My Diary North and South
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:15th Dec '11
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
A British journalist's eyewitness description of American society at the start of the Civil War, published in 1863.
First published in 1863, this two-volume work by the British journalist William Howard Russell (1820–1907) describes his experiences in America at the start of the Civil War. It records his impressions of the rival northern and southern states, their leaders and citizens, during a landmark period in America's history.William Howard Russell (1820–1907) was a nineteenth-century war correspondent for The Times. In 1861–2 he visited America to report on the secession crisis that had followed Abraham Lincoln's campaign to abolish slavery, in which eleven southern states had withdrawn from the United States to form their own confederacy, resulting in the American Civil War. First published in 1863, this two-volume work recounts Russell's experiences there. Based on his interviews with Lincoln, other pivotal figures, and ordinary citizens, together with his diaries and his letters to The Times, it documents his impressions of both the northern and the opposing southern states as he travelled through them. His book, thought to have been compiled in response to accusations that he was biased towards the South, provides a revealing eyewitness account of life during a landmark period in America's history. Volume 1 focuses mainly on southern society and slavery.
ISBN: 9781108041225
Dimensions: 216mm x 140mm x 25mm
Weight: 570g
448 pages