FOR COUNTRY CAUSE & LEADER CL |  | Author: Stephen W. Sears Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Category: Book
List Price: $25.00 Buy New: $1.88 You Save: $23.12 (92%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 1107313
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 480 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.6 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.4
ISBN: 0395663601 Dewey Decimal Number: 973.898 EAN: 9780395663608 ASIN: 0395663601
Publication Date: July 21, 1993 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: All orders ship from Florida daily. Emails answered quickly, we value your satisfaction and our feedback! Thanks ZA82
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A Real Civil War Soldier's Life July 8, 2004 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
This is a truly fascinating first hand account of what the Civil War was actually like for the common solider, something you don't fully appreciate from academic accounts of battles and campaigns. It is accounts about soldier's day to day life as they are fleshed out in Haydon's journal that are really illuminating.
For many Civil War soldiers, as for all soldiers, day to day life is tedium and it is the small every day things that make up their daily life. Haydon almost daily notes what the weather is because it was of such great consequence to someone who slept and lived outdoors for the most part. He dwells more on the weather when it is rainy than when it is nice. He also frequently talks about the state of his belly. He often tells us what he ate that day and whether or not the rations are any good. Much of the time he spends complaining about the lack of quality and quantity of the food. He also, at one point, goes into great detail about the massive quantities of coffee he and the other soldiers drink and comments how quickly one gets used to strong, black coffee made with muddy water. He also admonishes the extreme lack of discipline in the men, the many fights, and the massive consumption of alcohol (he drinks in moderation). He laments that he can see many good men as "worthless drunkards" in five years at the rate they are going. He also comments on the stealing, giving some darkly humorous accounts of how the soldiers steal everything not nailed down or guarded. He humorously states that "If the men pursue the enemy as vigorously as they do the whores they will make very efficient soldiers." Sickness of the men is also prevalent, especially diarrhea and fatigue. All this is the life of one solider in the Civil War.
Hayden is also somewhat introspective. He talks of having given up a law career to join the Michigan 2nd and take up arms against the rebels, seeing it as his duty. After being in the rearguard at the first Battle of Bull Run he notes more frequently how he does not expect to live out the war and that his chances of coming out of it alive are less than fifty-fifty. He does not seem terribly troubled by the prospect and notes that he has taken to a soldiers life quite well (unlike some others). He seems somewhat resigned to his fate. Coming into Baltimore where sentiment there was positive sentiment for the rebels, tension was high and he notes that he "rammed his first load ever intended for a human mark" and leaves it at that. After his first "kill" he said he was surprised by how "cool I took it." He even talks about gazing at the stars and the enjoyment he gets out of it on a clear night. He is also fairly good at describing the land he's in. He noted that he was somewhat surprised at how he was able to adapt to living as a soldier with little sleep, sleeping outdoors, in rain, in leaky tents, in the cold and having gotten used to poor food.
Although there is poignant account about feeling otherworldly in the heat of battle and wondering about his own bravery once the shooting starts, he doesn't seem to be afraid of bullets or battle and says his heart pounded more during a Dress Parade in front of the general than when bullets go whizzing by. He also has a good sense of humor that pops up frequently and is surprising given his situation. He must have been fairly well respected because he became a 2nd Lt. in fairly short order.
A very interesting account of a solider's life.
Real! September 28, 2003 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
This is as good a set of personal reflections as you will ever read. From his induction, training and initial taste of Army life Charles B. Haydon puts you on guard duty and allows you to experience boredom, nasty weather, and interminable marches. Along the way you will fight at Bull Run, participate in the Penninsula campaign, particularly the fight at Williamsburg, the fight at Fredericksburg and to top it off, the sieges of Vicksburg and Knoxville. Haydon was a gifted writer who rises from the ranks to become a lieutenant colonel. Oddly, he dies in Cincinnati of pneumonia. His is a most unusual journal. He was very sincere about being a good soldier and performed flawlessly under intense, continuous combat. These are the personal reminiscences of a very good man, selflessly devoted to his men, his comrades and to his country. You will not be disappointed.
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