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A Soldier’s Life

A Soldier’s Life. The American Civil War. Who were these soldiers?. Husband ?. Sister?. Fa ther?. Brother?. Uncle?. Daughter? . Mother?. Wife? . Boyfriend. Cousin. Brother. Friend. Neighbor. Son. Nephew. They were real people…. They were real people….

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A Soldier’s Life

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  1. A Soldier’s Life The American Civil War

  2. Who were these soldiers?

  3. Husband? Sister? Father? Brother? Uncle? Daughter? Mother? Wife?

  4. Boyfriend Cousin Brother Friend Neighbor Son Nephew

  5. They were real people…

  6. They were real people… with a real sense of humor.

  7. They were real people… with a story to tell.

  8. A Soldier’s Letter “War is not quite so hard as you poor townspeople think; We have plenty of food to eat, and a good warm blanket at night,And now and then, you know, a quiet, moderate drink: Which doesnt hurt us, dearest, and makes things right.But the greatest blessing of all is the total want of care; The happy, complete reliance of the carefully-guardianed childWho has no thought for his dinner, and is given good clothes to wear,…

  9. “And whose leisure moments are with innocent sports beguiled.The drill of the soldier is pleasant if one works with a willing heart, It is only the worthless fellow that grumbles at double-quick;I like the ingenious roanceuvres that constitute war an art, And not even the cleaning of arms can make me sick.” -Fitz James O’Brien

  10. JULY 29, 1864. “Sleepless nights. The report is that the Yankees have left Covington for Macon, headed by Stoneman, to release prisoners held there. They robbed every house on the road of its provisions, sometimes taking every piece of meat, blankets and wearing apparel, silver and arms of every description. They would take silk dresses and put them under their saddles, and many other things for which they had no use. Is this the way to make us love them and their Union? Let the poor people answer whom they have deprived of every mouthful of meat and of their livestock to make any! Our mills, too, they have burned, destroying an immense amount of property.” -Dolly Sumner Lunt’s journal They left their homes…

  11. …their wives… FROM A SOLDIERS WIFE.AT Paducah, Kentucky, I first realized whatit required to be a soldiers wife. I hadseen much before, and borne a great deal, yetit seemed but little comparatively when I cameto take leave of my husband, and turned back tomy lonely room to await his return.

  12. …and their children. THE SOLDIERS BA]3Y.A baby was sleeping,A mother was weeping,Pale vigil was keeping,For slumber had fle& Had news from the battle,Where deaths cannon rattle,0, news from the battle!Its father was dead.The wife is still weeping,The baby is sleeping,Good angels are keepingWatch over its bed.Too young to know sorrow,Or lifes woes to borrow,Must learn some to-morrow,Its father is dead.

  13. They gave their lives…

  14. …for what they believed in.

  15. Appreciation Honor Respect A soldier’s, Charles Wellington Reed's, pencil sketch of Abraham Lincoln at City Point, Virginia, 1865. Love Dedication

  16. Because of the sacrifice of the Civil War soldiers, the United States of America is still the united nation it is today.But, who were they?

  17. Bibliography • A Civil War Soldier in the Wild Cat Regiment , . Library of Congress • Camp of 31st Pennsylvania Infantry near Washington, D.C. Published in: American women : a Library of Congress guide for the study of women's history and culture in the United States / edited by Sheridan Harvey ... [et al.]. Washington : Library of Congress,, 1862. Library of Congress • Charles P. Stone to Abraham Lincoln, Monday, February 15, 1864 (Requests that his name be cleared; endorsed by Nathaniel P. Banks) Charles P. Stone, 15 Feb. 1864. Library of Congress • Charles Wellington Reed's pencil sketch of Abraham Lincoln at City Point, Virginia, 1865. Charles Wellington Reed, 1865. Library of Congress • Civil War Maps , . Library of Congress • Confederate soldiers as they fell, near the Burnside Bridge, at the battle of Antietam. [Stereograph] Alexander Gardner, 1862. Library of Congress • Dead Confederate sharp shooter at the battle of Gettysburg. [Stereograph] Timothy H. O'Sullivan, 1863. Library of Congress • From a Soldier's Wife. [Harper's new monthly magazine. / Volume 29, Issue 173, October, 1864] Belle Z. Spencer, Oct 1964. Library of Congress • I want to be a soldier. Air--I want to be an angel. [n. p.] [n. d.] , . Library of Congress • James W. Grimes, James Harlan, and James F. Wilson to Abraham Lincoln, Friday, June 19, 1863 (Write on behalf of soldier who performed heroic feat at Vicksburg) James W. Grimes, James Harlan, and James F. Wilson, 19 June 1863. Library of Congress • Johnny's prayer! Copied from a soldier's letter. [n. p.] [n. d.] , . Library of Congress • Joseph P. Pope to Abraham Lincoln, Monday, March 14, 1864 (Sends ring) Joseph P. Pope, 14 Mar 1864. Library of Congress • Soldier's Letter. [Harper's new monthly magazine. / Volume 24, Issue 142, March, 1862] Fitz James O'Brien, Mar 1862. Library of Congress

  18. Bibliography (cont.) • Soldier's sister. Tune--Irish emigrant's lament. Written by J. Dyer, 104th Reg't, P. V., Col. W. W. H. Davis. Sold by R. H. Singleton, Bookseller, ... Post Office Building, Nashville, Tenn. [n. d.] J. Dyer, . Library of Congress • The Confederate soldier's wife parting from her husband! [n. p.] [n. d.] , . Library of Congress • The Selected Civil War Photographs Collection , . Library of Congress • The Soldier's Baby. [The Old Guard / Volume 3, Issue 11, Nov 1865] C. Chauncey Burr, Nov 1865. Library of Congress • The Union soldier's prayer. Dedicated to the U. S. Army, by H. V. McCully. Tune.- Old hundred. Johnson, pr. [Philadelphia] [n. d.] H.V. McCully, . Library of Congress • Transcribed from: A woman's wartime journal: an account of the passage over a Georgia plantation of Sherman's army on the march to the sea, as recorded in the diary of Dolly Sumner Lunt (Mrs. Thomas B Burge, Dolly Lunt., 1918. Library of Congress • [Portrait of a Confederate soldier?]. , . Library of Congress • [Portrait of a Confederate soldier?]. , 1860-1865. Library of Congress • [Portrait of a Federal soldier (Horse artillery)]. , 1860-1865. Library of Congress • [Portrait of a Federal soldier]. , 1860-1865. Library of Congress • [Portrait of a Federal soldier]. , 1860-1865. Library of Congress • [Portrait of a soldier group]. , 1860-1865. Library of Congress • [Portrait of boy soldier]. Morris Gallery of the Cumberland, Nashville, Tenn., , 1860-1865. Library of Congress • [Wounded soldier telling story to young woman and older man]. Darley, Felix Octavius Carr, . Library of Congress

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