Three Years in the Army of the Cumberland: The Letters and Diary of Major James A. Connolly

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Indiana University Press, Jun 22, 1996 - Biography & Autobiography - 400 pages

". . . offers an unsurpassed chronicle of the war in the West." —Register of the Kentucky Historical Society

"This eyewitness account brings a better understanding to a conflict that brought a nation to its knees." —Historical Media Review

". . . an exceptional Civil War narrative. It has value for the military and literary historian." —War, Literature, and the Arts

The letters and diary of Major James Austin Connolly, 123rd Illinois Infantry, constitute an unsurpassed record of Civil War campaigning in the West. Connolly had a flair for narrative, an eye for people and places, and a smooth and facile style. His accounts offer a realistic picture of day-to-day soldiering in the Civil War—of rough, spare living in the field, of boredom and fun in camp, of seemingly aimless scouts, and of the high excitement of battle.

From inside the book

Contents

Initiation
13
Minor Actions
32
To Tullahoma
74
Chickamaugaand Stalemate ΙΟΙ
101
Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge
149
A Period of Preparing
165
The Atlanta Campaign
202
Chasing Hood
266
The March to the Sea
303
Through the Carolinas
376
Index
392
Copyright

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