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Recollections of the Civil War

Chapter 19: A DAY AT THE CITY HOTEL
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About This Book

The memoir presents a child's vivid memories of living through the Civil War years, recounting a journey to join an ill father serving with the army, experiences in military hospitals and on a battlefield-turned-hospital site, and the author's observations of nursing, scarcity, and civilian disruption. It interweaves family recollection, preserved letters, and sensory detail to describe travel, hospital wards, and community responses, while reflecting on fear, loss, and admiration for the mother's ministrations to the sick and wounded. Episodes are organized chronologically and punctuated by personal reflections that balance concrete incidents with the long-term emotional imprint of wartime childhood.

A DAY AT THE CITY HOTEL

OUR friends the De Forests, after boarding for a time at the Manassas, removed their quarters to the City Hotel.

They had taken under their protecting wing a little yellow girl by the name of “Mandy.” She was sent one day to invite my mother and another lady to spend the day at the City Hotel. Mandy and I had traveled the road many times, and we put our heads together and determined to take them by way of the long line of cotton defences, instead of the open street, as we could just as well have done. Imagine their discomfiture and our glee as they faced the frowning wall over which they had to climb as best they could. How we laughed and shouted as we scaled the “works” with the agility of young monkeys.

The low-ceiled parlor of the City Hotel, with its dark, large-figured Brussels carpet, is yet a familiar feature to me, as we gathered in it after dinner and listened to Mrs. Dr. Mitchell relate how they used to go to church in a wagon drawn by an ox team, at her girlhood’s home in Illinois.