The Civil War in North Carolina: The Mountains


Book Description

You will perceive by this I am at least in the Confederate service.... Since I have been here I have had a severe sickness but am glad to say at present I am well though I fear my sickness would have incapacitated me for active service.... In all probability our regiment will be stationed here permanently for the winter to guard the bridge across the Watauga River...--Private John H. Phillips, Company E, 62nd Regiment NC Troops, Camp Carter, Tennessee, October 13, 1862. As with volume 1 (The Piedmont), this work presents letters and diary entries (and a few other documents) that tell the experiences of soldiers and civilians from the mountain counties of North Carolina during the Civil War. The counties included are Alleghany, Ashe, Buncombe, Burke, Caldwell, Cherokee, Clay, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, McDowell, Macon, Madison, Mitchell, Polk, Rutherford, Surry, Transylvania, Watauga, Wilkes, and Yancey. The book is arranged chronologically, 1861 through 1865. Before each letter or diary entry, background information is provided about the writer.




The Civil War in North Carolina, Volume 2: The Mountains


Book Description

"You will perceive by this I am at least in the Confederate service.... Since I have been here I have had a severe sickness but am glad to say at present I am well though I fear my sickness would have incapacitated me for active service.... In all probability our regiment will be stationed here permanently for the winter to guard the bridge across the Watauga River..."--Private John H. Phillips, Company E, 62nd Regiment NC Troops, Camp Carter, Tennessee, October 13, 1862 This work presents letters and diary entries (and a few other documents) that tell the Civil War experiences of soldiers and civilians from the mountain counties of North Carolina: Alleghany, Ashe, Buncombe, Burke, Caldwell, Cherokee, Clay, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, McDowell, Macon, Madison, Mitchell, Polk, Rutherford, Surry, Transylvania, Watauga, Wilkes, and Yancey. The book is arranged chronologically, 1861 through 1865. Before each letter or diary entry, background information is provided about the writer.




The Civil War in North Carolina, Volume 2: The Mountains


Book Description

"You will perceive by this I am at least in the Confederate service.... Since I have been here I have had a severe sickness but am glad to say at present I am well though I fear my sickness would have incapacitated me for active service.... In all probability our regiment will be stationed here permanently for the winter to guard the bridge across the Watauga River..."--Private John H. Phillips, Company E, 62nd Regiment NC Troops, Camp Carter, Tennessee, October 13, 1862 This work presents letters and diary entries (and a few other documents) that tell the Civil War experiences of soldiers and civilians from the mountain counties of North Carolina: Alleghany, Ashe, Buncombe, Burke, Caldwell, Cherokee, Clay, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, McDowell, Macon, Madison, Mitchell, Polk, Rutherford, Surry, Transylvania, Watauga, Wilkes, and Yancey. The book is arranged chronologically, 1861 through 1865. Before each letter or diary entry, background information is provided about the writer.







The Heart of Confederate Appalachia


Book Description

In the mountains of western North Carolina, the Civil War was fought on different terms than those found throughout most of the South. Though relatively minor strategically, incursions by both Confederate and Union troops disrupted life and threatened the social stability of many communities. Even more disruptive were the internal divisions among western Carolinians themselves. Differing ideologies turned into opposing loyalties, and the resulting strife proved as traumatic as anything imposed by outside armies. As the mountains became hiding places for deserters, draft dodgers, fugitive slaves, and escaped prisoners of war, the conflict became a more localized and internalized guerrilla war, less rational and more brutal, mean-spirited, and personal--and ultimately more demoralizing and destructive. From the valleys of the French Broad and Catawba Rivers to the peaks of the Blue Ridge and Great Smoky Mountains, the people of western North Carolina responded to the war in dramatically different ways. Men and women, masters and slaves, planters and yeomen, soldiers and civilians, Confederates and Unionists, bushwhackers and home guardsmen, Democrats and Whigs--all their stories are told here.




Bushwhackers


Book Description

A history of the Civil War in the mountains of NC.




The Civil War in North Carolina


Book Description

Eleven battles and seventy-three skirmishes were fought in North Carolina during the Civil War. Although the number of men involved in many of these engagements was comparatively small, the campaigns and battles themselves were crucial in the grand strate







Blood and War at my Doorstep


Book Description

Continuing from Volume I, Volume II intersperses numerous soldiers’ letters with those from home. The issue of slavery from both the owners and individuals is brought forth. Did colored men really serve as Confederate soldiers? Did free black men? Union soldiers described southern women as defi ant, beautiful, crude, and pitiful. Read of women aboard blockade-runners, the fall of Wilmington, Sherman’s march, Stoneman’s western raiders, and the end of the war. Did any civilians die due to these raids? Did they idly sit by as their lives and homes were destroyed? The war did come to their doorstep during the second half of the confl ict. Both Volume I and II tell something from each of the state’s 87 counties. Perhaps you may fi nd information about your ancestor among these pages. Information from period newspapers, as well as mostly unpublished letters, tell their stories.




The Whole Country Has Gone Up!


Book Description

It was late 1863, but the mountains of western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee were isolated enough that the hardships caused by the war were delayed for some time. But the South lacked manpower at home, and a series of conscription acts started to take a toll on the remaining number of men at home, leaving the women and children alone to farm. Crops and livestock were taken from them by both sides. Nowhere felt the sting of hunger, fear, and rivalries more than in western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee. Few people knew the Civil War touched the mountains of North Carolina and Tennessee so deeply. The hope is to preserve the information for the Regiment's men and their families who still live here. Many great battles and skirmishes were occurring throughout the country. Still, here in the mountains, it was a few hundred men fighting each other here and there. To those soldiers, a bullet, a broken limb, or sickness, was just as real as if it were happening at Shiloh or Gettysburg instead of a dark cove in the mountains. Brother against brother is a term thrown about as freely as dishwater out the cabin door. Still, it is a fact covered in blood and truth in western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee mountains. Two regiments of the Federal Army were raised in western North Carolina and Tennessee: the 2nd North Carolina Mounted Infantry and the 3rd North Carolina Mounted Infantry. The records reveal at least 1,831 men in both regiments, all raised from October 1863 to August 1865, just 169 men short of two entire regiments. This book traces the battles the men of the 2nd North Carolina fought. There are rosters for both the 2nd and 3rd Regiments. Rosters for the 2nd come from the actual Regimental Books and contain a wealth of information about each man, including hair and eye color, height, complexation, where he stated he was from and individual remarks. For those that didn't manage to make it home, quite a few had Widow's Pensions applied for against their service. For those that did, they quite often filed for Service Pensions. The indexes for both type pension applications are included.