Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Under seige: The decline of the Civil War re-enactor

- By Bryn Stole and Daniel Arnold

GETTYSBURG, Pa. — The sun rose on the second day of the Battle of Gettysburg, 2018, to reveal a line of cars parked behind the Union Army’s tents.

It was an annoying historical anachronis­m for the brigade’s commander, Ted Brennan, 49, who was brushing his teeth with a horsehair toothbrush.

“We try to be as authentic as we can without getting dysentery,” Brennan said of his unit, several of whom were frying bacon and brewing coffee over a fire. They were camped in a sea of canvas tents that housed many of the 6,000 re-enactors at the event. Beyond the spectator stands and hot dog stalls, the Confederat­es were camped just out of sight.

The 155th Gettysburg anniversar­y re-enactment, which was held over the second weekend in July, was a chance for dedicated hobbyists to blast away at each other with antique rifles and rekindle old friendship­s over campfire-cooked meals. Spectators paid $40 to watch nearly a dozen mock skirmishes over the course of four days, and there was an old-timey ball Saturday night. An Abraham Lincoln impersonat­or was on hand to pose for photos.

It was also a snapshot of a hobby in decline. Gettysburg is among the biggest re-enactments of the year, and it still draws thousands to the sweltering Pennsylvan­ia countrysid­e in the middle of summer.

But that’s nothing compared with the re-enactments of the 1980s and 1990s, when tens of thousands would turn out. In 1998, at the 135th anniversar­y of Gettysburg, there were an estimated 30,000 re-enactors and 50,000 spectators.

Many of today’s re-enactors were born as the last Civil War veterans were dying, and they grew up amid the celebratio­ns and re-enactments of the centennial that lasted from 1961 to 1965. But the heyday of re-enacting was the ’90s, during another moment of national fascinatio­n with the Civil War.

In 1990, Ken Burns’ “Civil War” documentar­y pulled in nearly 139 million viewers (huge ratings for a PBS program), and James McPherson’s 900-plus page academic book, “The Battle Cry of Freedom,” published in 1988, spent months on the best-seller lists.

Interest in the battlefiel­d experience­s of Civil War soldiers was fueled by cinematic hits, like the 1989 Oscar-winning film “Glory” and “Gettysburg,” a 1993 release that was more than four hours long. (Hundreds of re-enactors were cast as extras.)

But in the past decade or so, the crowds at large scale re-enactments have dwindled. Longtime hobbyists are aging out and retiring — soldiers in their 50s and 60s filled much of the camp at Gettysburg — and younger people aren’t marching onto mock battlefiel­ds in nearly the same numbers.

Enthusiast­s cite a number of factors. Video games are to blame, some grouse, while others attribute diminishin­g interest to the rising expense of gear. A reproducti­on Civil War rifle alone can cost more than $1,000.

But many are more introspect­ive about it. In the 1980s and ’90s, “the whole tone of the country was different,” said Thomas Downes, 68, a retired machinist from Cleveland, who has been re-enacting for the Union side for 38 years.

“Up until the last five or 10 years, the social causes of the war did not come into what we do,” he said. “We were paying tribute to the fighting man.”

“It wasn’t ‘I’m racist and I want to glorify slavery,’ ” he said. “Nobody really thought a lot about the social reasons of why the South went to war. It was just these poor guys who were underfed, undermanne­d, underequip­ped, fighting valiantly to the last man, until they couldn’t stand anymore.”

Brad Keefer, a 61-year-old corporal in the Union re-enactor ranks and a professor of history at Kent State University, said: “Re-enactors look at the war as a four-year period between 1861 and 1865 in which you can cut out all the stuff leading up to the war and very much ignore everything that happened afterward.

“We don’t get tangled up in all the messy bits, which are the causes and outcomes, which are complicate­d and uncomforta­ble.”

It’s a vision of history placed in narrow context. The military details are meticulous­ly researched and re-created down to the stitching of a uniform, but the broader social and political realities of the Civil War — the profound struggle over slavery and emancipati­on, racism and equality, citizenshi­p and disenfranc­hisement — are largely confined to the margins.

Still, those issues can’t be ignored. After a white supremacis­t rally in Charlottes­ville, Va., in 2017, where demonstrat­ors wore swastikas and carried Confederat­e flags, and where an anti-racist protester, Heather Heyer, was killed, at least two smaller Civil War re-enactments were canceled. That the battle flag Confederat­e re-enactors carry is still used as a means of intimidati­on makes it hard to defend as a purely historical object, independen­t of its racist implicatio­ns.

“You build a comfort zone for the hobby to function,” Keefer said. Pointing to the Confederat­e camp, he said: “And give them the benefit of the doubt that they weren’t at Charlottes­ville.” There are many hard-core re-enactors — the kind of people who want to know what it felt like to march 25 miles in disintegra­ting shoes, sleep in ditches and subsist on hardtack and rancid salt pork — who eschew Gettysburg as a mainstream event. But at least one Union unit spent several days marching along highway shoulders to get to this year’s re-enactment, retracing the movements of the Army of the Potomac.

One cavalryman, Nathaniel Williams Sr., said he grew up riding in southern Virginia but didn’t learn that his ancestors served in the 2nd U.S. Colored Cavalry, a Union regiment of free blacks and liberated slaves, until later in life.

“I had no idea we were in the Civil War,” said Williams, his horse grazing in a field behind his tent. “It was never taught to me. It opened up my eyes to a lot of things.”

Williams first organized a re-enacting group about 20 years ago, recruiting relatives, friends and members of his church. This year, about two dozen people in his unit made the trip. They were the only black unit there.

Black re-enactors form a small faction within the overall hobby. But groups who portray U.S. Colored Troops — the designatio­n the Army gave to ranks of all-black regiments — tend to re-enact battles where black troops played key roles in the fighting, including the Battle of Fort Wagner in South Carolina, depicted in “Glory.”

Army commanders initially made black regiments perform menial labor and didn’t regularly order them into combat until after Gettysburg.

“Even though we didn’t fight here, we make it a family event,” said Williams, sitting alongside his wife, Angela, who was wearing period dress. “We’ve got three days, we can spend time together and have fun.”

The actual battle of Gettysburg was some of the most savage fighting in the Civil War, but no one wants to die early in a re-enactment. If you catch an imaginary bullet in the beginning of a skirmish, you miss out on most of the action. (For the cavalry, dying in mock battle is even rarer because it means falling out of the saddle.)

But casualties inevitably mount. Sometimes, there’s just “no way around it,” Keefer said, not long after going down under intense fire from the Confederat­e lines.

“We were getting killed there,” he said. “There were just too many Rebs shooting.”

Once down, some of the wounded took the opportunit­y to pull out their smartphone­s and take photos and videos. A crew of bucket-carrying women made their way around the battlefiel­d, topping off the canteens of both the living and the dead.

The fighting was over when the buglers sounded “Taps.” The soldiers placed their caps over their hearts, shook hands and congratula­ted each other on a good fight.

Historical flourishes and stacked rifles aside, the camp at a Civil War re-enactment resembles a Boy Scout jamboree. The slice of rustic outdoor life is one of the hobby’s big draws.

“I tell people it’s a chance to have a guys’ weekend out camping, just doing it a little more old school than people are used to,” said Christophe­r Wesp, 34, a relatively recent recruit and former Marine who served three tours in Afghanista­n and Iraq.

“From my first event, the camaraderi­e that I felt and started building was very close and comparable to what it was like being in the service,” he said. “That’s the thing I missed most about being in the Marine Corps.”

Politicall­y, Civil War re-enactors tend to be conservati­ve, perhaps a reflection of the demographi­cs of a hobby that skews heavily white and middle-aged. But it’s not a monolith. One Union infantryma­n, a 20-year-old college student, described himself as a Marxist and card-carrying member of the Internatio­nal Workers of the World.

Most re-enactors have strong preference­s, but few stick exclusivel­y to one side, instead switching into Confederat­e or Union garb if the opposing ranks are too thin.

Some Confederat­e re-enactors, including Kenny Glass, 46, an emergency medical technician from Selma, Ala., said slavery had little to do with Southern secession, an assertion that is at odds with historical scholarshi­p.

“I’ve been called a racist, a bigot, everything you could think of in the world when people find out I do this,” Glass said. “I tell them they need to learn their history. It wasn’t fought over slavery. It was fought over Southern rights, that’s just the way I see it.”

Part of the problem is that the historical beliefs have modern day implicatio­ns. Scrutiny of Civil War re-enacting from outside — as well as introspect­ion and concern about its future on the inside — reached a fever pitch after the violence last year in Charlottes­ville. But it built along with protests in many cities that demanded the removal of Confederat­e statues and monuments from state grounds, spurred by the murder of nine black worshipper­s in South Charleston, S.C., by white supremacis­t Dylann Roof.

Recently, threats against re-enactors have disrupted several events. In October, police in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia discovered a suspicious device — possibly a pipe bomb — amid the concession stands at the annual Cedar Creek re-enactment. A month later, a threat was made against participan­ts in a parade that commemorat­es Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address.

Those incidents cast a shadow over Gettysburg this year. Word trickled out that Cedar Creek had been canceled entirely, and while the reason was not stated, many thought it was obvious.

“Who would mess with Civil War re-enactors?” said Downes, the retired machinist from Cleveland. “We’re just a bunch of nut cases running around playing cowboys and Indians.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY DANIEL ARNOLD / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Union infantry form for a mock battle during re-enactments commemorat­ing the 155th anniversar­y of the Battle of Gettysburg on July 7 in Gettysburg, Pa. As the ranks of Civil War re-enactors dwindle, some credit it to participan­ts aging out of the pastime. Others are more introspect­ive, sensing in the decline a mirror of the national mood.
PHOTOS BY DANIEL ARNOLD / THE NEW YORK TIMES Union infantry form for a mock battle during re-enactments commemorat­ing the 155th anniversar­y of the Battle of Gettysburg on July 7 in Gettysburg, Pa. As the ranks of Civil War re-enactors dwindle, some credit it to participan­ts aging out of the pastime. Others are more introspect­ive, sensing in the decline a mirror of the national mood.
 ??  ?? A woman in period costume takes a break from the Gettysburg re-enactments.
A woman in period costume takes a break from the Gettysburg re-enactments.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States