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A 6 page report on After Chancelorsville: Letters from the Heart. No additional sources cited.
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time of great struggle for all people, no matter what side they were on and no matter their involvement, or lack of involvement, in the military. It was a moment
in history that stood to dismantle the Union or make it stronger, a major turning point that could have gone differently and resulted in a very different nation than we
know today. This struggle was made up of many people, most of them quite common and perhaps many who possessed no education. In the work After Chancellorsville: Letters from the
Heart, edited by Robert I. Cottom and Judy, the reader is presented with the very personal and private letters of two different people during the Civil War. The letters are
those of Private Walter G. Dunn and Emma Randolph. The following paper presents a book report of this particular work. After Chancellorsville: Letters from the Heart Dunn and
Randolph were actually very distant cousins and began writing while Emma was home and Dunn was in the service. Emma was not even 20 years old when she began writing
to him and Dunn was part of the 11th New Jersey Infantry. They had apparently been writing but then a point came when all of Emmas letters were detaimed by
a Rebel and as such Dunn did not receive any letters from her for awhile. It was also at this time that he became wounded severely in battle and was
sent to a hospital where he was one of far too many injured, and he was witness to horrific conditions in the filthy hospital. In this scenario one can
see a powerful story of Emma, a relatively simple young woman, but a woman who is caring and compassionate and wants to do whatever possible to help this man by
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