When Abraham Lincoln called for 300,000 volunteers to fortify Union forces in July 1862, George and Lycurgus Remley enlisted to serve God and country--and for them, this phrase had real meaning. When their native Virginia had become a hostile environment for men speaking out against the evils of slavery, the Remley family had taken refuge in the Midwest. Answering the call of their president and their consciences, the two brothers joined the 22nd Iowa Infantry. This poignant collection of their letters to and from home sharply portrays the human costs of the Civil War. The Remley brothers saw action in an unusually wide geographic area, from Missouri to Louisiana, as their regiment fought the battles of Port Gibson and Champion Hill, laid siege to Vicksburg and Jackson, and took part in Major General Sheridan's Shenandoah Valley Campaign. Along the way, George and Lycurgus witnessed battle scenes, border warfare, bushwhacking, and guerrilla encounters--all of which they graphically described in letters home. Physical hardships were matched, the brothers felt, by spiritual hardships. Even before the Civil War began, they knew that their abolitionist convictions would require personal sacrifice. When the family moved from Virginia to the free soil of Iowa, Lycurgus remained behind to finish school. He was soon expelled, however, for asserting his own abolitionist views and was forced to follow his family north. Ready to fight for their beliefs, he and George proudly joined the Union ranks with Bibles in hand. As they traveled throughout the country, Lycurgus, still outspoken, distributed New Testaments among his comrades. A close fraternal bond carried the Remleys through the tedium of camp life and the intensity of battle. George and Lycurgus wrote as distinct individuals; and this fascinating collection of their letters offers dueling impressions of the same events. But when sudden illness and death left one brother alone, he courageously continued to fight not only for God and country but also for his fallen brother and comrade.
"This book will deploy a wide range of material culture objects, artwork, and landscapes to the tell the story of the American Civil War.
Methodist minister Charles Cumings of Madison, Ohio, fully condoned Sherman's men taking vengeance on the state's populace. Borrowing apocalyptic terminology from the book of Revelation, he supposed that “the last vial of... wrath” ...
Composed almost entirely of Midwesterners and molded into a lean, skilled fighting machine by Ulysses S. Grant and William Tecumseh Sherman, the Army of the Tennessee marched directly into the heart of the Confederacy and won major ...
Northern, All Right Let Them Come, 90. 37. “Wadley Diary,” 67. 38. ... Rankin, Diary of a Christian Soldier, 89. 41. Ibid., 150. 42. Earp, Yellow Flag, 30. ... Holcomb, Southern Sons, Northern Soldiers, 74–75. 5.
Also for state studies of dissent, see Hubert H. Wubben, Civil War Iowa and the Copperhead Movement (Ames: Iowa State University Press, 1980); and Arnold M. Shankman, The Pennsylvania Antiwar Movement, 1861–1865 (Rutherford, ...
... Ralph 294n25 Abraham 5, 37, 38, 76, 79 Adam 13, 64,123, 233 Adams, John 48, 59 Adams, Samuel 48 Afghanistan War, the 206 Afterlife Diet, The (1995) agnostics 235 Agus, Arlene 186–87 AIDS 206, 225 Albom, Mitch 1, 2, 4, 212–14 Alcorn, ...
How did Civil War soldiers endure the brutal and unpredictable existence of army life during the conflict? This question is at the heart of Peter S. Carmichael's sweeping new study of men at war.
Joseph Wheeler's Confederate cavalry, charged with harassing Sherman's lines, was also involved in foraging in Georgia. One Georgia woman, attempting after the war to receive compensation from the federal government for lost goods, ...
Southern Sons, Northern Soldiers: The Civil War Letters of the Remley Brothers, 22nd Iowa Infantry. DeKalb: Northern Illinois Univ. Press, 2004. Hood, John Bell. Advance and Retreat. 1880. Reprint, Bloomington: Indiana Univ.
98 Serving in central Virginia, Private Frederick Osborn acknowledged the receipt of a letter from his mother in Salem, Massachusetts, penned only three days earlier.99 The efficiency of the postal service also impressed Captain ...