Cover image for The Journals of Josiah Gorgas, 1857–1878.
The Journals of Josiah Gorgas, 1857–1878.
Title:
The Journals of Josiah Gorgas, 1857–1878.
Author:
Gorgas, Josiah.
ISBN:
9780817383015
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (347 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- Illustrations -- Foreword -- Introduction -- Acknowledgments -- Editorial Policy -- Genealogy of the Family of Josiah and Amelia Gorgas -- Prologue -- Antebellum -- Chapter 1. "Her Affectionate companionship is sufficient for me" -- Chapter 2. "My great regret is the wandering life we are obliged to lead" -- Civil War -- Chapter 3. "Brilliant hopes which centered in the possession of Richmond" -- Chapter 4. "The confederacy totters to its destruction" -- Chapter 5. "Has war ever been carried on like this" -- Chapter 6. " Such a war, so relentless and so repugnant" -- Chapter 7. "Can we hold out much longer?" -- Chapter 8. "The prospect is growing darker & darker about us -- Reconstruction -- Chapter 9. " I am as one walking in a dream -- Chapter 10. "Our works progress slowly" -- Chapter 11. "Harrassed with debt & surrounded with troubles" -- Chapter 12. "Our company affairs are very much embarrassed -- Chapter 13. " I am now daily teaching" -- Chapter 14. " I was not well pleased with the action of the Board of Trustees" -- Epilogue -- Biographical Directory -- Bibliography -- Manuscript Sources -- Printed Sources -- Index.
Abstract:
Josiah Gorgas was best known as the highly regarded Chief of Confederate Ordnance. Born in 1818, he attended West Point, served in the U.S. Army, and later, after marrying Amelia Gayle, daughter of a former Alabama governor, joined the Confederacy. After the Civil War he served as president of The University of Alabama until ill health forced him to resign. His journals, maintained between 1857 and 1878, reflect the family's economic successes and failures, detail the course of the South through the Civil War, and describe the ordeal of Reconstruction. Few journals cover such a sweep of history. An added dimension is the view of Victorian family life as Gorgas explored his feelings about aspects of parental responsibility and transmission of values to children--a rarely documented account from the male perspective. His son, called Willie in the journals, was William Crawford Gorgas (1854-1920), who was noted for his fight to control yellow fever and who became surgeon general of the United States. In his foreword to the volume, Frank E. Vandiver states: "Wiggins has done much more than present a well-edited version of Gorgas's diaries and journals; she has interpreted them in full Gorgas family context and in perspective of the times they cover. . . . Wiggins informs with the sort of editorial notes expected of a careful scholar, but she enlightens with wide knowledge of American and southern history. . . . Josiah Gorgas [was] an unusually observant, passionate man, a 'galvanized Rebel' who deserves rank among the true geniuses of American logistics.".
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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