Between the epic battles of 1862 and the grueling and violent
military campaigns that would follow, the year 1863 was oddly quiet
for the Confederate state of Virginia. Only one major battle was
fought on its soil, at Chancellorsville, and the conflict was one
of the Army of Northern Virginia's greatest victories. Yet the
pressures of the Civil War turned the daily lives of Virginians --
young and old, men and women, civilians and soldiers -- into
battles of their own. Despite minimal combat, 1863 was an eventful
year in Virginia history -- Stonewall Jackson died within its
borders and Abraham Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address. In
Virginia at War, 1863, editors William C. Davis and James I.
Robertson Jr. present these and other key events, as well as a
discussion of the year's military land operations to reveal the
political, social, and cultural ramifications of the ongoing
national conflict. By this time, the war had profoundly transformed
nearly every aspect of Virginia life and culture, from education to
religion to commerce. Mounting casualties and depleted resources
made the citizens of the Commonwealth feel the deprivations of war
more deeply than ever. Virginia at War, 1863 surveys these often
overlooked elements of the conflict. Contributors focus on the
war's impact on Virginia's children and its newly freed slaves.
They shed light on the origins of the Hatfield-McCoy feud, explore
the popularity of scrapbooking as a form of personal recordkeeping,
and consider the changing role of religion during wartime and the
uncertain faith of Virginia's Christians. The book concludes with
the 1863 entries of the Diary of a Southern Refugee by Richmond's
Judith Brockenbrough McGuire. At the midpoint of the Civil War, the
hostility of this great American struggle had become an ingrained
part of Virginia life. Virginia at War, 1863 is the third volume of
a five-book series that reexamines the Commonwealth's history as an
integral part of the Confederacy. The series looks beyond military
campaigns and tactics to consider how the war forever changed the
people, culture, and society of Virginia.
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