Mary Boykin Chesnut was a prominent member of the upper-class society in the South during the Civil War. She was married to James Chesnut, the general of the South Carolina reserves. Mary Chesnut is the author of her Civil War diary which details the society of Southerners during the war. She had access to a great deal of information through her husband, and she relays this information through her diary. Mary Chesnut’s diary gives insight into pivotal events during the war and details her own opinions about the Civil War. Throughout her diary, Mary Chesnut details the upper-class society in the South, documents the divisions between Southerners during the war, and questions many of the beliefs of Southerners. Mary Chesnut was a prominent member of the upper-class society in the South. …show more content…
Chesnut then went on to say how the woman deserved this remark said to her. In the same excerpt from A Diary from Dixie, she said that Mrs. Davis was not fond of her husband becoming president of the war. It is believed that she felt this way because people were hard to please and especially hard to please during the Civil War. Chesnut’s relationship with Mrs. Davis gave insight into Mrs. Davis as a person, instead of a name connected to a man. It proves that Mrs. Davis was more than the wife of the Confederate president and that she was an important member of their upper-class society. Another notable member of society Mary Chesnut had a friendship with is the politician Clement Clay. She mentioned him, and the events occurring around him, in her diary. The most important time that Chesnut recorded Clay was when he heard the news that General Lee, the commander in charge of the Confederate army, had surrendered. “Just now, when Mr. Clay dashed upstairs, pale as a sheet, saying, ‘General Lee has capitulated,’ I saw it reflected in Mary Darby 's face
Once the war was over, Mary had her son, John L. Hayes. Time passed and her husband past away. She remarried to a war veteran by the name of John McCauley. There are different versions of what happened to him. Some say he died, or that he spent all her money and ran away, and others say that they went there own ways.
He was the Confederate president at the time, and being in their house, she managed to glean plenty of information from them. She made them think that she was illiterate, even though she could write, read, and speak perfectly. All of the information she got, she relayed back to Thomas McNiven. He was a baker in Richmond, and went to the Davis house everyday, even before Mary got there. No one ever thought that Mary was the one giving information to the Union army, and she managed to stay without blame until 1865.
Baker, a historian and professor of history at Goucher College and who was also featured in the Alexander Street American History video on The First Ladies: North and South, provides insight into the life of Mary Todd Lincoln during the Civil War. In her book Mary Todd Lincoln: A Biography, Jean Baker describes how Mary Lincoln showed her bravery and loyalty to her husband during the terrors of the Civil War. When Washington and the White House was under threat of an attack from the Confederates, she refused to flee for safety and leave her husband’s side. Furthermore, she would accompany Lincoln in reviewing the troops and regularly visit the Washington hospitals. During her visits, she would attempt to cheer and comfort the wounded soldiers as well as compose letters to the families of those who were unable to write for themselves.
In 1813, John died, Mary never remarried again. She worked as servant for the rest of her life. People described her as a short, heavy-set woman who had an abrupt manner. She loved children and was a tender, careful nurse to the sick. Mary McCauley did have a rough side, however.
Mary Walker was an advocate for women 's rights and the first woman awarded the Medal of Honor. At the outbreak of the Civil War Mary Walker volunteered in Washington to join the Union effort, and she worked as a nurse in a temporary hospital set up in the capital. In 1862 she was sent to Virginia to provide medical care to wounded soldiers. In 1863 she was briefly appointed as a surgeon in an Ohio Regiment. The stories that surround this time of her life are undocumented, but in 1864, she was a prisoner of war exchanged for a Confederate soldier.
On one of these “missions” in April 1864, Walker ran into a group of Confederate soldiers. She was imprisoned at Castle Thunder which was an old tobacco warehouse in Virginia. As a prisoner, Walker was given special privileges such as her own room and the ability to walk in the garden and the streets of Richmond. On August 12, 1864, a prisoner exchange occurred in which the Union Army traded prisoners from the Confederate Army to free Walker. After a successful trade, Mary spent the rest of the war continuing as assistant surgeon.
Name of Document: A Southern Woman Describes the Hardship of War - 1862 A. List four things the author said that you think are important: 1.The townspeople fears the fact that the southerns will lose the town. 2. Laura and other southerns didn’t expect to see the Union invade Tennessee so quickly. 3.All communication with the brother will be lost if the Union captures their town.
Imagine growing up on a cotton plantation to former slaves in Delta, becoming an “orphan at the age of 7, becoming a wife at the age of 14, a mother at 17 and a widow at 20?” This all describes the early life of Sarah Breedlove, better known as Madam C.J Walker. “She supported her family by washing laundry and she used her earning as a laundress to pay for her daughter’s education at Knoxville College” .In 1889, Madam C.J Walker moved to St. Louis in search of a better future.
She became a matriarch that was nothing but cruel. Just like her husband who loved to beat slaves and cause them pain in any way. He hated slaves in many ways. This slave holders name was mr.severe, his name is a perfect description of his personality.
Important Women and their Role in the Civil War The American Civil war lasted for four years from 1861-1865. The war occurred because of a controversy on differences of beliefs, with the primary reason being slavery and state’s rights. The war resulted in the killing of over 600,000 soldiers. The war had a lot of advances in American culture.
Bynum writes “woman have held their own very well on the “front line” against encroaching militia officers send to disloyal regions of the state to arrest deserters and evaders of the Confederate army.” Bynum emphasized the importance of women’s positions in evading the militia. They’re the visible partner who responsible for their children’s security. So women are the reliable sources that know the whereabouts of their family (husband and son).
Mary Anne Bell’s character shows how much war really changes someone. She was shipped over to Vietnam by her boyfriend, Mark Fossie, at just seventeen years of age. She was an innocent, young and pretty girl from Cleveland Heights. When she first arrived,
As she becomes engaged in the war Mary Anne evolves to embrace the savage beauty of the land and is lured by the mysteriousness of war. Mary Anne’s presence represents a semblance of normalcy and beauty, contrasting with the harsh realities and horror of combat. This beauty lies in her determination to follow her heart despite the dangers surrounding her. Her interest with Vietnamese culture and integration into their way of life reveals both the allure and the terrifying consequences of war. The beauty lies in her curiosity and willingness to embrace new experiences, even in the midst of a war zone.
The novel is written from a third person objective. This novel is written as a play, so I know that this is third person. Plays are narrated in third person because you do not see the play through one character 's viewpoint. Also the word I does not often appear in the play.
In this book report I will talk about the story “The diary of Anne Frank” the story is about a Jew girl called Anne who lived with her family in Germany in the second world war when a new German president called Adolf Hitler came with the idea that all Jew people were dangerous ; so her dad Otto Frank who worked in a bank came with the idea of moving to Amsterdam, Holland to be safer from the German army called the Nazis. Anne was a little girl who lived with her family: Otto Frank her dad, Margot her sister and Edith her mom. For her birthday in June 12 her father gave her a diary were she wrote everything that happened. Days later bad news came, a new German president called Adolf Hitler came with the idea that all Jew people is dangerous