Publications of the Virginia War History Commission: Virginia war letters, diaries and editorials
Author: Virginia War History Commission
Publisher:
Published: 1925
Total Pages: 576
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKRead and Download eBook Full
Author: Virginia War History Commission
Publisher:
Published: 1925
Total Pages: 576
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Arthur Kyle Davis
Publisher:
Published: 2011-10-01
Total Pages: 568
ISBN-13: 9781258207823
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Virginia War History Commission
Publisher:
Published: 1924
Total Pages: 536
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Arthur Kyle Davis
Publisher:
Published: 1925-01-01
Total Pages: 528
ISBN-13: 9780884901259
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Virginia War History Commission
Publisher:
Published: 1927
Total Pages: 472
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Kristen Brill
Publisher: LSU Press
Published: 2017-10-18
Total Pages: 0
ISBN-13: 0807167436
DOWNLOAD EBOOKLucy Wood Butler's diary provides a compelling account of an ordinary woman's struggle to come to terms with realities of war on the Confederate home front. Married at the start of the war, she would become a widow by mid-1863; her account of life in the Confederacy explores her life in Virginia, her mourning period for her deceased husband, and her views on the waning prospect of Confederate victory. Now available in book form for the first time, The Diary of a Civil War Bride brings to light a vital archival resource that reveals the mindset of women in the Civil War South.
Author: John M. Curran
Publisher:
Published: 1919
Total Pages: 24
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Adrian Brettle
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Published: 2020-07-16
Total Pages: 440
ISBN-13: 0813944384
DOWNLOAD EBOOKLeading politicians, diplomats, clerics, planters, farmers, manufacturers, and merchants preached a transformative, world-historical role for the Confederacy, persuading many of their compatriots to fight not merely to retain what they had but to gain their future empire. Impervious to reality, their vision of future world leadership—territorial, economic, political, and cultural—provided a vitally important, underappreciated motivation to form an independent Confederate republic. In Colossal Ambitions, Adrian Brettle explores how leading Confederate thinkers envisioned their postwar nation—its relationship with the United States, its place in the Americas, and its role in the global order. Brettle draws on rich caches of published and unpublished letters and diaries, Confederate national and state government documents, newspapers published in North America and England, conference proceedings, pamphlets, contemporary and scholarly articles, and more to engage the perspectives of not only modern historians but some of the most salient theorists of the Western World in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. An impressive and complex undertaking, Colossal Ambitions concludes that while some Confederate commentators saw wartime industrialization as pointing toward a different economic future, most Confederates saw their society as revolving once more around coercive labor, staple crop production, and exports in the war’s wake.
Author: Lucy Rebecca Buck
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Published: 2012-02-01
Total Pages: 396
ISBN-13: 0820340901
DOWNLOAD EBOOKWhen the Civil War began in 1861, Lucy Rebecca Buck was the eighteen-year-old daughter of a prosperous planter living on her family's plantation in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley. On Christmas Day of that year Buck began the diary that she would keep for the duration of the war, during which time troops were quartered in her home and battles were literally waged in her front yard. The extraordinary chronicle mirrors the experience of many women torn between loyalty to the Confederate cause and dissatisfaction with the unrealistic ideology of white southern womanhood. In the environment of war, these women could not feign weakness, could not shrink from public gaze, and could not assume the presence of protection that was supposedly their right. This radical disjuncture, coming as it did during a period of extreme deprivation and loss, caused Buck and other so-called southern belles to question the very ideology with which they had been raised, often between the pages of private diaries. In powerful, unsentimental language, Buck's diary reveals her anger and ambivalence about the challenges thrust upon her after upheaval of her self, her family, and the world as she knew it. This document provides an extraordinary glimpse into the "shadows on the heart" of both Lucy Buck and the American South.