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Madam Constantia

Chapter 2: EDITOR’S PREFACE
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About This Book

A veteran officer provides a first-person account of campaigns and captivity during the Revolution in the southern provinces, tracing marches, skirmishes, surrender and exchange, and the daily hardships of campaigning. He reflects on military pride, social prejudices between regulars and colonials, and adaptations to guerrilla tactics and local conditions. Interwoven with these martial scenes is a personal narrative of parole, encounters with local characters, and a romantic thread centered on a woman named Constantia. The tone balances tactical detail, social observation, and the emotional strains of imprisonment and loyalty.

EDITOR’S PREFACE

Although the Historical Manuscripts Commission (England) has dealt with several of the Northumberland Collections, the Commission has not thought fit to print among the papers of the Craven family of Osgodby, the narrative of the fifth baronet’s experiences in South Carolina during the War of American Independence. The reason for this decision may be either a belief that the episode is not of value from a historical standpoint; or a suspicion that the facts owe something to the expansion of a man writing many years later. However this may be, the story seemed to the present Editor to possess a certain poignancy, and, notwithstanding some intimate passages, to be worthy of a public wider than that of the County of its birth. He has, therefore, with such skill as he possesses prepared it for publication.

It will be noticed that Sir Edward Craven nowhere names the regiment in which he served, but it appears from other sources that it was the 33rd Regiment of Foot, now styled the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment.

The Editor has thought proper to retain the fanciful title prefixed by the writer, but has added some Chapter headings.