSPIRE (via MasterFILE™ Premier and Academic Search Premier). Some names mentioned in the letters that are not found in the biographies
are his children - Val, Ella, Brucy, and Walter- his African American hired hand
Ben, and his beloved horse Jasper.
As Milroy was stationed in the Shenandoah Valley at
Break the class into groups of 2 or 3.
Each group will be assigned one letter (or more, depending on class size
and desired length of lesson) to deconstruct and search for clues / details
about the past. These letters
(listed below) can be accessed through the Milroy Collection website. Students
will have a topical grid to fill up with information gleaned from the letters
about important issues tied to the Civil War and life in the 1860s (see
worksheet).
Not all letters will have
information connected to all issues, so the students will need to present their
findings, either through group discussion or oral report, to the class to fill
in the gaps. The following documents (in bold) provide strong evidence under
their respective headings as well as significant evidence for some of the other
topics listed.
1861-13
(sept 6) / 1862-332 / 1862-334
DAILY
LIFE IN THE CIVIL WAR: How did soldiers /
civilians celebrate? What was
medicine like? What challenges did
the soldiers face in terms of weather, disease, and boredom?
What challenges did the mothers and children of soldiers face at home?
Medicine in the 1860s consisted of home remedies and house calls (when
and if the doctor could make it). The
soldiers were typically hungry, exposed to harsh climate, and vulnerable to
disease. The mothers and children
back home had to deal with the loss and loneliness of having husbands, brothers,
and fathers away for years at a time, or worse.
Finding able bodies to bring in the crops and do heavy manual labor (i.e.
chop wood) became increasingly difficult as the war went on.
1862-304 / 1862-338 / 1862-341 /
SLAVES
AND FREEDMEN:
What was contraband? How were
free African Americans treated in the North / in the Union Army?
How were escaped / freed slaves treated by people in the North?
Southern slaves captured by the
Union Army were often referred to as contraband.
Some in the North felt that captured slaves should be set free and
justified this action by classifying these “contraband” slaves as being a
help to the enemy. Others in the
North disagreed and let slave hunters through enemy lines to reclaim lost
“property.” African Americans in
the Union Army were often denied the right to fight (especially before the
Emancipation Proclamation) and forced to do manual labor – digging ditches /
latrines, clearing land, building roads, cooking, etc.
1862-348
/ 1862-(aug 2nd)
THE
POLITICS OF OCCUPATION: Who were the Butternuts?
Was everyone in the North abolitionist?
Was everyone in the South pro-secession?
What role did the Dutch play in Milroy’s brigade?
The Butternuts were Southern sympathizers in the North.
There was a wide range of sympathy and support across both the North and
the South. Milroy often complained
about the “thieving Dutch” under his command, writing that they often looted
and pillaged civilian homes in the South.
1862-305
/ 1862-311 / 1862-329 /
1862-345
THE
GRAY EAGLE:
What can we learn about Milroy’s personal and political views based on
his letters? Milroy
was an ambitious military leader with a love of battle, a deep commitment to the
abolitionist cause, and a strong dislike for the career military men that came
from
1862-298
/ 1863-108 /
1863-157 / 1863-301
Lesson
Three: more ideas
If you wish to extend this lesson / exercise
with primary documents, have the students take the information they have
gathered and write an essay incorporating found facts and stats along with new
research on current events. For
example, one paper could compare the military communication technology of the
Civil War to the technology available in our present war in
Another interesting exercise might be to update
the monetary figures into today’s dollars to get a sense of what things really
cost or find out if the post office has gotten any faster / more efficient /
more expensive over the last 140 years.
Feel free to use all or any part of this lesson and be sure to visit the
Milroy Collection website for more documents / information if you run short.
(worksheet
page 1)
Name
_______________________
period______
date_________
Where
did Robert Huston Milroy call home?
Outside
of his military service, Milroy had a career in what field?
Why
was Milroy the subject of a military investigation?
What
was the verdict?
Why
did they call him “the Gray Eagle”?
The
What
mountain range forms the valley?
Find
(worksheet page 2)
THE
SPEED OF THINGS: What was the main mode of
transport for soldiers, supplies, and information, and how long did it take?
DAILY
LIFE IN THE CIVIL WAR: How did soldiers /
civilians celebrate? What was
medicine like? What challenges did
the soldiers face in terms of weather, disease, and boredom?
What challenges did the mothers and children of soldiers face at home?
SLAVES
AND FREEDMEN:
What was contraband? How were
free African Americans treated in the North / in the Union Army?
How were escaped / freed slaves treated by people in the North?
THE
POLITICS OF OCCUPATION: Who were the Butternuts?
Was everyone in the North abolitionist?
Was everyone in the South pro-secession?
What role did the Dutch play in Milroy’s brigade?
THE
GRAY EAGLE:
What can we learn about Milroy’s personal and political views based on
his letters?
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