My Diary North and South

My Diary North and South

by William Howard Russell
My Diary North and South

My Diary North and South

by William Howard Russell

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Overview

William Howard Russell (1820–1907) was a nineteenth-century war correspondent for The Times. In 1861–2 he visited America to report on the secession crisis that had followed Abraham Lincoln's campaign to abolish slavery, in which eleven southern states had withdrawn from the United States to form their own confederacy, resulting in the American Civil War. First published in 1863, this two-volume work recounts Russell's experiences there. Based on his interviews with Lincoln, other pivotal figures, and ordinary citizens, together with his diaries and his letters to The Times, it documents his impressions of both the northern and the opposing southern states as he travelled through them. His book, thought to have been compiled in response to accusations that he was biased towards the South, provides a revealing eyewitness account of life during a landmark period in America's history. Volume 2 focuses on the horrors of the unfolding war.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781108041232
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 12/15/2011
Series: Cambridge Library Collection - North American History
Pages: 460
Product dimensions: 5.51(w) x 8.50(h) x 1.02(d)

About the Author

Eugene H. Berwanger is professor of history emeritus at Colorado State University and the author of many books, most recently British Foreign Service and the American Civil War.

William E. Gienapp is professor of history at Harvard University and the author of The Origins of the Republican Party, 1852—1856 among other books.

Table of Contents

1. Down the Mississippi; 2. Camp Randolph; 3. Heavy Bill; 4. Camp at Cairo; 5. Impending battle; 6. Progress of events; 7. Niagara; 8. Departure for Washington; 9. Interview with Mr. Seward; 10. Arlington Heights and the Potomac; 11. Fortress Monroe; 12. The 'State House' at Annapolis; 13. Skirmish at Bull's Run; 14. To the scene of action; 15. A runaway crowd at Washington; 16. Attack of illness; 17. Return to Baltimore; 18. A tour of inspection round the camp; 19. Personal unpopularity; 20. A Crimean acquaintance; 21. Another Crimean acquaintance; 22. General Scott's resignation; 23. A captain under arrest; 24. News of the death of the Prince Consort.
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