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Letters that illustrate the loss of innocence in the harsh realities of war and epitomize the experience of the common soldier of the Confederacy
To comprehend the nature of the ‘real war, ’ which Walt Whitman said would ‘never get into the books, ’ we need to get beneath the artificial symmetry of narrative histories, of neat lines and arrows on battle maps, of command decisions and orders from headquarters, to the human dimensions of the conflict. And there is no better place to start than with the letters in this volume. –James M. McPherson, from the foreword
On July 18, 1863, Lawrence Barrett, a private in the Confederate Army, wrote a letter to his brother-in-law in Pickens, South Carolina. The soldiers has a by word when any body or anything lost saying its gone up the spout I say the Confederacy is on her way up the spout.
These lines are from one of thirty-three letters from seven Confederate soldiers included in this volume and published with their original spelling and punctuation intact. Sent to Lucretia Caroline Barrett McMahan and her husband between 1861 and 1864, the letters were from three of Lucretia’s brothers, her brother-in-law, and family friends or acquaintances.
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Letters that illustrate the loss of innocence in the harsh realities of war and epitomize the experience of the common soldier of the Confederacy
To comprehend the nature of the ‘real war, ’ which Walt Whitman said would ‘never get into the books, ’ we need to get beneath the artificial symmetry of narrative histories, of neat lines and arrows on battle maps, of command decisions and orders from headquarters, to the human dimensions of the conflict. And there is no better place to start than with the letters in this volume. –James M. McPherson, from the foreword
On July 18, 1863, Lawrence Barrett, a private in the Confederate Army, wrote a letter to his brother-in-law in Pickens, South Carolina. The soldiers has a by word when any body or anything lost saying its gone up the spout I say the Confederacy is on her way up the spout.
These lines are from one of thirty-three letters from seven Confederate soldiers included in this volume and published with their original spelling and punctuation intact. Sent to Lucretia Caroline Barrett McMahan and her husband between 1861 and 1864, the letters were from three of Lucretia’s brothers, her brother-in-law, and family friends or acquaintances.