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French CHAB News December 2025

 

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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CONFEDERATE HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION OF BELGIUM

NEXT MEETINGS 
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Saturday May 9, 2026 at 10 AM

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EXCURSION TO FIRST WORLD WAR SHRINES IN NORTHERN FRANCE

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Excursion organized by Gerald Hawkins: the Notre-Dame-de-Lorette National Necropolis and the Canadian National Vimy Memorial, major sites of the Great War in northern France.

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Located on a strategic ridge near Arras, Notre-Dame-de-Lorette was fiercely contested during the Frist World War. Its height made it a key observation point over the surrounding plains. During the battles of Artois in May-June 1915, French forces launched major offensives against entrenched German positions and eventually recaptured the ridge after heavy fighting. Despite significant early breakthroughs, the lack of reserves and strong ennemy counterattacks halted the advance. The battles, marked by intense artillery bombardments and costly frontal assaults, caused over 100,000 casualties. Today, the site is the largest French military necropolis, containing the remains of more than 40,000 soldiers, many buried in ossuaries. In 2014, the Ring of Remembrance was inaugurated nearby, bearing the names of some 580,000 men who fell in the Nord–Pas-de-Calais region, without distinction of nationality or side.

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The Battle of Vimy Ridge took place from 9 to 12 April 1917 during the Arras Offensive in Artois. This strategic position, strongly held by ennemy forces, dominated the Douai Plain and provided a crucial advantage for observation and artillery support. For the first time, all four divisions of the Canadian Corps fought together under unified command against the German 6th Army. Thanks to careful planning, extensive trenches and tunnels, and a precise creeping barrage, Canadian troops captured most of their objectives on the first day. The victory was however costly,  with more than 10,600 casualties, including about 3,600 killed. The capture of Vimy Ridge became a defining moment in Canada’s national identity. Inaugurated in 1936, the Vimy Memorial honors Canadian soldiers who died in France and symbolizes the country’s emergence on the international stage as a nation capable of conducting a major military operation independently.

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Price of the excursion: 50 € per person. More details on the French page of this website or upon request. Reservation a must by email at d.decleer@scarlet.be before May 2, at the latest.
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Saturday 13 June 2026, from 11 AM

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ANNUAL CHAB BANQUET

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As in previous editions, the CHAB banquet will take place at the clubhouse of the Hoegaarden hockey club. This year, Hubert Leroy and Dominique De Cleer are proposing a traditional barbecue:
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Kir

Skewer of scampi

Assortment of grilled meats

Apple crumble

  Coffe, tea
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Price of the meal (drinks not included): CHAB members and their partner: €35 – non-members: €45. Please register with our secretary Dominique De Cleer by email at d.decleer@scarlet.be or by phone at 0475/77 34 60 and transfer the amount for your meal to account BE90 3100 9059 2632 with the reference CHAB Banquet no later than June 7.
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Saturday 5 September 2026, at 3 PM

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OPEN MEETING

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For several years, the month of September has not attracted a large attendance at our meetings. Some lectures have been presented to only a handful of members. For this reason, the screening of one or another film related to the American Civil War has been included in the program. Unfortunately, the list of films on the subject available in French is rather limited. Therefore, for the September meeting, the committee has decided to somewhat modify the format. We are proposing an open meeting to which all members are cordially invited. This will provide everyone with the opportunity either to acquire or to sell books or objects related to the American Civil War or to the history of the United States. In addition, members may bring along one or more items from their collections and discuss them freely. Of course, there is no obligation to bring or purchase anything. It will simply be an ideal opportunity to chat informally and enjoy a refreshment among friends. The afternoon will be followed, from 6:00 p.m., by an optional supper of cheeses and cold cuts.
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Price of the supper (drinks not included): 20 €. Please register with our secretary Dominique De Cleer by email at d.decleer@scarlet.be or by phone at 0475/77 34 60 and transfer the amount for your meal to account BE90 3100 9059 2632 with the reference CHAB Banquet no later than August 31.
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LATEST PAINTINGS OF JOHN PAUL STRAIN
 

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McNIELL'S MOUNTAIN RANGERS

FALLEN TIMBERS

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Before the war, the men in and around Hardy County were hunters. These men were expert woodsmen, hunting and trapping in the mountains of western Virginia. They knew every game trail and pathway throughout their mountains and valleys. But now as their beloved homeland had been invaded by an army from the north, these mountain men would use their skills hunting men rather than game animals. For over two years McNeill’s Rangers was one of the most effective Confederate cavalry units operating in Virginia. Their targets were Union supply trains, supply depots, the B & O Railroad, and anything of value to the invading army. After a successful Ranger raid, US General Imboden describes why no Rangers were captured in his official report. Captain McNeill took to the mountains, and by a wonderful march (for rapidity) escaped, though pursued by over six hundred men. The year 1863 had been one of immense successes for the Partisans of the South Branch Valley. Though the Rangers were relatively small in numbers, their exploits cause havoc in the ranks of the Union Army. Their daring hit and run raids resulted in tremendous damage to the Federal war machine. In response to the raids the Federals deployed thousands of troops to protect the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad from the Ranger raidsOn a raid in January 1864, the Rangers captured a wagon train near Williamsport and confiscated arms and equipment, including 3,000 pounds of bacon. They then burned what was left of the supplies and disappeared with a number of prisoners. Two days later they captured the town of Romney, holding it for three days. On this occasion, General Robert E. Lee had high praise for the Rangers, saying, "You will find, I think, Captain McNeill bold and intelligent, and others in his cavalry (as well)." Perhaps the Rangers’ greatest feat was the seemingly impossible kidnapping of two Union Generals in what became known as "The Great Cumberland Raid”. On February 21, 1865, under the cover of night in a blinding snowstorm, a raiding party consisting of forty-eight McNeill’s Rangers and fifteen well known men from other commands began their sixty-mile ride. After crossing the Potomac River, the raiders used an obscure route of twenty rugged miles over several mountain ridges, one of which was called the Nobly Mountain. The temperature was biting cold and snow drifts in many places made passage difficult for the horses. When the Rangers arrived near the town of Cumberland it was still dark. Even though Cumberland was occupied by a Union garrison of over 10,000 troops, the Rangers managed to bypass pickets and guards by posing as Union soldiers. With the help of an informant, they went straight to hotels of the Revere House and Barnum House to find their targets of Brigadier General Kelly and Major General Cook in bed. The captured generals were taken without a fight and the Rangers escaped with them. There was no time to tally, as the raiding party was heading for home at a fast pace. Just four miles out of the city the boom of a cannon echoed through the mountains as the alarm was sound. Soon Union cavalry was in pursuit and the chase was on. Their route took them back across the Potomac River into western Virginia and up into the South Branch Mountains. They navigated steep snowy heavily forested terrain using lesser-known paths to evade the Union pursuers. Outside Romney the Federal cavalry from Cumberland caught up. A brief exchange of gunfire erupted, and the boys in blue retreated. Upon reaching the Moorefield valley, the Rangers were again intercepted. A whole brigade of the Ringgold cavalry from New Creek suddenly appeared on the opposite bank of the river. With their horses almost played out the Rangers made their way up again into the mountains, following the hunting trails they knew so well. Describing the raid General John B. Gordon said, “In daring and dash it is the most thrilling incident of the entire war.” Colonel John S. Mosby (Mosby’s Rangers) extended his hand in congratulations to Lt. Welton and said, "You boys have beaten me badly. The only way I can equal this is to go into Washington and bring out Lincoln!" Even US General Cook exclaimed, "Gentlemen, this is the most brilliant exploit of the war! The raid was one of the last Confederate successes of the war. The legend of McNeill’s Rangers still lives on today.    

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© All copyrights reserved by John Paul Strain Historical Art

Fought in southwest Tennessee, the Battle of Shiloh would be one of the first major and bloodiest battles of the Civil War. At Pittsburg Landing, Tennessee, General William T. Sherman described the weather in a letter dated April 3, 1862, saying "It was “springlike … apples and peaches in blossom and trees beginning to leaf, bluebirds singing.” On April 6, Confederate forces under the command of General Albert Sidney Johnston launched a surprise attack at dawn against Union forces around Pittsburg Landing on the Tennessee River. The southerner’s attack was devastating and successful. Although General Johnston had been killed in his charge through the “Peach Orchard”, General Grant’s troops were beaten, taking up a final defensive line near the river. Now in command, General P.G.T. Beauregard and his generals that night made battle plans to finish off Grant’s army the next morning. Unknown to them, they would face a new force of 18,000 fresh troops of the Army of the Ohio under the command of General Don Carlos Buell, who would reinforce union troops hunkered down during the rainy night. When Confederate forces attacked the following morning, they soon realized they were facing a new foe. With fresh reinforcements, Grant launched a counterattack. Outnumbered and exhausted, the Confederates withdrew towards Corinth, Mississippi. Colonel Nathan Bedford Forrest was assigned the task of covering the retreating southern army. Forrest commanded a small rear-guard force of 220 Terry’s Texas Rangers, 40 of his personal escort, and 40 Mississippians. General Grant sent Sherman southward on a reconnaissance to gauge whether the Confederates were retreating or reorganizing. When Sherman’s advance guard emerged from woods near a clearing of downed timber, Forrest and his Rangers unexpectedly wheeled and charged straight into the Union line. His sudden attack scattered the federal horsemen, but Forrest rode too far ahead of his troops and was shot point blank by a passing federal cavalryman with a .54 caliber carbine. The bullet passed though his left hip and lodged near his spine. Despite his serious injury, Forrest fought his way out of the engagement and rejoined his troops. Forrest’s charge made Grant and Sherman pull back and abandon any idea of pushing the retreating Confederates. In Sherman’s official report “The enemy’s cavalry came down upon us at a charge…and we were compelled to fall back. I became satisfied the enemy was in too great a force for further pursuit.” Colonel Forrest’s ferocious countercharge at Fallen Timbers became legendary. Forrest and his Rangers had preserved the Confederate withdrawal towards Corinth. It contributed greatly to Forrest’s reputation as the most successful and aggressive cavalry commander of the war. 

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© All copyrights reserved by John Paul Strain Historical Art

 

For information or online orders:

www.johnpaulstrain.com

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