On 27th July 1861, the 69th New York State Militia regiment returned home to New York, and to a hero’s
welcome, after the First Battle of Bull Run (aka “First Manassas”). Their
triumphal landing at what is now Battery Park, at the southern tip of
Manhattan, was recorded -- not by a Matthew Brady
photograph, but by an artist, Louis Lang, on a canvas some 11 feet wide and seven
feet high. The artist’s perspective is from
Bowling Green south toward New York Bay.
The story Lang’s epic painting tells is as complete as
a segment on CBS News “60 Minutes.” This
magnificent painting, which first went on display in October 1862, is the centerpiece
of the just renovated New-York Historical Society exhibition, “Making AmericanTaste: Narrative Art for a New Democracy,” fittingly, opened to the
public November 11, 2011 -- Veterans Day.
"Return of the 69th (Irish) Regiment, N.Y.S.M. from the Seat of War," by Louis Lang |
Although First Bull Run (July 21, 1861)
is generally remembered as a Federal defeat, the 69th Regiment of the New York State Militia (NYSM) was one of the few Union units on the field
to cover itself with glory that day. The
69th maintained good order and discipline, and combat effectiveness,
throughout the engagement, and provided the rear-guard action that enabled most
of the routed Union forces to escape.
The "Prince of Wales Flag," presented to the
69th NYSM after the regiment's refusal to march.
|
The 69th NYSM was an “Irish” regiment, made
up, in large part of Fenians, mostly natives of Ireland, who wished to acquire the military training and experience needed to defeat the vaunted British military
and bring freedom to Ireland. They saw themselves as the cadre of a future
Irish rising against their country’s oppressor.
Although their 90-day enlistment had expired, at the
personal request of President Abraham Lincoln, they remained in active service
to fight in the coming battle. Their
colonel, Michael Corcoran, on October 11, 1860, had achieved international fame
by refusing to parade the 69th for the visiting so-called “Prince of
Wales.” He was captured at Bull Run -- yet in Lang’s stunning portrait, his image appears on the front page of the
newspaper being hawked by the newsboy in the painting’s lower right-hand
corner.
Another
dominant figure in New York’s Irish community, Thomas Francis Meagher, “Meagher
of the Sword,” became commander of Company “K” (“Meagher’s Zouaves”) at Bull
Run. The famed orator, and a leader of the 1848 Rising in Ireland, is seen, on
horseback, near the center of the painting, doffing his hat to the cheering
welcomers. In response to Lincoln’s call
for volunteers, Meagher would soon raise and command “The Irish Brigade” of the
Union's Army of the Potomac. The Brigade’s first regiment would be the 69th
New York Volunteer Infantry -- drawing many from the 69th
NYSM.
The New-York Historical Society, at 170 Central Park
West at 77th Street, offered a Nov. 9 preview of Lang’s work, in the
society’s new, main-floor art gallery, which houses the exhibit including
Lang’s painting. The society invited members of the 69th Regiment of
New York, whose Army lineage includes the 69th New York State
Militia, the 69th New York Volunteer Infantry of the “Irish
Brigade,” and the 69th New York National Guard Artillery of
Corcoran’s “Irish Legion.” Also invited were members (including this writer) of
the 69th Regiment Historical Roundtable.
Also present -- underscoring the nexus between the regiment, the Irish experience worldwide and
Mother Ireland -- was Ann Cusack, owner of
the Granville Hotel,Meagher Quay, Waterford, Ireland. The
building, before it became a hotel, was the boyhood home of Meagher. Cusack was presented with an 8½” x 13” print
of Lang’s 87” x 140” painting. Prints, by the way, are available in the
New-York Historical Society bookshop.
The
significance of this painting goes beyond its special meaning to the Irish, the
New York National Guard, and the military generally. It is an extraordinary work of art,
appropriately included in the society’s exhibit of mid-19th century
American artistic tastes.
It
is even more -- a positive gesture toward the Irish in a time of Nativist,
anti-immigrant and anti-Catholic sentiment and a most artistic example of what The New York Times’
art critic Robin Pogrebin described in her October 16, 2011, article, headlined
“When Applying the Paint Was Spreading the News.” Pogrebin wrote, “Huge, detailed and
colorful, [Lang’s canvas] comes from an era when paintings were expressive and
descriptive, tools not only to evoke emotions, but also to do the very real
work of simply documenting and recounting history.”
The
painting itself was donated to the New-York Historical Society by the artist in
1886, and remained on display until some time after the Second World War, after
which it seems to have been stored away and neglected, until it was
rediscovered, in pieces, in 1977. In
2006, it was decided to assemble the jigsaw-puzzle-like painting and restore
it. A 1940s black-and-white photo of the
painting, plus the original 1862 descriptive brochure from Goupil’s Gallery, were helpful to the Williamstown Art Conservation Center in Massachusetts,
which was given the assignment. After
more than five years and investment of $220,000, the result is a masterpiece,
which looks as if it has just been painted.
It is a treasure for all Americans.
Making American Taste exhibition
features 55 works from the New-York Historical Society’s collection, each
informing the history of American art and the molding of American cultural
ideals from the 1830s through the 1860s. The exhibit gives pride of place to The Return of the 69th (Irish) Regiment, an oil-on-canvas work painted in 1862. The
exhibition will be open through August 19, 2012, except for April 1 through May
4.
However, since the Commander of the 1st
Battalion, 69th Infantry, Lieutenant Colonel James Gonyo, also left
with a print, it is more than likely that that print will be on display by next
year in the 69th Regiment Armory, today on Lexington Avenue and 26th Street.
“The Return of the 69th (Irish) Regiment” -- too big to travel when the rest of the show goes on the road -- will be installed at the entrance to the Henry Luce III Center for the Study of American Culture, on the society’s fourth floor. Do not miss it, or the rest of the show. WG
“The Return of the 69th (Irish) Regiment” -- too big to travel when the rest of the show goes on the road -- will be installed at the entrance to the Henry Luce III Center for the Study of American Culture, on the society’s fourth floor. Do not miss it, or the rest of the show. WG
2 comments:
Unfortunately Lang’s Painting at the New York Historical Society is like the Parson Egg. I am very happy that after allowing the painting to rpt and deteriorate in the New York Historical Warehouse (where the painting was stored when the Society no longer considered it "timely") it is very disappointing that the painting is being featured as part of an Art Exhibit and not featured because of its subject matter: the Irish contribution in the Civil War.
In this 150th Anniversary year of the Civil War, the contribution of the NY Irish has been conspicuously absent at the New York Historical Society. One wonders why the new York Historical Society would ignore one of the most famous regiments of the Civil War, the 69th, and the other two New York Regimants that made up the Irish Brigade while going to great lengths to tell other ethnicities stories.
Of course the New York Historical Society did have one alleged "Irish Theme" topic: the New York Draft Riots. To tell the story of the Draft Riots without the context of Bull Run, Antietam, Fredericksburg or Chancellorsville is like tell the story of the LA Riots without showing the Rodney King beating.
It's time the New York Historical Society tells the stories of ALL New Yorkers, even Irish Americans.
I agree with your assessment of the NY historical society's neglect of the artifacts from the Irish Brigade many flags and other documents of this organization lie wasting away which I believe is a true crime historically speaking
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