Schenectady County Community College Foundation, Inc. – 30th Annual Food for Thought & All That Jazz
Auction Ends: Apr 9, 2022 11:59 PM EDT

Books

History Buff

Item Number
173
Estimated Value
Priceless
Sold
100 USD to jsb160740

The winning bid will go to FrontStream Global Fund (tax ID 26-3265577), a 501c3 nonprofit organization, which will send the donation to Schenectady County Community College Foundation, Inc. (tax ID 23-7194187) on behalf of the winner.

Number of Bids
10  -  Bid History

Item Description

  • Autographed Copy of Hinsonville's Heroes: Black Civil War Soldiers of Chester County, Pennsylvania
  • 1-year Family Membership to Schenectady County Historical Society

In addition to serving as SUNY Schenectady's Vice President for Academic Affairs, Dr. Cheryl Renée Gooch is an active researcher and the author of Hinsonville's Heroes: Black Civil War Soldiers of Chester County, Pennsylvania (The History Press, 2018).

She was inspired to write the book while serving as Dean of the School of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences at Lincoln University, a historically Black university near Oxford, Penn., after noticing headstones of Civil war veterans in the Hosanna Church cemetery near campus. After researching the names on the headstones, she uncovered more about the lives of George Duffy, Abraham Stout, Isaac A. Hollingsworth, Abraham Blake, Lewis Palmer and others, 18 in total who served as members of what were called United States Colored Troops during the Civil War.

As described in publicity materials for Hinsonville's Heroes, "As members of the Fifty-Fourth Massachusetts Volunteers, brothers Wesley, William, and George Jay survived the bloody battle at Fort Wagner, South Carolina, memorialized in the film Glory. George W. Duffy and Stephen J. Ringgold were part of the only Black regiment to lead President Lincoln's funeral procession in Washington. William B. Fitzgerald, Abraham Stout, Samuel H. Blake, and Isaac A. Hollingsworth fought with troops who cornered Robert E. Lee's army, forcing surrender at Appomattox Court House."

"A double purpose induced more than 200,000 Black men to enlist in the United States Army: to reunify our country and liberate more than 4 million Americans from slavery, including many of my direct ancestors. They sacrificed their health and lives to reform our democracy to ensure freedom and be recognized as full citizens. They were patriots."    

-Dr. Cheryl Renée Gooch


In addition to Hinsonville's Heroes, Dr. Gooch is the author of On Africa's Lands: The Forgotten Stories of Two Lincoln Educated Missionaries in Liberia (The Lincoln University Press, 2014) and is a life member of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH).

Item Special Note

Item will be shipped at no additional cost to the winner. The author will personalize an inscription upon request.

Donated By:

The College Store

Schenectady County Historical Society