Positively Pittsburgh TV Interview now online

The interview I did last year at the Military Writers Society of America conference for Positively Pittsburgh is now available to view or download online.

I had a great time at the conference in Dayton, Ohio and the interview was a fun experience. While at the conference I had the opportunity to visit the graves of the Wright Brothers and enjoy their fine city. I would like to thank Joanne Quinn-Smith for this opportunity and for her going out of her way for the MWSA members.


Boys of Diamond Hill

Boys of Diamond Hill

The Military Writers Society of America Gold Medal for History 2012.

To read the entries thus far in the Sesquicentennial series for The Boys of Diamond Hill click here.

To learn more click on the “Diamond Hill” link at the top. To buy the book you may go to any major online retailer such as Amazon or Barnes and Noble, or you may buy it directly from McFarland Publishers. “The Boys of Diamond Hill” is also available for the Kindle.

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A Passel of Hate by Joe Epley

A Passel of Hate
By Joe Epley

Reviewed by Keith Jones

“A Passel of Hate” brings a little known, but pivotal battle of the American Revolution to life. In this book, Joe Epley crafts a tale surrounding the Battle of Kings Mountain that is worthy of historical fiction greats like John Jakes. Why the New York publishing houses and Hollywood have not discovered Epley is a great mystery, but hopefully they won’t waste too much time because this is a powerful story.

The story follows Jacob Godley and his divided family during the time leading up to the battle and in the wake of the aftermath. The Godley family is split down the middle between the Loyalist Tories and the Patriot Whigs. This family echoes the tracks followed by other such families during this time. It also brings to life a battle which has become a footnote in our history, but had a much greater impact to our independence. Many of the troops fighting for the King were not British at all. In fact a huge number of them were Colonial Loyalists.

The Battle of Kings Mountain was instrumental in depriving the Crown of the support it needed to win the conflict and pacify the Colonies. Many of the Colonists would have preferred to remain neutral. Not being able to do so led those caught in the middle to simply pick the side they thought most likely to win, or at least not get them killed. The devastating loss for the Loyalists there caused the fence sitters to either choose the Patriot side or simply hide at home until the conflict was over.

“A Passel of Hate” brings the Battle of Kings Mountain up close and personal. You don’t want to miss this one.

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Nightfall Over Nicodemus by R. G. Yoho

Nightfall Over Nicodemus
By R. G. Yoho
White Feather Press, Hamilton, MI

Reviewed by Keith Jones

R. G. Yoho does it again with “Nightfall Over Nicodemus.” In this fast paced Western, Yoho weaves the little known town of Nicodemus, Kansas settled by former slaves and the role of black cowboys into his tale.

The opening of this story finds Kellen Malone rescuing former slave Damon Gates from being murdered. Gabriel Burns, a legendary gunman had already sacrificed his life intervening on Gates’ behalf and Malone finishes the rescue. Gates and Malone discover that Burns had been paid to protect a family from a strong arm land baron when he stopped to help Gates. Gates felt honor bound to finish the job and takes Malone with him.

Like the previous entries in the Kellen Malone series, “Nightfall Over Nicodemus” will leave you more than satisfied. Highly recommended.

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A Great Review on Georgia Remembers Gettysburg

Georgia Remembers Gettysburg front cover draftA new review by a high profile reviewer of many history books (over 500 reviews online) has been posted on Amazon about Georgia Remembers Gettysburg. I don’t post every review I get here, but sometimes there is one that catches my attention and I want to share it with you. I wish to thank the reviewer and say that I am very pleased that you enjoyed it.

Now the review…

A true account of the Confederate Soldiers from Georgia who were in the Battle of Gettsyburg, September 21, 2013

“Keith Jones “Georgia Remembers Gettysburg” is an outstanding book of the memories, first hand accounts, and reports from the Confederate Soldiers who fought at Gettysburg from July 1 to July 3, 1863. The author begins by describing the events that led to the Battle of Gettysburg and the soldiers from Georgia who marched thru Maryland and Pennsylvania. Jones researched letters, diaries, reports, and Confederate Veteran Magazines and put them in this book about the soldiers from Georgia and their stories and memories about the battle. These soldiers suffered some horrific deaths and woundings and lost friends, brothers, and fellow Georgians. Stories of Georgians captured at Gettysburg are also in this fine book. There are a wide variety of memories, accounts, that are first hand from these soldiers and it is fascinating to read what they experienced. At the end of the book there are stories of how former enemies became life-long friends and met at Civil War Veterans reunions and the speech given by General James Longstreet is a fitting and poignant tribute to all the soldiers of the Civil War and how they became “brother in arms” after the war.

Keith Jones is to be commended for an outstanding book that is a worthy addition to the Battle of Gettysburg. This is a fine addition to the history of the battle and it is HIGHLY RECOMMENDED for anyone who is interested in the Battle of Gettysburg and the Civil War!”

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Georgia Remembers Gettysburg among top Gettysburg sellers on Amazon

Georgia Remembers Gettysburg front cover draftToday after working with Amazon to get Georgia Remembers Gettysburg categorized onto the list “Campaigns & Battlefields -> Gettysburg” (not sure why that was difficult) today it is at #47 among the books on the topic of Gettysburg. This should introduce it to those who peruse this list looking for a new book on the subject.

Thanks to all who talk this up to their friends. Interestingly enough, it seems that those in Georgia have yet to discover this book for the most part. We’ll have to see what we can do about that.

In the meantime, work continues on “South Carolina Remembers Gettysburg.”  I am gathering many great articles.  If you have any you have collected in pursuing your ancestors, please share them with me.  Maybe we can bring your great grandpa the recognition he deserves.

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Daniel Boyd August 29, 1863 – David’s Island

On August 29, 1863, Daniel Boyd wrote his father a letter from Petersburg, Virginia. Daniel had been wounded and captured at Gettysburg. He was sent to the DeCamp General hospital on David’s Island which would later be home of Fort Slocum in Long Island Sound in New York. He was paroled and exchanged on August 24. He was now in the South Carolina hospital in Petersburg. Here he would await his long overdue furlough while writing this letter detailing his experiences in Gettysburg and as a guest of the federal government of the United States.


Boys of Diamond Hill

Boys of Diamond Hill

The Military Writers Society of America Gold Medal for History 2012.

To read the entries thus far in the Sesquicentennial series for The Boys of Diamond Hill click here.

To learn more click on the “Diamond Hill” link at the top. To buy the book you may go to any major online retailer such as Amazon or Barnes and Noble, or you may buy it directly from McFarland Publishers. “The Boys of Diamond Hill” is also available for the Kindle.

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Recent Article on Georgia Remembers Gettysburg

I received this clipping in the mail from a friend recently of a brief article on Georgia Remembers Gettysburg that appeared in the Elberton Star in Elberton, Georgia.

Elberton Star June 26, 2013

Appearing in the Elberton Star in Elberton, Georgia; June 26, 2013

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MWSA Review of Georgia Remembers Gettysburg

Please take a moment to check out this outstanding review of my newest book, “Georgia Remembers Gettysburg” from Joyce Faulkner, past president of the Military Writers Society of America. It is copied below for your enjoyment.



“Georgia Remembers Gettysburg” is one of the finest books on the Battle of Gettysburg that I’ve ever read. It balances strategy, adventure, tragedy, and loss against time, memory, and perspective. Historian and author Keith Jones has a knack for seeing a picture in shattered shards of glass and has once again, as he did in his award-winning book, “The Boys of Diamond Hill,” created a mosaic of humanity that intrigues and moves the reader.

In the Introduction, Jones describes the roles of the various Georgia Units serving in the Army of Northern Virginia as it moved North in 1863 — the Georgia Artillery, Anderson’s Brigade, Benning’s Brigade, Dole’s Brigade, Gordon’s Brigade, Semmes’ Brigade, Woffard’s Brigade, and Wright’s Brigade. This is usually where the story ends. However, with Chapter One, we realize that we will be seeing the events of late June and early July through the eyes of the Georgians who fought in a tiny Pennsylvania crossroads known as Gettysburg — through their notes, letters, diaries, and published articles. Some of these narrations were penned within a day or two of the event — some were recorded months or years or decades after the fact. Some tales reflect youth, local perspective, and excitement. Some are told with the wisdom of distance and age.

I was amused to read how the various narrators saw themselves and their comportment at Gettysburg. Several expressed satisfaction at burning hated abolitionist Thaddeus Stevens’ Iron Works a few days before the battle — while at the same time, feeling offended that the Northern media blamed them for the burning of Wrightsville, PA. The gallantry of the times seems quaint now — a reflection of General Robert E. Lee’s orders and the innate rules of right and wrong carried in the hearts of the men themselves. They relished perceived support from the Pennsylvania locals — but mistrusted it at the same time. While determined to behave better as invaders than the Federals, it’s clear that many were regretful of the circumstances that drove them to personally take food from farms and homes. That the army took private property like horses seemed to cause less dismay — perhaps because that was expected on both sides.

Another amusing story — reminiscent of the whisper party game — centered on General Gordon of “Gordon’s Brigade” coming upon Union General Barlow — mortally wounded — on the first day. He pauses to talk to the stricken officer and leaves him, assuming that he is doomed and will die where he fell. Years later, the two met again — each having believed for years that the other had died. Those basic facts took on mythic proportions as the story was told and retold with each narrator enhancing it. Although I chuckled as this incident was introduced in succeeding accounts, I was struck by how difficult it must be to confirm what did or didn’t happen — even in Gettysburg which has been so carefully documented by so many historians over the last century and a half.

Participating mainly on the first and second days of the three day conflict at Gettysburg, the Georgia boys had good reason to feel that they were winning. Their performance was courageous and determined. Many were hardened by experience and moral certainty that their cause was just. On the first day, they captured and killed thousands of Federals — and chased the rest through the town to the heights on the far side. Many were distressed at the time…and even more so in the years after the battle … that they were ordered not to follow their foes and displace them from the prized “high ground.” Some believed that this one “blunder” as one soldier put it … led to the loss of the battle and ultimately the war. On the second day, soldiers who were reporting closer to the time of the battle without understanding the totality of the event, concluded that the Confederates must have or should have “won” the day. Their commitment was such that they attempted the near impossible as readers who might have visited Gettysburg can attest after seeing places like the Wheat Field, Devil’s Den, and Little Round Top. With the passage of time and a better understanding of the whole event, these soldiers seem proud to have fought against such odds — while continuing to grieve for the cost in lives and limbs.

Keith Jones, by allowing the Georgia boys to report events as they saw them … and to comment about them, gives us not only eye witness accounts of a famous event but empathy and context in a way that most history books forget to include. It is a delicious experience that will keep you pondering for weeks.

** Although I have visited Gettysburg many times and have spent long hours at the locations mentioned in this book, maps with the movements of these specific units would have been useful. However, in total, “Georgia Remembers Gettysburg” is carefully notated and has helpful Appendices like “The Confederate Order of Battle at Gettysburg for Georgia Troops” and a comprehensive and logical Index.

Joyce Faulkner (2013)

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Fenton Hall Dies July 10, 1863 – Willtown Bluff

Fenton Hall, the eldest of our soldiers from Diamond Hill and the husband of the eldest Boyd sister — Mary Jane — was killed July 10, 1863 in a skirmish at Willtown Bluff near Charleston, South Carolina. Company G – along with Companies B and D – had acted as support for the Washington Artillery. There the artillery engaged an armed Federal steamer, the John Adams, and two smaller boats, the transport Enoch Dean and the tug Governor Milton. They sank the Governor Milton in the battle.19

On the afternoon of July 9, 1863, two hundred-fifty black soldiers with the First South Carolina U. S. Troops departed on the three boats: the John Adams – an armed ferry boat steamer carrying two Parrott guns, a twenty pounder and a ten pounder along with two howitzers; the Enoch Dean – a transport with one ten pound Parrott gun and a small howitzer; and the Governor Milton – a tugboat armed with two twelve pound Armstrong guns. They were headed up the South Edisto River, then also known as the Pon Pon River, with the goal of burning a rail road bridge about thirty miles up the river. They travelled under a dense fog which made their journey difficult, but also shielded their movements from the Confederate pickets set up along the river. About four o’clock a.m. they anchored at Willtown Bluff near the Morris Plantation. There they found the bluff defended only by the Chestnut Artillery and a handful of cavalry. The Confederate guards spotted the encroaching federals at sunrise and engaged them. The outnumbered battery commanded by Lt. Thomas White was soon forced to retreat leaving the bluff to the Union troops.20

Col. Hugh Kerr Aiken ordered 50 of his Sixth South Carolina Cavalry to support the force at Willtown Bluff under Lt. Col. L. P. Miller. The remainder followed under Maj. Thomas Ferguson. Aiken deployed his entire force against the Yankees on Willtown Bluff where they skirmished throughout the day. When the tide became high enough for the John Adams to proceed, it was ordered forward. However it ran aground on its first attempt, becoming hopelessly stuck. The Milton and the Dean were able to press on without the Adams. Further upstream, the Chestnut Artillery under Lt. Thomas White had reformed near the Barnwell Plantation and subjected the Dean to a heavy fire. The guns of the two boats finally driving White’s battery back. The Dean kept running aground, but managed to push up the river until it finally became stuck about two miles short of the bridge they wished to destroy. The Milton was ordered to continue without them.21
At a point opposite Dr. Joseph Edward Glover’s plantation, about a quarter mile from the bridge, the Milton encountered a battery of Walter’s Light Battery which was part of the Washington Light Artillery under the command of Lt. Samuel Gilman Horsey. The battery subjected it to a furious fire and disabled the engine of the Milton. The Milton – now 30 miles upstream from the mouth – attempted to float back down river to safety. At this point Col. Aiken ordered the Marion Artillery to reinforce White at Gibbe’s Plantation where they attacked the Dean and the Milton as they moved back down river. Under fire, the Milton again ran aground. The Adams had managed to dislodge and was now moving freely again. The Dean had worked its way back down to Willtown Bluff to attempt to pick up the federal infantry there. The Adams moved upstream to the aid of the Milton, but was unable to free it. Subsequently the Milton was abandoned and set afire to prevent the Confederates from capturing it. At sunset Col. Aiken ordered the Sixth S.C. Cavalry to move on Willtown Bluff to find it abandoned by the enemy. A section of the Sixth pursued the federals downstream with part of the Chestnut Light Artillery to a point below Morris’s Mill, but to little effect.22

All Confederate records had listed Fenton Hall as having been captured, but no record could be located of his being taken prisoner or his body being recovered. It is likely that he was mortally wounded and died in the hands of the federal army. Also, being captured by an enemy who was under heavy fire and in the process of withdrawing, it is entirely possible that the federals were in no mood to deal with handling prisoners and simply shot him. In any event, his remains probably rest in an unmarked grave – quite likely a mass grave at that – like so many of his brothers in arms.

Fenton was the eldest of our letter writers having perished in the defense of his courtry at the ripe old age of twenty-nine. Alas the man who exuded such warmth in his letters to Mary Jane and often lamented that his greatest desire was to return home, would never see Diamond Hill again. His family would not know his ultimate fate. On Oct. 23, 1917 at the age of eighty-five, Mary Jane Boyd Hall would state in a Confederate widow’s pension application that Fenton “was captured and never heard of any mor.”


Boys of Diamond Hill

Boys of Diamond Hill

The Military Writers Society of America Gold Medal for History 2012.

To read the entries thus far in the Sesquicentennial series for The Boys of Diamond Hill click here.

To learn more click on the “Diamond Hill” link at the top. To buy the book you may go to any major online retailer such as Amazon or Barnes and Noble, or you may buy it directly from McFarland Publishers. “The Boys of Diamond Hill” is also available for the Kindle.

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Daniel Boyd at Gettysburg – July 2-4, 1863

First, I want to wish everyone a Happy Independence Day. On July 4, 1776 our founding fathers signed an ordinance of secession from the kingdom of Great Britain known as the Declaration of Independence. So on this day they would officially secede from a mother country which was milking their resources through unjust taxes to create their own new country on their own separate land, not take over the governance of the old mother country. In this endeavor they would succeed. 85 years later their grandchildren in the southern portion of this new country would attempt to do the same thing from the northern nation due to having their resources strained in far more unequal and unjust fashions through tariffs.  In their endeavor they would not succeed.

Kershaws Marker KeithIt was this struggle that led Sgt. Daniel Boyd to be in the small village of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania; a place he likely otherwise would never have heard of, much less visited. In the wee hours of July 2, 1863 the 7th South Carolina as part of Kershaw’s Brigade marched from their camp in Guilford, Pennsylvania to arrive at the battlefield during the second day of the battle. Around 4:30 in the afternoon, Col. Wyatt Aiken would lead the 7th South Carolina through the Wheatfield on the right wing of Kershaw’s 1,800 troops. They would march through the Rose Farm, along Plum Run and do battle on the Stony Hill. It was during this engagement that Daniel was wounded in the lower thigh.

As Gen.Robert E. Lee began withdrawing his army Daniel was unable to march with them. There was also not room in the ambulance wagons for him. So Daniel was left behind in the field hospital and there he would be turned over to the Provost and sent north to become an official guest of the federal government of the United States. After a stint in the prison hospital of DeCamp General Hospital on David’s Island in Long Island Sound, Daniel would be exchanged and get to return home.


Boys of Diamond Hill

Boys of Diamond Hill

The Military Writers Society of America Gold Medal for History 2012.

To read the entries thus far in the Sesquicentennial series for The Boys of Diamond Hill click here.

To learn more click on the “Diamond Hill” link at the top. To buy the book you may go to any major online retailer such as Amazon or Barnes and Noble, or you may buy it directly from McFarland Publishers. “The Boys of Diamond Hill” is also available for the Kindle.

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