Browse Items (41 total)
- Tags: he:Sherman's March to the Sea
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Remainiscing in Lively Vein
“December 1864. Near Eatonton, Georgia. An Arkansas rifleman remembers some interesting events from his experience in Georgia as a straggler trying to escape Sherman’s army.”
Tags: au:confederate, au:male, era:1864, era:Civil War, he:Sherman's March to the Sea, loc:Eatonton Ga, loc:Macon Ga, loc:Putnam County GA, milt:Company D 2nd Arkansas Mounted Riflemen, pd:1930, su:battlefield, su:confederate, su:homefront, su:medical, su:military, su:plantation, su:slaveholding, su:slavery, su:war experience, su:warfront, ts:memory
Richmond During the War: Four Years of Personal Observation
“First published in 1866, this book gives a perceptive account of life in Richmond during the war. Written in the third person, this work is more a social history of Richmond than an autobiography. Like Mrs. Chesnutt’s diary, this source has clear…
Sherman's Trail Through South Carolina
“May 1865. South Carolina. The trail of destruction across South Carolina described by an ex-Confederate soldier, immediately after the end of combat.”
A Southern Woman's Bravery
“1863. Vicksburg to Brandon, Mississippi. A confederate veteran recalls how a brave woman—assisted by a Union captain from Wisconsin—save her family’s treasures from Yankee plunderers.”
Echoes from the Battlefield; Or, Southern Life During the War
“Impersonal account of life for a Georgia family during the war, by an M.D. living near Atlanta.”
One Woman in the Great War
“1864-1865. Petersburg, Virginia. A recollection of the last months of the war, just south of Richmond.”
Tags: au:female, au:southern, era:1865, era:Civil War, he:Sherman's March to the Sea, he:Siege of Petersburg, loc:Petersburg VA, loc:Richmond VA, loc:South Carolina, loc:Virginia, pd:1915, su:civilian, su:female experience, su:homefront, su:medical, su:military, su:occupation, su:southern, su:war experience, ts:memory
That Bastard Rag
“February 1865. Winnsboro, South Carolina. A lady notes that Union occupation officers would refuse to provide hungry civilians with food because they “hoisted that bastard rag instead of the legitimate flag."
The Burning of Columbia - Affidavit of Mrs. Agnes Law
“A brief statement about the destruction of South Carolina capital.”