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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. Fight for freedom or rescue one's family from the grips of hunger and invasion – these were the two choices that weighed heavily upon the hearts and minds of Civil War soldiers. Both the Union and Confederate armies were rigorous in their respective attempts to win the war, however, issues concerning the home front continued to divert their attention from the military objective put forth by the war's efforts. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCconfd.rtf
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hearts and minds of Civil War soldiers. Both the Union and Confederate armies were rigorous in their respective attempts to win the war, however, issues concerning the home front
continued to divert their attention from the military objective put forth by the wars efforts. "Even though all the factors that created cohesion within the Union army operated as
thoroughly on the Confederate army, the will to make war was crippled by the obligations men felt to their families" (Mitchell PG). Much
literary attention has been given to the Civil War, including it causes, outcome and overall impact upon American history; however, few accounts actually delve deeply, if at all, into the
agonizing human concerns those three days produced. Many people have little understanding of the Civil Wars impact beyond a superficial point, inasmuch as school history books fail to address
the personal issues that ensued, which is where such insightful accounts like Reid Mitchells The Vacant Chair: The Northern Soldier Leaves Home and James M. McPhersons Ordeal By Fire: The
Civil War and Reconstruction effectively fill in this gaping void with emotional reflections that allow the reader to gain a significantly different perspective of the problems both Union and Confederate
armies faced on the home front. "Confederate soldiers left their wives -- and their mothers, sweethearts, daughters, fathers, sons, family, and friends -- at higher risk than most Union
soldiers left theirs. And as the war went on, the dangers that the people back home faced grew more widespread. Confederate soldiers found themselves torn between two duties,
one to the Confederacy, one to their families. After 1864, some Confederates saw the war as likely to end in defeat, others saw it as unlikely to end at
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