РефератыИностранный языкA A Soldiers Life In The Civil War

A Soldiers Life In The Civil War

Essay, Research Paper


Life during the Civil War was not a pleasant time. There was


basically utter chaos going on the South. Soldiers had to deal with the


harsh conditions and the thought of death. Plantation owners had to


worry about who was going to work their fields. Business owners had to


worry about who was going to buy their products. Citizens had to worry


about soldiers destroying their property. And the government had to


worry about how to pay the soldiers and how to end the war. This was a


very rough time to be alive.


Soldier Life During The Civil War


The camp life for a soldier was hardly one to be desired. ?The


weather was hot and the water was bad, yet the men kept in good spirits,


and there was no grumbling at the hard drill and harder work(Ratchford,


11).? The weather varied a lot during the Civil War. At times it would


snow up to depths of eight inches and sometimes it would rain and hail for


hours on end(Russell, 130). Other times it would be very hot. Sometimes


when it would rain, soldiers would wake up half submerged(Brown,122).


Death was also a major fear during the Civil War. ?We cook and


eat, talk and laugh with the enemies dead lying all about us as though


they were so many logs(Brown, 115).? The soldier would march threw


battlefields where dead men, horses, and smashed artillery were scattered


about in utter confusion; the Blue and the Gray mixed-their bodies so


bloated, distorted, and discolored from decomposition, that they were


basically unrecognizable(Mohr, 326).


There was also the duties of the officers. ?Often when a detachment


was on scout, there were no men left in camp to release the pickets, and


they had to remain on post for seventy-two hours at a stretch(History of


the Service, 129).? Marching, shooting, charging, scouting; they were all


hard assignments, but they were important to the war. There were times


when troops had to charge for ten miles to get to towns to protect


them(Mohr, 326). Troops often woke up before daylight to march and


sometimes they would just march right back to where they started(Brown,


120). There were also times when troops would march a couple of


hundred yards and end up marching back the next day. It sounds as


though there was a lot of unnecessary marching.


There was also a lot of unnecessary shooting. There would be picket


lines shooting all day every day and the occasional canon shot(Brown,


118). Sometimes there would be picket firing going on into the


night(Mohr, 324). ?Shelling don?t scare us as it used to and if they pass us


before they burst there is no danger in them. All they do is to make men


bow their heads as it passes over(Brown, 116).?


Food is essential in every day life, and it is very difficult to live


without. ?Little chance to feed and eat(Mohr, 324).? Food was not always


very abundant during the civil war. Food was sometimes stolen from


citizens or even from the enemy.


?I took 30 men today and went on a scout to the left of our


Army, to drive in some cattle near the Yanks picket lines-I


went about seven or eight miles-found the cattle in a large


field and succeeded in getting 20 head of them, and some of


them I got within 200 yards of the Yanks vidette line. Brought


the cattle all in and got back just before night- making a


complete success of the trip and got no one hurt(Brown, 123).?


There were also times when enemy?s would trade goods. There would be


Rebels on one side of a river and Union troops on the other side and they


would arrange to meet and trade newspapers, salts, coffee, and


tobacco(History of the Service, 129).


Medical help was a problem if you got hurt. The basic treatment for


a gun shot wound was to let it heal on it?s own or cut of the part that got


shot. It was very unlikely to live after being shot. ?A finger or two were


removed, the broken bones were adjusted, and the patient rallied in good


spirits from the second administration of chloroform and shock to the


system(Camp

Life, 76).?


Pay for soldiers was also not the greatest thing in the world. The


government tried to pay the soldiers ten dollars a month instead of their


thirteen dollars a month(Adams, 48). But when the paymaster asked who


would take their ten now and get the three later, none of the soldiers


agreed(Adams, 48).


?Too many of our comrades? bones lie bleaching near the


walls of Fort Wagner to subtract even one cent from our hard


earned pay. If the nation can ill afford to pay us, we are men


and will do our duty while we are here without a murmur, as


we have done always, before and since that day we were


offered to sell our manhood for ten dollars per month(Adams,


49).?


I think that I would want to pay some more than ten dollars a month for


defending my country.


Government and Citizens During The Civil War


During the war, the governments had many modifications and


additions to their legislature. The Confederate Congress decided to next


meet in Richmond, which is where they made their new capital(Russell,


133). The Confederate Congress also passed an act stating that persons in


debt to the United States, to pay their amount of their debt to the


Confederate Treasury(Russell, 130). The United States marshals seized all


of the telegraphic dispatches during a years time(Russell, 131). The


Montgomery Congress passed a bill that ?binds volunteers to serve during


the war, unless sooner discharged(Russell, 133).? Kentucky?s governor


warned off both Federal and Confederate soldiers of his territory(Russell,


130). ?British subjects have been forcibly carried off to fill the ranks of


so-called volunteer companies and regiments(Russell, 137).?


The general population of the United States had a dramatic reaction


to the activities of the Civil War. ?It is impossible to describe the


excitement and rage of the people(Russell, 131).? The Richmond


Examiner described the United States Army as, ?the band of thieves.


robbers, and assassins, in the pay of Abraham Lincoln(Russell, 132).?


Charges of abolitionism appeared in police reports and persons were


found guilty ?not of expressing opinions against slavery, but of stating


their belief that the Northerners will be successful? are sent to prison for


six months; or they are tarred and feathered, their head shaven, or


deported(Russell, 134). Many municipal authorities threatened to close the


city schools and disband police; while at the same time, employers refused


to pay their workmen(Russell, 136). Most Negroes had fled their plantains


and would not go back except under government control(Private and


Official Correspondence, 33). It appears that the people of the United


States were falling into a depression due to their lack of ways to make


money or get paid. Most people over reacted to what was nothing


important at all.


While on the other hand, some civilians were getting there houses


burned down or property stolen from them. ?Marauding parties


continually overran the country, robbing, burning, and killing(Ratchford,


11).


To me it sounds as though the life of a soldier during the Civil War


is not one that I would want to live. I would rather sit at my computer and


type a paper about it than actually leave through it. The soldiers and the


civilians alike, had it very rough. The conditions were harsh and the fear


of death would be the only thing on my mind. Or fear of having my house


burnt down or taken from me is something I would not want to


experience. In conclusion, I would be very proud to shake any soldiers


hand that fought in the Civil War.


Outline


I. Introduction


II. Life of a Soldier During the Civil War


A. Camp Life


B. Death


C. Duties


D. Shooting


E. Food


F. Medical


G. Pay


III. Government and Citizens During The Civil War


A. Government Reaction


B. Citizens Reaction


C. Citizens Vandalism


IV. Conclusion

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