Distinguished from traditional historical narrative by its
balanced portrayal of wartime experiences both at home and on the
battlefield and flavored by its vivid portrayal of a divided
Appalachian community, Ashe County's Civil War: Community and
Society in the Appalachian South breaks new ground in Southern
social, political, and economic history.
Martin Crawford contends that the experiences of Ashe County's
men and women during the Civil War era were shaped as much by their
membership in the wider American society as by uniquely local
factors. Through a thoughtful blending of family correspondence,
local and state historical documents, and the broader news of the
divided country, Crawford re-creates the lives of Ashe County's
citizens. Among them are teenager Selina Howell, whose suicide
draws the reader into an intimate portrayal of kin and community
dynamics, and Tom Crumpler, the young lawyer-politician who made
the ultimate sacrifice for a cause he initially opposed.
These people and their stories bring to life the very human side
of the Civil War, carrying Crawford's narrative well beyond
ordinary social history.
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