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Civil War New Orleans Letter Mardi Gras Band Arrested for Bonnie Blue Flag

Description: Colonel Hooker telegraphed papa yesterday that there were several letters at Jackson for him & myself...I expect them tomorrow? I sent your aunt "Josie" here to school ( New Orleans) She is now at Madame Carnatz...it is a select school not more than 15 boarders and 125 scholars...they speak nothing but French and great attention is paid to music,both instrumental and singing. You and your brothers should have been here last Tuesday which was Mardi Gras to have seen the funny sights on the streets. Men and women and children alike all dressed up in all sorts of fancy and grotesque costumes,some walking others riding in carriages and horseback. At night there was a procession of the ( see letter) headed by a fine band of music. They played Dixie and the Bonnie Blue Flag they marched to the Vanities theatre and there had a ball. A company of the military marched to the theatre to arrest the band for playing the Bonnie Blue Flag,but they wrre prevailed by the theatre owner not to enter the house. If they had there might have been a time to be seen." Many people were intoxicated...Mrs. Armstrong, Mrs. Powell, Ms. Kate Reese,Ms. Woodson went from here. Some of them had their dresses entirely torn off by the crowd. Mary direct your letters to Dennis & Lewis as your papa has dissolved partnership with Colonel Dennis. Or you can direct your letters to Banks & Loving and Company. Ned is in partership with General Loving. His wife and May were here, but when the scarlet fever appeared here, she left for Montgomery (Alabama)~ Little Belle Armstrong recovered from the fever, but still looks very badly and frightful...Phew ! Civil War New Orleans Letter Mardi Gras Band Arrested for Bonnie Blue Flag Click images to enlarge Description New Orleans Feb 17th 1866~My Dear Mary... Colonel Hooker telegraphed papa yesterday that there were several letters at Jackson (MS) for him & myself...I expect them tomorrow? I sent your aunt "Josie" here to school ( New Orleans) She is now at Madame Carnatz...it is a select school  not more than 15 boarders and 125 scholars...they speak nothing but French and great attention is paid  to music,both instrumental and singing. You and your brothers should have been here last Tuesday which was Mardi Gras to have seen the funny sights on the streets. Men and women and children alike all dressed up in all sorts of fancy and grotesque costumes,some walking others riding in carriages and horseback. At night there was a procession of the ( see letter) headed by a fine band of music. They played Dixie and the Bonnie Blue Flag they marched to the Vanities theatre and there had a ball. A company of the military marched to the theatre to arrest the band for playing the Bonnie Blue Flag, but they were prevailed by the theatre owner not to enter the house, if they had there might have been a time to be seen." Many people were intoxicated...Mrs. Armstrong, Mrs. Powell, Ms. Kate Reese,Ms. Woodson went from here. Some of them had their dresses entirely torn off by the crowd. Mary direct your letters to Dennis & Lewis as your papa has dissolved partnership with Colonel Dennis. Or you can direct your letters to Banks & Loving and Company. Ned is in partership with General Loving. His wife and May were here, but when the scarlet fever appeared here,she left for Montgomery (Alabama)~ Little Belle Armstrong recovered from the fever,but still looks very badly and frightful...Phew ! "Bonnie Blue Flag:" The Most Dangerous Song of the Civil War By Jessica Anne Dauterive   The popularity of sheet music in the United States had reached its peak by the start of the Civil War. Well before the development of recording and broadcasting technology, the commercial music industry centered upon the circulation of sheet music played by both amateur and professional musicians. To enjoy popular music, consumers either had to perform the songs themselves, attend public concerts, or participate in informal gatherings. This made music a more interactive and socially engaging experience than the passive role today’s recording industry creates for listeners.  The nationalization of the sheet music industry in the late nineteenth century stifled the production of songs created by local musicians and composers. In the mid-1800s, however, music created by local and regional musicians readily found its way to audiences via the many music publishers found in various US cities. These conditions allowed a song popularized through performance in New Orleans to become a controversial anthem of the Confederacy. Historian E. Lawrence Abel speculates that A.E. Blackmar and Bro. ran the South’s most successful sheet music publishing house. Among other tunes, such as "Missouri, or a voice from the South," and "Dixie," Blackmar published one of the earliest imprints of Harry Macarthy’s popular song “Bonnie Blue Flag.”  In May 1862, Union forces entered New Orleans and the city became one of the first occupied territories in the South during the Civil War. From May to December 1862, General Benjamin Butler ruled over the city. His legacy is marked by his severe social policies. General Order No. 40 states that "Any person who has in his possession...any property of any kind or description whatever, of the so-called Confederate States...shall be liable to imprisonment and to have his property confiscated." With this order, owning or singing one of the most popular songs of the period became an act of treason. Arrest records from New Orleans papers reveal that men and women were regularly arrested for singing "Bonnie Blue Flag," and were charged with a range of penalties, from a fine to time in the workhouse to a full pardon.  A few months before Butler took over the city, advertisements for A.E. Blackmar and Bro. disappeared from the newspapers. Henry, the oldest Blackmar brother, relocated his publishing operation to Atlanta, where it remained successful for the duration of the war. Armand Blackmar stayed to run the shop in New Orleans, but was not quite as lucky. Butler, acting on General Order No. 40, is said to have arrested Blackmar and ransacked his shop, destroying all Confederate materials inside. By the time we see Blackmar in New Orleans again, Butler had been removed from the city and replaced by General Nathaniel Prentiss Banks, who is known to have pursued a more socially lenient approach to running New Orleans than his predecessor.  In November 1863, advertisements for Blackmar reappeared in the newspapers of New Orleans, but no longer promoted "The Bonnie Blue Flag." These advertisements also reported a change of address from 74 Camp Street to 167 Canal Street, where Blackmar continued to publish music for the duration of the war. Paper and ink were in scarce supply by this point in the war, forcing some publishers to print on recycled materials such as wallpaper and develop new ways to make ink for printing. However, despite material shortages and Union presence, Blackmar's success in the finally years of the war suggests that the demand for sheet music remained strong in occupied New Orleans.  After the Civil War and the collapse of the Confederacy, "The Bonnie Blue Flag" developed a life of its own. In the second decade of the twentieth century, the song was revived as a symbol of Lost Cause mentality in the midst of fifty-year commemorations of the War. During the Civil Rights era, "The Bonnie Blue Flag" once again became a song of protest, this time against the integration of public spaces. It even found its way back into the classroom, as one New Orleans resident remembers learning it at his elementary school in the 1950s. It can even be heard in current movies such as Gods and Generals and, more perplexingly, the video game Bioshock. The long afterlives of this song have sometime divorced it from its original meaning, but its memory also reveals how music played a role in the city's experience of the Civil War. Pictures sell! Auctiva offers Free Image Hosting and Editing.300+ Listing Templates! Auctiva gets you noticed! The complete eBay Selling Solution. Track Page Views WithAuctiva's Counter

Price: 300 USD

Location: Saint Augustine, Florida

End Time: 2025-01-13T00:54:56.000Z

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Product Images

Civil War New Orleans Letter Mardi Gras Band Arrested for  Bonnie Blue FlagCivil War New Orleans Letter Mardi Gras Band Arrested for  Bonnie Blue FlagCivil War New Orleans Letter Mardi Gras Band Arrested for  Bonnie Blue FlagCivil War New Orleans Letter Mardi Gras Band Arrested for  Bonnie Blue FlagCivil War New Orleans Letter Mardi Gras Band Arrested for  Bonnie Blue Flag

Item Specifics

Restocking Fee: No

Return shipping will be paid by: Seller

All returns accepted: Returns Accepted

Item must be returned within: 30 Days

Refund will be given as: Money Back

Conflict: Civil War (1861-65)

Original/Reproduction: Original

Theme: Militaria

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