Thursday, April 23, 2026
Baltimore Belles & Rebels: Links to Free Patterns
Wednesday, April 8, 2026
Confederados #4: Strength in Union for Louisa and Clement Vallandigham
During the Civil War Southern sympathizers spent time north of the border spying and working against the Union. After Southern surrender many Confederados sought refuge in Canada including members of the Jefferson Davis family. Much traffic, legal and illegal, crossed land and water borders in the 1860s.
One unwilling Canadian resident was Ohio politician Clement Vallandigham, deported in 1863 for treasonous activities as head of the “Peace Democrats,” nicknamed the Copperheads after a snake that bites without warning. Born in Ohio, Vallandigham married Louisa Anna McMahon (1820-1871), daughter of a Maryland plantation owner in 1846. They had two sons, one who died as an infant and Charles Noble Vallandigham, born in 1854.
During the Civil War Vallandigham attacked Lincoln and Union war goals. A May, 1863 speech infuriated Major General Ambrose Burnside so much that he broke into the "Copperhead's" Dayton home in the middle of the night and arrested him.
After a few weeks in the Confederacy he found passage on a blockade-runner to the Bahamas, then on a ship north to Canada where he established a home in Windsor, Ontario, across from Detroit.
A shattered Louisa visited relatives in Maryland where she died less than two months after Clement.
In 1928 author Elbert Benton looked back 70 years and considered the Copperhead/Peace Democrats a result of the politics of “perverted imagination”---perhaps we’d call it paranoid misinformation---a personality trait all too familiar today.
My Encyclopedia and BlockBase tell us that this simple repeat is called Strength in Union from the Nancy Cabot column in the Chicago Tribune of the 1930s. Burnside and Lincoln banished Vallandigham because they realized he was a grassroots force to weaken Union Strength. In his treason he became The Man Without a Country, inspiring Edward Everett Hale’s famous story.
Read More
Biography by Clement’s brother:
Ye Book of Copperheads, Cartoons and Poetry
The Man without a Country by Edward Everett Hale
The Movement for Peace without a Victory by Elbert J. Benton
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89062261854&seq=7
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Baltimore Belles & Rebels #3: Monument Wreath for Rebecca Lloyd Nicholson
Rebecca Lloyd Nicholson, a prominent member of Baltimore society, showed her rebellion in Union Maryland by forming the Brown Veil Club, supporters of the Confederacy.
When war began she lived with her parents Arinthea Darby Parker and James Macon Nicholson in the Mount Vernon Place neighborhood at 209 West Monument Street with a view of Baltimore's Washington Monument.
The Monument Street Girls sewed clothing for rebel soldiers and sang in a glee club where they popularized James Ryder Randall’s poem, “Maryland! My Maryland” set to the tune of “Tannenbaum-O Tannenbaum.” The women staged a small Confederate demonstration after the Southern victory at the Battle of Manassas in July, 1861, marching to Baltimore’s Washington Monument in their West Monument Street neighborhood.
In her 1904 account of the club's activities Rebecca recalled they asked men associated with the poem to publish it as a song but they refused, worried about Union retaliation. Rebecca decided to do it herself. Although a Southern sympathizer father James was opposed to Secession inspiring her accurate idea that she could get away with treason. "My father is a Union man, and if I am put in prison, he will take me out."
A year after the war ended Rebecca married Confederate Captain John Post of the First Maryland Cavalry. In the ten years they were married they had six children but only one son survived to adulthood. Her husband died at 36 at their home on West Monument Street.
Rebecca's second husband was Union veteran Edward Shippen (1827-1895), a Philadelphia surgeon who served with several Pennsylvania regiments and as superintendent of a hospital at the Capitol building in Washington. They married in 1878 and had a son the following year. Rebecca lived well into the 20th century, dying in 1926.
Read more about the family:
https://civilwarquilts.blogspot.com/2020/08/rebecca-lloyd-nicholsons-civil-war.html
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/237344414/rebecca_lloyd-shippen
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
Confederados #3: Wild Goose Chase for Jo & Betty Shelby
The Lost Cause has its heroes. Missourian Jo Shelby has come to personify all the “Confederados” who left the United States after Confederate defeat. He's still glorified today despite his traitorous behavior. “...the kind of chieftain that Dumas or Walter Scott would have delighted in, a figure of legendary derring-do.” “J.P.G” in the Kansas City Star in 1919.
The Star was at the heart of Shelby’s myth through
his lifetime and beyond.
Born in Kentucky to a prominent family of Gratzes, Shelbys and Blairs, J. O. Shelby moved to Waverly in Lafayette County, Missouri with half-brother Henry when they left Transylvania University. His Aunt Rebecca Gratz in Philadelphia was optimistic about his future: "So amiable affectionate & clever....he has gone to such a thriving place and where he has so many friends!"
Shelby brought dozens of slaves from Kentucky to work his Waverly Steam Rope company, a “Rope Walk,” where men wound hemp into rope in demand for baling cotton.
Twisting hemp on a rope walk was labor intensive work. In 1860 Lafayette County tallied more enslaved people than any other Missouri county. Shelby became committed to the extreme proslavery cause as Missourians defined it, alienating his brother who returned to Kentucky.
In 1857 27-year-old Jo Shelby married 15-year-old Elizabeth (Betty) Shelby, a distant cousin. When the Civil War began she had one boy to
raise as her husband enthusiastically joined Missouri’s Southern sympathizing
troops. Missouri did not secede but became the site for bitter guerilla mayhem.
Detail of an 1862 Thomas Nast illustration of guerrilla
warfare
Jo Shelby must have been a charismatic charmer. During
Missouri’s Civil War chaos his Union family continued to speak well of him and
help him out. Kentucky Gratzes traveled to Waverly to escort Jo's wife and
children (a boy was born in 1864) back to the safety of Lexington, Kentucky.
After Appomattox Shelby, following his habitual path of
reckless narcissism, refused to accept Confederate defeat. He took troops and family
on a wild goose chase that failed to live up to expectations, leading about
1,000 soldiers to Mexico, then in the midst of its own Civil War between
Benito Juarez's Mexican troops and those affiliated with the Emperor
Maximilian, installed by Napoleon III of France.
Fanciful idea of a meeting between Shelby and the Mexican imperial pair Maximilian and Carlotta drawn for the Kansas City Star by Frank Miller to publicize the 1939 release of the Bette Davis movie Juarez.
In reality Maximilian rejected Shelby’s offer of troops because he worried about a Union military response after the U.S. war.
Instead, the Emperor offered Shelby soldiers land grants in Mexico, proposing Confederate colonies in Cordoba and Tuxpan.
In Cordoba Shelby began business on a large hacienda, a coffee plantation, and Elizabeth gave birth to Benjamin Gratz Shelby born in July, 1866. Mexicans, whether Juarista rebels or not, were displeased with invading Yankees taking their land. Rebellion in the form of banditry, assaults and raids convinced most Americans to abandon the colonies in 1867.
The Block
Read More:
Daniel O'Flaherty, General Jo Shelby: Undefeated Rebel, 1954









































