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Captain George N. Bliss experienced almost every aspect of the
Civil War, except death. As an officer in the First Rhode Island
Cavalry, Bliss engaged in some twenty-seven actions. He
miraculously survived a skirmish in Waynesboro, Virginia, in
September 1864, when he single-handedly charged into the Black
Horse Cavalry. Badly injured and taken prisoner, Bliss was
consigned to the notorious Libby Prison in Richmond. Midway through
the war, Bliss also served for nine months at a Conscript Camp in
Connecticut, where he sat on several courts-martial. Bliss richly
detailed his war experiences in letters to his close friend, David
Gerald, who lived in Rhode Island. In absolute candor, Bliss
expressed his opinions on many topics and related a plethora of
firsthand details. A colorful writer, he also penned dispatches
from the field for a Providence newspaper. Meticulously transcribed
and annotated, this collection of letters is unusual because Bliss
did not mask the devastation and challenges of his intense wartime
experiences as he might have done in writing to a family member. In
conclusion, the editors describe how, following the war, Bliss
sought out the Confederates who almost killed him, forming personal
relationships that lasted for decades.
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