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Emmala Reed's journals from 1865 and 1866 present a detailed account of life in western South Carolina as war turned to reconstruction. Reed's post-war writings are particularly important given their rarity - many Civil War diarists stopped writing at war's end.
Includes hundreds of letters which paint a bleak and accurate portrait of the female experience among Floridians during the Great Depression. This work reveals the immediacy and intensity of their plight. The struggles of many of the women, however, reflect the Depression's extraordinarily devastating impact in Florida.
Augusta Jane Evans Wilson (1835-1909) was one of 19th-century America's most popular novelists and outspoken supporters of the Confederacy. She was also powerful letter-writer whose correspondents included prominent Confederate leaders. This volume gathers 112 of Wilson's epistles.
Aileen Kilgore enlisted in the Women's Army Corps (WAC) during World War II. From basic training in Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia, to her discharge in late 1945, she served as one of more than 150,000 American women who joined the WAC. This work includes her diaries and letters of that time.
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