A Leaf of Voices


Book Description

During the American Civil the Wabash Intelligencer and the Wabash Plain Dealer frequently printed letters from Wabash County men serving in the Union army. The letter writers are a remarkable cast of characters: young and old, soldiers, doctors, ministers, officers, enlisted men, newspaper men, and a fifteen-year-old printers’ devil who enlisted as a drummer boy. These are not stories of generals or battle strategies; they are the stories of the ordinary soldiers and their everyday lives. They describe long tiring marches across state after state, crossing almost impossible terrain, facing shortages of rations and supplies, enduring extremes of weather where they froze one day and sweltered the next, and encountering guerrillas that harried the wagon trains. The correspondents wrote of walking over the bodies of fallen comrades and foes alike, of mules and their wagons sinking into muddy roads that became like quicksand, of shipwrecks, and of former slaves.




American Zouaves, 1859-1959


Book Description

 The elite French Zouaves, with their distinctive, colorful uniforms, set an influential example for volunteer soldiers during the Civil War and continued to inspire American military units for a century. Hundreds of militia companies adopted the flamboyant uniform to emulate the gallantry and martial tradition of the Zouaves. Drawing on fifty years of research, this volume provides a comprehensive state-by-state catalog of American Zouave units, richly illustrated with rare and previously unpublished photographs and drawings. The author dispels many misconceptions and errors that have persisted over the last 150 years.










Ridgway--Ridgeway Family History


Book Description

Richard Ridgway was born in England about 1650. He and his wife, Eliza- beth came to America in July, 1679 and settled in Bucks county, Pennsylvania.




The Ravenscrofts in America


Book Description

Samuel Ravenscroft (died before 1695) was probably born in England and immigrated to America ca. 1679. He married Dyonisia Savage, a daughter of Thomas Savage and Faith Hutchinson, in 1681. They had six children. By at least 1686, the family had settled in Virginia, and descendants spread over the east-central states and from there westward.