-
Recent Posts
- A Union Girl In the South 05: Dora Miller’s Civil War Diary, Jan 28, 1861
- A Union Girl In the South 04: Dora Miller’s Civil War Diary, Jan 28, 1861
- A Union Girl In the South 03: Dora Miller’s Civil War Diary, Jan 26, 1861
- A Union Girl In the South 02: Dora Miller’s Civil War Diary, Dec, 1860
- A Union Girl In the South 01: Dora Miller’s Civil War Diary, Dec 1, 1860
Recent Comments
- Mark Vogl on About
- shopgoodideas.com on Why Abraham Lincoln Sent the Union Army to Defeat at Bull Run
- Liberty and Justice – How a Handful of Merchant Ships Struck a Blow for Civil Rights in WW2 | militaryhistorynow.com on Articles Index
- Mark DC (@FilmCriticOne) on Lincoln in 1855: Slavery will never end peacefully
- Ron Franklin’s Civil War | Civil War BSC on Articles Index
Archives
Categories
Meta
Category Archives: The Confederacy
This Week In 1865: Confederate Diary posts for Feb 26-27, 1865
Sunday, February 26, 1865 J. B. Jones John Beauchamp Jones (1810-1866) was a writer who worked in the Confederate War Department in Richmond during the war. His diary was published in 1866 as “A Rebel War Clerk’s Diary at the … Continue reading
Posted in Black Confederates, Black soldiers, Campaigns, Diaries, Slavery, The Confederacy
Tagged A Rebel War Clerk’s Diary, Augusta County, black Confederate soldiers, Burning of Columbia, Civil War, Confederacy, Confederate government, Confederate states, Confederate War Department, Emma LeConte, John Beauchamp Jones, Joseph Waddell, Richmond, RonElFran, Staunton, Staunton Spectator, Virginia
Leave a comment
This Week In 1865: Confederate Diary posts for Feb 23-25, 1865
Thursday, February 23, 1865 Emma Leconte Emma Florence LeConte (1847-1932) lived in Columbia, SC and witnessed Sherman’s burning of the city. “Yankees – that word in my mind is a synonym for all that is mean, despicable and abhorrent.” The … Continue reading
Posted in Black Confederates, Black soldiers, Campaigns, Diaries, Slavery, The Confederacy
Tagged A Rebel War Clerk’s Diary, black Confederate soldiers, Burning of Columbia, Civil War, Confederacy, Confederate government, Confederate states, Confederate War Department, Emma LeConte, Fall of Wilmington, John Beauchamp Jones, RonElFran, William Tecumseh Sherman
Leave a comment
This Week In 1865: Confederate Diary posts for Feb 22, 1865
Wednesday, February 22, 1865 As J. B. Jones anticipates, Wilmington, NC fell to the Union on this day. General Sherman had taken Columbia, SC on the 17th. Though he denied ordering it to be burned, when his troops left, Columbia … Continue reading
Posted in Black Confederates, Black soldiers, Campaigns, Diaries, Slavery, The Confederacy
Tagged A Rebel War Clerk’s Diary, black Confederate soldiers, Burning of Columbia, Civil War, Confederacy, Confederate government, Confederate states, Emma LeConte, Fall of Wilmington, John Beauchamp Jones, RonElFran, William Tecumseh Sherman
Leave a comment
Varina Davis’s critical assessment of Confederate spy Rose Greenhow
As a Confederate spy in Washington, Rose Greenhow used her relationships with men in high level positions in the Union government or military to gain access to sensitive information. She was eventually caught, imprisoned in Washington, then banished across Confederate … Continue reading
Virginia’s Governor urges use of slaves as Confederate Soldiers
By December of 1864 it was clear to anyone who cared to see that the Confederacy was fast approaching exhaustion. Union armies under Grant in Virginia and Sherman in Georgia had placed a chokehold on the military resources of the … Continue reading
Posted in Black Confederates, Black soldiers, Jefferson Davis, Secession, Slavery, The Confederacy
Tagged Andrew Martin Chandler, black Confederate soldiers, black Confederates, Civil War, Confederacy, Confederate government, Confederate states, Confederates, Jefferson Davis, Patrick Cleburne, RonElFran, Silas Chandler, the Confederacy, William "Extra Billy" Smith
Leave a comment
States rights would doom the Confederacy even if they won the war
Would the Confederacy have become a powerful nation if they had won the Civil War? Probably not. Their commitment to state sovereignty would have soon torn them apart. [ This article is being expanded and moved to another site: stay … Continue reading
The “blunder” in the Declaration of Independence
When the Confederate states seceded from the Union, they considered themselves, rather than the North, to be the true upholders of American liberty. It’s always been hard for me to understand how people who fought for the right to hold … Continue reading
Mary Elizabeth Bowser: A Union Spy in Jefferson Davis’s House
In the final months of the American Civil War, Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederate States of America, knew that critical information was somehow being leaked to the Union Army under General Ulysses S. Grant. He was right about the … Continue reading
Posted in Jefferson Davis, Slavery, Spies, The Confederacy
Tagged confederate president jefferson davis, Confederate White House, confederate white house richmond, Jefferson Davis, jefferson davis civil war, jefferson davis home, jefferson davis wife, Mary Elizabeth Bowser, mary elizabeth bowser biography, mary elizabeth bowser pictures, mary elizabeth bowser timeline, Union spies; secret agents, varina davis
Leave a comment
Slavery and the Golden Rule
White Christians in the South who supported slavery (as most did) had a problem. They were assured from practically every pulpit throughout the cotton states that slavery was an institution sanctioned by God. After all, they were taught, Abraham owned … Continue reading
South Carolina says “NO!” to Blacks as Confederate Soldiers
Were there significant numbers of black troops who fought for the Confederacy in the Civil War? Many today who identify with the “Lost Cause” interpretation of Southern history believe there were. Yet, the historical record is clear that if there … Continue reading