May 17, 1863 – Fenton Hall – Let us have peace


Grove Plantation near Adams Run

May 17, 1863, Fenton Hall wrote his wife Mary Jane again from camp in Adams Run, South Carolina. The attack they were planning on John’s Island did not happen. Fenton says they heard that one of their men deserted and alerted the Yankees to the plan.


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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May 13, 1863 – Fenton Hall – Heavy firing down at White Point


Grove Plantation near Adams Run

May 13, 1863, Fenton Hall writes his wife, Mary Jane from his camp at Adams Run, South Carolina. He is concerned about her and their two children. Also, he talks of James Rampey, who had been gone from camp, finally returning. Rampey was in the guard house and Fenton says that there is always 14 or 15 in the guard house. He also mentions a fight on John’s Island.


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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Battle of Chancellorsville – Daniel Boyd

Daniel Boyd wrote his father Robert on May 7, 1863 shortly after the fateful Battle of Chancellorsville. This battle was a mixed bag for the Confederacy. It was perhaps General Stonewall Jackson’s most masterful victory over the federal army, but it would also prove to be his last. Brought down by friendly fire mistaking his group for a Union party, he would expire from his wounds on May 10.

In this letter, Daniel reports on his eyewitness account of the battle.


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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Your Suggestions Needed – Georgia and Gettysburg

For the upcoming release of my next book, “Georgia Remembers Gettysburg,” the publisher — Ten Roads Publishing — has asked for suggestions of appropriate images for the cover. If you have know of fitting images, either pictures of paintings, please let me know. You can either post here or write me through the contact form.

If you know of a lesser known artist with work relating to the role of Georgia troops in the Gettysburg Campaign, that would work very well.

“Georgia Remembers Gettysburg” is scheduled to be released in June and consists of over 80 first hand accounts from the soldiers that fought there in Georgia brigades. Along with a 20 page introduction summarizing Georgia’s role at Gettysburg, “Georgia Remembers Gettysburg” brings you up close and personal with the men from the peach state as they fought there.

While you wait for this one, check out its companion volume “North Carolina Remembers Gettysburg” by Michael C. Hardy.

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Fenton Hall – My Horse Looks Very Bad – April 26, 1863


Grove Plantation near Adams Run

On April 26, 1863, Fenton Hall writes his father-in-law, Robert Boyd from his camp in Adams Run, South Carolina. He is writing to thank Mr. Boyd for working his land for him while he is away at the war. Fenton’s brother Davis had worked it the previous season and had brought in a very good wheat crop before being pressed into the war himself. Now the 60ish Robert Boyd is having to work his own farm, which at the beginning of the war he had the help of four of his sons, alone. We know from this letter that he is also working Fenton’s farm as well and we must wonder if he also works the farm left behind by the death of his eldest son William. His daughter-in-law, Mary Ann Crowther Boyd and her two small children are now left to fend for themselves. The national drama has unquestionably altered the life of Robert Boyd.

Fenton also talks a bit about conditions in the camp. The health of the horses is not good. Fenton says that his horse “looks very bad.” He also says that food is short with the troops having only corn to feed on.


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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Bud & Fran Orr Interview

Today I am talking with Captain Bud Orr and his co-author in both literature and in life, his wife Fran.  I want to thank them for taking the time to do this interview for my readers.  So sit back and enjoy.

1) What made you decide to start writing?

 

Fran:
Good question. I have always loved writing and reading. I began writing children’s stories while in high school. After taking an Ira Progoff Intensive Journal Workshop I started writing my personal memoir. I continue to journal in the mornings.

 

Bud:
My major in college was journalism but I did not pursue journalism as a career – instead I became a navy carrier pilot. My unique flying experiences made for great stories worth sharing.

 

2) Did your experiences drive you to write or did your desire to write lead you to record your experiences?

 

Bud:
We began by writing my experiences and the story was originally titled, Cheating Death and encapsulated many of my flying adventures including day and night carrier landings, combat in Vietnam and being the first Navy pilot to fly the AV8-A Harrier with the Marine Corps operationally in the United States.

 

Fran:
I realized our story had historical significance that crossed boundaries in time to provide a glimpse of Vietnam forward as the progeny of the World War II matured.

 

3) Is “Love at First Flight” a love story set in war or war story built around love?

 

Fran:
Love at First Flight is an adventure story with a glimpse of the magnificent fraternity of carrier pilots who wear the Navy Wings of Gold with insights into the women they love.

 

Bud:
My flying career was unique and replete with excitement – including our courtship and marriage aboard the USS Enterprise in the Philippines where the captain of the carrier gave her away. We are the only couple to be married on the aircraft carrier in her fifty year history
.

 

4) Bud, tell me about the first time you met Fran.

 

Bud:
We met on a blind date on New Year’s Eve. A mutual friend set it up. I took Fran to the Lemoore Officer’s Club and could tell she was captivated with the camaraderie of my squadron mates.  That was great, but I wanted time alone with her away from the noise and suggested we leave and I would tell her a flying story as a way for her to get to know me better
.

 

5) What was the first piece of writing you did that left an impression on you?

 

Bud:
I have a story to tell and have written several talks where I felt I communicated something meaningful to my audience.

 

Fran:
My memoir is titled, Dusty Memories which begins my journey as a child of migrant farm workers, born into poverty and deprivation.  An agent with McMillian who read my proposal said she would be interested in publishing my story if I had name recognition.

 

6) Whose idea was it to write the book? Bud or Fran?

 

Fran:
From my answer above you can guess that I started the process. As Bud mentioned at first the story was just his flying adventures.  Working with our agent we became aware the more interesting story was combining Bud personal encounters with extreme danger, including day and night carrier landing (over 1000), combat in Vietnam and flying the AV8-A Harrier with my childhood and history – including our courtship and marriage aboard the USS Enterprise in the Philippines.

 

7) At what point did you realize that this story was bigger than just the two of you?

 

Bud:
Throughout the story you gain insights into the military family who make the required sacrifice of loneliness and long separations while providing their utmost support to the men they love.

 

8) What writers inspire you?

 

Fran:
John Steinbeck (first and foremost as he understands my heart) C.
S. Lewis, Julie Cameron, Sonia Choquette and Ayn Rynd.  For fiction I enjoyed Suzanne Brockmann’s Navy Seal series and Jodi Thomas wrote a western series I have read a couple of times on holiday.

 

Bud:
Fran is a voracious reader of fiction and non-fiction. She usually directs me to what she knows I would enjoy reading. She is seldom wrong. I have enjoyed reading Gene Cernan, John McCain and Bill O’Reilly.

 

9) Who began writing first? Bud or Fran?

 

Bud:
Definitely Fran

 

Fran:
Bud has an incredibly organized mind. When I had difficulty putting my memoir into a timeline he just listened to me and was able to establish one I could use with great success. He also has a gift of coming up with the perfect word at difficult moments in writing.

 

10) Do you have any other projects in progress?

 

Fran:
We will continue to promote Love at First Flight and when the time is right we will see Dusty Memories published
.

 

Bud:
We are working daily toward the success of Love at First flight and are involved in speaking, marketing and writing daily.

 

11) Is there anything else you would like to add before we conclude?

 

Bud:
It has been a wonderful, rewarding experience to have my exciting flying stories combined with our unique romance and marriage published. So many people say, “I really should write my story.” To each and everyone we encourage them to start writing.

 

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French Letters Book One: Virginia’s War by Jack Woodville London

French Letters, Virginia’s War: Tierra, Texas 1944
By Jack Woodville London

Reviewed by J. Keith Jones

In this, the first book in Jack Woodville London’s French Letters series, you will see how literary fiction is done. This book reminds me a bit of “Home Fires Burning” by Bob Inman. From this book it is easy to see why London was named writer of the year by the Military Writer’s Society of America.

This book follows the intertwined lives of the residents of Tierra, Texas while their young men are off fighting World War II. From the young boys, to an able bodied young man whose influential father has tricked the system into keeping him out of the war, to a pregnant young woman whose man is in the army, their lives are all connected. London’s prose is smooth and his character development is strong. The writing is so good that you are identifying with the characters before you realize it… even the ones you don’t like.

This is the first of London’s books I have read, but it will not be the last. Check it out, you’ll be a fan before you realize it.

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An Unlawful Order by Carver Greene

An Unlawful Order
By Carver Greene

Reviewed by J. Keith Jones

“An Unlawful Order” is the first in an intended series following Marine Captain Chase Anderson. In this novel, Carver Greene pics an unlikely military protagonist in the form of a public affairs officer on a U. S. Marine base. As odd of a choice as this may seem, Greene pulls it off with style.

Once this book gets a head of steam, you will want to say with it until you are done. Strong characters and interesting back story promises many more such installments, or at least I hope it does. One gets the sense reading this book that Carver Greene is just getting warmed up.

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Daniel Boyd – there was a great many drowned – May 7, 1863

On May 7, 1863, Daniel Boyd wrote his father from the 7th South Carolina’s camp about what he saw at the Battle of Chancellorsville. He tells him about the wounding of Stonewall Jackson. He says that the Yankees had a hard time of it: “We drove them one knight on four miles. I never saw Yankees runn before they plunged into the river. when they com to it their was a great many got drownded. they left everything they had.”


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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Fenton Hall – Plant food not cotton – March 26, 1863


Summit Plantation near Adams Run

On March 26, 1863, Fenton Hall wrote his wife Mary Jane — the sister of the Boyd brothers of Diamond Hill — again from his camp in Adams Run, South Carolina in the defense of Charleston and the coast of South Carolina from the northern invasion. He tells of his brother Davis having left his camp with Captain John Miot for Columbia. He also advises her and their neighbors to not plan cotton, rather, he said, “if you get iney thing planted let it be sumthing to eat.”


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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