You may also like
The Civil War Writ Small
The literature on the Civil War, the watershed event in American history, is enormous and continues to grow. With so much written on the conflict, it is valuable to find a little-explored aspect. It sometimes can be useful to limit one's scope, as author Charles Mills has done in his book "Civil War Graves of Northern Virginia" (2017), part of the series of photographic local histories published by Images of America. Mills studies the Civil War in the northern Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C., and he focuses on the commemoration of death resulting from the conflict in northern Virginia. Northern Virginia, of course, was heavily hit by the Civil War and has been studied in detail. Still, this book's study of cemeteries and death is moving and poignant and gives the reader a feel for the conflict and its cost that sometimes is absent from longer, broader-based accounts. The focus on death and commemoration in northern Virginia becomes a symbol for the death and destruction resulting from the Civil War as a whole.
Mills' book consists of photographs largely drawn from the Library of Congress and from the author's own files together with commentary and explanatory material. Some of the images will be familiar to readers with a good knowledge of the Civil War, but many of them are rare and unusual. Taken together, the images tell an impressive, coherent story. The discussions are brief, but they show Mills has a good command of Civil War history. The book examines a broad range of commemorative sites, from large cemeteries including the Arlington National Cemetery to battlefield commemorations, to many small hidden-away cemeteries in local churches. Similarly, the book describes the commemoration of famous leaders, such as Lee, Jackson, and Stuart, to lesser known figures, to unknown soldiers who died through battle or disease, to civilians and children.
The book is in six parts. In the first part, Mills examines the suburban D.C. city of Alexandria and offers images of the first civil war casualties following Virginia's secession from the Union in the May 24, 1861 encounter at a hotel called the Marshall House. Colonel Elmer Ellsworth, a friend of Abraham Lincoln, was killed as was the owner of the hotel, an ardent supporter of the Confederacy, James Jackson. Many old unusual images of Alexandria and its environs add interest to this section.
Prince William County is the focus of the second part of the book which includes many images of the First Battle of Bull Run and of the treatment of the casualties from this first large battle of the War. The book shows monumentation of both Union and Confederate soldiers and of civilians in burial sites large and small.
Part three of the book takes the reader to Fairfax County. It ranges in scope from the deaths of Union Generals Philip Kearny and Isaac Stevens following Second Manassas to a view of the Jermantown Cemetery, a small cemetery established in 1868 for African Americans who could not be buried in the segregated cemeteries of Fairfax. The book also shows how George Washington's home at Mount Vernon was maintained as a neutral site throughout the war.
In the fourth part of the book, Mills offers a brief but lively account of John Mosby and his guerilla Confederate cavalry. The account is short but offers a good introduction to the famous raider while showing graves and other forms of commemoration for both the raiders and their victims in northern Virginia.
The next section of the book offers a brief history of Arlington National Cemetery, built on the estate of Robert E. Lee, and of its commemoration of Civil War dead from generals to unknown, humble privates. Mills also discusses the construction of the Confederate National Memorial at Arlington. The book offers an eloquent overview of the Civil War in this iconic American cemetery.
The final part of the book discusses commemorative organizations North and South that arose following the Civil War and it briefly traces events aimed at the reconciliation of the former foes. The section also discusses a number of important cemeteries and sites not included in earlier parts of the book while discussing as well commemorative efforts for Confederate Generals Lee, Jackson, and Stuart.
Although this book is short and narrowly focused, I learned a great deal from it. The book will interest readers with a passion for Civil War history. A bibliography would have made a useful addition. Readers interested in a broader account of the treatment of casualties resulting from the Civil War may wish to read Drew Gilpin Faust's book, "This Republic of Suffering: Death and the American Civil War." Although he does not refer to the work, Mills has clearly learned a great deal about his subject from Faust.
You may also like
The French & Indian War in Western Pennsylvania
9781467156172
Regular price $24.99 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%War of Empires/
The colonial frontier of Western Pennsylvania set the stage for the fight over control of North America and the promise of the American West. The war began in the Commonwealth and the defenses, roads and skirmishes fought in the Western part of the state defined the war and the early career of George Washington. Join author Robert M. Dunkerly as he reveals the harrowing history of the French and Indian War in Western Pennsylvania.
Andersonville Civil War Prison
9781596297623
Regular price $21.99 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%
Guerrillas in Civil War Missouri
9781609493882
Regular price $21.99 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%
The Immortal 600
9781609499891
Regular price $21.99 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%In 1864, six hundred Confederate prisoners of war, all officers, were taken out of a prison camp in Delaware and transported to South Carolina, where most were confined in a Union stockade prison on Morris Island.
They were placed in front of two Union forts as ""human shields"" during the siege of Charleston and exposed to a fearful barrage of artillery fire from Confederate forts. Many of these men would suffer an even worse ordeal at Union-held Fort Pulaski near Savannah, Georgia, where they were subjected to severe food rationing as retaliatory policy. Author and historian Karen Stokes uses the prisoners' writings to relive the courage, fraternity and struggle of the ""Immortal 600.""
World War II Hawaii
9781467161770
Regular price $24.99 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%In World War II Hawaii, experience the untold stories of Hawaii at war where children worked the pineapple fields and women served in armed volunteer units. Makeshift bomb shelters were constructed, trenches dug around public buildings, and barbed wire strung on beaches. This tropical paradise transitioned into an active war front where over one million servicemen and tens of thousands of civilian defense workers came through and changed Hawaii forever.
Within hours of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, martial law was declared in Hawaii. Schools were taken over by the military, and neighborhoods were evacuated. All communication was censored, and every citizen was fingerprinted and registered. The US government burned over $2 million and replaced it with newly minted currency that had “Hawaii” stamped on it in case of invasion by the Empire of Japan.
Dorothea N. Buckingham is a librarian, author, and World War II historian. John C. Buckingham is a retired US Marine Corps officer, author, and active docent with Pearl Harbor museums. Through this collection of rarely seen images, taken mainly from the Hawaii War Records Depository, they present daily life in Hawaii during World War II as it has never been seen before.
Nazis of Long Island
9781467156493
Regular price $24.99 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%In Yaphank, New York, hid the greatest threat to the United States war effort during World War II: the American Nazi.
Building on racial and ethnic biases, lack of trust in government and a dose of conspiracies, the German American Bund was able to contribute to a growing American fascist movement. Fueled partially by Nazi Germany’s financing of propaganda, thousands of New Yorkers embraced the ideals of an American Reich through retreats such as Yaphank’s Camp Siegfried, which groomed Nazi sympathizers to be ready for the fascist overthrow of the American republic. In opposition to Nazism, multiple local citizen groups fought to combat the Bund’s organized efforts to undermine America. Author Christopher Verga brings to life the often-overlooked history of New York’s World War II era through a story of Nazi sedition, espionage and citizen resistance to preserve the American republic.