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Record 1 of 1

Title:
  • "Don't tell father I have been shot at" : the Civil War letters of Captain George N. Bliss, First Rhode Island Cavalry / George N. Bliss ; edited by William C. Emerson with Elizabeth C. Stevens.
Call No:
  • E528.6 2nd
  • .B56
Summary note:
  • "Captain George N. Bliss of the First Rhode Island Cavalry survived 27 actions during the Civil War. Injured and taken prisoner, he was consigned to Libby Prison in Richmond. Bliss detailed his experiences in letters to a friend and sent dispatches to a Providence newspaper. His writings are rich with details of the war and his own opinions"--
Subjects:
Author:
Physical Description:
  • ix, 298 pages :
  • illustrations, maps ;
  • 23 cm
Notes:
  • Includes bibliographical references and index.
  • "Chaos still reigns" (March-May 1862) -- "Don't tell father I have been shot at" (May-July 1862) -- "If we are not all generals neither are we all fools" (August-December 1862) -- "Our day ought to be near at hand" (January-May 1863) -- "Our regt has just been cleaned up" (June-August 1863) -- "[I] report today at New Haven Conn." (August 1863-April 1864) -- "I am ordered to rejoin my regiment" (May-August 1864) -- "Chasing the rebels ... is a very exciting amusement" (August-September 1864) -- "Is there a mason here, I am a mason" (September 1864-February 1865) -- "Out of the horrible pit, out of the miry clay" (Februrary-May 1865) -- Postwar life in East Providence, 1865-1928.
  • "Captain George N. Bliss of the First Rhode Island Cavalry survived 27 actions during the Civil War. Injured and taken prisoner, he was consigned to Libby Prison in Richmond. Bliss detailed his experiences in letters to a friend and sent dispatches to a Providence newspaper. His writings are rich with details of the war and his own opinions"--
Location:
  • Reading Room
  • MARC Values: