Read A Year in the South Online
Authors: Stephen V. Ash
Agnew, Enoch: background of; as physician; and Union troops; wartime plantation activities of; and slaves; and freed blacks; postwar plantation activities of; travels to Memphis; illness of; mentioned
Agnew, Letitia
Agnew, Nannie: marries; pregnancy and delivery of; visits in neighborhood; tends baby; visits family; death of; mentioned
Agnew, Samuel: early life of; character and habits of; marriage, fatherhood, and domestic life of; Confederate patriotism of; comments on war news; and Union troops; wartime ministry of; concerned about food supply; wartime plantation activities of; and slaves; raises poppies; hosts wounded soldier; observes collapse of Confederacy; comments on emancipation and freed blacks; postwar plantation activities of; raises tobacco; comments on political reconstruction; postwar ministry of; comments on sickness; loses horse; witnesses exhumation of corpse; comments on black uprising scare; notes poor-white restlessness; observes departure of blacks; later life of.
See also
Tippah County, Mississippi
Alabama state salt works
Anderson, Alfred
Black Code
Blacks: behavior of, as slaves; emancipation of; and Union army during war; in Lexington and Rockbridge County; John Robertson's opinion of; in Knoxville; as Union soldiers; on Agnew plantation; enlisted by Confederate army; and Union army after war; postwar attempts of whites to control; in Memphis; postwar goals and activities of; postwar white hostility toward; and Freedmen's Bureau; and Northern missionaries; in Ohio; and uprising scare.
See also
Slavery
Blue Springs Church
Boss.
See
McGehee, Edmund
Brice's Crossroads, battle of
Brooks, N. S.
Brown, John
Brownlow, William G.
Canada
Chattanooga, Tennessee
Chicago, Illinois
Cincinnati, Ohio
Collier, Thomas
Como, Mississippi.
See
Panola County, Mississippi
Confederate army: in northern Mississippi; and slaves; in east Tennessee; impressment and destruction by; defends Shenandoah Valley; conscription by; desertion from; condition of; defeat and surrender of; soldiers of, return home
Confederate States of America: disintegration and collapse of; impressment and taxation by; morale in; enlists slaves
Dailey, Mrs.
Davis, Jefferson
Deaver, Thomas
Early, Jubal
East Tennessee: slavery and emancipation in; wartime unionist-secessionist conflict in; Confederate army in; Union army occupies; privation, danger, and disruption in; Confederate river raid in; postwar unionist-secessionist conflict in.
See also
Chattanooga, Tennessee; Knoxville, Tennessee; Roane County, Tennessee
Emancipation.
See
Blacks, emancipation of
Farrington, Mary
Federal army.
See
Union army
Forrest, Nathan Bedford
Fredonia Methodist Church
Freedmen.
See
Blacks
Freedmen's Bureau: in Memphis; in Mississippi; in Lexington
Garnet, Henry Highland
George (slave)
Grace Episcopal Church
Grant, Ulysses S.: and Cornelia McDonald; during war; after war; mentioned
Hamilton, Ohio
Hughes, Louis: early life of; and Edmund McGehee (Boss); habits, character, and appearance of; and Sarah McGehee (Madam); skills and duties of; failed escape attempts of; hates slavery and desires freedom; marriage and children of; in Memphis; in Panola County; at salt works; as nurse; and religion; and John McGehee (Master Jack); escapes from slavery; rescues family from slavery; in Cincinnati; in Hamilton; in Canada; later life of; reunites with brother
Hughes, Matilda: early life of; marriage of; skills and duties of; escape attempts of; children of; character of; treatment of, by owners; reunites with mother; later life of; mentioned
Humphreys, Benjamin G.
Hunter, David
Jackson, Thomas J. (Stonewall)
Johnson, Andrew
Kitty (slave)
Knoxville, Tennessee
Lee, Robert E.: as wartime commander; retreat and surrender of; after war; mentioned
Letcher, John
Lexington and Rockbridge County, Virginia: Cornelia McDonald moves to; occupied by Union army in 1864; description of; wartime conditions in; slavery and emancipation in; deserters in; postwar conditions in; occupied by Union army after war; Northern merchants and teachers in; postwar race relations in; Episcopal church controversy in; Freedmen's Bureau in; Robert E. Lee in
Lincoln, Abraham
McDonald, Allan: described; helps mother; takes work; sees Robert E. Lee; leaves Lexington; later life of
McDonald, Angus: early life of; captured by Union army; illness and death of; wartime service of; mentioned
McDonald, Cornelia: early life of; and Angus McDonald; character and habits of; children of; refugees to Lexington; and religion; Winchester home of; emotional difficulties of; financial difficulties of; hires cook; Lexington house of; friends and benefactors of; clothes family; takes work; feeds family; Confederate patriotism of; attitude of, toward Northerners; injures foot; and Robert E. Lee; later life of.
See also
Lexington and Rockbridge County, Virginia
McDonald, Donald
McDonald, Edward
McDonald, Harry: character and strength of; takes work; helps mother; joins army; aids wounded half brother; captured by Union troops; and Freedmen's Bureau agent; later life of; mentioned
McDonald, Hunter
McDonald, Kenneth
McDonald, Nelly
McDonald, Roy
McElwee, Anne and William
McGehee, Edmund (Boss): buys Louis Hughes; cruelty of; mansion of; paternalism of; death of; mentioned
McGehee, John (Master Jack): plantation of; and Louis Hughes; character and habits of; resists emancipation; mentioned
McGehee, Sarah (Madam): cruelty of; in 1865; mentioned
McGehee, William
Madam.
See
McGehee, Sarah
Master Jack.
See
McGehee, John
Memphis, Tennessee: Louis Hughes in; conditions in; Enoch Agnew in; mentioned
Middle Tennessee
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Missionaries, Northern
Mississippi: postwar military occupation of; political reconstruction of; black uprising scare in; Black Code of.
See also
Panola County, Mississippi; Tippah County, Mississippi
Mullens, Newton
Nashville, Tennessee
Northern army.
See
Union army
Northerners: Cornelia McDonald's opinion of; John Robertson's opinion of; as missionaries; in Lexington.
See also
Cincinnati, Ohio; Freedmen's Bureau; Hamilton, Ohio; Reconstruction, political: federal policy on; Union army
Opium
Panola County, Mississippi: slavery in; description of; conditions in
Paxton, Madge
Payne, Reverend
Pendleton, Alexander (Sandie)
Pendleton, Ann
Pendleton, William: during war; after war
Powell, Mrs. John
Race relations.
See
Blacks; Slavery
Reconstruction, political: in Tennessee; federal policy on; in Mississippi
Refugees
Roane County, Tennessee: conditions in; description of; Confederate river raid in
Robertson, Allen
Robertson, James
Robertson, John: early life of; goals and character of; in Greene County; wartime religious activities of; Confederate patriotism of; as Confederate soldier and home guardsman; does farm work; education of; skills of; attempted murder of; in Knoxville and Knox County; and Southern unionists during war; as schoolteacher; travels to and from Roane County; religious conversion of; comments on Northerners; and blacks; and Margaret Tennessee Robertson (Tennie); postwar religious activities of; and Southern unionists after war; decides to flee east Tennessee; travels to Iowa; in Iowa; later life of.
See also
East Tennessee; Roane County, Tennessee
Robertson, Margaret Tennessee (Tennie)
Rockbridge County, Virginia.
See
Lexington and Rockbridge County, Virginia
Salt.
See also
Alabama state salt works
Sharkey, William L.
Sherman, William T.
Slavery: blacks' behavior under; and Confederate army; efforts of whites to maintain; in Panola County; at salt works; in east Tennessee; and Union army; in Lexington and Rockbridge County; on Agnew plantation; collapse of.
See also
Blacks
Springfield, Iowa
Susan (cook)
Tennessee, political reconstruction of.
See also
Brownlow, William G.; Chattanooga, Tennessee; East Tennessee; Knoxville, Tennessee; Memphis, Tennessee; Middle Tennessee; Nashville, Tennessee; Roane County, Tennessee
Tennie.
See
Robertson, Margaret Tennessee
Tillson, Davis
Tippah County, Mississippi: disruption and crime in; privation in; Union army raids in; description of; Confederate troops in; local government in; sickness in; black uprising scare in; poor-white restlessness in
Tubbs, C. Jerome
Union army: occupies west and middle Tennessee; destruction and impressment by; occupies Lexington; raids Shenandoah Valley; occupies east Tennessee; raids northern Mississippi; and slaves; moves against Mobile; hard-war policy of; black soldiers of; occupies Mississippi after war; soldiers of, return home; and freed blacks; postwar Southern hostility toward
Unionists, Southern: harassed by secessionists; vilify and harass secessionists during war; in Knoxville; organize relief association; vilify and harass secessionists after war.
See also
Brownlow, William G.
United States army.
See
Union army
Virginia.
See
Lexington and Rockbridge County, Virginia
Virginia Military Institute
Walker, Thomas A.
Washington College
Whillock, George
Woolsey, Benjamin
Young, James L.
Stephen V. Ash
is a professor emeritus of history at the University of Tennessee. He is the author of
Firebrand of Liberty,
A Year in the South,
and other books on the Civil War era. He lives in Knoxville, Tennessee. You can sign up for email updates
here
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CONTENTS