Ohio History Journal

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THE ODYSSEY OF

PETROLEUM

VESUVIUS

NASBY

 

 

 

 

 

 

by DAVID D. ANDERSON

After more than a century the American Civil War remains garbed in

tragedy and pathos, heroes and hero worship, sentiment and cynicism,

as it has been since the guns fell silent and the printing presses began to

pour out a still unabated torrent of memoirs, histories, and biographies.

As an age of heroes, it is resplendent with the names of Lincoln, Grant,

Lee, Sherman, Sheridan -- and Petroleum Vesuvius Nasby.

Perhaps the least remembered of these is Nasby, although he, like the

others, came out of obscurity to fame in the four years of the war. Yet,

in spite of the shadow into which he has again passed, Nasby deserves

inclusion in any list of the war's great men: he is our only authentic Civil

War anti-hero.

Nasby began his anti-heroic march, not in the ranks of either army, but

in a long series of letters that began to appear with regularity on April

25, 1862, in the Hancock Jeffersonian of Findlay, Ohio.1 His attainment of

 

 

NOTES ARE ON PAGE 279