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French CHAB News June 2026

 

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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CONFEDERATE HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION OF BELGIUM

NEXT MEETINGS 
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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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Saturday 10 October 2026, at 3 PM

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CINEMA AND THE CIVIL WAR

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Lecture by Maurice Jaquemyns: Cinema and the Civil War, from historical context to film. Every artistic production expresses, at a given moment in time, a vision of the world shaped by its context. From 1900 to the present day, cinema and television series have shown an interest in the American Civil War according to the questions and aspirations of the American public regarding this pivotal period in their history. A work emerges within the framework that inspires it: both its origins and its legacy reflect the evolving issues of domestic and foreign policy in the United States. Our presentation will be illustrated with visual materials and representative documents from films that have left a lasting mark on the history of cinema.

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Saturday 14 November 2026, at 3 PM

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GEORGE ARMSTRONG CUSTER, THE ENFANT TERRIBLE

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Lecture by Farid Ameur: George Armstrong Custer, the Enfant Terrible. Born in 1839 in Ohio, George Armstrong Custer was the son of a blacksmith of German origin. Although he was a troublesome student, he entered the United States Military Academy at West Point, where he attracted the attention of his superiors through his misconduct and his disregard for military regulations. In July 1861, as the Civil War had just broken out, he graduated last in his class and joined his unit in time to receive his baptism of fire at the First Battle of Bull Run. A devoted, energetic, and determined cavalry officer, he distinguished himself in the spring of 1862 during the Peninsula Campaign. Having caught the attention of General George B. McClellan, commander of the Army of the Potomac, he was assigned to McClellan’s staff. The experience proved successful and opened new opportunities for him. On June 29, 1863, despite his young age, he was suddenly promoted from captain to brigadier general of volunteers. At the Battle of Gettysburg, the Boy General earned his new rank by leading his forces in two spectacular charges that helped save the rear of the Federal line at a crucial moment in the battle. Eager for glory, as brave as he was vain and egocentric, he multiplied his daring exploits on the Virginia front. Despite reckless risks, he came to believe himself invincible. War, in truth, was his natural element. From the Shenandoah Valley to the final Appomattox Campaign, he carried out the most dangerous missions with zeal and composure, becoming a favorite of public opinion. Shortly before the end of the conflict, he was promoted to major general, making him the youngest officer ever to hold such rank in the history of the U.S. Army. After peace was restored, he was appointed lieutenant colonel of the 7th Cavalry Regiment and pursued a controversial career fighting Native Americans on the Frontier. Obsessed with his own image, he achieved the immortality he so deeply desired by dying, alongside 262 of his men, at the Battle of the Little Bighorn against a coalition of Sioux and Cheyenne warriors led by Chief Sitting Bull.

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Saturday 12 December 2026, at 3 PM

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THE INTERVENTION OF THE UNITED STATES DURING THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION

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Lecture by Jean-Claude Janssens: The intervention of the United States during the Mexican Revolution. In 1910, the Mexican Revolution broke out, ending ten years later after causing the deaths of nearly two million people. On several occasions, the United States was forced to intervene, and in February 1913, President Woodrow Wilson imposed an arms embargo. The U.S. fleet blockaded Tampico and Veracruz. In April 1914, the Navy seized Veracruz by force. On March 9, 1916, the revolutionary Pancho Villa attacked the American outpost of Columbus. Troops under General John J. Pershing were sent in pursuit of the raiders and crossed the border on March 15. Among the officers on Pershing’s staff was a certain Captain George S. Patton. For ten months, the Americans roamed through Sonora and Chihuahua without success. Pancho Villa escaped capture, and Pershing returned empty-handed to the United States in January 1917. That same year, the interception of the Zimmermann Telegram – Germany’s proposal that Mexico enter the war against the United States in exchange for the return of territories lost in 1848 – became one of the many pretexts that motivated the United States to enter the war against the German Empire. Thus, a second war with Mexico never took place. Between 1917 and 1919, sporadic clashes still occurred along the border. In 1920, the Revolution finally came to an end, and relations between the two countries were permanently normalized.

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LATEST PAINTINGS OF JOHN PAUL STRAIN
 

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BURNING THE TRESTLE AT WOODSTOCK

FALLEN TIMBERS

 

In the spring of 1862, the Shenandoah Valley became the stage for one of the most brilliant campaigns of the Civil War. Charged with protecting the Shenandoah Valley, General Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson maneuvered his small army with remarkable speed and secrecy, frustrating Federal attempts to advance southward. Jackson’s trusted cavalry commander, Col. Turner Ashby, and his daring horsemen constantly ambushed the enemy while reporting on their movements. Ashby also assisted Jackson in another task that the general seemed to relish—the destruction of railroads. The Manassas Gap Railroad threaded its way through the Valley from Front Royal southward through Woodstock to Mount Jackson. It served as an important Federal supply and transportation route. To deny its use to the enemy, Jackson repeatedly ordered sections of track, bridges, and trestles destroyed wherever opportunity allowed. Just north of the small town of Woodstock, the railroad crossed the clear waters of Pugh’s Run on a timber trestle built along the base of Little North Mountain. Here Confederate soldiers piled branches, brushes, and debris around the base of the vertical support posts and soaked them with tar, oil, or kerosene before putting the torch to the structure. Flames quickly ran upward through the diagonal braces as the dry timbers created a chimney effect, producing tall flames rising through the bridge. Once the supports burned through, the entire trestle would collapse. Such acts of calculated destruction became a familiar feature of Jackson’s Valley operations. Iron rails were torn up, heated in great fires, and twisted around nearby trees while trestles and bridges were burned to prevent their repair. Few would remain standing. The work earned Jackson a reputation among friends and foes alike as an unrelenting destroyer of railroads. He understood that crippling an enemy’s lines of supply and easy troop movement could be as decisive as winning a battle. Jackson was so focused on this tactic that his men nicknamed him “The Old Railroad Wrecker.” As flames climbed the trestle at Pugh’s Run and smoke drifted across the valley floor, Jackson and Ashby watched the destruction of yet another vital link in the enemy’s transportation network. The two commanders prepared to move on once more, continuing their relentless campaign of maneuver and disruption that would soon make the Shenandoah Valley Campaign one of the most famous operations of the Civil War.    

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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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