Search Results
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Confederate Women and Yankee Men
When Confederate men marched off to battle, southern women struggled with the new responsibilities of directing farms and plantations, providing for families, and supervising increasingly restive slaves. Drew Gilpin Faust offers a compelling picture of the more than half-million women who belonged t... More
Language: ENGCopyright: 1996 -
Mothers of Invention
When Confederate men marched off to battle, southern women struggled with the new responsibilities of directing farms and plantations, providing for families, and supervising increasingly restive slaves. Drew Faust offers a compelling picture of the more than half-million women who belonged to the s... More
Language: ENGCopyright: 2004 -
Mothers of Invention: Women of the Slaveholding South in the American Civil War
Exploring privileged Confederate women's wartime experiences, this book chronicles the clash of the old and the new within a group that was at once the beneficiary and the victim of the social order of the Old South.... More
Language: ENGCopyright: 2004 -
This Republic of Suffering: Death And The American Civil War (Vintage Civil War Library)
An illuminating study of the American struggle to comprehend the meaning and practicalities of death in the face of the unprecedented carnage of the Civil War. During the war, approximately 620,000 soldiers lost their lives. An equivalent proportion of today's population would be six million. Thi... More
Language: ENGCopyright: 2008 -
James Henry Hammond and the Old South: A Design for Mastery (Southern Biography Series)
From his birth in 1807 to his death in 1864 as Sherman's troops marched in triumph toward South Carolina, James Henry Hammond witnessed the rise and fall of the cotton kingdom of the Old South. Planter, politician, and partisan of slavery, Hammond built a career for himself that in its breadth and a... More
Language: ENGCopyright: 1982 -
The Ideology of Slavery: Proslavery Thought in the Antebellum South, 1830–1860 (Library of Southern Civilization)
In one volume, these essentially unabridged selections from the works of the proslavery apologists are now conveniently accessible to scholars and students of the antebellum South. The Ideology of Slavery includes excerpts by Thomas R. Dew, founder of a new phase of proslavery militancy; William Har... More
Language: ENGCopyright: 1981 -
Brokenburn: The Journal of Kate Stone, 1861-1868 (Library of Southern Civilization)
This journal records the Civil War experiences of a sensitive, well-educated, young southern woman. Kate Stone was twenty when the war began, living with her widowed mother, five brothers, and younger sister at Brokenburn, their plantation home in northeastern Louisiana. When Grant moved against Vic... More
Language: ENGCopyright: 1995 -
Macaria: or, Altars Of Sacrifice (Library of Southern Civilization)
First published in 1864, Macaria; or, Altars of Sacrifice was the third novel of Augusta Jane Evans, one of the leading women writers of nineteenth-century domestic fiction. A wartime best seller, with more than twenty thousand copies in circulation in the print-starved Confederacy before the war’s ... More
Language: ENGCopyright: 1992 -
Belle Boyd in Camp and Prison: Poems (American Biography Ser.)
First published in 1865, Belle Boyd's memoir of her experiences as a Confederate spy has stood the test of time and interest. Belle first gained notoriety when she killed a Union soldier in her home in 1861. During the Federal occupations of the Shenandoah Valley, she mingled with the servicemen and... More
Language: ENGCopyright: 1998