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MSM and the Civil War: Home

Material related to MSM faculty who served in Civil War, and to the general history of Rolla in the Civil War

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James W. Abert

Col. James W. Abert. Photographer Ciarlo, of Newport, KY. Part of Clair V. Mann Collection (R:3/3/5).

Faculty Biographies: Selected Civil War Veterans

Captain Robert W. Douthat (1840 Apr-1925 Dec 22)

Captain Douthat started college at Emory and Henry College but left when the college closed in April 1861 for the duration of the Civil War. He joined a Confederate state militia, and then in April 1862 was made First Lieutenant under Captain Fowlkes of the 11TH Virginia. He was promoted to Captain in May 1862.  He then went to Gettysburg, and was part of Pickett’s Charge. He was the only captain in the 11th Virginia to survive Pickett’s Charge (this is not reported consistently).  A copy of his lecture on Pickett’s Charge was published in 1905 (see list of documents on left side of screen). He toured the country delivering this lecture, and died while on a lecture tour after his retirement from West Virginia University.

He and his entire company were captured after the Battle of  Five Forks with Sheridan’s forces on April 6, 1865, and imprisoned on Johnson’s Island in Lake Erie. On June 18, 1865, he took the oath of allegiance to the United States and was released from the Federal prison.

Johns Island Prisoners

To see a larger version of this image, right click and select "View Image".

After Douthat's release, he taught at various schools and farmed before joining the faculty of Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy from 1873-1884.

 Douthat was initially Professor of English Branches, and later Professor of Languages and Principal of the Preparatory Department. He also served as the Secretary to the Faculty and Secretary to the Executive Committee. Per Clair Mann, Douthat was forced out in 1884 by a ‘conspiracy’ (pay cut from $1900 to 1000) related to his activism.

He advocated for the school to build dormitories (originally on Ft Wyman hill), and when this wasn’t approved, created his own. At the same time he was advocating for more humanities classes, and created the Western Conservatory of Music.

In addition to starting the music conservatory, he created two dormitories for male Spanish and Mexican students, and for female students in 1882, and also conducted recruitment drives throughout the Southwest to find students for MSM.

The male dormitory was known as ‘Poverty Flats’ and included living quarters for the large Douthat family (nine children). It has been an old tobacco factory located on the north half of the block bounded by Main, Rolla, 7th, and 8th streets (current site of the Vineyard Church). Douthat gave part of the land to the South Methodist Church, contributed to its building.

The female dormitory was known as ‘Black Jacks,’ named after the black oaks on the property. The property was located on the block lying between Main, Park, 9th, and 10th streets. This is now the parking lot across from the Leach Theatre.

While in Rolla, Capt. Douthat became a third degree Mason.

After Capt. Douthat left Rolla, he served at several more schools before retiring on a Carnegie pension from West Virginia University. A copy of his lecture on Pickett’s Charge was published in 1905 (see list of documents on left side of screen). Artist N. C. Wyeth gifted Douthat the painting “The Scout” (aka “Mustered Out”) which is still held by the family.

Douthat toured the country delivering his popular lecture on Pickett’s Charge, and died while on a lecture tour after his retirement.

Captain George Dana Emerson (1818 Jan 23-1900 Sept 28. Buried in Mount Hope Cemetery, San Diego, CA with two siblings)

George D. Emerson is a bit on an enigma. He attended law school briefly before beginning a career as a largely self-taught mining engineer in the upper Midwest (Minnesota, Ohio, and Michigan) alongside his younger brother, Luther. He served as editor for both the Portage Lake Mining Gazette and the Lake Superior Miner. He served as Assistant Engineer for the Sault Ste. Marie ship canal (part of the Soo Locks project).

His father, Caleb Emerson, was an abolitionist and lawyer. The Caleb Emerson family papers are held by the Western Reserve Historical Society and include George’s military materials. The Internet Archive contains a copy of the Dana Family in America (https://archive.org/details/TheDanaFamilyInAmerica), and provides additional genealogical information for George.

He was mustered into service in the Union Army during the Civil War on Dec 26, 1862 as Captain, Company C, 1st Michigan Engineers and Mechanics to serve for 3 years. He was later transferred to Company L, in the same regiment. He was mustered out with honorable discharge as a Captain on April 30, 1865 in Nashville. While he is identified as ‘Major Emerson’ in the Mann collection, he was indeed a captain according to military records and his tombstone (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/112257541/george-dana-emerson ).

During the War he was Principal Assistant to Col. William E. Merrill, the Chief Engineer of General Thomas. As such, he made surveys of the area around Chattanooga and Nashville, and assisted in the construction of bridges, blockades, and fortifications.

 In the summer of 1873 he was appointed the Chair of Civil and Mining Engineering at the Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy, and taught here until 1887. He lived with his sister, and the pair were well regarded and considered cultural supporters.His life after leaving Rolla is unknown. The small demonstration steam engine he used in his classes is in the S&T Archives.

Emerson patented the Emerson Rail Bender in the 1870s, and it is still in use. The Mann collection includes a sketch of the apparatus. The Harvard Art Museums hold a photographic print of the bender by Paul Rowell in their permanent collection.

University Archivist

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