Prussian-born cartographer Oscar Hinrichs was a key member of
Stonewall Jackson's staff, collaborated on maps with Jedediah
Hotchkiss, and worked alongside such prominent Confederate leaders
as Joe Johnston, Richard H. Anderson, and Jubal Early. After being
smuggled along the Rebel Secret Line in southern Maryland by John
Surratt Sr., his wife Mary, and other Confederate sympathizers,
Hinrichs saw action in key campaigns from the Shenandoah Valley and
Antietam to Gettysburg, Petersburg, and Appomattox. After the
Confederate surrender, Hinrichs was arrested alongside his friend
Henry Kyd Douglas and imprisoned under suspicion of having played a
role in the Booth conspiracy, though the charges were later
dropped.
Hinrichs's detailed wartime journals, published here for the first
time, shed new light on mapmaking as a tool of war, illuminate
Stonewall Jackson's notoriously superior strategic and tactical use
of terrain, and offer unique perspectives on the lives of common
soldiers, staff officers, and commanders in Lee's army.
Impressively comprehensive, Hinrichs's writings constitute a
valuable and revelatory primary source from the Civil War era.