Civil War Letters of John Shook
View of the Civil War from One of America's Volunteer Soldiers
by Alfred Marion Chard
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About the Book
John Shook was a 19 year old Illinois farm boy who volunteered to fight for the Northern cause in 1861. He wrote more than 40 letters home before being fatally wounded in the Battle of Stones River, Tennessee. His letters have been lovingly preserved by his family for over 145 years. The letters and envelopes contain historic and remarkable print art that is beautifully rendered in this book. The Shook letters are by turns patriotic and jingoistic, humorous and sad, and curious about friends and family back home. Written in the quaint country vernacular of the time without punctuation or capitalization, the book makes for fascinating ...and challenging... reading
Features & Details
- Primary Category: History
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Project Option: Standard Landscape, 10×8 in, 25×20 cm
# of Pages: 194 - Publish Date: Apr 11, 2010
- Keywords Battle of Wilson's Creek, Battle of Pea Ridge, Illinois in the Civil War, Camp Rolla, Civil War camp life, union soldiers, Stones River, Illinois 36th Regiment, Civil War letters, Perryville, Shook
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About the Creator
Alfred Marion Chard
Dublin, Ohio USA
Alfred Marion Chard was raised in Audubon, Iowa, in the dust bowl years. He graduated from the State University of Iowa and the US Navy Midshipman's School at Columbia University in 1943. After the war he was a business executive in the manufacturing industry. He is now retired and working on his second book.