CATTON, Charles, GM3

Deceased
 
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Last Rank
Petty Officer Third Class
Last Primary NEC
GMG-0000-Gunner's Mate Guns
Last Rating/NEC Group
Gunner's Mate
Service Years
1917 - 1918
GM-Gunner's Mate

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

66 kb


Home State
Michigan
Michigan
Year of Birth
1899
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by Steven Loomis (SaigonShipyard), IC3 to remember CATTON, Charles (Bruce / PMOF), PO3.

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Contact Info
Home Town
Petoskey, Michigan
Last Address
Buried in Benzonia's township
cemetery, Frankfort, Michigan
Date of Passing
Aug 28, 1978
 

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Last Known Activity:

(Charles) Bruce Catton
Historian, 1899–1978

American journalist and notable historian of the American Civil War.
He won a Pulitzer Prize for history in 1954 for A Stillness at Appomattox,
his study of the final campaign of the war in Virginia.
He received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1977 from Gerald R. Ford.

Gunnersmate, U.S. Navy, WWI.
His service with the War Production Board during World War II
led to his first major book, The War Lords of Washington (1948).


A former Cleveland newspaperman
turned historian, Bruce Catton produced some of the most readable and compelling books about the American Civil War ever written. Combining "a scholar's appreciation of the Grand Design with a newsman's keenness for meaningful vignette," wrote Newsweek on the author's death in 1978, "Catton created an 'enlisted man's-eye view' of the war that treated humanely the errors on both sides."

As a boy growing up in Petoskey, Michigan, in the first decade of the 20th century, Catton had listened to the stories of old men who had actually fought in that bitter conflict. (His engaging 1972 autobiography, Waiting for the Morning Train: An American Boyhood, captures both the wonder and nostalgia of those years, when vivid memories of a simpler and—more heroic—time still lived lightly on the evening air in an unbroken continuity with the past.) The accounts of those desperate battles he was later to read as a student at Oberlin College near Cleveland were pallid in comparison with those gripping accounts. But it may have been his own stint in the Navy during World War I,  as a gunner’s mate, along with his own talent for storytelling, that led him to seek out the more down-to-earth world of journalism.

In 1920 Catton got a job with the old Cleveland News, and worked briefly for the Boston American before landing a position with the Cleveland Plain Dealer, where his first published work on the Civil War—a series on local veterans who had fought in it—appeared in 1923. From 1925 to 1939, he worked for the Cleveland office of the Scripps-Howard Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA), turning out news stories, features, editorials, and book reviews for papers around the U.S. before moving to NEA's Washington office.

He was 50 when he began the first of his 13 books on the War Between the States, winning both the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize for the final volume of his great trilogy on the Army of the Potomac, A Stillness at Appomattox (1953), the story of the last cruel and desperate year of America's most painful episode. For this book and the first two parts of the series, Mr. Lincoln's Army (1951) and Glory Road (1952), Catton drew on a wide range of primary materials including the diaries, letters, and reports filed by soldiers, which enabled him to reconstruct events and their aftermath with telling detail and immediacy. The New York Times praised his "rare gift." The Chicago Tribune called it "military history...at its best."

Catton's love of history and the distinctive character of the American adventure led him to spend the next five years as the first editor of an ambitious new experiment in popular history, the hardbound American Heritage: A Magazine of History. He remained senior editor from 1959 until his death, while continuing to write books about his favorite subject.

"No one ever wrote American history with more easy grace, beauty and emotional power, or greater understanding of its meaning, than Bruce Catton," wrote Oliver Jensen, who succeeded him at the magazine. "There is a near-magic power of imagination in Catton's work [that] almost seemed to project him physically onto the battlefields, along the dusty roads and to the campfires of another age."


   
Other Comments:

(1899-1978), U.S. journalist, historian, and writer. Born Charles Bruce Catton on Oct. 9, 1899, in Petoskey, Mich., he served in the Navy during World War I before becoming a newspaper journalist. Catton worked in journalism until 1941, after which he worked for the federal government. Catton’s hobby, writing about the American Civil War, became his full-time occupation in 1952. The final entry of his three-volume history of the war, which comprised ’Mr. Lincoln’s Army’, ’Glory Road’, and ’A Stillness at Appomattox’, won a National Book award and a Pulitzer prize for history in 1954. He wrote a number of other works on the subject, including ’This Hallowed Ground’, ’Grant Moves South’, ’The Picture History of the Civil War’, and ’The Centennial History of the Civil War’. He also served as editor (1954-59) and senior editor (1959-78) of American Heritage magazine.

Other honors 
Catton received an award for "meritorious service in the field of Civil War history" in 1959, presented by Harry S. Truman. He received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1977 from Gerald R. Ford.  Catton received 26 honorary degrees in his career from colleges and universities across the United States, including one in 1956 from Oberlin College.

   

  Gunners Mate 3rd Class Bruce Catton
   
Date
Not Specified

Last Updated:
Jul 10, 2010
   
Comments

Gunners Mate 3rd Class Bruce Catton, the future Pulitzer prize-winning historian from Benzonia, left messages for friends to contact him on board his receiving ship in New York harbor. 1919.

Quotes from: "A Real Michigan Welcome"

Soldiers -- and Sailors -- Comments

The roster's comments column offers an informative, sometimes amusing and often touching overview of the activities and emotional state of servicemen from every branch of the armed forces. The exuberance of Edward F. Lange, who writes he is homeward bound and will have Christmas dinner in Detroit, and Sidney Miller, a discharged Grand Rapids sailor who notes that it is the "Tall pines for me," is balanced by the somber assertion of Angus M. Burkam of Benton Harbor, a seaman on the USS DeKalb, that he has made twelve trips to France, or others who write that they "sail for France in the morning." Myron E. Pomery of Allen wanted the world to know he had "married a Coldwater girl." There are dozens of young men anxiously waiting to return to University of Michigan, the Michigan Agricultural College (present-day Michigan State University) or other colleges. There is also Gertrude H. Merrill, formerly of Mount Pleasant, a member of the Salvation Army who would like to "see anyone from Central State Normal School" (present-day Central Michigan University). Gunners Mate 3rd Class Bruce Catton, the future Pulitzer prize-winning historian from Benzonia, left messages for friends to contact him on board his receiving ship in New York harbor.

Military pay, or lack thereof, was a frequent topic. If not totally "broke" many were like Leslie Wirtz of Hubbell, "not broke but badly bent." Even worse was the plight of John D. Later of Grand Rapids who gave his next friend as, "Paymaster," adding that he was "still broke." Paul W. Donnell of Menominee offered the tongue in cheek advice to "Join the Navy" for "Trips to France."

In April 1919 Seamen Carl J. Trese of Port Huron voiced the sentiments of thousands of returning servicemen when he wrote, "Till the Sun Sets Forever -- Michigan."

   
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