- ISBN: 9780143106067 | 0143106066
- Cover: Paperback
- Copyright: 4/26/2011
Introduction | p. xi |
Suggestions for Further Reading | p. xxv |
A Note on the Text | p. xxvii |
Mary Chesnut's Diary | |
Charleston, S. C., November 8, 1860-December 27, 1860. | |
The news of Lincoln's election | |
Raising the Palmetto flag | |
The author's husband resigns as United States Senator | |
The Ordinance of Secession | |
Anderson takes possession of Fort Sumter | p. 1 |
Montgomery, Ala., February 19, 1861-March 11, 1861. | |
Making the Confederate Constitution | |
Robert Toombs | |
Anecdote of General Scott | |
Lincoln's trip through Baltimore | |
Howell Cobb and Benjamin H. Hill | |
Hoisting the Confederate flag | |
Mrs. Lincoln's economy in the White House | |
Hopes for peace | |
Despondent talk with anti-secession leaders | |
The South unprepared | |
Fort Sumter | p. 6 |
Charleston, S. C., March 26, 1861-April 15, 1861. | |
A soft-hearted slave-owner | |
Social gaiety in the midst of war talk | |
Beauregard a hero and a demigod | |
The first shot of the war | |
Anderson refuses to capitulate | |
The bombardment of Fort Sumter as seen from the housetops | |
War steamers arrive in Charleston harbor | |
ôBull Runö Russell | |
Demeanor of the negroes | p. 19 |
Camden, S. C., April 20, 1861-April 22, 1861. | |
After Sumter was taken | |
the jeunesse dorée | |
The story of Beaufort Watts | |
Maria Whitaker's twins | |
The inconsistencies of life | p. 37 |
Montgomery, Ala., April 27, 1861-May 20, 1861. | |
Baltimore in a blaze | |
Anderson's account of the surrender of Fort Sumter | |
A talk with Alexander H. Stephens | |
Reports from Washington | |
An unexpected reception | |
Southern leaders take hopeless views of the future | |
Planning war measures | |
Removal of the capital | p. 42 |
Charleston, S. C, May 25, 1861-June 24, 1861. | |
Waiting for a battle in Virginia | |
Ellsworth at Alexandria | |
Big Bethel | |
Moving forward to the battleground | |
Mr. Petigru against secession | |
Mr. Chesnut goes to the front | |
Russell's letters to the London Times | p. 50 |
Richmond, Va., June 27, 1861-July 4, 1861. | |
Arrival at the new capital | |
Criticism of Jefferson Davis | |
Soldiers everywhere | |
Mrs. Davis's drawing-room | |
A day at the Champ de Mars | |
The armies assembling for Bull Run | |
Col. L. Q. C. Lamar | p. 60 |
Fauquier White Sulphur Springs, Va., July 6, 1681-July 11, 1861. | |
Cars crowded with soldiers | |
A Yankee spy | |
Anecdotes of Lincoln | |
Gaiety in social life | |
Listening for guns | |
A horse for Beauregard | p. 68 |
Richmond, Va., July 13, 1861-September 2, 1861. | |
General Lee and Joe Johnston | |
The battle of Bull Run | |
Colonel Bartow's death | |
Rejoicings and funerals | |
Anecdotes of the battle | |
An interview | |
Treatment of prisoners | |
Toombs thrown from his horse | |
Criticism of the Administration | |
Paying the soldiers | |
Suspected women searched | |
Mason and Slidell | p. 72 |
Camden, S. C., September 9, 1861-September 19, 1861. | |
The author's sister, Kate Williams | |
Old Colonel Chesnut | |
Roanoke Island surrenders | |
Up Country and Low Country | |
Family silver to be taken for war expenses | |
Mary McDuffie Hampton | |
The Merrimac and the Monitor | p. 111 |
Columbia, S. C., February 20, 1862-July 21, 1862. | |
Dissensions among Southern leaders | |
Uncle Tom's Cabin | |
Conscription begins | |
Abuse of Jefferson Davis | |
The battle of Shiloh | |
Beauregard flanked at Nashville | |
Old Colonel Chesnut again | |
New Orleans lost | |
The battle of Williamsburg | |
Dinners, teas, and breakfasts | |
Wade Hampton at home wounded | |
Battle of the Chickahominy | |
Albert Sidney Johnston's death | |
Richmond in sore straits | |
A wedding and its tragic ending | |
Malvern Hill | |
Recognition of the Confederacy in Europe | p. 115 |
Flat Rock, N. C., August 1, 1862 August 8, 1862. | |
A mountain summer resort | |
George Cuthbert | |
A disappointed cavalier | |
Antietam and Chancellorsville | |
General Chesnut's work for the army | p. 183 |
Portland, Ala, July 8, 1863-July 30, 1863. | |
A journey from Columbia to Southern Alabama | |
The surrender of Vicksburg | |
A terrible night in a swamp on a riverside | |
A good pair of shoes | |
The author at her mother's home | |
Anecdotes of negroes | |
A Federal Cynic | p. 188 |
Richmond, Va., August 10, 1863-September 7, 1863. | |
General Hood in Richmond | |
A brigade marches through the town | |
Rags and tatters | |
Two love affairs and a wedding | |
The battle of Brandy Station | |
The Robert Barnwell tragedy | p. 199 |
Camden, S. C., September 10, 1863-November 5, 1863. | |
A bride's dressing-table | |
Home once more at Mulberry | |
Longstreet's army seen going West | |
Constance and Hetty Cary | |
At church during Stoneman's raid | |
Richmond narrowly escapes capture | |
A battle on the Chickahominy | |
A picnic at Mulberry | p. 209 |
Richmond, Va., November 28, 1863-April 11, 1864. | |
Mr. Davis visits Charleston | |
Adventures by rail | |
A winter of mad gaiety | |
Weddings, dinner-parties, and private theatricals | |
Battles around Chattanooga | |
Bragg in disfavor | |
General Hood and his love affairs | |
Some Kentucky generals | |
Burton Harrison and Miss Constance Cary | |
George Eliot | |
Thackeray's death | |
Mrs. R. E. Lee and her daughters | |
Richmond almost lost | |
Colonel Dahlgren's death | |
General Grant | |
Depreciated currency | |
Fourteen generals at church | p. 220 |
Camden, S. C., May 8, 1864-June 1, 1864. | |
A farewell to Richmond | |
ôLittle Joe'sö pathetic death and funeral | |
An old silk dress | |
The battle of the Wilderness | |
Spottsylvania Court House | |
At Mulberry once more | |
Old Colonel Chesnut's grief at his wife's death | p. 265 |
Columbia, S. C., July 6, 1864-January 17, 1865. | |
Gen. Joe Johnston superseded and the Alabama sunk | |
The author's new home | |
Sherman at Atlanta | |
The battle of Mobile Bay | |
At the hospital in Columbia | |
Wade Hampton's two sons shot | |
Hood crushed at Nashville | |
Farewell to Mulberry | |
Sherman's advance eastward | |
The end near | p. 273 |
Lincolnton, N. C., February 16, 1865,-March 15, 1865. | |
The flight from Columbia | |
A corps of generals without troops | |
Broken-hearted and an exile | |
Taken for millionaires | |
A walk with Gen | |
The burning of Columbia | |
Confederate money refused in the shops | |
Selling old clothes to obtain food | |
Gen. Joe Johnston and President Davis again | |
Braving it out | |
Mulberry saved by a faithful negro | |
Ordered to Chester, S. C. | p. 300 |
Chester, S. C., March 21, 1865-May 1, 1865. | |
How to live without money | |
Keeping house once more | |
Other refugees tell stories of their flight | |
The Hood melodrama over | |
The exodus from Richmond | |
Passengers in a box car | |
A visit from General Hood | |
The fall of Richmond | |
Lee's surrender | |
Yankees hovering around | |
In pursuit of President Davis | p. 320 |
Camden, S. C., May 2, 1865-August 2, 1865. | |
Once more at Bloomsbury | |
Surprising fidelity of negroes | |
Stories of escape | |
Federal soldiers who plundered old estates | |
Mulberry partly in ruins | |
Old Colonel Chesnut last of the grand seigniors | |
Two classes of sufferers | |
A wedding and a funeral | |
Blood not shed in vain | p. 335 |
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