Welcome!

In late 2010, having volunteered to assist Drum Barracks Civil War Museum in Wilmington, California, with research in pro-secession activity in California, director Susan Ogle handed me a list of names, places and events for possible investigation. One of those names was that of Dan Showalter, a California politician turned Confederate cavalry officer of whom I'd never heard.

Becoming fascinated just after reading the barest outline of Showalter's life, the next year found me hunting down everything I could find about this largely forgotten character. When I had finished my research -- which included the discovery of several previously unpublished items as well as obtaining the only known photograph from a Showalter descendent -- I had so much material that Susan exclaimed, "You've got a whole exhibit right here!"

And with her guidance, on November 5, 2011, co-curated by myself and Susan Ogle, my "Dan Showalter: California's Arch Rebel" exhibit went on display at the Drum.

Now being slated for removal in August 2012 in that ongoing round of ever-successive new exhibits that mark good museums, I've started this website as a place where, over time, I can memorialize and expand upon all the material accumulated on this remarkable Californian.

Hope you'll return often as this website expands and enjoy!

Wednesday, October 10, 2018

Oops!

A small error has been pointed out to us on Pg. 57 of "An Arch Rebel Like Myself." In the discussion about the 1861 legislature's ballots to elect a U.S. Senator, we mistakenly show Dan Showalter being joined in support of Joseph Lancaster Brent by State Senator Pio Pico. In fact, it was not Pio Pico, but his younger brother Andrés, from Los Angeles, who was the State Senator at the time. Both Pico brothers had substantial roles to play in early Los Angeles and California history. Our thanks for this oversight being pointed out to us.