Full Description
July 1, 1863. The Confederate Army of Northern Virginia under General Robert E. Lee advanced across the Pennsylvania countryside toward the small town of Gettysburg--less than 90 miles from Washington, D.C.--on a collision course with the Union Army of the Potomac. In Lee's ranks were 5,000 South Carolina troops destined to play critical roles in the three days of fighting ahead. From generals to privates, the Palmetto State soldiers were hurled into the Civil War's most famous battle--hundreds were killed, wounded or later suffered as prisoners of war.
The life-and-death stories of these South Carolinians are here woven together here with official wartime reports, previously unpublished letters, newspaper accounts, diaries and the author's personal observations from walking the battlefield.
Contents
Table of Contents
Prologue
1. "Cover Themselves in Glory"
2. "Go In, South Carolina!"
3. "All the Yankees Born Can't Hurt Me"
4. "Tomorrow I Am Going to Lose My Life"
5. "Shrieking, Crushing, Tearing, Comes the Artillery Fire"
6. "The Ghastly Dead Upon the Fields of Blood"
7. "Carnival of Hell"
8. The Cavalry Fights and Monumental Decisions—July 3
9. "Death Freed Many from Their Sufferings"
10. "Locked in the Embrace of Morpheus"
11. Carolinians Left Behind: The Gettysburg Wounded
12. The Grieving Home Front
13. Sunset Years
14. Reunions: "One God, One Flag, One Country"
15. "Taps" for the Last Gettysburg Carolinians
Appendix: Odds and Ends
Chapter Notes
Bibliography
Index