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Informationen zum Autor Edward T. Cotham, Jr., is an independent scholar based in Houston, Texas. He is a member and past president of the Houston Civil War Roundtable, and also leads tours of Civil War battlegrounds in Texas and lectures to historical and civic groups. Klappentext On September 28, 1863, the Galveston Tri-Weekly News caught its readers' attention with an item headlined "A Yankee Note-Book." It was the first installment of a diary confiscated from U.S. Marine Henry O. Gusley, who had been captured at the Battle of Sabine Pass. Gusley's diary proved so popular with readers that they clamored for more, causing the newspaper to run each excerpt twice until the whole diary was published. For many in Gusley's Confederate readership, his diary provided a rare glimpse into the opinions and feelings of an ordinary Yankee-an enemy whom, they quickly discovered, it would be easy to regard as a friend.This book contains the complete text of Henry Gusley's Civil War diary, expertly annotated and introduced by Edward Cotham. One of the few journals that have survived from U.S. Marines who served along the Gulf Coast, it records some of the most important naval campaigns of the Civil War, including the spectacular Union success at New Orleans and the embarrassing defeats at Galveston and Sabine Pass. It also offers an unmatched portrait of daily life aboard ship. Accompanying the diary entries are previously unpublished drawings by Daniel Nestell, a doctor who served in the same flotilla and eventually on the same ship as Gusley, which depict many of the locales and events that Gusley describes.Together, Gusley's diary and Nestell's drawings are like picture postcards from the Civil War-vivid, literary, often moving dispatches from one of "Uncle Sam's nephews in the Gulf." Inhaltsverzeichnis AcknowledgmentsIntroductionGalveston Tri-Weekly News Introduction to the Note-BookChapter 1. The Battle Below New OrleansChapter 2. Ship Island, the Pearl River, and Lake PontchartrainChapter 3. PensacolaChapter 4. New OrleansChapter 5. The Mississippi RiverChapter 6. Baton Rouge, Plaquemine, and DonaldsonvilleChapter 7. The Return to Pensacola and Ship IslandChapter 8. The Capture of GalvestonChapter 9. Matagorda BayChapter 10. The Battle of GalvestonChapter 11. The Capture of U.S.S. HatterasChapter 12. A New CommanderChapter 13. Mississippi SoundChapter 14. The Swamps of LouisianaChapter 15. Butte a la RoseChapter 16. Mobile BayChapter 17. The Return to the Teche CountryChapter 18. The Battle of Sabine PassChapter 19. Letters from PrisonNotesIndex...