The colors of courage: Gettysburg's forgotten history: immigrants, women, and African-Americans in the Civil War's defining battle

The colors of courage: Gettysburg's forgotten history: immigrants, women, and African-Americans in the Civil War's defining battle

Author
Creighton, Margaret S
Publisher
Hachette Book Group (Perseus);Basic Books
Language
English
Edition
1st Basic books pbk. ed.
Year
2006;2011
Page
xxvii, 321 pages, 8 unnumbered leaves of plates : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780465014569,0465014569,9780465014576,0465014577
File Type
epub
File Size
2.4 MiB

Gettysburg has been written about and studied in great detail over the last 140 years, but there are still many participants whose experiences have been overlooked. In augmenting this incomplete history, Margaret Creighton presents a new look at the decisive battle through the eyes of Gettysburg's women, immigrant soldiers, and African Americans.An academic with a superb flair for storytelling, Creighton draws on memoirs, letters, diaries, and newspapers to get to the hearts of her subjects. Mag Palm, a free black woman living with her family outside of town on Cemetery Ridge, was understandably threatened by the arrival of Lee's Confederate Army; slavers had tried to capture her three years before. Carl Schurz, a political exile who had fled Germany after the failed 1848 revolution, brought a deeply held fervor for abolitionism to the Union Army. Sadie Bushman, a nine-year-old cabinetmaker's daughter, was commandeered by a Union doctor to assist at a field hospital. In telling the stories of these and a dozen other participants, Margaret Creighton has written a stunningly fluid work of original history--a narrative that is sure to redefine the Civil War's most essential battle.

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