Often, people ask me about books. And that’s ok. I’ve read a
few over the past three decades. At times, it is really hard to answer those
questions in a general sense. But, when it comes to more specific questions,
like best book on a battle, or a certain topic, that can be easier to answer.
Over the past year, I have read, or re-read, several volumes about Richmond,
the Confederate capital. There are other volumes about the Confederate capital,
but I find these the most helpful. (These are in order of date published.)
Rebel Richmond: Life and Death in the Confederate Capital
(Stephen Ash, 2019) – The dust jacket states that Ashe “guides readers from the
city’s alleys, homes, and shops to its churches, factories, and halls of power,
uncovering the intimate daily drama of a city transformed and ultimately
destroyed by war.” The various chapters examine housing, food, work, crime, and
other aspects of the city during the war. I struggled somewhat with the chapter
entitled “White Supremacy and Black Resistance.” That implies that only white
people, most upper society white people, were racist. Everyone was racist in
that period of time. Many people did not like the Irish, or the Catholic. In reading
Jones’s famous A Rebel War Clerk’s Diary, he never really mentions the
enslaved, but he sure detested the Jews. Ash gives some space to overlooked
areas of war-time Richmond, such as the “Soldier’s Home” on Cary Street.
Soldiers passing through the Capital and required to wait on connecting trains
could stay at the Soldier’s Home, instead of having to wander the streets
throughout the night, looking for a place to bed down. (51) Overall, Rebel
Richmond is a good read.
The Confederate State of Richmond: A Biography of the
Capital (Emory M. Thomas, 1971, 1998) This is probably the first book I
ever read on the Confederate capital. The edition I now have is the second,
with the new introduction. Emory writes in the introduction that as a boy,
growing up in Richmond, the War in general and the Confederacy in particular, was
a lot of “sad stories told principally by people in flowered dresses, floppy
straw hats, and white gloves.” Later, Thomas admits that “the Confederate
experience possessed genuine intellectual viability.” (vii) While Thomas should
have admitted a debt of gratitude to those ladies in white gloves for saving multitudes
of letters and diaries and oral traditions, I still like his book. He uses
footnotes so it easy to track down sources (instead of flipping back and
forth). Thomas broaches several important subjects, such as the relationship of
weather to crop production, the meat panic in January 1864, and the CS
Commissary borrowing food from the city to feed Lee’s army in March 1865. There
are some who criticize Thomas, especially his biography of Lee. Overall, I still
think The Confederate State of Richmond a good read and important contribution
(probably the first scholarly) to the study of the Confederate capital.
Ashes of Glory: Richmond at War (Ernest B. Furgurson,
1996)--At almost 400 pages, Ashes of Glory is probably the most detailed
history of the Confederate capital to date. Furgurson introduces us to a wide
range of characters. Robert E. Lee, Jefferson Davis, Mayor Joseph Mayo, Capt.
Sally Tompkins, Rev. Moses Hoge, spy Elizabeth Van Lew, and a host of others
make their appearances through the text. There are good descriptions of the
relationship (or lack thereof) between Robert E. Lee and Lucius Northorp, of
Northorp’s sacking, of the spy network, the escape of Federal prisoners from
Libby Prison, the work of such industries as Tredegar Iron Works… Overall, it
is a pretty comprehensive look at the Confederate capital. “In this work of
great verisimilitude and potency, Furgurson resurrects a city in crisis and
dramatically personalizes the conflict that was our nation’s coming-of-age,”
the book’s jacket tells us.
There are, of course, many other volumes. Moore’s Complete
Civil War Guide to Richmond (1978) contains a lot of useful information for
those who like to explore the city. Kimball’s Starve or Fall: Richmond and
its People, 1861-1865 (1976) is somewhat dated and probably replaced by Ash.
Parker’s Richmond’s Civil War Prisons (1990). Manarin’s Richmond at
War: The Minutes of the City Council, 1861-1865 (1966) is essential primary
source reading. Burns’ Curiosities of the Confederate Capital: Untold
Richmond Stories of the Spectacular, Tragic, and Bizarre (2013) is a fun
read. There are two medical- related books: Calcutt’s Richmond’s Wartime
Hospitals (2005) and Green’s Chimborazo: The Confederacy’s Largest
Hospital (2004) are both important reads, as is Dew’s Ironmaker to the
Confederacy: Joseph R. Anderson and the Tredegar Iron Works (1966).
Parker’s Richmond’s Civil War Prisons (1990) looks
interesting, but this is one I have never read nor own, as is Casstevens’ George
W. Alexander and Castle Thunder: A Confederate Prison and its Commandant
(2004). There are, of course, other books that have been written over the
years, but these three, Ash, Thomas, and Furgurson are my go-to books about the
Confederate capital. (Or course, I might be remiss to not mention my own Capitals
of the Confederacy [2015] that has two chapters on Richmond.) This list
leaves out first-person accounts, like DeLeon, Jones, McGuire, Putnam, Pember,
and Kean.
So, what are your favorite books on Richmond and the War?
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