An edition of The Civil War (2014)

The Civil War

the final year told by those who lived it

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Last edited by MARC Bot
May 27, 2022 | History
An edition of The Civil War (2014)

The Civil War

the final year told by those who lived it

  • 0 Ratings
  • 1 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

"The final volume of this highly acclaimed four-volume series begins with the controversial Kilpatrick-Dahlgren raid on Richmond in March 1864 and ends with the proclamation of emancipation in Texas in June 1865. It collects 160 pieces by more than one hundred participants and observers, among them Abraham Lincoln, William T. Sherman, Ulysses S. Grant, Jefferson Davis, Robert E. Lee, Frederick Douglass ... The selections include include vivid and haunting firsthand accounts of battles and campaigns -- the Wilderness, Spotsylvania, Cold Harbor, Atlanta, the Crater, Franklin, and Sherman's march through Georgia and the Carolinas -- as well as the Fort Pillow massacre; the struggle to survive inside Andersonville prison; the burning of Columbia and Richmond; the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment; the surrender at Appomattox; and Lincoln's assassination"--Publisher description.

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Language
English
Pages
886

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Table of Contents

"Yankee wickedness": North Carolina, March 1864 / Catherine Edmondston: Diary, March 8, 1864
Occupied Knoxville: Tennessee, March 1864 / Ellen Renshaw House: Diary, March 9-11, 19, 1864
Northern industry: Pennsylvania, March 1864 / Scientific American: New rolling mills in Pittsburgh, March 26, 1864
Opening a freedmen's school: Virginia, March 1864 / Harriet Ann Jacobs and Louisa M. Jacobs to Lydia Maria Child, March 26, 1864
"My irons were taken off": Tennessee, March 1864 / Jim Heiskell: statement regarding his escape from slavery, March 30, 1864
Hungry families: North Carolina, April 1864 / Susan C. Woolker to Zebulon B. Vance, April 3, 1864
Planning the spring campaign: Washington, D.C., April 1864 / Ulysses S. Grant to William T. Sherman, April 4, 1864
"A tear of sorrow": Louisiana, April 1864 / William Winters to Harriet Winters, April 4, 1864
Freedom and slavery: Virginia, April 1864 / Wilbur Fisk to The Green Mountain Freeman, April 7, 1864
An expulsion order: Tennessee, April 1864 / Ellen Renshaw House: Diary, April 8, 1864
"A proud day": Washington, D.C., April 1864 / Lois Bryan Adams to the Detroit Advertiser and Tribune, April 9, 1864
The Fort Pillow massacre: Tennessee, April 1864 / Achilles V. Clark to Judith Porter and Henrietta Ray, April 14, 1864
Predicting Union plans: Virginia, April 1864 / Robert E. Lee to Jefferson Davis, April 15, 1864
"Insatiate as fiends": April 1864 / The New York Times: The black flag, April 16, 1864
Defining liberty and considering retribution: Maryland, April 1864 / Abraham Lincoln: Address at Baltimore Sanitary Fair, April 18, 1864
"Take no prisoners": April 1864 / R.H.C. to The Christian Recorder, April 30, 1864
Debating retaliation: Washington, D.C., May 1864 / Gideon Welles: Diary, May 3, 5-6, 1864
Protesting slave impressment: Alabama, May 1864 / Petition from the Slaveholders of Randolph County, Alabama, May 6, 1864
"Our right cause": Virginia, May 1864 / Samuel W. Fiske to the Springfield Republican, May 3, 1864
Battle of the Wilderness: Virginia, May 1864 / Theodore Lyman: Journal, May 4-7, 1864
"The disaster came": Virginia, May 1864 / Wilbur Fisk to The Green Mountain Freeman, May 9, 1864
"Another struggle with death": Virginia, May 1864 / J.F.J. Caldwell: from The History of a Brigade of South Carolinians
Grant turns south: Virginia, May 1864 / Horace Porter: from Campaigning with Grant
"Strife in the pines": Virginia, May 1864 / Herman Melville: The Armies of the Wilderness
"If it takes all summer": Virginia, May 1864 / Ulysses S. Grant to Edwin M. Stanton and to Henry W. Halleck, May 11, 1864
Battle of Spotsylvania: Virginia, May 1864 / Charles Harvey Brewster to Martha Brewster, May 11, 1864 ; and to Martha Brewster, May 15, 1864
The Bloody Angle: Virginia, May 1864 / J.F.J. Caldwell: from The History of a Brigade of South Carolinians
Whipping a slavemaster: Virginia, May 1864 / Edward A. Wild to Robert S. Davis, May 12, 1864
Battle of Resaca: Georgia, May 1864 / James A. Connolly to Mary Dunn Connolly, May 15 and 20, 1864
"These sad fields": Georgia, May 1864 / Alpheus S. Williams to Mary Williams, May 20, 1864
Battle of Pickett's Mill: Georgia, May 1864 / Samuel T. Foster: Diary, May 23-28, 1864
Proclaiming victory: Louisiana, May 1864 / Richard Taylor: General Orders No. 44, May 23, 1864
"I am scared most to death": Virginia, May 1864 / Charles Harvey Brewster to Mary Brewster, May 23, 1864 ; to Martha Brewster, May 24, 1864 ; and to Mattie Brewster, May 26, 1864
Andersonville Prison: Georgia, May 1864 / Eugene Forbes: Diary, May 24-27, 1864
Appraising Grant: Virginia, May 1864 / Charles Francis Adams Jr. to Charles Francis Adams, May 29, 1864
Assessing black troops: May 1864 / Lorenzo Thomas to Henry Wilson, May 30, 1864
Behind the Union lines: Virginia, May-June 1864 / Cornelia Hancock to her sister, May 28, May 31-June 3, 1864
Battle of Cold Harbor: Virginia, May-June 1864 / Frank Wilkeson: from Recollections of a Private Soldier in the Army of the Potomac
"Born anew in blood and tears": New York, June 1864 / Maria Lydig Daly: Diary, June 8, 1864
"The work of death": Georgia, June 1864 / Robert Patrick to Alonzo Lewis, June 9, 1864
Ruined plantations: Virginia, June 1864 / Judith W. McGuire: Diary, June 11, 1864
"Miserable long dreary days": Virginia, June 1864 / Charles Harvey Brewster to Mattie Brewster, June 11, 1864
Completing "the great idea": London, June 1864 / Charles Francis Adams to Charles Francis Adams Jr., June 17, 1864
Fighting the Alabama: the English Channel, June 1864 / Charles B. Fisher: Diary, June 19-21, 1864
Battle of Petersburg: Virginia, June 1864 / Wilbur Fisk to The Green Mountain Freeman, June 19, 1864
"Butchered time and again": Virginia, June 1864 / Stephen Minot Weld to Stephen Minot Weld Sr., June 21, 1864
"A horrid, hellish dream": Virginia, June 1864 / George E. Chamberlin to Ephraim Chamberlin, June 27, 1864
Life at Andersonville: Georgia, June 1864 / Eugene Forbes: Diary, June 13-20, 1864
The Atlanta Campaign: Georgia, June 1864 / William T. Sherman to Ellen Ewing Sherman, June 30, 1864
An appeal for negotiations: New York, July 1864 / Horace Greeley to Abraham Lincoln, July 7, 1864
"An infinity of hills": Georgia, July 1864 / John White Geary to Mary Geary, July 8, 1864
Washington, D.C., July 1864 / Abraham Lincoln: Proclamation Concerning Reconstruction, July 8, 1864
Conditions for peace: Washington, D.C., July 1864 / Abraham Lincoln to Horace Greeley, July 9, 1864
Hanging the Andersonville Raiders: Georgia, July 1864 / Eugene Forbes: Diary, July 11, 1864
Threatening Washington: Maryland, July 1864 / Henry Robinson Berkeley: Diary, July 4-13, 1864
The capital under attack: Washington, D.C., July 1864 / Lois Bryan Adams to the Detroit Advertiser and Tribune, July 13 and 15, 1864
Pursuing Early: Virginia, July 1864 / Ulysses S. Grant to Henry W. Halleck, July 14, 1864
"The deepest shame": Washington, D.C., July 1864 / Charles A. Dana to Ulysses S. Grant, July 15, 1864
"To whom it may concern": Washington, D.C., July 1864 / Abraham Lincoln: Offer of safe conduct for peace negotiators, July 18, 1864
"War to the bitter end": Canada, July 1864 / Clement C. Clay and James P. Holcombe to Horace Greeley, July 21, 1864
A meeting with Jefferson Davis: July 1864 / James R. Gilmore to the Boston Evening Transcript, July 11, 1864
Fighting in the Shenandoah: Virginia, July 1864 / Henry Robinson Berkeley: Diary, July 14-14, 1864
Fighting for Atlanta: Georgia, July 1864 / Samuel T. Foster: Diary, July 18-23, 1864
"Take my children from those men": Massachusetts, July 1864 / John Q.A. Dennis to Edwin M. Stanton, July 26, 1864
"A melancholy accident": Texas, July 1864 / Benjamin F. McIntyre: Diary, July 29, 1864
Preparing for battle: Gulf of Mexico, July 1864 / David G. Farragut: General Orders Nos. 10 and 11, July 12 and 29, 1864
The Battle of the Crater: Virginia, July 1864 / Stephen Minot Weld: Diary, July 30, 1864, and Memoir from 1912
"Murder them in cold blood": Virginia, July 1864 / William Pegram to Virginia Johnson Pegram, August 1, 1864
"This abominable despotism": New York, August 1864 / C. Chauncey Burr: from The Old Guard, August 1864
"Retribution at last": Virginia, August 1864 / Edgeworth Bird to Sallie Bird, August 4, 1864
"This dictatorial usurpation": August 1864 / Benjamin F. Wade and Henry Winter Davis: To the supporters of the government, August 5, 1864
"Stern retaliation": Virginia, August 1864 / Robert Garlick Hill Kean: Diary, August 7, 1864
"Smoke and flame": Virginia, August 1864 / Mathella Page Harrison: Diary, August 17, 1864
Washington, D.C., August 1864 / Abraham Lincoln: Memorandum on Probable Failure of Reelection, August 23, 1864
Exchanging prisoners: Virginia, August 1864 / Benjamin F. Butler to Robert Ould, August 27, 1864
Defending Atlanta: Georgia, August 1864 / Robert Toombs to Alexander H. Stephens, August 30, 1864
"Four years of failure": Illinois, August 1864 / Platform of the Democratic National Convention, August 30, 1864
"We must conquer": September 1864 / James R. Gilmore: Our visit to Richmond, September 1864
Requesting reinforcements: Virginia, September 1864 / Robert E. Lee to Jefferson Davis, September 2, 1864
"My children is my own": Missouri, September 1864 / Spottswood Rice to his children and to Kitty Diggs, September 3, 1864
Preserving "our own race": Kentucky, September 1864 / Thomas Bramlette to Abraham Lincoln, September 3, 1864
"Shouting for McClellan": Washington, D.C., September 1864 / Gideon Welles: Diary, September 3, 1864
Political advice: Ohio, September 1864 / Clement L. Vallandigham to George B. McClellan, September 4, 1864
"The wrath to come": Louisiana, September 1864 / Kate Stone: Diary, September 5, 1864
"Audacious infamy": New York, September 1864 / George Templeton Strong: Diary, September 5-8, 1864
Accepting the nomination: New Jersey, September 1864 / George B. McClellan to the Democratic Nomination Committee, September 8, 1864
Jonesboro and Atlanta: Georgia, September 1864 / James A. Connolly to Mary Dunn Connolly, September 11, 1864
"War is cruelty": Georgia, September 1864 / William T. Sherman to James M. Calhoun and others, September 12, 1864
Equal pay for black soldiers: Ohio, September 1864 / Rachel Ann Wicker to John A. Andrew, September 12, 1864
A report from Mobile Bay: Alabama, September 1864 / Alexander McKinley to Samuel Francis Du Pont, September 18, 1864
Battle of Winchester: Virginia, September 1864 / Henry Robinson Berkeley: Diary, September 19, 1864
Georgia, September 1864 / Jefferson Davis: Speech at Macon, September 23, 1864
A Cabinet resignation: Maryland, September 1864 / Elizabeth Blair Lee to Samuel Phillips Lee, September 1864
South Carolina, October 1864 / Jefferson Davis: Speech at Columbia, October 4, 1864
A call for political equality: New York, October 1864 / Address of the Colored National Convention, October 6, 1864
"Make Georgia howl": Georgia, October 1864 / William T. Sherman to Ulysses S. Grant, October 9, 1864
"One great desert": Virginia, October 1864 / Stephen Dodson Ramseur to Ellen Richmond Ramseur, October 10, 1864
Desertion and "despotism": Virginia, October 1864 / John B. Jones: Diary, October 10-13, 1864
England and the Civil War: Delaware, October 1864 / Samuel Francis Du Pont to William King Hall, October 13, 1864
War news: North Carolina, October 1864 / Catherine Edmondston: Diary, October 18, 1864
Unity and civil freedom: New York, October 1864 / Francis Lieber: Lincoln or McClellan, October 1864
Election results: New York, November 1864 / George Templeton Strong: Diary, November 9, 1864
Reading a sealed paper: Washington, D.C., November 1864 / John Hay: Diary, November 11, 1864
Retaliatory executions: Virginia, November 1864 / John S. Mosby to Philip H. Sheridan, November 11, 1864
A slaveowner's deception: Maryland, November 1864 / Jane Kamper: Statement regarding her emancipation, November 14, 1864
"Vox populi, vox dei": New York, November 1864 / Maria Lydig Daly: Diary, November 15, 1864
Sherman's March: Georgia, November 1864 / James A. Connolly: Diary, November 17-23, 1864
"The bitter end": November 1864 / John Wilkes Booth: "To whom it may concern," November 1864
Lincoln's reelection: London, November 1864 / Henry Adams to Charles Francis Adams Jr., November 25, 1864
"My boy was dead": Kentucky, November 1864 / Joseph Miller: Statement regarding his family, November 26, 1864
Battle of Franklin: Tennessee, November-December 1864 / Samuel T. Foster: Diary, November 30-December 1, 1864
Washington, D.C., December 1864 / Abraham Lincoln: Annual Message to Congress, December 6, 1864
Reports of a slave insurrection: North Carolina, December 1864 / Henry Nutt to Zebulon B. Vance, December 12, 1864
Meeting Sherman: Georgia, December 1864 / John Chipman Gray to John C. Ropes, December 14, 1864
Besieging Savannah: Georgia, December 1864 / John White Geary to Mary Geary, December 17, 1864
Union looters: Georgia, December 1864 / Mary S. Mallard: Journal, December 15-21, 1864
"The torture of loyal men": New York, January 1865 / Harper's Weekly: Retaliation, January 8, 1865
"The most pernicious idea": Georgia, January 1865 / Howell Cobb to James A. Seddon, January 8, 1865
"The birthright of the South": North Carolina, January 1865 / Catherine Edmondston: Diary, January 9, 1865
The right to vote: Tennessee, January 1865 / Petition of the Colored Citizens of Nashville to the Union Convention of Tennessee, January 9, 1865
Enlisting slaves "without delay": Virginia, January 1865 / Robert E. Lee to Andrew Hunter, January 11, 1865
"To have land": Georgia, January 1865 / Meeting of Colored Ministers with Edwin M. Stanton and William T. Sherman, January 12, 1865
Land for freedmen: Georgia, January 1865 / William T. Sherman: Special Field Orders No. 15, January 16, 1865
Washington, D.C., January 1865 / Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, January 31, 1865
"The greatest event": Washington, D.C., February 1865 / George W. Julian: Journal, February 1, 1865
Peace talks: Virginia, February 1865 / Robert Garlick Hill Kean: Diary, February 5, 1865
"We must emancipate:" Virginia, February 1865 / John H. Stringfellow to Jefferson Davis, February 8, 1865
"Let slavery die": Washington, D.C., February 1865 / Henry Highland Garnet: A Memorial Discourse, February 12, 1865
The burning of Columbia: South Carolina, February 1865 / Emma LeConte: Diary, February 17-18, 1865
Confederate deserters: Virginia, March 1865 / Luther Rice Mills to John Mills, March 2, 1865
Washington, D.C., March 1865 / Abraham Lincoln: Second Inaugural Address, March 4, 1865
"A sacred effort": Washington, D.C., March 1865 / Frederick Douglass: from Life and Times of Frederick Douglas
"We have work faithful": North Carolina, March 1865 / Roanoke Island Freedmen to Abraham Lincoln and to Edwin M. Stanton, March 9, 1865
"The death flurry of a whale": New York, March 1865 / George Templeton Strong: Diary, March 10, 1865
Marching through the Carolinas: North Carolina, March 1865 / Alpheus S. Williams to his daughter, March 12, 1865
Land and votes: Washington, D.C., March 1865 / Charles Sumner to John Bright, March 13, 1865
"Give me a thousand": Kentucky, March 1865 / Frances Johnson: Statement regarding her whipping and escape, March 25, 1865
"A very cruel man": Kentucky, March 1865 / Clarissa Burdett: Statement regarding her whipping and escape, March 27, 1865
"Awaiting my fate": Virginia, April 1865 / John B. Jones: Diary, April 2, 1865
The fall of Richmond: Virginia, April 1865 / Sallie Brock: from Richmond During the War
"Gloria in excelsis deo": New York, April 1865 / George Templeton Strong: Diary, April 3, 1865
"This peerless comrade": Virginia, April 1865 / William Gordon McCabe to Mary Pegram, April 4, 1865
Occupying Richmond: Virginia, April 1865 / Thomas Morris Chester to the Philadelphia Press, April 4, 1865
Southern "arrogance and folly": Washington, D.C., April 1865 / Gideon Welles: Diary, April 7, 1865
Surrender terms: Virginia, April 1865 / Ulysses S. Grant to Robert E. Lee, April 9, 1865
A commander's farewell: Virginia, April 1865 / Robert E. Lee: General Orders No. 9, April 10, 1865
Lincoln's assassination: Washington, D.C., April 1865 / Elizabeth Keckly: from Behind the Scenes
"A fearful, gigantic crime": New York, April 1865 / George Templeton Strong: Diary, April 15, 1865
The President's deathbed: Washington, D.C., April 1865 / Gideon Welles: Diary, April 18, 1865
A political agreement: North Carolina, April 1865 / William T. Sherman to Ulysses S. Grant or Henry W. Halleck, April 18, 1865
"It is all murder": Louisiana, April 1865 / Sarah Morgan: Diary, April 19, 1865
Explaining surrender: Virginia, April 1865 / Robert E. Lee to Jefferson Davis, April 20, 1865
Fleeing defeat: North Carolina, April 1865 / Jefferson Davis to Varina Howell Davis, April 23, 1865
"Something that haunted us": Virginia, April 1865 / Stephen Minot Weld to Hannah Minot Weld, April 24, 1865
"What we were fighting for": North Carolina, April-May 1865 / Samuel T. Foster: Diary, April 18-May 4, 1865
"A thousand rumors": Georgia, May 1865 / Ellen Renshaw House: Diary, May 2, 1865
"He behaved so brave": Washington, D.C., May 1865 / Walt Whitman: from Specimen Days
"Heroes of the sublimest conflict": May 1865 / New York Herald: The Grandest Military Display in the World, May 24, 1865
The Grand Review: Washington, D.C., May 1865 / Lois Bryan Adams to the Detroit Advertiser and Tribune, May 24 and 27, 1865
"All slaves are free": Texas, June 1865 / Gordon Granger: General Orders No. 3, June 19, 1865.

Edition Notes

Color maps on lining papers inside front and back covers.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Series
The Library of America -- 250, Library of America -- 250.

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
973.7
Library of Congress
E464 .C433 2014, E464 .C5635 2014

The Physical Object

Pagination
xxvii, 886 pages
Number of pages
886

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL27160687M
Internet Archive
civilwarfinalyea0000unse
ISBN 10
1598532944
ISBN 13
9781598532944
LCCN
2013941526
OCLC/WorldCat
852221835

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