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Alfred Emory Lee, an aspiring attorney recently graduated from Ohio
Wesleyan University, resolved to do his part to restore the Union.
Lee enlisted in Co. I of the 82nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry in
November 1861 and so begins this incredible journey through the
Civil War. Lee was commissioned as an officer and wrote home
frequently, leaving a fascinating record of the lengthy list of
battles in which his regiment participated, including McDowell,
Cross Keys, Cedar Mountain, Second Bull Run, Chancellorsville,
Gettysburg, (where Lee was severely wounded and captured on the
first day of the battle), Wauhatchie, Missionary Ridge, Resaca, New
Hope Church, CulpOs Farm, Peach Tree Creek, Atlanta, Savannah,
Averysboro, and Bentonville. Alfred E. LeeOs Civil War draws from
LeeOs copious wartime correspondence and his post war writings to
present a detailed and insightful portrait of the war as fought
both east and west.
This collection of Civil War letters from the pen of Captain John
M. Lemmon of the 72nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry fills a void in Civil
War scholarship, covering the entire service of one of most highly
regarded regiments in the Army of the Tennessee. Lemmon enlisted in
1861 and served with the 72nd Ohio throughout its term of service.
Captain Lemmon proved a keen observer of the war and the issues
over which it was fought; his record within the regiment was one of
an earnest yet modest officer. His letters document the war as it
was fought in western Tennessee and northern Mississippi, a theater
characterized equally by grand engagements and periods of tedium.
From Shiloh to Vicksburg, Brice's Crossroads to Nashville and
beyond, Sherman's Praetorian Guards tells the complete story of the
72nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry.
The letters contained in this volume from the pen of Private Harry
Comer of Co. A, 1st Ohio Volunteer Infantry provide a fascinating
glimpse into the life of a regular soldier in the Army of the
Cumberland. The letters begin shortly after his enlistment in the
spring of 1861 and follow the 1st Ohio throughout its three years'
Civil War service in the Eastern and Western theaters.
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