When I saw the movie Gods and Generals, I started thinking
about how hard it is to comprehend the daily life of our Civil War
ancestorsboth soldiers and civilians. I have a fairly extensive
library of pioneer women's diaries, and because they really do give
a clear picture of day-to-day life, I decided to look for Civil
War diaries and letters on the Internet.
I discovered that Duke University has put together a dandy site
called Civil War Women scriptorium.lib.duke.edu/women/cwdocs.html.
The site features transcriptions, which document women's experiences
in the Civil War, from their manuscript collection. Among them are
letters from Rose O'Neal Greenhow, a Confederate spy.
The Diary of Basil H. Messler www.augustana.edu/library/SpecialCollections/special/Messler/index1.html
spans from February 1864 to January 1865. The majority of the
diary chronicles his stay in Vicksburg, Miss. I particularly
enjoyed his July 4, 1864, entry in which he writes about seeing
the elephant (engaged in fighting). He wrote "there's whare we
seen the Elephant and he was tramping on our Toes we limbered up
7 of Them There and then and Then They came so thick and fast we a got
on the elephant's and rode across the cornfield."
Letters from an Iowa Soldier in the Civil War
www.civilwarletters.com/home.html contains a sampling of correspondence sent
during a three-year period from Pvt. Newton Robert Scott, Company A of the 36th Infantry, to neighbor Hannah Cone.
You get a lot of insight into the soldier's feelings about the 1864 election when Scott writes, "The Election is near at hand and I am glad to tell you that Co. A has No McClellen Men Amongst our No. I think that Every man that Belongs to Co. A will Vote for
Old Abe without a Doubt."
If you'd like to learn more about daily life in the mid-1800s,
Everyday Life During the Civil War (Writer's Digest Books, $16.99)
by Michael Varhola. You can order it online at
www.familytreemagazine.com/store/display.asp?id=10635
or by calling toll-free (800) 448-0915.
Also, be sure to check out these Web sites for Civil War research resources:
• Cyndi's List—Civil War
www.cyndislist.com/cw.htm
• National Archives—Civil War Records
www.archives.gov/research_room/genealogy/military/civil_war_records.html
• Researching People of the Civil War Era
www.cwc.lsu.edu/cwc/other/genealogy/faq-gene.htm
• American Civil War Research Database (subscription site)
www.civilwardata.com