The Kepi
A New Concept in Civil War Reporting

The Kepi A New Concept in Civil War Reporting Volume I and II by: S.L. Kotar / J.E. Gessler
The Kepi A New Concept in Civil War Reporting Volume I and II by: S.L. Kotar / J.E. Gessler
The Kepi III & IV by: S.L. Kotar / J.E. Gessler
The Kepi III & IV by: S.L. Kotar / J.E. Gessler

Non-Fiction Reference
Publishers and Editors-in-General
 S.L. Kotar and J.E. Gessler

Available on AMAZON

The Kepi Volumes I -II and III - IV
This is a compilation of the iconic magazine, THE KEPI's four years of publication. Included for the first time is a complete Table of Contents and a comprehensive index . The comprehensive Index will provide a valuable reference to both historical and genealogical researchers. Its title, THE KEPI, was chosen because the cap itself symbolizes the Civil War. Worn by both North and South, officers and privates, the kepi is a non-partisan capsulization of the War Between the States. This is exactly what we hope to achieve, an unbiased representation of the war years. Are you tired of reading boring recounts of well-known battles, or unenlightened biographies of great men? Have you been unable to substantiate the veracity of an article because there were no footnotes, or been frustrated because other Civil War magazines promise to give an overview of the times, but do not? THE KEPI is not a casual coffee table publication, but a work that will become a permanent part of your library, assist you in your research, raise new questions and possibly answer others..
Written by: S.L. Kotar and J.E. Gessler
Published by: Ahead of the Press Publishing
Date Published: 01/19/2018
ISBN: 978-1-945594-80.9 978-1-945594-81-6 978-1-945594-82-3 978-1-945594-83-0
Available in: Ebook Paperback

AUTHOR’S NOTE

Putting together The Kepi Magazine

In speaking with devotees of the Civil War it has often struck me that those deeply immersed in studying the conflict, whether they refer to it as, “The War of Northern Aggression,” the “Blue and the Gray,” or the “War Between the States,”  have a life-long fascination with it. When people ask me how and why I got interested, my answer is always the same: I was born to it. As early as I can remember, I was drawn to the Civil War. Nothing was too obscure or settled for me: I wanted to know everything about the battles and leaders, but more specifically I craved an understanding of the times, because to truly understand the past, you have to view it from the perspective of those who lived it.

Believing that others felt as I did, and that they weren’t satisfied with coffee table publications specializing in repeating the tried and the true without daring to reinterpret a battle or a strategy or even a personality, my partner and I decided we would publish a magazine dealing not only with fresh (and sometimes uncomfortable) views, but one that offered a more thorough examination of the mid-19th century. With an eye toward the iconoclastic, the odd and the unexplored, we began publishing in the time before personal computers were commonplace.

To present a professional magazine meant using a professional printer and typesetter. Starting out with grand ideas and a limited budget we quickly learned how to do a paste-up which is actually more complex than it sounds. We had to teach ourselves about various typefaces, column width and how to efficiently use space, where and how to insert illustrations and how to be judicious in the use of lines. The description “paste-up” comes from the fact that pages were literally pasted-up. After deciding how to arrange a page, the typesetting (which came on a long roll), was cut to size and blocked out on a piece of blue graph paper (the camera didn’t pick up the color blue). Then the back of the typesetting was covered with hot wax and placed on the graph paper, using the lines and squares to make the column even. When the wax dried, the page was “set” and ready to be “shot.”

As you read the issues from start to finish (the printer did the paste-up on the premiere issue and we did subsequent issues) I think you’ll see how we experimented with typefaces and lines, getting more and more adept as we went along. Ironically, this turned out to be the easiest part of the equation. What we anticipated would be the easiest actually turned out to be the most difficult: finding authors who were capable of writing about the War without falling into the trite and the rehashed. We didn’t want the same old story of Gettysburg, or a romanticized version of Stonewall in the Valley. We sought hard, gritty stories, or ones with new interpretations of cannon. And believe me, when you talk about the Civil War, there is most definitely “cannon.” And by that I mean, This is the way it is.

 Perhaps there’s a comfort in the thought that you know a particular battle inside out. Perhaps that makes it easy to discuss when everyone is on the same page. But when you’re afraid to delve into probing questions, then you’re not an historian, you’re a fan. Fans were not our audience. That said, it proved extremely difficult to find articles worth publishing. We wanted to shake people out of their complacency but to do that we needed writers capable of producing thought-provoking material. We assumed they would beat a path to our door (we even paid a small fee) but they didn’t. Those articles we received might have been all right for a weekend reenactment, but it wasn’t interesting enough for us. So we ended up writing a number of articles ourselves, primarily on “Stonewall” Jackson, who happened to be our specialty. In re-reading these articles, as fresh to me now as when I wrote them decades ago, I hope you find some new insights and some thought-provoking interpretations. To add to our in-house staff we recruited several regular writers who had interests in medicine and religion. And I have to mention a gentleman who became a semi-regular writer for us, Thomas J. Evans. Although it’s been a long time since we communicated, Tom was a first rate investigator and we were honored to publish his material.

This is the background on The Kepi.  After we ceased publishing we devoted our energies to fiction writing. We have quite a number of books in the R.B. Saga that I intend to publish in the near future that deal specifically with the War. Our trilogy, The Kansas Pirates, available on Amazon, is set pre-War and deals with a number of uncomfortable issues in “Bleeding Kansas.”

Thank you for visiting this site and good reading!

SLK

 GSFE@aol.com

First Issue  Volume I, Number 1

Kepi 4-83 Cover         

Cover:   Statue at Fredericksburg, Virginia. Photo by J.E.Gessler.

Volume I, Number 2

Kepi 6-83 Cover

 Cover:   From The American Phrenological Journal, March 1863.
Volume I, Number 3

Kepi 8-83 Cover color

Cover:   “The Battle of Perryville” from HARPER’S WEEKLY, November 1, 1862.
Volume I, Number 4

Kepi 10-83 Cover color

Cover:   “The Official Military Atlas of the Civil War“.
Volume I, Number 5

Kepi 12-83 Cover

Cover:   Taken from the collection of  William F. Howard, depicts Confederate prisoners awaiting transfer to Union prisons.
Volume II, Number 1

Kepi 2-84 Cover

Cover:   Shows Fr. Thomas Mooney offering Sunday Mass to the 69th NYSM; Col. Corcoran stands  with arms folded.  Courtesy Library of Congress
Volume II, Number 2

Kepi 4-84 Cover

Cover:   Mosby in uniform; Brig.-Gen. Edwin H. Stoughton, Commander of 2nd Vermont Brigade: plaque outside Gunnel house where Stoughton was captured.
Volume II, Number 3

Kepi 6-84 Cover

Cover:   General Richard Ewell from Moore’s Rebellion Record; Gen. P.G.T. Beauregard from Embattled Confederates; Gen. Rodes from Lee’s Lieutenants; Gen. Trimble from Stonewall in the Valley.
Volume II, Number 4

Kepi 8-84 Cover

Cover:   Col. Rush C. Hawkins from the Anne S.K. Brown Military Collection, Brown University.
Volume II, Number 5

Kepi 10-84 Cover color

Cover:   Gen. T.J. Jackson, vintage image by Meiley, of Lexington, Va.  From the authors private collection.  “The Rebel Stonewall Jackson”, p.5 from Harper’s Weekly, August 30, 1862.
Volume II, Number 6

Kepi 12-84 Cover color

Cover:   From the Library of Congress.
Volume III, Number 1

Kepi 2-85 Cover color

Cover:   Thomas J. Evens examines a recently excavated specimen at the XI Corps Ammo Dump.  There was so much pewter in the ground, authors ended up screening the earth.  John M. Morton checks a reading on his White’s metal detector; examples of the Gardiner explosive musket shells; partially exploded bullet with hole on both sides; partially exploded bullet showing burst detonator; unfired bullet; three acorn-shaped copper detonators; two detonators with caps removed to reveal hole.  All photos from cover and accompanying articles courtesy of authors.
Volume III, Number 2

Kepi 4-85 Cover color

Cover:    Little Round Top and Big Round Top, Brady plalte; Library of Congress Also: Gettysburg from Seminary Ridge, Tyson Brothers; Gettysburg National Park Service.
Volume III, Number 3

Kepi 6-85 Cover color

Cover:   From the Library of Congress.
Volume III, Number 4
Volume III, Number 5

Kepi 10-85 Cover

Cover:  A tired and careworn T.J. Jackson.  Taken in 1863, this photograph starkly reveals how heavily his responsibilities weighed on this 39-year-old hero.  Courtesy of the authors.
Volume III, Number 6