1862: Scenic South Carolina in the midst of war ...
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1862: Scenic South Carolina in the midst of war ...
1862: The sun goes down & the miles drag on ...
1862: Troop movements along the Potomac ...
1862: Dr. Hawks lays out some of the military realities of her surroundings ...
1862: General Saxton confronts the ruthless tide of violence against former slaves ...
1862: The orders go out: It's a night's march! ...
Colby runs into his fiancee's older brother-in-law in camp at Arlington Heights ...
1862: While waiting in camp at Washington, Colby hears news of nearby engagements...
1862: Even worse than property damage is the abuse of former slaves by Northern soldiers ...
1863: Dr. Esther Hill Hawks confronts many of her own racial preconceptions when she finds herself managing the camp hospital that receives over 500 wounded men of the 54th MA following their assault on Fort Wagner...
1862: Colby surveys his surroundings & recalls the big names that shaped history here ...
1860: Burleigh sends news about his family's Thanksgiving activities...
1862: Dr. Esther loses her voice teaching 300 freedmen students at a time ...
1862: Roman poets among the ruins ...
1862: Dr. Hawks continues to document the depredations of Union troops occupying coastal South Carolina ...
1860: Burleigh relates a classic NH Thanksgiving... (Drawn by guest artist Dan Haines of Hopkinton)
1860: Burleigh's recently back from the 1860 Republican convention in Chicago, and he can't wait to tell his brother all about the celebrations back on the farm in Contoocook:
1862: Colby's regiment finally reaches Washington, but Newton's sick in the hospital when the work begins ...
1858: Burleigh K. Jones has some fun times planned for May Day, but life around the capital still seems unbearably dull... (Drawn by guest artist Althea Barton)
1862: Dr. Esther has some help at her new home in South Carolina ...
1858: Be careful what you wish for! Burleigh K. Jones just can't get rid of those buttons he had his brother send him from Boston! (Drawn by guest artist Heather Mitchell) ...
1855: Contoocook's Burleigh K. Jones shares news from home (and demonstrates his sense of humor) in an exciting letter to his brother Sullivan. (Drawn by guest artist Andrew Z.) ...
1862: The Union armies stand at the gates of Richmond, and to Burleigh, the war seems all but won. He couldn't be more wrong ...
1862: Burleigh K. Jones takes a break from letter writing to observe dinnertime; then he continues with some ghastly details from the Fair Oaks battlefield: