James Riley Weaver's Civil War : The Diary of a Union Cavalry Officer and Prisoner of War, 1863-1865 /
666 days of diary entries documenting the life of a Union officer held in Confederate prisons. Captured on October 11, 1863, James Riley Weaver, a Union cavalry officer, spent nearly seventeen months in Confederate prisons. Remarkably, Weaver kept a diary that documents 666 consecutive days of his e...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Otros Autores: | , , , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Baltimore, Maryland :
Project Muse,
2019
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Colección: | Civil War soldiers and strategies.
Book collections on Project MUSE. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Prologue: Instilling the "ideal of Christian manhood," 1839 to 1863
- "The arts and scenes of active warfare": the making of a cavalry officer, June 1 to July 17, 1863
- "Slept to dream of war but woke to find all quiet": campaigning in Northern Virginia, July 18 to October 11, 1863
- "What a little world in itself have we in Libby": Libby Prison, Richmond, October 12, 1863, to January 16, 1864
- "Our happiness is alloyed by the fear of being disappointed": Libby Prison, Richmond, January 17 to May 6, 1864
- "Think of home and wonder when the space that now separates us will be traversed": Macon, Georgia, May 7 to July 27, 1864
- "They go high like a shooting meteor and fall abruptly as stars": Charleston, South Carolina, July 28 to October 5, 1864
- "Escape is the order of the day": Camp Sorghum, Columbia, South Carolina, October 6 to December 11, 1864
- "Sitting outside my tent penning these lines": Camp Asylum, Columbia, South Carolina, December 12, 1864, to February 13, 1865
- "Altho' these things seemed as of former days, yet I could not realize that I was free": homeward bound, February 14 to April 1, 1865
- Epilogue: "Students are co-laborers with the instructor in the investigation of specific subjects," Weaver's post-war career, 1865 to 1920.