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The recently discovered journal of William Ray of the Seventh
Wisconsin is the most important primary source ever of soldier life
in one of the war's most famous fighting organizations. No other
collection of letters or diaries comes close to it.Two days before
his regiment left Wisconsin in 1861, the twenty-three-year-old
blacksmith began, as he described it, "to keep account" of his life
in what became the "Iron Brigade of the West." Ray's journal
encompasses all aspects of the enlisted man's life-the battles, the
hardships, the comradeship. And Ray saw most of the war from the
front rank. He was wounded at Second Bull Run, again at Gettysburg,
and yet a third time in the hell of the Wilderness. He penned
something in his journal almost every day-occasionally just a few
lines, at other times thousands of words. Ray's candid assessments
of officers and strategy, his vivid descriptions of marches and the
fighting, and his evocative tales of foraging and daily army life
fill a large gap in the historical record and give an unforgettable
soldier's-eye view of the Civil War.
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