Samuel Bell Palmer's diary offers a rare and intimate window into the early years of the Civil War and the divided loyalties of East Tennessee. A native of Knoxville, Palmer served as a Confederate soldier during the opening phase of the war, experiencing firsthand the uncertainty and tension that defined a region being pulled in opposing political and military directions. This duality would shape Palmer's fate: while home on furlough-and while Knoxville was under Federal control-he was captured and subsequently sent north to Camp Douglas in Chicago, one of the largest Civil War prison camps where thousands of Confederate prisoners remained until the end of the war. Palmer's diary chronicles daily life in captivity, reflecting on illness, boredom, despair, and resilience among the imprisoned soldiers.

Most striking are Palmer's beautiful and detailed sketches and drawings, created during his service and imprisonment, which vividly portray camp life, fellow prisoners, military scenes, and East Tennessee landscapes. Drawn from materials held in the Calvin M. McClung Historical Collection at Knox County Public Library, Imprisoned at Camp Douglas combines historical documents and visual records to unsettle and enrich our memory of the American Civil War.



Autorentext

Michael M. Van Ness was born into a military family in DC, educated at Yale and Virginia University's School of Medicine, and served in the Navy at Bethesda Naval Hospital. Now retired from his gastroenterology practice in Canton, Ohio, he is the author of General in Command: The Life of Major General John B. Anderson and To the Front: Grandfathers' Stories in the Cause of Freedom.

Titel
Imprisoned at Camp Douglas
Untertitel
The Diary and Art of Knoxville Confederate Samuel Bell Palmer
EAN
9798895274118
Format
E-Book (epub)
Veröffentlichung
01.12.2026
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Wasserzeichen
Anzahl Seiten
272