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A lovely introduction.
I have really enjoyed owning this book

Museum in a book ...
Must Buy!

Union victories at Vicksburg and Gettysburg turn the tideAs with all of these volumes, "1863: The Crucial Year" begins with a Timeline of Major Events for that year, divided into parallel columns covering what was happening At Home and Abroad with Military Events. Although the book is divided into two parts, (I) High Tide for the Confederacy and (II) Triumph and Turmoil for the Union, it does follow a chronological rather than sectional organizational pattern. Part I starts with the Emancipation Proclamation and ends with Lee's decision to move north for the second time in the war. Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation after the battle of Antietam in September 1862, but it did not take effect until the first day of the new year (in between was the disastrous defeat of the Army of the Potomac at Fredericksburg). The main focus of this first part is Ulysses S. Grant's siege of Vicksburg, although it also looks at the costly Union victory at Murfreesboro, the attack on Fort Wagner (the climax of the movie "Glory"), and the battle of Chancellorsville, where Lee made his most brilliant strategic move and ended up losing Stonewall Jackson. The best illustrations in this first part are the lithographs, particular of the attack on Fort Wagner and Lee's final meeting with Jackson.
Part II focuses primarily on the Battle of Gettysburg, following through to Lincoln's Gettysburg address (for which we see both the one photograph of Lincoln at Gettysburg and a draft of the speech in Lincoln's handwriting), along with the fall of first Vicksburg and then Port Hudson, along with the battles of Chickamauga and Lookout Mountain in eastern Tennessee. While I have enjoyed looking through these various sourcebooks, not just for the Civil War but also those on Colonial America and the American West, the illustrations in this particular volume, overall, are not as good as what I have seen elsewhere. Maybe it is because there was a concerted effort NOT to duplicate photographs and drawings we have seen before; certainly most of what is in this book are illustrations I do not recall having seen before. Still, these sourcebooks are always worth a look.


Lots O'Good Stuff

highly readable

A great book to read

NASA history of the 1970s - EXCELLENT

A very Provoking Read

A ParticipantHaving said that and because I was personally involved, I found her book to be very interesting. I can attest to its historical accuracy.
Ms Jurey's wrote her VOA radio reports in a style that any world-wide short-wave radio listener could understand. This book is written in the same style.
I recommend it to journalism students, particularly students who intend to go into Radio-TV journalism.


A look at the Civil War away from the battlefieldsThe goal of these Sourcebooks is to make available to students (and teachers) many of the original visual documents preserved in the Library of Congress. Consequently you will find within these pages prints, broadsides, maps, paintings and other works from the Library's special collections divisions. This particular volume has some notable color illustrations, including a painting of a freeman reading news of the Emancipation Proclamation and some fascinating Civil War advertisements for Original Red Cross Biters and Cuban cigars.
Politics and Civilian Life looks at the Southern and Northern leaderships, civilians fighting soldiers, and contrasts Southern economic problems with the expansion of Northern industry. After looking at African Americans and the war, including the Emancipation proclamation, the Sourcebook covers the Copperheads and the efforts of women both North and South. Life in the Army looks at recruitment and camp life on both sides, and tangential aspects like the press in the field, war time photography, and medicine.
Other Sourcebooks on the Civil War cover "Prelude to War," "The First Battles," "1863: The Crucial Year," "The Road to Appomattox," and "One Nation Again." There are also sets of Sourcesbooks on Colonial America and the American West, all of which are excellent sourcebooks (duh) of historical prints, photographs, journals and maps, all drawn from the Library of Congress. Certainly with the wonderful modern technologies of photocopies and scanners both teachers and students can find a way of incorporating some of these illustrations into reports, bulletin boards and the like.