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American Heritage MagazineApril 1964    Volume 15, Issue 3
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LETTERS TO THE EDITORS


 

IN MEMORIAM, J.F.K.


In your December issue you enclosed a tribute to the late President Kennedy—a poem of Emily Dickinson’s written in 1865. … Both my husband and myself feel that the eight-line poem expressed better how most of us felt than all the millions of words that were written about Mr. Kennedy’s death.

Mrs. Harry Kronman
Santa Monica, California


 

IN MEMORIAM, J.F.K.


At first I was astonished that The Magazine of History had chosen so personal an expression of grief as Emily Dickinson’s poem. But I soon saw it was a perfect choice, for one of the most incredible features of this terrible and incredible business is that so many of us feel so personal a sorrow for a man we never laid eyes on.

Mrs. Cyril Sumner
Damariscotta, Maine


 

VICE VS. VIRTUE


I am writing to protest the insolence of the author of “Vice vs. Virtue, A Puritan Remembrancer,” in the December, 1963, AMERICAN HERITAGE. The question is not “… how could … people, … many of them our own forebears, have taken such things so literally and seriously?” The issue is, how could people in only a few decades degenerate to the point of openly ridiculing truth and righteousness? … There are still people in America to whom some things are sacred and honorable.

Rev. J. Walter Jepson
Sacramento, California


 

WAS PREVOST IDLE?


War-of-1892 buffs hereabouts have greatly enjoyed Mr. C. S. Forester’s excellent article on the Plattsburg campaign in the [December] issue of AMERICAN HERITAGE. But we think that the evidence contained in the enclosed selection from a British soldier’s campaign diary may lead Mr. Forester to modify or withdraw his statement that, on the day of the attack on Plattsburg “Prevost stayed idle in his lines.” [The anonymous diarist’s entry for September 11, 1814, the date of the Battle of Plattsburg, reads in part: “In the morning our shipping were seen to be on the move. We then, that part of the army under Major Genl Robinsons command consisting of the 3d battn of the ayth regt and 76 regt and 4 light companies; and Major Genl Powers brigade consisting of the 3d 5th first battn of the 27th and 58th regts [began] to force the road to the Saranac and advance provided with scaling ladders to destroy the enemys works on the heights. … Scarcely had His Majestys troops … ascended the heights … when we heard the shout of victory from the enemys works in consiquence of the British flag being lowered on board the Confiance and Linnett and the gun boats seeking for safty in flight. Hear we found the enemy in the occupation of an ellavated ridge of land on the south side of the Saranac crowned with three strong redoubts and other field works and block houses armed with heavy ordinence. … This day we retreated a cross the Saranac again as our force was not strong enough.”] This eye-witness account makes it clear that a land assault was launched as soon as the British naval squadron was seen to be moving into action and that it continued until Macdonough’s victory was beyond doubt. Let me add that there are no apologists for Sir George Prevost in this camp!

E. C. Beer, Archivist
Queen’s University
Kingston, Ontario


 

WAS PREVOST IDLE?


Mr. Forester replies:

I have said that “Prevost stayed idle in his lines” and I see no reason to modify this statement. A divisional general pushed a reconnaissance across the Saranac, presumably to make certain that the Americans were still in their lines; it cannot have been more than a reconnaissance when the casualty list totalled no more than thirtyseven. The two brigades mentioned must have numbered nearly 4,000 men, and any serious move could only have resulted in a loss ten times as great as was actually experienced.


 

WASHINGTON AT VALLEY FORGE


On page 101 of the Oct. ’63 issue of AMERICAN HERITAGE you characterize as apocryphal the story of Washington praying in the woods at Valley Forge. Please inform me of reading matter that supports the view you present. I am inclined to agree with you, but I’d like to have some basis for asserting it to pupils.

M. K. Stone
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

The best summation of the evidence is in George Washington and Religion, by Paul F. Boiler, Jr., (Southern Methodist University Press, 1963) pp. 8–11. Boiler says that the Valley Forge story is “without foundation in fact,” despite its being the favorite, perhaps, of all those who wish to make Washington a pious figure. Its inventor was the same Parson Weems who invented the story of Washington and the cherry tree.


 

SNOBS AND TYRANTS


Your handsomely got-up October issue contains at least two articles in which the Republicans, as usual, come off as snobs, tyrants, inept little men. … Why not a nice little article about the character and habits of “Honey Fitz” Fitzgerald? Or Tammany Hall? …

Mrs. Arthur B. Loder
San Antonio, Texas

We published an article on Boston’s Mayor James Curley (“The Last of the Bosses”) in our June, 1959, issue. One on “Honey Fitz” was in fact scheduled for our last issue, but has been postponed for obvious reasons. A feature on Boss Tweed of Tammany Hall is coming soon.


 
 
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