Chapel Hill Memories logo
Chapel Hill Memories is for anyone who wants to relive and help preserve memories of Chapel Hill. We welcome your recollections of any subject related to Chapel Hill and The University Of North Carolina in written, photo, audio, and video form. We have the ability to scan and transfer photos, audio, and video if you do not. We do not charge for this, and will return your materials within a week.

Send your memories, ideas, photos, and questions to CHMemories@gmail.com.
If you need to mail us something let us know, and we will send you our mailing address.
Login

 
 
Silent Sam Was a Yankee

by Charly Mann

In 1909 the United Daughters of the Confederacy decided to have a monument built on the UNC campus to honor Carolina students who had fought for the South in the Civil War.

Silent Sam was unveiled and dedicated on June 2, 1913, and stands in McCorkle Place near Franklin Street facing directly north.

For the last quarter century many people have felt that Silent Sam dishonors the University because it memorializes a cause that supported slavery. For those of you who feel this way I have some comforting news. Silent Sam is a Yankee who was modeled on a Boston policeman named Harold V Langlois. The sculptor who created him, John Wilson, was even more of a Northerner -- from Canada. Finally, Sam is not very threatening, since he carries no ammunition.

I think of Sam as a tribute to the 321 former students of the University who died in the Civil War. To put that in some perspective, this would have been more than half the University's enrollment prior to the Civil War, and would be like losing more than 15,000 students in a war today. Slavery is morally wrong, but the North also had slaves during much of the Civil War, and we still honor their dead. Many of these Carolina men thought they were fighting as much for their families and states as anything else. When I examine the writing of students during that period, I rarely come across any correspondence that even mentions slavery as something they are fighting to defend.


Post to del.icio.us Stumble It! Reddit Digg it! Furl it!

 
 


Comments:

wayne pressley      7:51 PM Tue 3/16/2010

please let that chapel hill liberalism go....silent sam was not a yankee was not meant to be a yankee and isn t a yankee g wayne pressley class of 1974
 

beachtat      9:41 PM Fri 6/12/2009

It was rumored that when a virgin walked past "Silent Sam", he would fire his rifle. No one I know ever heard the rifle shot!
 

Joan Smith      5:08 PM Sat 3/28/2009

I've lived in Chapel Hill for 62 of my 75 years, and never even heard of Silent Sam. Tomorrow I think I will introduce myself to him.
 

Jay Sharp      3:05 PM Sat 3/28/2009

Maybe Sam should go since he's a Yankee.
 

To comment using your account, simply login or sign up above

Write a comment about this article:





simple_captcha.jpg
(type the code from the image)

 

Check out our other website:



Investment strategies and advice about Apple Inc. and related technology companies by Charly Mann.
www.appleinvesting.com

 



Chapel Hill is located on a hill whose only distinguishing feature in the 18th century was a small chapel on top called New Hope Chapel. This church was built in 1752 and is currently the location of The Carolina Inn. The town was founded in 1819, and chartered in 1851.

 

 

What is it that binds us to this place as to no other? It is not the well or the bell or the stone walls. or the crisp October nights. No, our love for this place is based upon the fact that it is as it was meant to be, The University of the People.

-- Charles Kuralt

 

 

Dark Side of the Hill -- Pink Floyd, the creators of the most popular album in history, Dark Side of the Moon, took the second half of their name from Floyd Council, a Chapel Hill native, and great blues singer and guitarist. He once belonged to a group called "The Chapel Hillbillies".

 

 

Check out Charly Mann's other website:
Oklahoma Birds and Butterflies

http://oklahomabirdsandbutterflies.com

 



We need your help. Send your submissions, ideas, photos, and questions to CHMemories@gmail.com.

 

 

 

 

There would probably be no Chapel Hill if the University of North Carolina Board of Trustees in 1793 had not chosen land across from New Hope Chapel for the location of the university. By 1800 there were about 100 people living in thirty houses surrounding the campus.

 

 

The University North Carolina's first student was Hinton James, who enrolled in February, 1795. There is now a dormitory on the campus named in his honor.

 

 

 

 

The University of North Carolina was closed from 1870 to 1875 because of lack of state funding.

 

 

 

 

William Ackland left his art collection and $1.25 million to Duke University in 1940 on the condition that he would be buried in the art museum that the University was to build with his bequest. Duke rejected this condition even though members of the Duke Family are buried in Duke Chapel. What followed was a long and acrimonious legal battle between Ackland relatives who now wanted the inheritance, Rollins College, and the University of North Carolina, each attempting to receive the funds. The case went all the way to the United States Supreme Court, and in 1949 UNC was awarded the money for the museum. Ackland is buried near the museum's entrance. When the museum first opened, in the early sixties, there were rumors that his remains were leaking out of the mausoleum.

 

 

The official name of the Arboretum on the University of North Carolina campus is the Coker Arboretum. It is named after Dr. William Cocker, the University's first botany professor. It occupies a little more than five acres. It was founded in 1903.

 

 

Chapel Hill's main street has always been called Franklin Street. It was named after Benjamin Franklin in the early 1790s.

 

 



We need your help. Send your submissions, ideas, photos, and questions to CHMemories@gmail.com.

 

 

Chapel Hill High School and Chapel Hill Junior High were on Franklin Street in the same location as University Square until the mid 1960s.

 

 

The Colonial Drug Store at 450 West Franklin Street was owned and operated by John Carswell. It was famous for a fresh-squeezed carbonated orange beverage called a "Big O". In the early 1970s, I managed the Record and Tape Center next door, and must have had over 100 of those drinks. The Colonial Drug Store closed in 1996.

 

 

Sutton's Drugstore, which opened in 1923, has one of the last soda fountains in the South. It is one of the few businesses remaining on Franklin Street that was in operation when I was growing up in the 1950s.

 

 

Future President Gerald Ford lived in Chapel Hill twice. First when he was 24, in 1938, he took a law couse in summer school at UNC. He lived in the Carr Building, which was a law school dormitory. At the same time, Richard Nixon, the man he served under as Vice President, was attending law school at Duke. In 1942, Ford returned to Chapel Hill to attend the U.S. Navy's Pre-Flight School training program. He lived in a rental house on Hidden Hills Drive.

 

 

All rights reserved on Chapel Hill Memories photography and content

Contact us



Use Coupon Code chapelhillmemories to receive a $9.94 discount!