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The Civil War influenced virtually every aspect of children's lives, and in turn they eagerly incorporated the experience of war into their daily assumptions and activities. In this new contribution to the American Childhoods series, James A. Marten places the experiences of children living in the North during the Civil War into the larger contexts of economic, political, and cultural developments during the nineteenth century. On the home front, children became almost full-fledged members of their communities in their support of the war effort. They left school to replace absent men on farms and in factories, helped raise funds for hospitals and other soldiers' causes, and volunteered to knit socks, pick lint, and perform other necessary duties. Even as families were torn apart by the war, Mr. Marten notes, family ties grew stronger as Union soldiers filled their letters with love and advice for their children. He shows how the war brought writers for children to challenge the pacifism reflected in antebellum literature and instead to promote controversial political viewpoints such as abolitionism and to support the Union's military action. Indeed, Northern children's lives were militarized as never before, from the toys and games and stories that were overwhelmed by images of warfare and pro-Union ideals to actual military service by under-age soldiers and drummer boys. Both heroes and casualties, drummer boys in fact became potent symbols of the Northern war effort and the subject of countless poems and articles, at least temporarily altering perceptions of proper roles for children and youth in American society. As adults looking back, Northern children saw the war as a great adventure or a turning point in their lives. Some mourned lost fathers or relatives; others mourned lost childhoods. Children for the Union opens a new window on the impact of the war and shows that the youngest Americans were inevitable and enthusiastic participants in the nation's worst crisis. Abundantly illustrated.
Published | Feb 23 2004 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 256 |
ISBN | 9781566635639 |
Imprint | Ivan R. Dee |
Dimensions | 9 x 6 inches |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
This work would be a welcome addition for any academic library.
Library Journal
This volume usefully surveys what it was like to be a child in the North during the Civil War. . . . Fluent, jargon-free social history.
Booklist
In this splendid book, James Marten captures the passion and poetry of the children's Civil War.
James M. McPherson
In this detailed look at children and childhood during the Civil War era, James Marten connects compelling personal stories to the larger social, economic, and political events of the time. . . . The result is a volume that skillfully demonstrates the ways in which the war influenced and shaped a generation of children.
Marilyn Irvin Holt, author of Children of the Western Plains
Details the impact of the Civil War on the lives of Northern white children. Provides a welcome glimpse into the lives of Northern middle-class children of the Civil War era.
Heather Cox Richardson, Boston College, Chicago Tribune
Marten's facts have a welcome human face, since he relies heavily on the memoirs of those who experienced the war first-hand.
Foreword Reviews
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