Lt. General James Longstreet
Memorial Dedication

Gettysburg, PA

July 3, 1998


Images & Text © Jay J. Pulli and Peggy Marshall


The Program

Prelude 2nd South Carolina String Band
Posting of Colors Maryland SCV Color Guard, 2nd Maryland Fife & Drums
Welcome William E. Johnson, Jr.
Invocation Reverend Roy Fauth, Trinity United Church of Christ
Musical Tribute Sons of Dixie
Keynote Address Dr. William Garret Piston, Southwest Missouri State University
Historical Reading Rosemary R. Ralph
Prayer of Thanks Reverend Charles C. Thomas
Presentation & Acceptance of Perpetual Care Fund E. Todd Holden; Dr. John Latschar, Superintendent, Gettysburg National Military Park
Sculptor's Address Gary Casteel
Unveiling Robert C. Thomas
Lone Piper Bob Underwood
Benediction Father Joseph Hildreth, St. Francis Xavier Church



The Ceremony

Professor William Piston (left)wrote the book "Lee's Tarnished Lieutenant: James Longstreet and His Place in Southern History", which inspired Robert Thomas (right) to begin the effort to right the wrong thrust upon Longstreet, and build this memorial to him at Gettysburg.

Dr. John Latschar (left), Superintendent of the Gettysburg National Military Park, discussed the importance of the Longstreet Memorial to the Park. This was followed by the sculptor, Gary Casteel (right).

When the Sons of Dixie began to play "I Wish I Was In Dixie", the largest Confederate flag I'd ever seen was raised, and after the ceremony it seemed that everyone wanted to have their picture taken in front of it.




The Memorial








The sculptor, Gary Casteel

I have also put together a photographic study of the Longstreet Memorial, which you can view by clicking here.


General Longstreet and His Men Pose in Front of the Confederate Flag



The General's Descendents in Front of the Memorial




It Was Also a Day for Period Costumes

Actually, it was way too hot for period dress, but that didn't stop anyone.

Another Malnurished Rebel





The Longstreet Connection:
A Brief History of Marshall Hall

First Marshalls of Maryland

Thomas Marshall, the builder of Marshall Hall on the Potomac, was not a first son or the first of his line in the colony of Maryland. His father died when he was 4 years old leaving older brother William 410 acres, and Barbara, Thomas, and Richard each an inheritance of 100 acres on the Wicomoco River in Charles County. This land was once part of a much larger tract patented in 1651 as “Marshall” by his grandfather William Marshall, an emigrant from England; who, before his death in 1673, had accumulated 1,870 acres.

Thomas may have been raised on the Wicomoco land, but he also had several ties to people in the vicinity of his future Potomac tract. His mother, Elizabeth Hanson Marshall, was the daughter of Randall Hanson who had patented “Hansonton” and “Charley.” On November 18, 1696 Randall Hanson sold John Fendall and, Thomas’s uncle, Joshua Marshall 500 acres of Hansonton and 360 acres of Charley. Under a deed of partition dated November 24, 1696 Fendall kept the Hansonton section and Marshall kept Charley. This was followed on September 11, 1700 by a deed of confirmation signed by John Ackatamaka, described therein as “Emperor of the Piscataway,” consenting to the deed transfer from Hanson to Fendall and Marshall. This may have been a requirement during the resurveying effort, following the peace treaty with the Piscataway. It is probably this deed that later contributed to the persistent legend that Marshall Hall land was granted to the Marshalls by the Piscataway.

In 1698, soon after the death of Thomas’s father (William Marshall II) his mother Elizabeth married John Fendall. It is quite possible that at that time William III, Barbara, Thomas, and infant Richard moved to Hansonton on the Potomac. It is known that when Uncle Joshua died in 1702 without heir, Fendall served as executor of the Charley property for William Marshall III.

The Building of Marshall Hall

With newfound peace in the area, patent claims 60 years earlier by men such as Randall Hanson were finally being developed. James Stoddert, a county surveyor, was first on the scene in the new wave of land speculation to claim pieces others had overlooked. When Stoddard died in 1726, Thomas Marshall married Elizabeth Bishop Stoddert that September. On January 7, 1727 Thomas applied for a survey of “Mistake.” By patenting Mistake in 1728, Thomas laid the foundation for the development of the estate that would eventually become Marshall Hall. He proceeded to build a mansion on the bank of the Potomac, east of the “Greenwich” tract patented by Randall Brandt. The house was started around 1730, but there are no specific records to confirm its date of construction. Thomas Marshall married the widow Stoddert when he was 31 years old, and may have owned a home before their marriage. Marshall did own other land and Stoddert had a dower claim of life use of one-third of Southampton Plantation. By custom, she could have resided there with her Stoddert children and new husband as long as she wanted.

Thomas was a justice of the peace of Prince George’s Co. from 1737 to 1748, when the boundary between Charles and Prince George’s moved and he became a legal resident of Charles County. Records indicate that in large, the Marshalls were only involved in politics at the county level. In colonial society, however, this office was powerful and prestigious. Justices, appointed by the governor, ran the county government, decided tax rates, hired sheriffs, and allocated funds. They sat in courts of law deciding local land disputes and registering deeds. In 1759 Thomas Marshall died and was survived by his two children: Sarah Marshall Dent and Thomas Hanson Marshall, who inherited the estate. Brother and sister were married to brother and sister - John and Rebecca Dent - whose father, Colonel George Dent, was Chief Justice of Maryland.

Sarah’s husband, John Dent, rose to the rank of general during the American Revolution. Their daughter, Ann Herbert Dent (born October 30, 1756) married Captain William M. Wilkinson of the Revolutionary War. Ann's daughter, Jane Herbert (Dent) Wilkinson, was born July 23, 1798 on Truman's Place plantation near the Patuxent River in Charles County. Jane married Doctor James Long and went on to fame as the "Mother of Texas." Their sons, Thomas Marshall Dent and George Dent, became captains in the Revolutionary War. George served in the Maryland Legislature, becoming Speaker of the House before federal election to Congress for two terms as a supporter of Thomas Jefferson. Thomas Marshall Dent, born October 22 1761, was the maternal grandfather of Confederate Lt. General James Longstreet - General Robert E. Lee's "Old War Horse."


Related Links

The Longstreet Chronicles

Articles & Documents Concerning the Longstreet Controversy

Images of General Longstreet

Bibliography & Reading List

Yahoo Index of Civil War Sites

My New Site on the Stonewall Jackson Memorial at Manassas



Photographic Notes: shot with a Nikon N90 camera and 3 Nikkor lenses: 20 mm f2.8 AFD, 35-70 mm f2.8 AFD, and 80-200 mm f2.8 AFD. All on Fuji Sensia II -100 film. Transfered to Kodak PhotoCD, opened in Adobe Photoshop, Levels and Unsharp Mask filters applied, saved as jpeg files.

| Jay Pulli's Photo Page | Email to Jay Pulli | Jay Pulli's Home Page |

| Cape Cod: Images & Poetry | Cape Cod Lighthouses | Outer Banks, North Carolina |

| Scottish Highland Games | Close Up Photography | Solar Eclipse | Grand Canyon | Antietam | Manassas |

| Assisi | Italian Image of the Week | Cecilia Bartoli | Grapes of Tuscany | Turkey |