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Sample
Tracks
Eyewitnesses
- Lt. F.M. Abbott (manuscript, Harvard University Library)
- Louisa May Alcott
- Jourdon Anderson
- Sgt. Onley Andrus (from Civil War Letters of Sgt. Onley Andrus. Fred
A. Shannon (ed.) University of Illinois Press)
- Pvt. Thomas B. Barker (from the Collections of the Maine Historical
Society)
- Henry Bibb
- John Wilkes Booth
- Gen. Frank Blair
- Sgt. John Brobst (from Well Mary: Civil War Letters of a Wisconsin
Volunteer. Margaret B. Roth (ed.) University of Wisconsin Press)
- John C. Brock
- Noah Brooks
- William Wells Brown
- Lt. John Burnham
- Gen. Joshua L. Chamberlain
- Mary B. Clay
- Peter H. Clark
- Sgt. Samuel Clear (Menge, Bill and Shimrak, Gus (eds.). The Civil
War Notebook of Daniel Chisholm. Used by permission of J. August
Shimrak and W. Springer Menge)
- A. Davenport
- Judge David Davis
- Anna Elizabeth Dickinson
- Frederick Douglass
- W.J. Ferguson
- James Ford
- Cpl. J.G. Fraser (Joshua G. Fraser Papers, Indiana Historical Society)
- A.G. Frick (letter from A.G. Frick to Abraham Lincoln, Feb. 14, 1861,
collections of the Chicago Historical Society)
- Giuseppi Garibaldi
- Cpl. James H. Gooding
- Gen. Ulysses S. Grant
- Horace Greeley
- Gen. Henry Halleck
- Cornelia Hancock
- Sgt. James H. Harden
- Eliza Harris
- Pvt. William R. Hartpence
- Harry Hawk
- Nathaniel Hawthorne
- John M. Hay
- Sgt. A.F. Hill
- Gen. Joseph Hooker
- Elizabeth Keckley
- Laura Keene
- George Kimball
- William.E. Limbarker (William E. Limbarker diary, Jan. 16, 1862,
Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan)
- Abraham Lincoln
- Pvt. William H. Lloyd (from the Collection of the Western Reserve
Historical Society)
- James Russell Lowell
- Gen. George B. McClellan
- Alexander K. McClure
- Pvt. G.F. Newhall (used by courtesy of the Trustees of the Boston
Public Library)
- John G. Nicolay
- Pvt. Oliver Wilcox Norton
- Sgt. Eli K. Pickett (from the Eli K. Pickett Correspondence, Manuscript
Collection, Minnesota Historical Society)
- Marcus M. Pomeroy
- Gen. John Pope
- Gen. Horace Porter
- George Haven Putnam
- A.H. Rice
- William Howard Russell
- Pvt. Henry J. Savage
- Gen. Carl Schurz
- Gen. Philip Sheridan
- Gen. William T. Sherman
- Edwin M. Stanton
- Rev. A.M. Stewart
- Harriet Beecher Stowe
- George Templeton Strong
- Sgt. David L. Thompson
- George Ticknor
- Harriet Tubman
- Rev. Henry M. Turner
- Pvt. Theodore Upson (from With Sherman to the Sea: The Journal
of Theodore F. Upson. Oscar O. Winther (ed.) Louisiana State
University Press)
- Bethany Veney
- Thurlow Weed
- Gideon Welles
- Walt Whitman
- Josephine Wilcox
- Gen. James Harrison Wilson
- Robert Winthrop
- Jesse Bowman Young
Top
Music
All of the songs in Reunion date from before the end of
the Civil War.
- Abraham's Daughter
(Words & Music: Septimus Winner)
- All Quiet Along
the Potomac Tonight
(Words: Ethel L. Beers, Music: John Hill Hewitt)
- Battle Cry of
Freedom
(Words & Music: George F. Root)
- Beautiful Dreamer
(Words & Music: Stephen Foster)
- Better Times Are
Coming
(Words & Music: Stephen Foster)
- Comrades, Fill
No Glass for Me
(Words & Music: Stephen Foster)
- Darling Nelly Gray
(Words & Music: Benjamin R. Hanby)
- Der Deitcher's Dog
(Words & Music: Septimus Winner)
- Grafted into the
Army
(Words & Music: Henry Clay Work)
- Hard Times Come
Again No More
(Words & Music: Stephen Foster)
- Heav'n Bound Soldier
(Words & Music: Traditional)
- Home, Sweet Home
(Words & Music: Henry R. Bishop)
- John Brown's
Body
(Words & Music: Traditional)
- Lincoln and Liberty
(Words: Jesse Hutchinson, Music: Traditional)
- Marching Along
(Words & Music: William B. Bradbury)
- Marching Through
Georgia
(Words & Music: Henry Clay Work)
- May God Save the
Union
(Words: Rev. G. Douglass Brewerton, Music: Carl Wolfsohn)
- Pat Murphy of
the Irish Brigade
(Words & Music: Traditional)
- Somebody's Darling
(Words: Marie Ravenal de la Coste, Music: John Hill Hewitt)
- Steal Away
(Words & Music: Traditional)
- Tenting on the
Old Camp Ground
(Words & Music: Walter F. Kittredge)
- The Liberty Ball
(Words & Music: Traditional)
- Wake Nicodemus
(Words & Music: Henry Clay Work)
- Wasn't That A
Wide River
(Words & Music: Traditional)
- We Are Coming,
Father Abr'am
(Words: James Sloan Gibbons, Music: L.O. Emerson)
- Weeping Sad and
Lonely
(Words: Charles C. Sawyer, Music: Henry Tucker)
- We'll Fight for
Uncle Abe
(Words: C.E. Pratt, Music: Frederick Buckley)
Historical Works
Popular Reference
- Ward, Geoffrey C., Burns, Ric and Burns, Ken. The Civil War (PBS).
- Catton, Bruce and McPherson, James M. (eds.). The American Heritage
New History of the Civil War.
- Kunhardt, Philip, et al. Lincoln: An Illustrated Biography.
- Davis, William C., Time-Life Editors. Brother Against Brother:
Time-Life Books History of the Civil War.
Civil War History
- Catton, Bruce. Mr. Lincoln's Army. Classic narrative
about The Army of the Potomac and Lincoln's relationships with its
commanders
and men.
- Catton, Bruce. The Coming Fury. Rich account of events
leading up to Fort Sumter.
- Commager, Henry Steele (ed.). The Blue and the Gray: The Story
of the Civil War As Told by Participants. (2 vols.) A
vast, wonderfully organized 2-volume collection of original letters,
articles,
song lyrics, memoirs, etc., from both sides.
- Leech, Margaret. Reveille in Washington. (1941) Pulitzer
Prize-winning book overflowing with rich detail about political and
social life in the capital during the Civil War. This wonderful book
is often
not in stock--don't pass it up if you can find it.
- McPherson, James M. Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era. Brilliant
book, called by many the best one-volume book about the war. Explores
military, economic, racial and political causes and effects.
- Sears, Stephen W. Landscape Turned Red. The story of
the horrific Battle of Antietam and the events preceding and following,
including
McClellan's restoration to command and Lincoln's issuing of the Emancipation
Proclamation.
- Wiley, Bell Irvin. The Life of Billy Yank: The Common Soldier
of the Union. Breakthrough work documenting the lifestyle
and attitudes of Union soldiers, backed up with their own words.
This book is a follow-up to Wiley's groundbreaking earlier book,
The Life of Johnny Reb.
Collections of Letters and Narratives
- Bishop, Jim. The Day Lincoln Was Shot. Sturdy journalistic
account of the events surrounding the assassination, based upon first-person
sources available at the time of publication.
- Blockson, Charles L. The Underground Railroad: First-Person Narratives
of Escapes to Freedom in the North.
- Buel, Clarence C. and Johnson, Robert U. (eds.). Battles and Leaders
of the Civil War (4 vols.). (1887) Massive collection
of first-person narratives collected by Century magazine 20 years
after
the war. Includes everything from explanations of battles written
by the generals themselves, to personal observations of enlisted
men from both sides. Reprints available in several variations:
- Bradford, Ned (ed.). Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Condensed
version including material from all of the 4 original volumes.
- Dannett, Sylvia G.L. (ed.). Noble Women of the North. First-person
experiences of the women who worked behind the lines.
- Holzer, Harold (ed.). Dear Mr. Lincoln: Letters to the President. Rich
collection of letters from ordinary citizens, maniacs, foreign dignitaries,
political allies and rivals, etc.
- McPherson, James M. For Cause & Comrades: Why Men Fought in
the Civil War. Wide-ranging study of why soldiers on
both sides fought, based on hundreds of letters, with incisive
commentary
by the Pulitzer Prize-winning historian. Though this book was
published after REUNION was written, it is included here
because of its value in understanding the common soldier's point
of view.
- McPherson, James M. The Negro's Civil War: How American Blacks
Felt and Acted During the War for the Union. Indispensable
collection and commentary covering every imaginable aspect of
black participation and experience in the war.
- Meltzer, Richard. Voices of the Civil War. Miscellaneous
collection of first-person writings.
- Osofsky, Gilbert (ed.). Puttin' On Ole Massa. Collection
of slave narratives.
- Redkey, Edwin S. (ed.). A Grand Army of Black Men: Letters from
African-American Soldiers in the Union Army, 1861-1865. Letters
from men who served in the U.S. Colored Troops.
- Sterling, Dorothy (ed.). We Are Your Sisters: Black Women in the
Nineteenth Century. Excerpts from letters, journals,
newspapers and memoirs.
- Tapert, Annette. The Brothers' War. An excellent chronological
arrangement of letters from soldiers of both sides. (Out of print,
but available in many public libraries)
- Wheeler, Richard. Lee's Terrible Swift Sword. One of
a very good series of “eyewitness”narrative books by the
same author. (Out of print, but available in many public libraries)
- Wheeler, Richard. Sword Over Richmond. Eyewitness accounts
of McClellan's Peninsula Campaign. (Out of print, but available in
many public libraries)
- Wheeler, Richard. Witness to Gettysburg. Eyewitness
accounts of the Battle of Gettysburg.
Memoirs & Diaries
- Alcott, Louisa May. Hospital Sketches. (1864) Best-selling
account of the author's brief but eventful term as a Union nurse
in Washington.
- Chamberlain, Joshua L. The Passing of the Armies. (1915)
Moving account of the final phase of the war in the east, written
in lavish Victorian style by the hero of Gettysburg.
- Dennett, Tyler (ed.). Lincoln and the Civil War in the Diaries
and Letters of John Hay. Unique fly-on-the-wall view
of Lincoln and his White House by his assistant secretary.
- Gooding, James H.; Adams, Virginia M. (ed.). On the Altar of Freedom:
A Black Soldier's Civil War Letters from the Front. Letters
to a newspaper from a member of the 54th Massachusetts, one of
the first regiments made up of African-Americans.
- Grant, Ulysses S.; McPherson, James M. (ed.). Personal Memoirs
of U.S. Grant. Generally pointed to as one of the greatest
American autobiographies.
- Keckley, Elizabeth. Behind the Scenes, Or, Thirty Years a Slave,
and Four Years in the White House. Memoir of the Lincoln
White House by freedwoman dressmaker who became Mary Todd Lincoln's
closest friend and confidant.
- Menge, Bill and Shimrak, Gus (eds.). The Civil War Notebook of
Daniel Chisholm: a chronicle of daily life in the Union Army, 1864-1865. Combined
diaries of two soldiers who served in The Army of the Potomac
for the final two years of the war.
- Porter, Horace. Campaigning with Grant. Close-up view
of Grant's command. (Out of print, but still available in some large
bookstores)
- Sears, Stephen W. (ed.). The Civil War Papers of George B. McClellan:
Selected Correspondence, 1860-1865. Full of insights
into McClellan's thought processes and character, as well as
his troubled
relationship with Lincoln and the cabinet.
- Whitman, Walt; Lowenfels, Walter (ed.). Walt Whitman's Civil War. Collection
of his letters, poems and speeches revolving around his experiences
as a nurse in Washington, his search for his wounded brother, and the
death
of Lincoln.
- Brooks, Noah. Washington in Lincoln's Time (1896).
Journalistic memoir written by Lincoln's last personal secretary, a
reporter.
- Brown, William Wells. The Negro in the American Rebellion. (1867)
Written by major black figure in the fight for abolition.
- Douglass, Frederick. Douglass' Monthly (newspapers).
Original material relating to political conflicts over abolition and
slavery.
- Ferguson, W.J. I Saw Booth Shoot Lincoln. Account of
the events at Ford's Theatre told by the call-boy who stood in the
wings.
- Hill, A.F. Our Boys: The Personal Experiences of a Soldier in
the Army of the Potomac. (1890) Memoir of a Union sergeant
who loses a leg to the war.
- McClellan, George B. McClellan's Own Story. (1887)
Controversial, self-justifying memoir and excerpts from personal letters
and dispatches,
published just after his death.
- Russell, William Howard. My Diary North and South. (1863)
British newspaperman's South-slanted view of the war.
- Thayer, William Roscoe. The Life and Letters of John Hay. (1915)
A more complete collection of the writings of Lincoln's young assistant
secretary.
- Welles, Gideon. Diary of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy
Under Lincoln and Johnson. Insider's view of Lincoln
and the cabinet.
- Whitman, Walt. Specimen Days. (1882)
Biographies
- Donald, David H. Lincoln. Rich, unique,
best-selling biography that attempts to explore Lincoln's decisions
from his perspective,
concentrating only on the facts he had before him.
- Sears, Stephen W. George B. McClellan: The Young Napoleon. Exceptional,
detailed and objective life of the frustrating Union commander.
- Bentley, Judith. Harriet Tubman. Modern biography
of the famous one-time slave.
- Bradford, Sarah H. Harriet Tubman, The Moses of Her People. (1886)
- Brooks, Noah. Abraham Lincoln (1888) Written by his last
personal secretary.
- Creahan, John. The Life of Laura Keene. (1896) The life
of the star of Our American Cousin, including background on how a
touring company operated and accounts of the assassination.
- Helm, Katherine. The True Story of Mary, Wife of Lincoln. Sympathetic
biography of Mary Todd Lincoln, written by a descendant.
- Laughlin, Clara E. The Death of Lincoln. (1909) Collection
of source material compiled almost 50 years after the assassination.
- Nicolay, John G. and Hay, John M. Abraham Lincoln: A History. (1888)
Massive "approved" biography by the two men who served
as Lincoln's secretaries through most of the war.
- Ruggles, Eleanor. Prince of Players. Important biography
of Edwin Booth, with a lot of space devoted to John Wilkes Booth.
- Tanner, James. While Lincoln Lay Dying. Original testimony
dictated by eyewitnesses to the assassination, recorded by the Union
army stenographer who happened to be rooming across the street from
Ford's Theatre.
Background Reference
- Botkin, Benjamin A. A Civil War Treasury of Tales, Legends
and Folklore. Entertaining collection of miscellaneous
items relating to both sides
- Dickens, Charles. American Notes and Pictures from Italy. Outsider's
view of many aspects of life in 1842 America, north and south, with
especially strong views on slavery.
- Gragg, Rod. The Civil War Fact & Quiz Book.
- Kimmel, Stanley Preston. Mr. Lincoln's Washington. Wealth
of original newspaper accounts and local color about life in the
capital during the war years.
- Shaw, Dale. Titans of the American Stage. Concise
biographies of several early American stage stars, including Edwin
Booth.
- Stowe, Harriet Beecher. Uncle Tom's Cabin. Irreplaceable
as a document recording the passions of the antislavery movement
in the years just before the war.
- War Department, The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of
the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. Available
in many public and university libraries.
- George B. McClellan Papers, Library of Congress,
Manuscript Division.
Music Reference
- Botsford, Florence. The Botsford Collection of Folk Music.
- Crawford, Richard (ed.). The Civil War Songbook: Complete
Original Sheet Music for Thirty-Seven Songs.
- Glass, Paul. Singing Soldiers: The Spirit of the Sixties.
- Johnson, James Weldon and Johnson, J. Rosamond. The Books
of Negro Spirituals (2 vols.).
- Lovell, John, Jr. Black Song: The Forge and the Flame.
- Siegmeister, Elie and Downes, Olin. A Treasury of American
Song.
- Silber, Irwin (ed.). Songs of the Civil War.
- Silber, Irwin (ed.). Songs American Voted By.
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