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Craig L Barry
05-23-2012, 11:39 PM
When we grow up and have time, somebody ought to start a publication for Civilians and Military (re)enactors with reliable, well researched material, like the old Watchdog. Maybe we'll call it "The Civil War Citizens and Soldiers Digest." You know, B.I.R.D.

nast t
05-24-2012, 06:05 AM
I'm with you Craig Sir,

Spinster
05-24-2012, 09:15 AM
Craig,

Is this a function of Lakeway taking the CCG and the CC in-house?

Or are we talking a new effort completely separated from the Lakeway platform?

Craig L Barry
05-24-2012, 11:20 PM
Well, the recent changes at Lakeway provided a good opportunity for me to make a clean break there
and to do something that is completely separate and still possibly of interest to readers...historical research on the
material culture of the 19th century with no camp gossip or event reports. The sales of the Second Edition of
The Civil War Musket have been brisk enough to fund (I think) a new research based historical magazine,
which could also have limited advertising to further mitigate costs for readers. If we do it right, The Watchdog will continue
or hopefully increase its battlefield preservation donations. Last year we made donations to Friends of Antietam, CWPT
and Stones River National Battlefield Park.

Still in the discussion phase, but the plan is for this to be a new, non-profit periodical from The Watchdog. Print
and on-line versions. The Watchdog column will stay in Civil War News, and a new book is planned for the 4th quarter 2012
under the working title The Unfinished Fight: A Handbook of Confederate Material Culture.

The idea here is for a magazine with a look more in line with what print media from the 1860s
was like. Something you could print off the website or buy in print at an event and it would not look out
of place reading around the campfire. Aiming for July or August 2012. Are magazines in our hobby dead
or useless? Weren't all soldiers in the Civil War citizens at one time, too? Why separate them?

Spinster
05-25-2012, 12:19 AM
Excellent!

This methodology both cuts printing costs, ( as slick, glossy and color on every page is much more expensive) and cuts farbery in camps (and I must admit, I've tried to read a new magazine by lamp light rather than waiting until I got home).

Good Luck.

civwarhistory
05-25-2012, 01:30 AM
Craig,

I like your idea, but feel that perhaps a blog platform, or web magazine would be a great way to start, as well-written papers on the subject of reenacting could be added and edited quite easily. Plus, it allows you to do a trial run of the publication with less investment. If your new publication takes off, then I do agree with others that setting it up to look similar to print material from the period is a great call. I have operated my blog (linked in signature) for five years now and can help you get started with something if interested. Anyway, good luck with your idea.

Daniel

Craig L Barry
05-26-2012, 10:56 PM
Well, I sure appreciate that offer Daniel. We will see how much interest the magazine generates
with readers and where they want to go with it.

It seemed to me that there are already internet forums for dialog, newspapers and magazines for
event reports, book reviews and announcements...but not much decent research on the
material culture of the 1860s, which is what interests me. This never really "fit" with the
Gazette. Actually, a clash of cultures you could say. We will see if anybody else feels
the same way. I found out this evening that the Pederoli P-53 Enfield passed muster with
the N-SSA Small Arms Committee, and it is soon to be shipped to my door. For example,
a potential article would be a very thorough review of what this reproduction is like. An online version
in PDF can handle high resolution images, etc. I would read something like that, especially
if it was not expensive or hard to access. Probably the on-line version will be available for
a battlefield preservation fund donation and paper copies will be a couple bucks, which is
what it costs to print and mail them. The business model is little to no cost to readers with
reasonable advertising rates being the main revenue stream. The Watchdog is non-profit, so anything left at
the end of the fiscal year goes into battlefield preservation fund. Very little expense associated
with an on-line version, and advertisers would be able order in bulk to have hard copies at events.
I figure most people that want an article or the whole magazine in paper could print it off at home.

We are in discussions with a webmaster to set up the site, we have a (hard copy) printer lined up
and advertisers will be contacted or can contact Connie Payne (companioneditor@gmail.com)
or Bill Christen (gwjchris@earthlink.net). Obviously, Connie is going to need to get another g-mail address
with a different account name. The failure rate with print media has been grizzly for the last ten
years or so, but this could work.

civwarhistory
05-27-2012, 12:28 AM
Craig, your mention of material culture really interests me, as I actually took a class on the subject a couple years ago (I wrote a paper on the material culture of Civil War soldiers as the major assignment). That is a whole different realm, as like was mentioned, the big publication is Military Collector and Historian, but it sounds like you are hoping to reach a more general audience.

Again, if I can be of assistance on this, let me know. One book I would recommend would be Richard Bushman's Refinement of America (http://www.amazon.com/The-Refinement-America-Persons-Houses/dp/0679744142/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1338092779&sr=8-1), which deals with various aspects of material culture from architecture to personal behavior from the eighteenth into the nineteenth centuries, which may be of use to you expanding your awareness of nineteenth century material culture.

packrat
05-28-2012, 09:47 PM
Mr. Barry.. So is it a period format publication......Black and White text.... aged newsprint would be a nice effect... articles and thoughts from the vast sea of knowledge folks that we in small boats with one oar flounder about in ... correctly typeset and proofed....reasonable rates for those who could lend support. Old School Journalism.......without the tweets and likes of the hey! listen to ME!!!! books... I'm interested.... Paul Lopes AMERICAN CIVIL WAR KNAPSACKS

Craig L Barry
05-28-2012, 11:55 PM
We are formatting the pages like the Harpers Weekly Review as far as font and column. Old school, but delivered in the
most cost effective modern method--on line in PDF. Want a hard copy? Print it off. Or get a printed copy from one of the
sutlers that will be selling them at events.

Hey, every publisher who did hard copy only or on-line subscriptions for fee has failed badly and failed fast. How about quality research,
quality content, quality images and you decide if there is value in it for you. If there is, make a tax free donation to WD battlefield preservation fund in an amount of your choosing. Most of us make preservation donations anyway. Going forward with July/August first edition. Depends on the webmaster and when the site is ready, but we are going forward to try something new. Connie Payne's new email address is digesteditor1@gmail.com. Unit histories, material culture both civilian and military, historical research, period image analysis, etc.

Ironically, I got chided by one potential advertiser as a "hardcore" or an "A-C guy." Au contraire. We all just want to get it right. Events (not people) are what should be labeled as mainstream, progressive, hardcore or campaigner...or whatever meaningless terms you want to put on them. Re-enactors do whatever events they like, but all re-enactors want to "Get it Right." Why? "Because it's Right Dammit!" (BIRD) and because nobody goes out there to look like an idiot, they go out to have fun. It is okay to be new at something, but no reason to "look" that way. Call me crazy but my view is Civil War buffs want accurate historical information available and accessible when they want it, in whatever form they want it. And I think most of us want to support battlefield preservation, that was what drove The (old) Watchdog Civil War Quarterly. So put 2 + 2 together. If this new publication fails, there are still two books (coming out in the 4th quarter of 2012) and The Watchdog column in CW News to keep me busy.

mike44thva
05-29-2012, 08:55 AM
As someone who is slooooowly reading through all of the issues of The Watchdog (Thanks again for your help Craig!), the passion of the reviewers & writers is felt in every article. When this new publication comes out, sign me up!

packrat
05-29-2012, 02:59 PM
Limited actual printing going to specific areas..ie. Sutler Row is good sence..And having the basic mag on line is good business also...... Just as long as my troops don't let it get in the way of their camp dutys or drill......
some of this social media is a disease.... At our last event I had to take the Captains phone from him because he was on facebook instead of filling out reports .......like he can write anyway.... Just sayin........Really ..Good luck will keep up on your progress and contact you on ad info ect Paul Lopes

Poor Private
05-30-2012, 07:33 PM
I would love to see something other than the old Gazette. But I am getting gun shy. Spent good money on what I thought was 2 new magazines by subscription. To watch them sink faster than a cannonball. I was out the money. I will buy individual copies now instead, money is to hard to come by in todays financial situation. I would wait and see what it track record is going to be first.

Craig L Barry
05-31-2012, 10:59 PM
That is why "free" in PDF format is the plan here. No subscription fees. I got jobbed on those same two and they were good
quality publications that failed fast. You want an issue to save or an article? Print it. Just make a battlefield preservation donation to the WD at some point on the honor system in whatever amount, when you have a few sheckels left over. Strictly voluntary, though. Most will want to support that part of the venture since we all pretty much donate to the same preservation causes already.

Nothing against the Gazette...I published plenty of material in there, but this is going to be research
based. Journal of the Company of Military Historians wants an ad swap. Looks like July/August 2012
will be the first edition. There are already several dozen advertisers lined up and enough funds in hand to
get this off the ground. Then it sinks or swims on its own merits.

Wounded_Zouave
06-03-2012, 09:54 AM
...with no camp gossip or event reports.

Glory, hallelujah. I would suggest no "letters to the editor" either.

Craig L Barry
06-04-2012, 03:44 PM
Correct, no letters to the editor. I have seen the website proto-type. You know how the pages usually scroll up and down in PDF?
This web based magazine will turn pages like a paper copy, like the book pages do on a Nook. Going forward with it, and the magazine should be up
and running by July.

Need civilian material sent to digesteditor1@gmail.com. Have to balance out the content.

Jeffrey S. Quigley
06-04-2012, 08:07 PM
I really like the idea of the pages turning like a regular magazine. Can't wait for the first issue to be released.

Jeffrey S. Quigley

Craig L Barry
06-07-2012, 10:11 AM
See the facebook page,The Civil War Citizens & Soldiers Digest www.facebook.com/...Citizens-Soldiers-Digest/296915040403131

See the interview with Connie Payne http://www.thesewingacademy.com/2012/06/meet-the-editor-the-citizens-and-soldiers-digest/

Craig L Barry
06-14-2012, 07:58 PM
I hope to have a product review of the new Pedersoli P-53 Enfield in the first edition of C&S Digest coming out in July.
The Pedersoli is in hand, and the details will be worth reading about.

Craig L Barry
07-15-2012, 11:19 AM
Here is the website http://www.citizenssoldiersdigest.com/. The magazine is up.
The review is in it. The magazine loaded fine for me but we have heard a few gripes
from folks with difficulty loading it. We are working with the webmaster. Or try
http://issuu.com/csdigest/docs/july_aug_2012_pdf_for_website/44
Check it out. No fee or subscription required. Great piece on the Western migration.
19th century material culture includes the Civil War but does not exhaust the subject matter.

Ross L. Lamoreaux
07-15-2012, 12:38 PM
Here is the website http://www.citizenssoldiersdigest.com/. The magazine is up.
The review is in it. The magazine loaded fine for me but we have heard a few gripes
from folks with difficulty loading it. We are working with the webmaster. Or try
http://issuu.com/csdigest/docs/july_aug_2012_pdf_for_website/44
Check it out. No fee or subscription required. Great piece on the Western migration.
19th century material culture includes the Civil War but does not exhaust the subject matter.

Nicely done! I've always been a great fan of The Watchdog and Craig Barry (its no secret I consider him a good friend), and this new publication upholds the high standards they've both had for years, in a nice format that I found pretty easy to read and navigate. Thanks for making this happen!

Craig L Barry
07-15-2012, 02:02 PM
In the interest of full disclosure, we apparently have a mutual admiration because I always wear shirts made by Ross Lamoreaux and there will be an updated version of the 2007 article called "A Few Thoughts on Men's Shirts" in a future edition, with some of my more recent RL hand-sewn acquisitions.

Anyway, 341 hits on the counter by lunch... one site crash and recovery, but we are off and running. I like the zoom-in and zoom-out capability and page turning, but it takes some getting used to.

mississippian
07-16-2012, 07:32 AM
Craig,

Great work on the magazine, I just read the review of the new Pedersoli Enfield. First rate.

Will MacDonald

Provost-ADC
07-16-2012, 09:55 AM
Craig,

Tell us when the Apple/iPad/iPhone version is available

Me, Envious, and with a frozen screen when I try to sign in from my iPhone.........

maillemaker
07-16-2012, 01:12 PM
Fantastic magazine, and thank you so much for the fantastic write-up on the new Pedersoli P53! I have been waiting for such a review for a long time. Do you know when these are expected to hit the market?

Steve

Craig L Barry
07-16-2012, 11:25 PM
Pedersoli dealers can order them now. Check the D.Pedersoli website for a list of dealers.

Craig L Barry
07-16-2012, 11:28 PM
Craig,

Tell us when the Apple/iPad/iPhone version is available

Me, Envious, and with a frozen screen when I try to sign in from my iPhone.........


For some readers the http://www.citizenssoldiersdigest.com/ loads better.

Craig L Barry
07-16-2012, 11:30 PM
http://www.citizenssoldiersdigest.com/

It's up check it out. Pages do turn, you can zoom in on images. Want a hard copy, hit the print button.
Good mix of Civilian and Military. No cost to readers, so visit often. Close to 1000 hits since yesterday.

The emphasis is on historically accurate research articles and battlefield preservation. Preservation donations are
accepted in lieu of subscriptions, because any subscription fees would end up going to battlefield preservation
any way. The Watchdog is a non-profit 501(c)3.

Craig L Barry
09-12-2012, 03:07 PM
http://www.citizenssoldiersdigest.com/

It's up check it out. Pages do turn, you can zoom in on images. Want a hard copy, hit the print button.
Good mix of Civilian and Military. No cost to readers, so visit often. Close to 1000 hits since yesterday.

The emphasis is on historically accurate research articles and battlefield preservation. Preservation donations are
accepted in lieu of subscriptions, because any subscription fees would end up going to battlefield preservation
any way. The Watchdog is a non-profit 501(c)3.

OK, the Sept/Oct issue is on-line, same web address, etc.

Mojo1842
09-12-2012, 06:34 PM
Craig,
BRAVO! Great job; can't wait to see more. Will the archived back issues be free to view as well? (I missed the last one, despite my best intentions.)

maillemaker
09-12-2012, 07:57 PM
Great work! I like the articles on the trousers and the leather.

Steve

Craig L Barry
09-12-2012, 10:40 PM
Great work! I like the articles on the trousers and the leather.

Steve

Good. D Jarnagin (leather) and David Burt (Sky Blue Trousers in the ANV). I also liked
the one on ketchup which is a long neglected topic, too.

Pete K
09-13-2012, 10:56 AM
I shared the article on ketchup with my faculty. Being from the Pittsburgh, PA area we don't know anything but Heinz 57 products. What a reaction! I gave a copy to the History /Social Studies staff for feedback and I might say, they were impressed. Good job!

Craig L Barry
09-17-2012, 04:17 AM
Craig,
BRAVO! Great job; can't wait to see more. Will the archived back issues be free to view as well? (I missed the last one, despite my best intentions.)

No problem. Want to read the July/August edition? We will be archiving all editions right on the website for easy access and printing. Look right under the new Sept Oct edition (above "Friends, Resources and Sites") and click on it.