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Observations of an Illinois Boy in Battle, Camp and Prisons—1861 to 1865

Chapter 2: PREFACE.
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About This Book

A firsthand Civil War memoir recounts enlistment and service with Illinois units from 1861 to 1865, following campaigns and engagements across river operations, marches, and major battles in the Western and Southern theaters. The narrative describes camp routine, skirmishes, a wartime capture, the hardships of long prisoner transports, and brutal confinement in pens such as Belle Isle and Libby, including illness and smallpox. It also relates escapes and recapture, return to duty, personal reminiscences from comrades, and reflective chapters on the consequences of secession and war, patriotic observances about the national flag, and advice to younger readers.

PREFACE.

The story contained in this book is a true one. It was taken from letters, memoranda and memory. The author has in his possession twenty-nine letters written by him while in the army, from 1861 to 1865, and sent to his relatives, who returned them to him at the close of the war.

The memoranda were written soon after his return from the army. The accounts taken from memory are reasonably correct, as the scenes through which he passed, though here poorly portrayed, are of a character not easily forgotten. They are indelibly stamped upon the memory, and it seems, as time rolls on, that it renders the recollection of them even more vivid and distinct. After revising this story a number of times it is presented to the reader in its present form.