On the one-hundred-fiftieth anniversary of the Civil War, award-winning
author Frye Gaillard reflects on the war--and the way we remember
it--through letters written by his family, including his great-great
grandfather and his two sons, both of whom were Confederate officers. As
Gaillard explains in his introductory essay, he came of age in a
Southern generation that viewed the war as a glorious lost cause. But as
he read through letters collected by members of his family, he
confronted a far more sobering truth.
"Oh, this terrible war," wrote his great-great-grandfather, Thomas
Gaillard. "Who can measure the troubles--the affliction--it has brought
upon us all?"
To this real-time anguish in voices from the past, Gaillard offers a
personal remembrance of the shadow of war and its place in the haunted
identity of the South. "My own generation," he writes, "was, perhaps,
the last that was raised on stories of gallantry and courage . . .
Oddly, mine was also the one of the first generations to view the Civil
War through the lens of civil rights--to see . . . connections and flaws
in Southern history that earlier generations couldn't bear to face."