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Authors: Josef Skvorecky

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“Wait — it’s Kapsa, right?”

“Yes, general, sir!” replied the sergeant.

Toronto, 1984–1991
DEO GRATIAS

Postscript

In the Czech archives of the University of Chicago, while doing research for my novel
Dvorak in Love
, I came across 19th century issues of the Czech-American farmers’ almanach
Amerikán
. In them I found stories about the Czech soldiers of the Civil War, and also brief memoirs written by the veterans. Searching on, I discovered other sources:
Josef Cermak
’s invaluable
History of the Civil War with Experiences of Czech Soldiers Attached
(1889) which gives the names of Czech participants in most major battles of the conflict; Rudolf Bubenicek’s
History of the Czechs in Chicago
(1939); Thomas Capek’s
The Czechs (Bohemians) in America
(1920), and other books and articles.

My interest was aroused and I decided that, after I finish my Dvorak book, I’ll try my hand at a novel about the war from an angle which, to my knowledge, had never been attempted. My intentions were patriotic in the old fashioned sense: I would do my best to create a sort of memorial of the men who, far from their native land then under Austrian despotism, fought for the country which, unlike Europe, promised hope for a life worth living.

With the exception of Jan Amos Shake, all other Czech soldiers are real. They fought in various units of the Union Army, some in 26 Wisconsin. For the purpose of my novel I put them all there.

Trying to compute their numbers I failed, as others before me. I went through the card catalogue in the U.S. Army
Military History Institute in Carlisle Barracks, PA, but after examining several hundred cards, I gave up. The trouble was that far too many Czechs have German names, and since army registers almost never gave the ethnicity of the common soldiers it is impossible to decide whether a Konig, a Miller or a Frohlich was Czech, German, Austrian or Jewish. Besides, Czechs in America also anglicized their unpronounceable names, or Army clerks distorted them, so that a Skrzkrk became a Skirk, a Frkac turned into a Fircut, and a Machane, due to Yankee pronunciation, metamorphosed into a Scot, MacHane.

For these reasons it is hardly possible to determine exact numbers. Thomas Capek quips that “the Czechs provided the United States Army with more musicians than generals,” but, except for adding that the number of Czech generals was zero, he does not give any data either for the musicians, or for the common soldiers. He mentions four officers of whom I found only two listed in the
Official Army Register
.

My own, admittedly unreliable, estimate is about 300 combatants. The U.S. Department of Commerce
A Century of Population Growth
(1909) lists 26,061 immigrants from the Austrian countries recorded by the census of 1860, on the eve of the war. Josef Chada in
The Czechs in the United States
(1981) opines that the “largest fraction” of these Austrian immigrants were Czechs but he, too, fails to provide numbers: the census did not take notice of ethnic origins. If I, rather arbitrarily, take 20.000 for the basis of my computation, assuming that more than half of these were women, children and old or infirm men, the percentage of able bodied men who joined the army would be about 3 per cent.

However, those who saw service, judging by their brief memoirs and by the few honorable mentions in unit histories I have read (e.g. Zinkule acknowledged in Captain U.G. Alexander’s
History of the Thirteenth Regiment United States
Infantry
, 1905) acquitted themselves well on the battlefield. Perhaps, even in a huge army, it is quality rather than quantity which counts.

Having lived over one half of my life in a Communist country, I became allergic to Marxist interpretations of the Civil War. They tended — and for what I know, may still tend — to dismiss or, at best, grossly underestimate concepts that see the conflict also — if not mainly — in terms of the liberation of the slaves. The communist historians I read described the war exclusively as a clash between the interests of northern capitalists and southern plantation owners for which, in the North, emancipation only provided a smokescreen and, in the South, the issue of state rights served a similar purpose. This seemed to me like spitting on the graves of the soldiers — an emotional reaction, to be sure. But there is also a rational argument: “Although there were serious differences between the (South and the North), all of them except slavery could have been settled through the democratic process … (Slavery) was not the only cause of the Civil War, but it was unquestionably the one cause without which the war would not have taken place.” (Bruce Catton,
Short History of the Civil War
, 1960).

I resented another popular recent opinion which sees in Sherman the originator of total war. As a youngster, I encountered this killer-warlord image of the general in the Nazi weekly
Signal
. There Sherman’s military strategy was used to mock allied criticism of Goebbel’s notorious
Totalkrieg
speech, and to defend the
Propagandaminister
against allegations of being the one who instigated universal butchery.

I see Sherman differently.

It has never been clear to me how historians can blame Sherman for this kind of warfare. All one needs to know in order to refute the dubious credit is to read the Old Testament,
or be aware of the 15th century Hussite warriors’ battle song “Hit hard, kill, don’t spare anyone”, or remember the war practice of the
condottieri
in Italy, etc. Compared to them, Sherman is a true American innocent who scorched enemy land to shorten the war but never killed civilians on purpose.

The revisionist criticism of the general brought to my mind Graham Greene’s recommendation that writers should focus on characters ripe for universal condemnation rather than on heroes whom everybody likes. I felt I found such a character in the much maligned and ridiculed General Ambrose Burnside, and tried to treat him in the light of my late friend’s and patron’s advice. For this I found support in Craig Davidson Tenney’s dissertation on Burnside.

J.S.

Main American Book Sources

Angle, P.M.
Created Equal? The Complete Lincoln Douglas Debates of 1858
. The University of Chicago Press, 1958.

Argument of Hon. Aaron F. Perry, Vallandigham Habeas Corpus
. U.S. District Court, 1864?

Barnard, G.N.
Photographic views of Sherman’s Campaign
. Dover, 1977.

Battle of Bentonville, The.
Bentonville.

Bierce, Ambrose.
Bits of Autobiography
. Gordian Press, 1966.

Botkin, B.A.
A Civil War Treasury of Tales, Legends and Folklore
. Random House, 1960.

Bowman, S.M., Col. and Irvin, R.B., Lt. Col.
Sherman and His Campaigns: A Military Biography
. New York: Charles B. Richardson, 1865.

Burton, W.L.
Melting Pot Soldiers: The Union’s Ethnic Regiments
. Iowa State University Press, 1988.

Catton, Bruce.
Reflections on the Civil War
. Berkeley Books, 1984.

Catton, Bruce.
Short History of the Civil War
. Laurel, 1984.

Commager, H.S., ed.
The Blue and the Gray: The Story of the Civil War as Told by the Participants
. 2 vols. New American Library, 1973.

Crawford, R., ed.
The Civil War Songbook
. Dover, 1977.

David, Donald.
Lincoln Reconsidered
. Vintage, 1961.

Davis, Burke.
The Civil War: Strange and Fascinating Facts
. The Fairfax Press, 1982.

Davis, Burke.
Sherman’s March
. Random House, 1980.

Dyer, F.H.
A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion
. The Press of Morningside Bookshop, 1978.

Faust, D.G., ed.
The Ideology of Slavery: Proslavery Thought in Antebellum South 1830–1860
. Louisiana State University Press, 1981.

Foote, Shelby.
The Civil War: A Narrative
. 3 vols. Random House, 1958–1974.

Gardner, Alexander.
Photographic Sketch Book of the Civil War
. Dover, 1959.

Genovese, E.G.
The World the Slaveholders Made
. Vintage, 1971.

Hagerman, Edward.
The American Civil War and the Origins of Modern Warfare
. Indiana University Press, 1988.

Haythornthwaite, Phillip.
Uniforms of the American Civil War
. Blanford Press, 1986.

Hitchcock, Henry.
Marching With Sherman
. Yale University Press, 1927.

Klement, Frank L.
The Copperheads in the Middle West
. University of Chicago Press, 1960.

Klement, Frank L.
The Limits of Dissent
. University of Kentucky Press, 1970.

Korn, B.W.
American Jewry and the Civil War
. Jewish Publication Society of America, 1951.

Liddell-Hart, B.H.
Sherman: Soldier, Realist, American
. Dodd, Mead, 1929.

Lewis, Lloyd.
Sherman, Fighting Prophet
. Harcourt, Brace, 1932.

Lonn, Ella.
Foreigners in the Union Army and Navy
. Louisiana State University Press, 1951.

Lossing, B.J.
Mathew Brady’s Illustrated History of the Civil War
. The Fairfax Press.

Marszalek, John F.
Sherman’s Other War: The General and the Civil War Press
. Memphis State University Press, 1981.

McAlexander, U.G.
History of the Thirteenth Regiment United States Infantry
. Regimental Press, Thirteenth Infantry, Frank D. Gunn, 1905.

McPherson, James M.
Battle Cry of Freeedom: The Civil War Era
. Oxford University Press, 1988.

Menendez, A.J.
Civil War Novels
. Garland, 1986.

Merrill, James M.
William Tecumseh Sherman
. Rand McNally, 1971.

Official Army Register of the Volunteer Force of the United States 1861–1865
, 9 vols. Ron R. Van Sickle Military Books, 1987.

Olson, Kenneth.
Music and Musket: Bands and Bandsmen of the Civil War
. Westport: Greenwood, 1981.

Russell, A.J.
Civil War Photographs
. Dover, 1982.

Schuyler, Hartley and Graham.
Illustrated Catalog of Civil War Military Goods
. Dover, 1985.

Sherman, William Tecumseh.
Memoirs
. Da Capo Press, 1984.

Simonhoff, Harry.
Jewish Participants in the Civil War
. Arco Publishing Company, 1963.

Slotkin, Richard.
The Crater
. Atheneum, 1981.

Stampp, Kenneth M.
The Peculiar Institution: Slavery in the Ante-Bellum South
. Vintage, 1956.

Symonds, Craig L.
A Battlefield Atlas of the Civil War
. The Nautical and Aviation Publishing Company of America, 1983.

Tenney, Craig Davidson.
Major General A.E. Burnside and the First Amendment: A Case Study of Civil War Freedom of Expression
. Indiana University, 1977. University Microfilms International, 1987.

The Civil War
, 27 vols. Time-Life Inc., 1987.

Todd, F.P.
American Military Equipage
. Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1980.

Vasvary, Edmund.
Lincoln’s Hungarian Heroes: The Participation of Hungarians in the Civil War
. The Hungarian Reformed Federation of America, 1939.

Walters, John B.
Merchant of Terror: General Sherman and Total War
. Bobbs-Merrill, 1973.

Wheeler, Richard.
We Knew William Tecumseh Sherman
. Thomas Crowell, 1977.

Wheeler, Richard.
Sherman’s March
. Thomas Crowell, 1978.

Wiley, B.I.
The Life of Billy Yank: The Common Soldier of the Union
. Louisiana State University Press, 1978.

Wiley, B.I.
The Life of Johnny Reb. The Common Soldier of the Confederacy
. Louisiana State University Press, 1978.

Williams, T.H.
Lincoln and His Generals
. Vintage, 1952.

Woodbury, Augustus.
Ambrose Everett Burnside
. Providence: N. Bangs Williams and Company, 1882.

Wyatt-Brown, Bertram.
Yankee Saints and Southern Sinners
. Louisiana State University Press, 1985.

Czech sources are listed in the Czech edition of the novel which, as
Nevesta z
Texasu
, was published by Sixty-Eight Publishers, Corp., Toronto in 1992.

Illustration Credits

frw.1
Ward, Geoffrey C. et al.
The Civil War: An Illustrated History
(New York: Knopf, 1990), 320. Courtesy of the National Archives.

frw.2
Goolrich, William K.
The Civil War, “Rebels Resurgent: Fredericksburg to Chancellorsville”
(Alexandria: Time-Life Inc., 1985), 151. Courtesy of the Rochester Museum and Science Center.

1.1
Nevin, David.
The Civil War, “Sherman’s March: Atlanta to the Sea”
(Alexandria: Time-Life Inc., 1986), 105. Courtesy of Ronn Palm.

3.1
Wiley, Bell Irvin.
The Life of Billy Yank: the Common Soldier of the Union
(Baton Rouge: Louisiana State Univ., 1952), 320. Courtesy of the National Archives.

4.1
Bailey, Ronald H.
The Civil War, “Forward to Richmond: McClellan’s Peninsular Campaign”
(Alexandria: Time-Life Inc., 1983), 28. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

5.1
Murphy, Richard W.
The Civil War, “The Nation Reunited: War’s Aftermath”
(Alexandria: Time-Life Inc., 1987), 43. Courtesy of the Lightfoot Collection.

6.1
Vasvary, Edmund.
Lincoln’s Hungarian Heroes: the Participation of Hungarians in the Civil War, 1861–1865
(Washington DC: The Hungarian Reformed Federation of America, 1939), 10. Courtesy of the Hertz Collection.

7.1
Korn, Jerry.
The Civil War, “Pursuit to Appomattox: the Last Battles”
(Alexandria: Time-Life Inc., 1987), 54. Courtesy of the National Archives.

9.1
Cermak, Josef.
History of the Civil War
(Chicago: August Geringer, 1889) Courtesy of The Library of Congress.

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