"I wonder if the new year is to bring us new miseries and sufferings," seventeen-year-old Emma LeConte wrote in her diary on December 31, 1864. In fact, the worst was yet to come. Her later entries portray the city of C...

Buy Now From Amazon

"I wonder if the new year is to bring us new miseries and sufferings," seventeen-year-old Emma LeConte wrote in her diary on December 31, 1864. In fact, the worst was yet to come. Her later entries portray the city of Columbia, South Carolina, like much of the South, under the grip of Sherman's army. No reader of this diary is likely to forget the defiant, well-bred Emma, who describes a family's anxieties and brave attempts to get on with life while the Civil War rages around them.


Similar Products

On the Altar of Freedom: A Black Soldier's Civil War Letters from the FrontCelia, A SlaveShowdown in Virginia: The 1861 Convention and the Fate of the UnionOld Plantation Days: Southern Life Before the Civil WarThe American War: A History of the Civil War EraGive Me Liberty! An American HistoryHistory of My Own Times; or, the Life and Adventures of William Otter, Sen., Comprising a Series of Events, and Musical Incidents Altogether Original (Documents in American Social History)Confederates in the Attic: Dispatches from the Unfinished Civil War