Dolly Sumner Lunt begins her diary,
A Woman's Wartime
Journal, published in 1918, by recalling her anxiety about the
approach of General Sherman's Union army on January 1, 1864. While
she worries about the arrival of Sherman's troops and their habit
of pillaging and burning everything in their path, she records
stories of visits by local raiders posing as U.S. soldiers and the
sleepless nights she has spent watching fires on the horizon.
Despite Lunt's efforts to hide her valuable possessions, which
include sending her mules into the woods, dividing her stores of
meat among the slaves, and burying the silver, the passing Union
troops raid her house and plantation and take her slaves with them.
They also set fire to cotton bales in her barn, but the blaze burns
out before spreading, largely sparing Lunt's property the
widespread destruction suffered by neighboring plantations. In her
last entries, dated December 1865, Lunt writes optimistically about
the recovery of her farm, her new sharecropping system, and the
first cheerful Christmas in years.
A DOCSOUTH BOOK. This collaboration between UNC Press and the
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