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Collection Connections


 First-Person Narratives of the American South, 1860-1920

U.S. HistoryCritical ThinkingArts & Humanities

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Go directly to the collection, First-Person Narratives of the American South, 1860-1920, in American Memory, or view a Summary of Resources related to the collection.

The materials in First-Person Narratives of the American South, 1860-1920, lend themselves well to a study of American rhetoric and prose. Indeed, the years covered by the collection are from a unique period in American letters -- just before radio, television, and other modern means of communication changed the literary landscape. Like the rest of the country, southerners wrote letters, kept diaries, delivered speeches, and composed memoirs, all of which abound in the collection. Though each form offers different advantages to a researcher, all forms were part of a tradition of personal, reflective writing at the height of its popularity.

Introductions and Prefaces: Establishing the Truth

Nineteenth and early twentieth-century reading audiences were as attracted to true or real-life stories as are today's audiences. Many of the collection's narratives include an introduction or preface that defend the work's veracity. Because so many of the collection's documents contain an introduction or preface, readers can simply browse under Subject Index headings of their choice to find interesting examples. These documents-within-documents establish a contemporary perspective on the work that helps to place the document more clearly in the context of its reading audience.

In most cases, a well-respected member of the author's community wrote the preface. Of course, in some cases, the author, posing as a third party, may have written the introduction to his or her own work. For instance, the author of the introduction to Belle Boyd in Camp and Prison, identified only as a "Friend of the South," testifies to his limited role in the publication of the infamous Confederate spy's life story:

I took the manuscript, promising to look it over, and return it with an estimate of its merits. I have done so; and hence the publication of "Belle Boyd, in Camp and Prison." The work is entirely her own, with the exception of a few suggestions in the shape of footnotes - the simple, unambitious narrative of an enthusiastic and intrepid schoolgirl, who had not yet seen her seventeenth summer when the cloud of war darkened her land, changing all the music of her young life, her peaceful "home, sweet home," into the bugle blasts of battle, into scenes of death and most tumultuous sorrow.

Pages 2-3, Belle Boyd in Camp and Prison

  Black text on beige, reading "Belle Boyd, in Camp and Prison.  With and Introduction by a Friend of the South."
Cover of Belle Boyd in Camp and Prison.
  • Why do you think that the preface assures that "the work is entirely her (the author's) own"?
  • What is the preface author's tone in this passage? How might it influence a reader's expectations and reactions to the narrative?
  • What methods might a researcher use to find out if Belle Boyd wrote her own introduction?
  • What segment of Belle's reading audience would have been interested in her book's introductory statement? Why?
  • How are introductions different today?
  • How do modern writers, performers, and artists seek to establish authenticity?
Main in hat sitting in leather chair with boy standing behind.
Brigadier-General David E. Johnston and Aid-de-Camp D.E.J. Wilson.

Illustration from The Story of a Confederate Boy in the Civil War.
 

A great number of the documents in the collection are memoirs and autobiographies that were published decades after the events that they describe. The introductions to these works generally include statements that argue the work's value, describe its composition, and extol the author's virtues.

Notable among these documents are the Memoirs of W. W. Holden, the introduction to which informs the reader that the narrative was dictated following an attack of paralysis which soon after killed the author. David Johnston's The Story of a Confederate Boy in the Civil War is introduced by a Methodist minister who informs the reader that, although now friendly neighbors, the two men served on opposite sides during the war. Bethany Veney's narrative, introduced by the Rev. Bishop Mallalieu, offers the ex-slave's story as an example of the evils that slavery necessarily entails.

  • How might the knowledge that a memoir was dictated after an attack of paralysis and just before the author's death affect one's reading of it?
  • What is the effect of prefacing a story about the Civil War with a message of reconciliation? Why might the writer or publisher have decided to do this?
  • What might be the differences between an introduction to a living author's work and an introduction to a deceased author's work?
  • Why might the author of an introduction want to tell the reading audience about him- or herself?
  • What types of documents would include didactic introductions?
  • What types of documents would be more likely not to have an introduction or a preface?

Letters

The collection contains several epistolary documents that offer a unique window into the characters and lives of their authors and into the historical circumstances surrounding their composition. Like diaries and journals, letters provide immediate access -- ostensibly free from the interference of time's passage or concerns of composition -- to the writer's thoughts and feelings. Unlike those other mediums, however, letters convey immediacy, suggest spontaneity, and invoke intimacy.

Because a letter necessarily involves a dialogue between a writer and a silent "other," researchers are able to draw conclusions about a writer's character and personality by considering how he or she portrayed him- or herself to another individual.

Soldier and woman holding hands at the gate of a garden in front of a house with collumned porch.
Do you remember, my Sally, how many times
we said good-bye that evening?

Illustration from The Heart of a Soldier.
 

A search on letters yields eight documents including the wartime correspondence of General George Pickett to his betrothed, Sally Corbell. Published under the title The Heart of A Soldier, Pickett's letters impart firsthand experiences in many of the most famous battles of the war. The reports are particularly striking for their profusion of personal sentiment. For instance, in the June of 1862, Pickett wrote the following lines:

Thus, my darling, was ended the Battle of Seven Pines. No shot was fired afterward. How I wish I could say it ended all battles and that the last shot that will ever be heard was fired on June first, 1862. What a change love does make! How tender all things become to a heart touched by love - how beautiful the beautiful is and how abhorrent is evil! See, my darling, see what power you have - guard it well.

Page 48, The Heart of A Soldier

  • How might Pickett's letters be different if they had been written to a fellow soldier? What aspects of his experience of the war might Pickett have written about only to his fiance?
  • What do we learn about Pickett from his letters that we might not otherwise have known?
  • How might our understanding of Pickett be different if we learned about him only from military history books?
  • Do you think that it is important to know about a historical figure's love life? Why or why not?

Memoirs and Autobiographies

The collection abounds with memoirs and autobiographies -- documents written with the purpose of reflecting on the author's own life and times. In many instances, the texts were composed without expectation of compensation, monetary or otherwise. Indeed, the recalling of a lifetime seems to be the overriding purpose behind their composition.

A search on memoirs yields eight documents; a search on autobiography yields twenty-two. Some of these texts have a prosy, didactic, storytelling tone such as Bill Arp from the Uncivil War to Date and Edward J. Thomas's Memoirs of a Southerner. Thomas recalls the days of his affluent youth in the antebellum South through a series of artfully rendered vignettes concerning runaway slaves, scenes of nature, and educational endeavors. With a wealth of detail and clear description, Thomas's memoirs stand comparison to the prose styles of Charles Dickens or Mark Twain. For instance, Thomas observes that in contrast to the worries and problems that bothered his parents:

  Man with white hair and beard in rocking chair on porch with book.
Bill Arp.

Illustration from Bill Arp from the Uncivil War to Date.

My brother and I had a nice time catching birds in traps we made with sticks; the bulfinch, the red or cardinal bird, the speckle-breasted thrush - and, killing them, made a fire in the woods, broiled the poor little devils, and had a quick lunch; and as a boy I thought them fine until one day we caught a crow, but his meat was more than our appetites would permit. Sometimes we sat on the front porch in summer with bare feet and legs, to see which could kill the most mosquitoes.

Page 17, Memoirs of a Southerner

  • What might Thomas have wanted to convey about himself with this passage?
  • Does this passage imply wealth or poverty? Interest or apathy?
  • What types of readers would find memoirs valuable or interesting?
  • Who might have been interested in publishing memoirs or autobiographies in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries?

Other memoirs and autobiographies from the collection sacrifice style for information -- names, dates and places -- that provide a researcher with a wealth of historical reference points. Perhaps not surprisingly, many memoirs and autobiographies written by Confederate officers are of this type. Browsing under the Subject Index heading, Confederate States - Officers, provides access to the wartime autobiography of Lt. General Jubal Anderson Early, simply entitled Lieutenant General Jubal Anderson Early, C.S.A., and The Memoirs of Col. John S. Mosby.

Most of the autobiographies and memoirs in the collection alternate or blend art with information. These documents, mostly written near the end of the authors' lifetime, have the careful tone of a humble offering to future ages. For instance, in the Autobiography of Col. Richard Malcom Johnston, the ex-Confederate writes:

Profile of man with white hair, moustache, and glasses, seated, holding book.
Col. Richard Malcolm Johnston.

Illustration from Autobiography of Col. Richard Malcom Johnston.
  And then I bethought me to become an author. I had already written a few short stories intended to illustrate characters and scenes among the simple rural folk of my native region as they were during the period of my childhood, before the time of railroads. To this period I have always recurred, and I do so now, with much fondness, and indeed with high admiration for the good sense, the simplicity, the uprightness, the loyalty to every known duty that characterized the rural people of middle Georgia.

Page 71, Autobiography of Col. Richard Malcom Johnston

  • What role does Johnston assign to railroads?
  • What explanation does Johnston give for writing short stories?
  • What types of documents might compliment research done on a particular autobiography or memoir?
  • How have biographies changed since the nineteenth century?

Diaries

A search on diaries yields sixteen documents. Diaries are among the most personal, as well as the most suspect, documents in the collection -- personal, because they were ostensibly never intended for public perusal, suspect because publication gives rise to questions of authenticity. For instance, in the introduction to Sarah Dawson Morgan's A Confederate Girl's Diary, her son writes that long after the close of the war, a northern gentleman requested a copy of his mother's diary, but, upon receiving it, questioned the document's authenticity:   Frontal portrait of a oung woman with curly dark hair in hat.
Sarah Dawson Morgan.

Illustration from A Confederate Girl's Diary.

Ruled paper with
Facsimile of a Page
from A Confederate Girl's Diary.
 
Her transcription finished, she sent it to Philadelphia. It was in due course returned, with cold regrets that the temptation to rearrange it had not been resisted. No Southerner at that time could possibly have had opinions so just or foresight so clear as those here attributed to a young girl . . . Keenly wounded and profoundly discouraged, my mother returned the diaries to their linen envelope, and never saw them again.

Page xi, A Confederate Girl's Diary

  • Why does the northerner conclude that the manuscript is not authentic?
  • Why might Dawson have wanted to make her private documents public?
  • What is Dawson's daughter trying to prove about her mother's diary in this passage?
  • Why would someone want to publish Dawson's diary?

Questions of authenticity aside, however, the diaries in the collection are among the most valuable resources available to a historian interested in more than the surface details of an individual's life. Frances Hewitt Fearn's Diary of a Refugee, which the author later adapted for the stage, tells of her experiences in wartime Lousiana. The Diary of Bartlett Yancey Malone concisely relates the author's daily observations concerning items such as the weather, the condition of his fellow North Carolina volunteers, camp rumors overheard, and spiritual lessons learned.

Emma LeConte's journal, listed in the collection as Diary, 1864-1865, contains the then seventeen-year old girl's observations on the last year of the Confederacy. LeConte's descriptions of the quotidian details of her life reflect the sometimes mundane, sometimes overwhelming, concerns of her youth. For instance, at the height of the Confederacy's crises, she writes:

  Black text on beige, reading "The James Sprunt Historical Publications . . . The Diary of Bartlett Yancey Malone. . . ."
Cover of The Diary of Bartlett Yancey Malone.

A horrid day. Rain, rain, rain. I have been sitting over the fire knitting and reading. Mother sitting opposite with her knitting asked me such endless questions in regard to her stocking that I put down my book impatiently and am trying to write. I feel awfully cross and out of sorts, and can't at all understand how so simple an affair as knitting a stocking should appear an insoluble problem.

Page 5, Diary, 1864-1865

  • What is LeConte's tone in this passage? What does it reveal about the author?
  • How does LeConte characterize her mother?
  • How do words like "horrid," "endless," "cross," and "affair" affect the style of the passage?
  • Is journal keeping still popular today?

Public Oration

Several of the documents in the collection are transcriptions of speeches. As an important traditional vehicle for conveying ideas, public oratory, often accompanied by dramatic bombast and colorful exaggeration, was popular throughout the country during the period. Many of the speeches in the collection were delivered before clubs ranging in character from abolitionist societies to reunited Confederate military companies.

A search on address yields Howard Melancthon Hamill's The Old South: A Monograph, which is more or less a transcription of a prepared lecture given before the students of Georgia's Emory College. It also yields Rebecca Latimer Felton's speech to the Georgia Legislature's women's clubs, which is excerpted in her autobiography, Country Life in Georgia in the Days of My Youth.

  Two gentleman and a lady on stage, with cheering crowd in the background.
"Two Thousand Men Went Mad."

Illustration from The Leopard's Spots.
  • Why might a group be interested in a written copy of a speech?
  • What rhetorical devices would help to adapt a speech to print?
  • How is the reading of a speech affected by its presentation within an autobiography of its author?
Frontal portrait of two yound men in suits and ites, standing next to eachother.
Hezekiah J. Crumpton and Washington B. Crumption.

Illustration from The Adventures of Two Alabama Boys.
  In almost every instance, lectures grew from life stories that were felt to hold merit for others. In the second volume of The Adventures of Two Alabama Boys, accessible through a search on lectures, Washington, the younger Crumpton boy, relates the series of events that led him to turn his story into a public lecture for the Baptist Young People's Union of Sterling, Kentucky. Delivered under the title "The Original Tramp, or How a Boy Got Through the Lines to the Confederacy," Crumpton opened his speech:

I once heard a blind man sing - I remember one line of the chorus: "A BOY'S BEST FRIEND IS HIS MOTHER." How true is that and the poor boy doesn't realize it until the mother is taken from him. After she is gone out of the home, the world is never again what it was to him. My home was broken up by the death of my mother when I was only thirteen. I became a wanderer.

Page 75, The Adventures of Two Alabama Boys

  • Why might Crumpton have begun his speech with a quotation?
  • How is this passage from Crumpton's speech suited to his audience?
  • What elements of delivery cannot be conveyed on the printed page?
  • What are some famous speeches? What makes them memorable?
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Last updated 09/26/2002