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Embattled Freedom

Journeys through the Civil War’s Slave Refugee Camps

Amy Murrell Taylor

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The University of North Carolina Press img Link Publisher

Sachbuch / 20. Jahrhundert (bis 1945)

Beschreibung

The Civil War was just days old when the first enslaved men, women, and children began fleeing their plantations to seek refuge inside the lines of the Union army as it moved deep into the heart of the Confederacy. In the years that followed, hundreds of thousands more followed in a mass exodus from slavery that would destroy the system once and for all. Drawing on an extraordinary survey of slave refugee camps throughout the country, Embattled Freedom reveals as never before the everyday experiences of these refugees from slavery as they made their way through the vast landscape of army-supervised camps that emerged during the war. Amy Murrell Taylor vividly reconstructs the human world of wartime emancipation, taking readers inside military-issued tents and makeshift towns, through commissary warehouses and active combat, and into the realities of individuals and families struggling to survive physically as well as spiritually. Narrating their journeys in and out of the confines of the camps, Taylor shows in often gripping detail how the most basic necessities of life were elemental to a former slave's quest for freedom and full citizenship.

The stories of individuals--storekeepers, a laundress, and a minister among them--anchor this ambitious and wide-ranging history and demonstrate with new clarity how contingent the slaves' pursuit of freedom was on the rhythms and culture of military life. Taylor brings new insight into the enormous risks taken by formerly enslaved people to find freedom in the midst of the nation's most destructive war.

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Schlagwörter

refugee, clothing in the Civil War, Military Emancipation, spiritual lives of freedpeople, transition from slavery to free labor, women and combat in the Civil War, family lives of freedpeople, gender and Emancipation, Civil War and family, American Civil War, ground-level view of Emancipation, destruction of slavery, race relations in the Civil War, refugees from slavery, religious life in the Civil War, food and hunger in the Civil War, Civil War refugee camps, education and schools in Civil War, Union Army laborers, environmental history of Emancipation, the long Emancipation, Contraband camps, land reform during Reconstruction, Civil War material culture, Emancipation