On the day that Lincoln was inaugurated in 1861,
twenty-seven-year-old William Dorsey Pender, en route to the
provisional Confederate capital in Montgomery, Alabama, hurriedly
scribbled a note to his wife, Fanny. So began a prolific
correspondence between a rising Confederate officer and his
cherished wife that would last until Pender was mortally wounded at
Gettysburg.
First published by UNC Press in 1965, Pender's letters are filled
with personal details, colorful descriptions, and candid opinions
of such important figures as Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson, J.
E. B. Stuart, and A. P. Hill. His comments on his military
activities and aspirations and the challenges of command, combined
with his husbandly advice and affection, sketch an intimate and
unvarnished portrait of the man who was perhaps the most
distinguished North Carolina commander.