The Civil War, 1861-1865
The Civil War, 1861-1865
Letters and documents recount the secession crisis and the American Civil War through general orders, orderly books, recruitment broadsides, maps, photographs, newspapers, and the journals, official dispatches, and personal letters of military commanders, politicians, soldiers, and civilians. This archive includes letters and diaries written by statesmen, soldiers, and civilians that provide unique perspectives on virtually every aspect of the Civil War including battles, life on the home front, Lee’s surrender, Lincoln’s assassination, and prisoner-of-war experiences. Thousands of soldiers’ letters and diaries, most of them unpublished, capture the experience of the common soldier and his family in great detail.
Selected Searches in the Collection's Catalog
- Cartoons, prints, sketches, and engravings of battles, scenic views, and camp life including published engravings and hand-drawn sketches by soldiers
- Unique objects including an enslaved child’s doll, election ephemera, and mourning ribbons
- The impact of volunteer nurses in the Civil War is evident in the letters written by patients to Sarah Ogden
- Broadsides, including recruitment posters
- Period photographs capturing both battlefields and personal portraits
- Maps
- Newspapers
- A collection of rare newspapers printed on wallpaper
- Documents relating to the Emancipation Proclamation
- Soldiers’ letters, photographs, official documents, maps, and sketches from the Battle of Gettysburg
- Lincoln’s assassination