Issue

December 1963, Volume 15, No.1


Featured Articles

General Reynolds And “dear Kate”

Author: Mary R. Maloney

His family and aides knew John Renolds as a bachelor whose only love was soldiering. The tragic aftermath of his death at Gettysburg revealed one of the Civil War’s most poignant romances

Black Pawn On A Field Of Peril

Author: Bruce Catton

DRED SCOTT v. SANFORD

Vice Vs. Virtue, A Puritan Remembrancer

Author:

SHUN THE CUP, & KEEP THY FEET TO THE PATH

Lamplight Inauguration

Author: Charles Morrow Wilson

In San Francisco Warren G. Harding lay dead, and the nation was without a Chief Executive. In the early morning hours, by the light of a flickering oil lamp, an elderly Vermonter swore in his son as the thirtieth President of the United States

When The Turkeys Walked

Author: Neil M. Clark

Professor Henry And His Philosophical Toys

Author: Michael Blow

The first secretary of the Smithsonian Institution might have earned a fortune if he had chosen to commercialize his inventions. But American science would have suffered

Melting Pot In The Bayous

Author: Oliver Evans

Take a cup of Choctaw and add Frenchmen: aventuriers de bois and Acadian refugees from Nova Scotia
Blend in a Mississippi Bubble, a sprinkling of fugitives from justice, and a few filles de joie
Now sift in Catalans, Spanish planters, gens de couleur , and a large gombo nègre
Make a Code Noir and some Quadroon Balls
Stir together gently, adding Dalmatian oystermen, Filipino shrimpers, Germans, and “Kaintucks” (often rather tough)
Add a pinch of pirates
Simmer slowly under six flags
Serves most of southern Louisiana

Victory On Lake Champlain

Author: C. S. Forester

Hundreds of miles from salt water, two tiny, improvised fleets hammered away at each other in one of the decisive naval engagements of the War of 1812