In the years preceding the Civil War, Delaware was essentially
divided--as a slave state, it had many ties to the South, but as the
first state to ratify the federal Constitution, it was fiercely loyal to
the Union. With the outbreak of war, the First State rallied to
Lincoln's call and sent proportionally more troops to fight for the
Union than any free state. Yet even as the renowned Du Pont mills
provided half of the Union gunpowder, Southern sympathizers transported
war materiel to the Confederacy via the Nanticoke River. Author Michael
Morgan deftly navigates this complex history. From Wilmington
abolitionist Thomas Garrett, who helped 2,700 fugitive slaves flee
north, to the prison camp at Fort Delaware that held thousands of
captured Confederates and political prisoners, Morgan reveals the
remarkable stories of the heroes and scoundrels of Civil War Delaware.