While talking about the history of the Chesapeake & Delaware Canal during the Civil War at a meeting of the Fort Delaware Society last week, we discussed the website, www.marinetraffic.com. This open source initiative provides free, real-time information about ship movements so visitors are able to view marine traffic on the Delaware and Chesapeake bays and the Canal. It is also provides details on the vessels. Many guests at the program were interested in this virtual information repository, so I am posting the link here.
New Castle County Reads 2013 has selected the book March by Geraldine Brooks at its feature title for discussions and programming in 2013. The north is reeling under a series of unexpected defeats during the darkest days of the Civil War in this extraordinary novel, as Mr. March leaves his family to aid the Union cause. The author tells the story of the absent father going off to war and the reopening of past relationships in the process.
To support New Castle County Reads 2013, the library system is hosting a number of Civil War themed programs this spring. On April 7th, at the Bear Branch Library, I will be talking about the Mason and Dixon Line and the Civil War and the C & D Canal and the War. These programs are supported by the Delaware Humanities Forum.
When I did the talk about the C & D Canal and the Civil War at the New Castle Public Library on March 27th, we had an informed, lively discussion. Members of the Delaware Civil War Roundtable and Friends of Fort Delaware were there. During the evening we talked about a number of seldom used sources that serve as evidentiary traces for exploring the old canal’s important role in the war. There is a lot to this story that hasn’t been investigated and it was an enjoyable evening discussing matters with this group.
New Castle County Reads 2013 has chosen March by Geraldine Brooks as its feature book this year. The fascinating novel takes places during the dark years of the Civil War, as the north reels under a series of unexpected defeats and a father, Mr. March, goes off to aid the Union cause. The New Castle County Library System is hosting a series of related programs to support the book discussion groups so I have been asked to talk about the C & D Canal during those troubling years.
There are many primary sources to help support a discussion such as this. One, which I have found to be particularly insightful is a diary of a C & D Canal official. During those unsettled times, the officer in charge of the waterway across the peninsula kept a daily journal of happenings on the Peninsula. The talk takes place on Wednesday evening, March 26, at 7:00 p.m. at the New Castle Library. This is a Delaware Humanities Forum program.