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The Confederacy's Fighting Chaplain: Father John B. Bannon
 
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The Confederacy's Fighting Chaplain: Father John B. Bannon [Hardcover]

Phillip Thomas Tucker (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 1992
The Confederacy’s Fighting Chaplain is the remarkable story of the Irishman who brought the Bible and his own resourcefulness and daring to both the battlefield and the diplomatic field—a story that has been largely ignored for more than 130 years. The biography of John B. Bannon also chronicles the forgotten Southerners—the Irish immigrants of the Confederacy—whose colorful and crucial role in the Civil War has been seriously neglected.
 
John B. Bannon was born in Ireland in 1829 and raised in peat-bog country. Educated at the Royal College of St. Patrick at Maynooth, he was ordained a priest in May 1853. Ireland was still suffering from the effects of the Potato Famine, which caused thousands of Irish to emigrate to the United States. In response to the need for Roman Catholic priests to minister to America’s immigrant population, Father Bannon was sent to the Archidiocese of St. Louis, Missouri, shortly after his ordination. Many of the Irish parishioners of St. Louis lived in a crowded corner of the city without money, assistance or land.
 
Father Bannon soon became a leading civic and religious figure in St. Louis. An impressive character, he was described as a “handsome man, over six feet in height, with splendid form and intellectual face, courteous manners, and of great personal magnetism, conversing entertainingly and with originality and great wit, in a manner all his own.”
 
By 1860, Missouri contained the second largest Irish population and the largest German population in the Southern and border states, and when the war reached Missouri, Father Bannon volunteered to serve on the battlefield by tending to the wounded and dying. During the war he served as chaplain-soldier in perhaps the finest combat unit on either side—the First Missouri Confederate Brigade. He impressed his fellow Confederates by attending the wounded at the front lines during battle, while most chaplains stayed to the rear. This tall, athletic man was a striking figure with his slouch had and butternut-colored uniform with a red cloth cross on the left shoulder. Various accounts praised the chaplain: A veteran wrote that the chaplain “was everywhere in the midst of battle when the fire was heaviest and the bullets thickest.” General Sterling Price wrote: “The greatest soldier I ever saw was Father Bannon. In the midst of the fray he would step in and take up a fallen soldier.”
 
After the fall of Vicksburg, where Bannon had worked under dangerous fire, he journeyed to Richmond and received recognition and special diplomatic duties from President Jefferson Davis. Bannon conceived a brilliant strategy to gain recognition for the Confederacy from Pope Pius IX and thus open the door for recognition from Britain and France. On a mission for Davis he acted as a secret agent in Ireland during an all-important clandestine effort to stop the flood of Irish immigrants pouring into the Union armies at a critical time—before the decisive campaigns of 1864. After the war he joined the Jesuit order in Ireland, where he served until his death in 1913.
 
The story of Father Bannon is indeed the story of the Missouri Irish Confederates, whose role in the conflict likewise has been neglected. Without doubt, Father Bannon stands out as an important religious-diplomatic personality of the Confederacy. Few men played such a distinguished and diverse role during the Civil War.
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Editorial Reviews

Review

"A biography of John Bannon, a Roman Catholic priest who served as chaplain of the First Missouri Confederate Brigade from 1861 to 1863. Although Tucker gives some attention to Bannon’s career before and after the Civil War, his account focuses on Bannon’s varied wartime activities: recruiter of Irish immigrant troops military chaplain, and secret agent of the Davis government in Ireland. Tucker’s research in the primary literature is impressive and his narrative style is admirably clear, as he describes the often forgotten intersection of religious, political, and military concerns.”
—Journal of Southern History



"Well-written and well-researched . . . Father Bannon’s story is a remarkable and fascinating one. . . . All students of southern religious, and Civil War history should be indebted to Tucker for bringing this intriguing man to life in superb fashion. This is a fine study that will assuredly endure.”
—Journal of American History



"I have no hesitancy in saying that the greatest soldier I ever saw was Father Bannon.”
—General Sterling Price, C.S.A.

--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

About the Author

Phillip Thomas Tucker is United States Air Force Historian, Air Force Flight Test Center, Edwards Air Force Base, California.

--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: University of Alabama Press (September 1992)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0817305734
  • ISBN-13: 978-0817305734
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.2 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,371,802 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Different Perspective on the Civil War, April 6, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: The Confederacy's Fighting Chaplain: Father John B. Bannon (Hardcover)
The Confederacy's Fighting Chaplain, Father John B. Bannon by Phillip Thomas Tucker, is an excellent biography and Civil War History. The book gives the background of Father Bannon, beginning with his education in Ireland and his service in St. Louis. The conflicts which were tearing St. Louis, as well as the nation, apart are well reflected in the life of Bannon as he was making his decision as to how to respond to the gathering storm. Not limiting his narrative to a mere recitation of facts, Tucker acquaints the reader with the factors working on, and the thoughts going on within Bannon's mind which led him to his conclusion that the Confederacy represented the cause of freedom and Christian civilization in America. The chapters covering Bannon's service as chaplain for the First Missouri Confederate Brigade skillfully blend the details of the chaplain's life with the greater history of the War in general. The final section of the book relates Bannon's unique service as a diplomatic agent on behalf of the Confederacy and his role as personal emissary from President Davis to Pope Pius IX. Davis had asked Bannon to undertake a mission to Ireland to attempt to dissuade Irish from enlisting in the Union Army. It was Bannon's initiative to undertake the overture which almost resulted in recognition of the Confederacy by the Vatican. The unique intertwining of Bannon's roles as chaplain and diplomat within the larger story in which he played a part, make this a very worthwhile addition to the Civil War literature.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Irish Cleric Fighting for Dixie, October 28, 2000
By 
James Gallen (St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.A.) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Confederacy's Fighting Chaplain: Father John B. Bannon (Hardcover)
The Confederacy's Fighting Chaplain, Father John B. Bannon by Phillip Thomas Tucker, is an excellent biography and Civil War History. The book gives the background of Father Bannon, beginning with his education in Ireland and his service in St. Louis. The conflicts which were tearing St. Louis, as well as the nation, apart are well reflected in the life of Bannon as he was making his decision as to how to respond to the gathering storm. Not limiting his narrative to a mere recitation of facts, Tucker acquaints the reader with the factors working on, and the thoughts going on within Bannon's mind which led him to his conclusion that the Confederacy represented the cause of freedom and Christian civilization in America. The chapters covering Bannon's service as chaplain for the First Missouri Confederate Brigade skillfully blend the details of the chaplain's life with the greater history of the War in general. The final section of the book relates Bannon's unique service as a diplomatic agent on behalf of the Confederacy and his role as personal emissary from President Davis to Pope Pius IX. Davis had asked Bannon to undertake a mission to Ireland to attempt to dissuade Irish from enlisting in the Union Army. It was Bannon's initiative to undertake the overture which almost resulted in recognition of the Confederacy by the Vatican. The unique intertwining of Bannon's roles as chaplain and diplomat within the larger story in which he played a part, make this a very worthwhile addition to the Civil War literature
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5.0 out of 5 stars More Than Just God's Soldier, October 29, 2010
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Father John Bannon was a Catholic priest who became the chaplain of the First Missouri Brigade in the Confederate Army. Like most chaplains, Catholic or Protestant, North or South, he ministered to his "flock" by providing spiritual sustenance and sacraments to his troops. But unique to Father Bannon was his passion also for the Confederate cause. In fact at the Battle of Champion Hill, he personally helped swab the bore of a cannon in a Missouri Battery in action against Union Troops when one of the artillerists was knocked out of action. His fearlessness under fire and willingness even to literally assist in combat endeared him to Confederate troops. Father Bannon's name is not well-known, which makes this one of a kind biography unique and a significant contribution to Civil War scholarship.
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