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My Diary: North and South (vol. 1 of 2)

Chapter 39: FOOTNOTES:
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About This Book

A diary compiled from contemporaneous notes by a visitor to a country torn by civil war, combining eyewitness reportage of military camps and engagements with descriptive sketches of cities, hotels, public ceremonies, and private social life. The entries mix immediate observation and reflective commentary on political divisions, regional character, and the human cost of conflict, recording encounters with military and civic figures while withholding details that might harm living individuals. Throughout, the observer traces shifting fortunes, contrasts between communities, and uncertain prospects for reconciliation, balancing vivid detail with measured judgment.

FOOTNOTES:

[1] Since borrowed, it is supposed, by Mr. Seward, and handed over by him to Mr. Stanton. Lafayette gave it to Washington, he also gave his name to the Fort which has played so conspicuous a part in the war for liberty—“La liberté des deux mondes,” might well sigh if he could see his work, and what it has led to.

[2] Since killed in a duel by Mr. Rhelt.

[3] Now Confederate General.

[4] Since killed in action.

[5] Since killed.