In the "Year of the South: Four Lives in 1865", the author Steven Ash can tell his audience about the real stories of the lives of the four people living in the South-North in 1865. Four men included slaves ((), soldiers of the Confederate Army (John), wife of Colonel Colonel (Cornilla) and pastor (Samuel.) John, Cornelia, Roux, Samuel played a variety of roles through the civil war After fighting, after the war they changed their way of life.
Southern Year: 1865: True story of the four ordinary people in the 12 months most turbulent in American history, written by educators, historians, writers Steven V. Ash. Ash is a civil engineer and his background allows him to accurately and skillfully draw the South Civil War. Southern Year: 1865 is a biography of the four sides published in 2002. This book is a biography, but it closely resembles a novel. The book explains the influence of civil war on the lives of four different southerns during hostility. Ash wrote biographies to show various views of the civil war about each Southerner, using the diaries and memos left by the four people.
Between January and December 1865, four men witnessed the death of the former south and the birth of the new southern from different perspectives. The Civil War historian Stephen V. Ash recreates their daily lives with vivid details, their fear and hope, and their frustration and victory - to the real people in the era of gigantic turbulence It provides a dramatic story and a new perspective at important moments. history
Samuel Agne, Louis Hughes, Cornelia McDonald and John Robertson lived in the south in 1865. And I witnessed the death of Old South and the birth of New South. From January to December, the federal troops fell to the Federal Army, slavery gave way to freedom, and saw a long and difficult process of unifying the north and the south into one country. On this turbulent stage, everyone in the south fought a personal battle. Minister Agne is striving to solve spiritual and secular problems; Hughes who are slaves seeking freedom for himself and his family; widow McDonald 's away from the life of the new war. In their vivid history of their daily life, Stephen Ash shares their hopes, fears, frustration and victory