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Confederate States of America - Regimental Histories, Confederate States of America - General & Miscellaneous, Virginia - State & Local History, United States Civil War - Social Aspects, Armed Forces - United States - Regimental Histories - General & Misc
Lee's Young Artillerist by Peter S. Carmichael β€” book cover

Lee's Young Artillerist

by Peter S. Carmichael
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Overview

William R. J. Pegram forged a record as one of the most prominent artillerists in the Army of Northern Virginia. He participated in every major battle in Virginia and rose from sergeant to full colonel by the end of the war. Pegram entered Confederate service to defend a way of life that he believed to be ordained by God, a belief that was shared by many of his contemporaries. Lee's Young Artillerist looks at Pegram as a case study exemplifying the worldview of slaveholders whose formative years were the 1850s. Religious leaders offered a scriptural interpretation of society that emphasized human inequality as part of a social hierarchy and made support of slavery a Christian duty for all white Southerners. Pegram firmly believed in a religion of action, that God demanded he and his men do everything in their power to defeat the enemy. He equated losing faith in the Confederacy with abandoning God, family, and community and could not conceive of defeat at the hands of ungodly Northerners. Rather than being considered fanatic, Pegram's values were shared by other young Confederate officers, the South's ruling elite. Lee's Young Artillerist challenges the thesis of some Civil War historians that a weakening Confederate belief in slavery and a loss of morale contributed to the South's defeat. Carmichael proposes instead that Pegram and thousands of other young Confederates interpreted their world through a religious prism that made the defense of slavery appear a just cause for which to die.

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Editorials

Booknews

This biography of artillerist Pegram, who participated in every major Virginia battle by the end of the Civil War, is a case study in the Confederate worldview. Carmichael (PhD candidate, Pennsylvania State U.) challenges other historians by demonstrating that Pegram and his fellow soldiers shared a religious belief in human inequality based on scriptural interpretation, their "cause" becoming synonymous with Godliness and their defense of slavery not merely an economic or cultural defense but representative of a much deeper religious conviction. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Book Details

Published
June 1, 1995
Publisher
Charlottesville : University Press of Virginia, 1995.
Pages
264
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780813916118

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