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OverviewA rare, firsthand Civil War chronicle told by two soldiers-one Union, one Confederate-writing in the same diary. When Private Jacob Elsesser of the 9th Pennsylvania Reserves carried a small Daily Remembrancer into the 1862 Peninsula Campaign, he had no idea his diary would one day be continued by the enemy. After months of recording the grinding uncertainty of war, Elsesser abandoned the book in the chaos following the battle of Beaver Dam Creek near Richmond. The diary did not remain abandoned for long - fast on the heels of the 9th Pennsylvania Reserves was the 14th Georgia Infantry, including Private George Washington Hall, who discovered the small book in the smoldering ruins of the deserted Union camp. Claiming it as his own, he vowed to turn ""a Yankee diary into a Rebel one""-and proceeded to fill its remaining pages for nearly three years. Hall's entries trace his spiritual transformation, the brutal realities of combat, the monotony of camp life, and his survival through illness and nine punishing months as a prisoner of war at Fort Delaware. Edited by Hall's great-granddaughter, history professor Mary Hall, this extraordinary manuscript includes George Washington Hall's additional journal writings from 1862-1863 and a unit history written by Elsesser and preserved by his descendants. Together, these sources create an unparalleled dual portrait of two ordinary men swept into an extraordinary conflict. Through their alternating voices, readers witness: - The ferocity of the Eastern Theater's most decisive battles - The emotional and physical toll of soldiering on both sides - The longing for home that united men divided by allegiance - The faith, sense of duty, and resilience that shaped their post-war lives Elsesser returned to Pennsylvania and served for decades as a respected justice of the peace. Hall, determined to fulfill his wartime promise to spend his life spreading God's word, became a Baptist preacher and missionary in north Florida. Their writings-preserved across generations-offer a rare, deeply human window into America's defining struggle. This is a singular ""blue-gray"" diary that bridges enemy lines, generations, and the enduring search for meaning in the midst of war. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Mary T Hall , Frank O'ReillyPublisher: Lot Imprint: Lot Dimensions: Width: 17.80cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 25.40cm Weight: 0.921kg ISBN: 9781934368817ISBN 10: 1934368814 Pages: 538 Publication Date: 01 February 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews""Mary Hall has set the standard for what published diaries of Civil War soldiers should be."" Bradley Gottfried, Ph.D. ""Mary Hall's vociferously researched work, from the National Archives to public and private collections, will quickly find a home in Civil War historiography."" Michael P. Gray, Ph.D. ""Mary Hall's book will intrigue and inform popular and scholarly readers alike . . . [She] provides the historical context and expert analysis in each chapter, and then she lets Hall's and Elsesser's words breathe life into their daily experiences in the Confederate and Union armies."" David Ulbrich, Ph.D. Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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