The Spirit Divided: Memoirs of Civil War Chaplains : the ConfederacyJohn Wesley Brinsfield Mercer University Press, 2006 - 316 pages In this anthology of Civil War memoirs, we get a clearer impression of some of the chaplains who served during that Great Conflict. Chaplains were among the most omnipresent observers on the battlefield, and some wrote extensively about their experiences. Eighty-seven of the 3,695 chaplains who served in both armies wrote regimental histories or published personal memoirs, not counting a multitude of letters and more than 300 official reports. Yet, there has never been an extensive collection of memoirs from chaplains of both the Confederate and Union armies presented together. In this groundbreaking work, many of the Confederate chaplains write that they opposed secession and submitted to it only when war was inevitable. Moreover, some of the ministers who became chaplains were active in ministry to black slaves. They spoke out against the neglect and abuse of those held in bondage both before and during the war. For example, Reverend John L. Girardeau formed a large mission church for slaves in Charleston, South Carolina, before the war; Reverend Isaac Tichenor criticized the abuses of the slave system before the Alabama Legislature in 1863; and Chaplain Charles Oliver preached to black laborers in the Army of Northern Virginia in 1864 with the thought that more needed to be done for them. While these efforts may appear trivial in the face of the enormity of the entire slave system, they do reflect that a social conscience was not completely lacking among the Southern chaplains. From the battlefield to the pulpit, Confederate chaplains were surprising and complex individuals. For the first time, explore this aspect of the great struggle in each chaplain's own words. |
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Results 1-5 of 72
... Campaigns : Memoirs , 1862-1864 95 " Letter to Attorney General T. H. Watts , " Chaplain I. T. Tichenor , 17th Alabama Infantry Regiment " Reminiscences of the Battle of Shiloh , " Chaplain I. T. Tichenor . Chancellorsville and ...
... campaign , in prisons and hospitals , in evangelistic work , and in the post - war period . In spite of their early service in an ecumenical army environment , Southern churches and their Northern counterparts clashed during the war ...
... campaign in the army was full of incidents and too full for account in mere autobiographical sketch . Our first camp was at Lynchburg . I returned home and made a hasty trip through Georgia securing hospital supplies for the Regiment ...
... campaign to Hagerstown . I have elsewhere a record of this march . I do not like to refer to it and never do so without pain . The 11th September 1862 at the battle of South Mountain [ , ] while endeavoring to save my regiment from ...
... campaigns where incompetence or cowardice would not be ignored . A Baptist chaplain of the 13th Virginia Infantry , J. William Jones wrote to the Religious Herald in Richmond , " Send us the names of good men ; and here I repeat , we ...
Contents
9 | |
36 | |
Ministry on Campaigns | 95 |
Ministries of Revival and Encouragement | 183 |
Ministry at the End | 223 |
Building a New South | 254 |
Bibliography | 295 |
Index | 301 |
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Desperate Engagement: How a Little-Known Civil War Battle Saved Washington ... Marc Leepson No preview available - 2007 |