Civil War Enew Masthead
A Weekly Look Back at the Civil War

Volume 4, Issue 11

(127 Issues Since 15 October 2010) 


March 15, 1863/2013


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A Confederate Asks Whether Soldiers Can be Held Accountable for Their Deeds after Enduring the Horrors of War

March 15, 1863. Jere Tate, a member of the Fifth Alabama Infantry, wrote his sister from near Fredericksburg:

". . . I am all moste purswaded to believe that solgers are not accountable for there deeds hereafter; for if they have to endure all the truble, triles and tribulations of this unjust war and then be punisht in the world to cum wo be unto them in the day of there reserection. . . .

"I hear that old [Union General Fighting Joe] Hooker has several regements of darkes in his army. I do hope to god that they may sho themselves in the next battle if they do I am confident that there will be nun that will escape. Without they do it by fast running."

- Submitted by Peter A. Gilbert, Vermont Humanities Council Executive Director

SOURCE

Robert E. Bonner, The Soldier's Pen, p. 102.
Southern Civilians Anxiously Await the Approach of the Union Army

March 15, 1863. Kate Stone, a sensitive, well-educated twenty-three-year-old Southern woman, lived with her widowed mother, five brothers, and younger sister at Brokenburn, their plantation home in northeastern Louisiana. When Grant moved against Vicksburg, the family fled before the invading armies, found refuge in Texas, and finally returned to a devastated home. Stone's wartime journal offers a Southern woman's perspective and, in particular, the perspective of a citizen caught up in the theater of war. In March 1863, she wrote in part:

Kate Stone, Civil War diarist
Kate Stone
March 15. For the last two days we have been in a quiver of anxiety looking for the Yankees every minute, sitting on the front gallery with our eyes strained in the direction they will come, going to bed late and getting up early so they will not find us asleep. Today as it is raining, they are apt to remain in camp, and so we have a little relief.

March 24: The life we are leading now is a miserable, frightened one -- living in constant dread of great danger, not knowing what form it may take, and utterly helpless to protect ourselves. It is a painful present and a dark future with the wearing anxiety and suspense about our loved ones. We long for news from the outside world, and yet we shudder to think what evil tidings it may bring us. . . . We beguile the time sewing and reading well-thumbed books, starting at every sound, and in the evening play backgammon or chess.

- Submitted by Sarah Rooker, Project Director, Flow of History

SOURCE

Brokenburn: The Journal of Kate Stone, 1861-1868, by Kate Stone, John Q. Anderson, Ed., pp. 179, 185.
The Civil War Book of Days

The Civil War Book of Days is a weekly newsletter marking the sesquicentennial of the Civil War. Published by the Vermont Humanities Council, it commemorates what happened each week 150 years ago.

Please forward the e-mail to friends so they can subscribe -- using the forward link at the bottom of the e-mail.

 

Read previous editions at the Civil War Book of Days Archive, including the most recent:

  

 

Sleeping Union General Captured, Humiliated (8 March 2013/1863)  

 

 

 

  Stephen Crane

The Battle of Chancellorsville and The Red Badge of Courage (1 March 2013/1863)

 

 

 

 

Walt Whitman  

Whitman Describes Union Hospitals
(22 February 2013/1863)  

 

 

 

 

Northern Objections to Making Blacks Soldiers
(15 February 2013/1863) 

 

 

 

 

Private Hillory Shifflet Expresses Disgust with Emancipation (8 February 2013/1863)  

   

    

 

Copperhead
War Democrats, Peace Democrats, Copperheads, and Republicans (1 February 2013/1863)




Lincoln Appoints Fighting Joe Hooker to Lead Army of Potomac
(25 January 2013/1863)



Abe Lincoln
Lincoln Thanks Workers of Manchester, England for Their Support
(18 January 2013/1863)




Just "Stop Fighting" (1 January 2013/1863)

 

 

 

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