Sunday, May 16, 2:00 pm, Monthly Program, via Zoom. Richard Hurley presented:
This multimedia show chronicles the adventures (and misadventures) of the nearly 17,000 young men who volunteered for the Union army during the Civil War. Moved by passionate patriotism, these men (mostly from Northern California) enlisted to fight Rebels, in California or back East. Most were keenly disappointed when the War Department assigned them instead to the thankless task of replacing the regular U.S. forces throughout the West.
Institute member Richard Hurley received his undergraduate degree from Harvard College and wrote for The Harvard Lampoon. He worked for three years in the history division of the Oakland Museum of California. Richard earned a master’s degree in architecture from UC-Berkeley, then moved to the Sierra foothills and a career in computer-based multimedia. He is co-author of the award-winning historical fiction Queen of the Northern Mines. He has authored multimedia shows and guest-curated a museum exhibit on California and the Civil War. His California history page offers more about the states’s wartime experience.




