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OF THE

NIVERSITY OF

THE

SOUTH:

A TOUR OF ITS BATTLE-FIELDS AND RUINED CITIES,

A JOURNEY THROUGH THE DESOLATED STATES,
AND TALKS WITH THE PEOPLE:

BEING A DESCRIPTION OF THE

PRESENT STATE OF THE COUNTRY-ITS AGRICULTURE-RAILROADS-BUSINESS AND
FINANCES-GIVING AN ACCOUNT OF CONFEDERATE MISRULE, AND OF THE
SUFFERINGS, NECESSITIES AND MISTAKES, POLITICAL VIEWS,

SOCIAL CONDITION AND PROSPECTS, OF THE ARISTOCRACY,
MIDDLE CLASS, POOR WHITES AND
NEGROES. *

INCLUDING VISITS TO PATRIOT GRAVES AND REBEL PRISONS-AND EM-
BRACING SPECIAL NOTES ON THE FREE LABOR SYSTEM-EDUCATION
AND MORAL ELEVATION Of the freedMEN-ALSO, ON PLANS OF

RECONSTRUCTION AND INDUCEMENTS TO EMIGRATION.

FROM PERSONAL OBSERVATIONS AND EXPERIENCE DURING MONTHS OF SOUTHERN TRAVEL.

BY J. T. TROWBRIDGE,

AUTHOR OF "NEIGHBOR JACKWOOD," "CUDJO'S CAVE," ETC.

ILLUSTRATED.

SOLD BY AGENTS ONLY.

HARTFORD, CONN.:

PUBLISHED BY L. STEBBINS.
1866.

F

216

T86

1866

4819

Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1866,

BY L. STEBBINS,

In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the

District of Connecticut,

PREFACE.

In the summer of 1865, and in the following winter, I made two visits to the South, spending four months in eight of the principal States which had lately been in rebellion. I saw the most noted battle-fields of the war. I made acquaintance with officers and soldiers of both sides. I followed in the track of the destroying armies. I travelled by railroad, by steamboat, by stage-coach, and by private conveyance; meeting and conversing with all sorts of people, from high State officials to "low-down" whites and negroes; endeavoring, at all times and in all places, to receive correct impressions of the country, of its inhabitants, of the great contest of arms just closed, and of the still greater contest of principles not yet terminated.

This book is the result. It is a record of actual observations and conversations, free from fictitious coloring. Such

stories

as were told me of the war and its depredations would have been spoiled by embellishment; pictures of existing conditions, to be valuable, must be faithful; and what is now most desirable, is not hypothesis or declamation, but the light of plain facts upon the momentous question of the hour, which must be settled, not according to any political or sectional bias, but upon broad grounds of Truth and Eternal Right.

I have accordingly made my narrative as ample and as literally faithful as the limits of these pages, and of my own. opportunities, would allow. Whenever practicable, I have

-

stepped aside and let the people I met speak for themselves. Notes taken on the spot, and under all sorts of circumstances, on horseback, in jolting wagons, by the firelight of a farm-house, or negro camp, sometimes in the dark, or in the rain, have enabled me to do this in many cases with absolute fidelity. Conversations which could not be reported in this way, were written out as soon as possible after they took place, and while yet fresh in my memory. Idiomatic peculiarities, which are often so expressive of character, I have reproduced without exaggeration. To intelligent and candid men it was my habit to state frankly my intention to publish an account of my journey, and then, with their permission, to jot down such views and facts as they saw fit to impart. Sometimes I was requested not to report certain statements of an important nature, made in the glow of conversation; these, not without regret, I have suppressed; and I trust that in no instance have I violated a confidence that was reposed in me.

I may add that the conversations recorded are generally of a representative character, being selected from among hundreds of such; and that if I have given seemingly undue prominence to any subject, it has been because I found it an absorbing and universal topic of discussion.

MAY, 1866.

THE END.

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