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Confederate Heroines: 120 Southern Women Convicted By Union Military Justice
Thomas P. Lowry

Confederate Heroines: 120 Southern Women Convicted By Union Military Justice

Louisiana State University Press (Aug 14, 2006)
9780807129906
| Hardcover
212 pages | 147 x 218 mm | English
Dewey 973.772
LC Classification E628 .L69 2006
LC Control No. 2006001284

Genre

  • C.W. Diaries - Women

Subject

  • Military Courts
  • Military Courts - United States - History - 19th Century
  • United States - History - Civil War, 1861-1865 - Participation, Female
  • United States - History - Civil War, 1861-1865 - Prisoners And Prisons
  • United States - History - Civil War, 1861-1865 - Women

Plot

"From 1861 through 1865, southern women fought a war within a war. While most of their efforts involved activities such as rolling bandages and organizing charity fairs, many women in the Confederacy, particularly in border states, challenged Federal authority in more direct ways: smuggling maps, medicine, and munitions; aiding deserters; spying; feeding Confederate bushwhackers; cutting Federal telegraph wires. Thomas P. Lowry's investigation into some 75,000 Federal courts-martial - uncovered in National Archives files and mostly unexamined since the Civil War - brings to light women caught up in the inexorable Unionist judicial machinery. Their stories, published here for the first time, often in first-person testimony, compose a picture of courage and resourcefulness in the face of social, military, and legal constraints."--BOOK JACKET.

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Added Date Mar 20, 2017 18:59:30
Modified Date Mar 20, 2017 18:59:30