March Meeting Highlights and Photos

Ken Serfass, portraying U S Grant, presented “The Surrender of Robert E. Lee in 1865.”

Serfass gave a wonderful, informative and entertaining presentation about the weeks and days in early April 1865 which led to the surrender of Lee’s Confederate forces. Adding anecdotes and “personal” storoes from Grant’s past, the presentation captivated those in attendance.

Serfass was a late substiture for our original spekewr who was ill. He couldn’t have done a better job. It is always a delight to listen to his kind of living hisotry.

Pictured below are the winners from the monthly Preservation book raffle.

Next meeting will be April 1st - no fool!!

**UPDATED** New March Speaker - The Surrender of Robert E Lee in 1865

DUE TO ILLNESS OUR ORIGINAL SPEAKER HAD TO CANCEL BUT WE ARE PRIVILEGED TO HOST GENERAL U S GRANT!!

The Surrender of Robert E. Lee in 1865

In early April of 1865, the federal Army of the Potomac broke through the lines at Petersburg Virginia, forcing Robert E Lee’s Confederate army to attempt a retreat west and south in order to link up with other rebel forces, hoping to prolong their defeat and make one last effort to win against General Grant.

The two days before Lee agreed to meet with Grant started the final act in the fighting in Virginia that would come to a head in the town of Appomattox Court House, in the home of Wilmer McClean, where the two leading generals would meet to discuss terms of surrender of that portion of the Confederate States Army, known as The Army Of Northern Virginia.  An exchange of letters led to a face to face meeting between General Lee and General Grant, which influenced further surrenders and the outbreak of peace by the end of May that year.

Discuss with General Grant some of the finer details of the meeting which led Robert E Lee to surrender his army, ending the fighting in Virginia during the civil war.  The letters exchanged are merely the very public face of how the meeting comes about, and US Grant will be sharing some of inner workings that lead to this momentous day, along with notable anecdotes from the meeting itself and right after.

———————-

Kenneth J. Serfass, Gunnery Sgt USMC, retired (as Ulysses S. Grant)

Gunnery Sgt Kenneth J. Serfass is a native of Bethlehem, PA born on June 18th, 1966.  A US Marine since 1984, his last unit was the First Marine Division Band during Operation Iraqi Freedom, retiring in July of 2004 to become a music teacher. 

Ken is a former civil war “reenactor” but now a first-person impressionist with fifty years studying his childhood hero, US Grant.  As a full-time professional living historian portraying Grant, he presents between 11 and up to 23 appearances each month between February and November.  Ken began appearing as General Grant in 2009 while living in San Diego CA, and since returning to the east coast, he is engaged on horseback tours, rail road excursions, presenting school programs, living history and roundtable events, speaking at public libraries on a regular basis, and annually in Southern California at Huntington Beach’s Civil War Days over Labor Day weekend.

In 2023 the state of California recognized his contributions “to continued education of the public as to our national history” with coincidental certificates from the state assembly and senate in recognition of his efforts, presenting these to him at the Huntington Beach event.

Firmly established on both coasts, there is no other “Grant impressionist” with his reach, visiting fourteen states every year.  He jokes that the history talks and as leader of his Civil War era Marine Band, requires all his work to be dependent on time travel.

He has appeared at Pamplin Park near Petersburg VA, and several national park sites during the Civil War Sesquicentennial years.  In 2015 he was invited to join The Federal Generals Corps, to be their “Ulysses S. Grant” until the group disbanded in 2020. 

In October of 2020, he roamed Tennessee and Mississippi around Grant’s major battle sites, crafting a YouTube video series, “How the War Was Won In the West”, with 9 episodes that cover the campaigns leading Gen. Grant’s rise to become Lincoln’s top general in the Civil War. A similar YouTube series is in the works for Grant’s time in Virginia later in the war.

He has spoken on Grant’s Vicksburg Campaign to the Gettysburg Licensed Battlefield Guide Association to develop broader civil war study among their guides and is the first Grant impressionist to present his own topics at the General Grant National Memorial, in New York City, giving public interactive addresses, as General or as President, and developing Junior Ranger programs for NPS, bringing America’s youth closer to history.  

His repertoire includes programs on Grant’s battle campaigns, his interactions with Lincoln, Sherman, and Lee, and most importantly, the Grant family, and the two terms as the 18th US President.  His knowledge of Grant’s experiences and life led to being cast as President Grant and as tech advisor for a documentary on Fox Nation, debuting October 10, 2021.

It is with a profound honor that he tells the story of one of America’s greatest military leaders and Ken takes it very seriously to reaffirm Grant’s place of honor among the most respected people of our nation’s history. 

Entertaining and educational, the variety of his performing venues includes museums and business groups seeking leadership training and inspiration, and across the board they can all provide referrals for how people can talk TO history and share in our rich national heritage with US Grant.  Ken will say for all the years as a Marine, and this history work, there is nothing he is prouder of than being the father of his daughter Erin, who works in movie and TV production in Los Angeles.  He believes this work inspires her to make her own path and be happy in what she does. 

His passion for the subject is evident in his presentation, and it is hard not to be affected by his enthusiasm and believe that you’ve met US Grant in living history.

From the Brigade Commander ~ March

March ... a time when the first signs of spring appear and, like every other month, a myriad of events and special days, ranging from the zany (National Peanut Butter Lover’s Day) to the patriotic (National Anthem Day) are observed. To either inform you or jog your memory, inside you’ll find the most significant Civil War-related events that took place during March.

Our spring field trip will take interested members and their guests to Richmond, Va. If you missed our January meeting, you can find preliminary details in the March Newsletter on page 5. We’ll be sharing updated details at our March 4 meeting. (And we’ll also email revised (flyers) presented at the March meeting to all members of record.) The deadline to sign up for this trip is March 25, 2025. Sign-up contact information is included in the preliminary itinerary (in the March Newsletter on page 5).

Our March meeting’s guest speaker will offer a topic I hope will be as fascinating as it sounds: The mystery of Robert E. Lee’s Lost Special Order 191. Our speaker brings with him a deep, academic grounding in history and years of personal Civil War research, the latter of which has helped inform his interpretations of existing evidence surrounding the lost order. You’ll find the summary of his talk in the March Newsletter on page 2.

Hope to see you there!

Barry

P.S. For your scheduling purposes, we want to remind you that our April 1 meeting program will be presented by historian and Civil War buff David Walter. His presentation is entitled: “Come on You Wolverines! Gen. George Custer’s War.” No fooling!

February Meeting Highlights and Photos

Andy Waskie presented a fascinating study of Octavius Valentine Catto a brilliant scholar, professor, Renaissance Man and the highest-ranking Black US Army officer at the time, who was serving in the PA National Guard.

Cato was assassinated a few steps from his South Street home by political opponents of the Black community. It was Election Day 1871, and Catto was protecting the right of African American citizens to vote.

  Waskie was born in Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania, but noted he has ancestors scattered throughout the local area.

          Waskie was an Associate Professor at Temple University for 20 years, retiring in 2019. He also taught at Rider University, N.J., and Holy Family University in Philadelphia, teaching Civil War history in the Civil War Institute. He now teaches online courses for Camden County College; Manor College; etc.

          Waskie is a Civil War historian, author, and preservationist. He specializes in the life of General George G. Meade, whom he portrays in a Living-History performance.  He is a member of the Union League of Philadelphia, among many other organizations.

As usual we held our monthly preservation book raffle with winners pictured below.

Claire spoke about an upcoming field trip to Richmond VA in June.

Laura spoke about a change in schedule for March - details to be announced shortly.

June Field Trip to Richmond VA

Claire has done it again!

An amazing field trip to Richmond Virginia featuring

  • 2 nights in that beautiful city

  • the White House of the Confederacy

  • American Civil War Museum

  • Richmond National Battlefield

    • 13 sites

    • 4 visitor centers

  • Hollywood Cemetery

    • grave sites of Pres James Monroe & John Tyler

    • JEB Stuart, Jefferson Davis, and Henry Heth

    • 1869 Pyramid - earliest Confederate monument

    • 18,000 Confederates buried there, including 3,300 exhumed from Gettysburg and reinterred here.

Contact Claire ASAP to reserve your spot.

Additional details below.

Civil War Institute Summer Conference Discount for CWRT Members!

Civil War Institute Summer Conference Discount for CWRT Members!

CLICK HERE FOR SUMMER CONFERENCE DETAILS

  The Civil War Institute at Gettysburg College would like to offer the members of your Civil War Round table or organization a 15% discount to attend the 2025 CWI summer conference, June 13-18.

You can explore further details about our conference on our website, as well as check out our schedule for this year’s event. At CWI, we believe in the mission of CWRTs and we are making this special offer to recognize the efforts of your organization in promoting the study of Civil War history.

  We hope to have the opportunity to work with you to help continue the educational missions of both your Round Table and the Civil War Institute. Please let me know if you have any questions, and we look forward to hearing from you in the near future.

 Thank you!

Details of February Presentation Announced

Andy Waskie “The Story of the Forgotten Hero of Emancipation:  Major Octavius V. Catto”

On Oct. 10, 1871, Octavius Valentine Catto was assassinated a few steps from his South Street home by political opponents of the Black community. It was Election Day, and Catto was protecting the right of African American citizens to vote. Catto was a brilliant scholar, professor, Renaissance Man and the highest-ranking Black US Army officer at the time, who was serving in the PA National Guard. A statue of this great military and emancipation hero now stands on the south side of Philadelphia’s City Hall.

 Short Bio:  CV Anthony (Andy)  Waskie, Ph.D.

  Professor Waskie was born in Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania, and pursued a Languages/History major at Bloomsburg University, studying abroad in Austria, and Germany. He studied Slavic Linguistics in Prague on a Czech government scholarship and received an M.A. and Ph.D. degrees at New York University. He had experience with the State Department, and duty with the U.S. Army as an army linguist. He became a teacher of languages and history at Pennsbury School District, Bucks County, PA. He is a recipient of the Commendation Medal of the Pennsylvania Army National Guard.

          Waskie was an Associate Professor at Temple University for 20 years, retiring in 2019. He also taught at Rider University, N.J., and Holy Family University in Philadelphia, teaching Civil War history in the Civil War Institute. He now teaches online courses for Camden County College; Manor College; etc.

          Waskie is a Civil War historian, author, and preservationist. He specializes in the life of General George G. Meade, whom he portrays in a Living-History performance.  He is a member of the Union League of Philadelphia; Executive Council of the Civil War History Consortium of Philadelphia; and a co-founder and co-director of the ‘Civil War & Emancipation Studies program’ at Temple University. He has been a Pennsylvania ‘Commonwealth Speaker/Scholar’ from 2006 to 2018. Waskie serves as president of the General Meade Society; Board of the Friends of Laurel Hill Cemetery; Historian and Board member of the Grand Army of the Republic (G.A.R.) Civil War Museum & Library; American Legion Post 405 at the Union League; Armed Services Council of the Union League; a founder and officer of the OV Catto Society; and of the ‘Dandy First’; Armory Museum, Drexel University Campus;  and other history related organizations and institutions.

From the Brigade Commander - February 2025

February is an important month in the history of emancipation in the U.S., as it marks the signing of the 13th Amendment, in 1865, and the issuance of a symbolic proclamation and practical step toward ending slavery, which allowed Black Americans to serve in the Union Army. February is also the month that remembers the surrender of Fort Henry, the Battle of Roanoke Island, and the inauguration of Jefferson Davis as President of the Confederacy.

In 1949, President Harry Truman signed a bill establishing National Freedom Day, observed each year on February 1, to commemorate the day Abraham Lincoln signed the 13th Amendment to abolish slavery. Not surprisingly, February was also selected as Black History Month, established by Dr. Carter G. Woodson in 1926, and first officially observed by President Gerald Ford, in 1976, as a way to highlight the history, struggles, and accomplishments of African Americans.

Our February speaker will be Dr. Andy Waskie, who returns to the Civil War Round Table of Eastern Pa. stage to introduce a black man who became a Union soldier, emancipation hero and, later, a martyr. Hope you’ll be able to join us.

Barry

January Meeting Highlights and Photos

Ed Root

The January Meeting was highlighted by an unexpected change of speakers due to illness.

Our own Ed Root kept the attendees enthralled with a narrative about the life of General Benjamin Butler.

Butler was best known for his oft criticized command of New Orleans, which earned him the name of “The Beast” among others labels.

Ed described who he was visiting a military museum in New Orleans and got into a conversation with a staff member who said that Butler wasn’t all bad. That set him off on a mission to discover more about this Massachusetts lawyer turned soldier.

General Benjamin Butler

Ed described his quest and delighted us with what he found about this man who joined the war effort early on, but was noted more for the controversies which surrounded him than his military prowess.

We thank ed for his superior job!!

As usual we held our monthly book raffle to benefit our preservation efforts and the winners are depicted below.

From the Brigade Commander - January 2025

The Emancipation Proclamation, issued in January, 1863, was used as a military strategy to weaken the Confederacy by depriving it of slave labor and encouraging enslaved people to join the Union Army. It also added moral force to the Union cause. Inside the January Newsletter, you’ll find more about the forces of war, politics and the military during the Civil War era.

Also in the newsletter, you’ll also find our standard fare of new book releases, statistical highlights from last month’s meeting, an update on Civil War preservation efforts that took place/are taking place in multiple locations around the country, and, of course, information about the speakers and their planned presentation for our January 7th meeting.

According to Merriam-Webster, the first New Year’s resolution was made in 1671. These promises became so commonplace, in fact, that a Boston newspaper, in 1813, reported it believed folks made these promises to make up for having fully satisfied their sins the year before. Here at the Civil War Roundtable of Eastern Pa., we make the same resolution each year: To make a real difference in the fight to preserve battlefield land and the legacy of our nation’s defining conflict and to provide our members and the community at large with opportunities to develop a greater understanding of the Civil War.

Your membership dollars and other financial support and word-of-mouth advertising of our efforts is key—and greatly appreciated. Happy New Year 2025!

BARRY