New Search  |  Browse by Location  |  Browse by Subject  |  Browse all entries  |  Map
Results:  1 Item 
Locations
Baton Rouge (1)
Mobile (1)
Natchez (1)
New Orleans (1)
Philadelphia (1)
Vicksburg (1)
1.Title:  Alexander Dallas Bache Diary (1862)
 Dates:  1862 - 1862 
 Extent:  1 volume  
 Locations:  Baton Rouge | Mobile | Natchez | New Orleans | Philadelphia | Vicksburg 
 Abstract:  The Alexander Dallas Bache diary offers an unusual view of Civil War battlefields from the perspective of the superintendent of the United States Coast Survey. Bache served as Captain's Clerk aboard USS Harford flagship, one of 17 Union ships that traveled up the Mississippi River to take New Orleans. With entries spanning the spring and summer of 1862 (4/14-7/13), this volume recounts naval bombardments in the early years of the war, provides textured accounts of the Confederate South, and will no doubt interest researchers who study the Civil War, U.S. military history, and the Confederate States of America. 
    
Bache's diary provides curt but consistent accounts of the Union's military operations, particularly along the Mississippi River. Those include the Battle of Charlotte (4/25), the Battle of Baton Rouge (5/28), and the Battle of Vicksburg (6/28). Notably, Bache travels to shore on at least one occasion, furnishing first-hand accounts of the Confederate South. For example, he attends a religious service, writing, "Some of the officers went to church where they prayed for the President of the Confed. States" (5/13). Later, he describes as Natchez as a "very pretty place" (5/18). Interested researchers might consider pairing this volume with the Thomas Hewson Bache Diary, also from 1862, which provides a surgeon's perspective on the Battle of Baton Rouge.
 
    
The Alexander Dallas Bache diary offers an unusual view of Civil War battlefields from the perspective of the superintendent of the United States Coast Survey. Bache served as Captain's Clerk aboard USS Harford flagship, one of 17 Union ships that traveled up the Mississippi River to take New Orleans. With entries spanning the spring and summer of 1862 (4/14-7/13), this volume recounts naval bombardments in the early years of the war, provides textured accounts of the Confederate South, and will no doubt interest researchers who study the Civil War, U.S. military history, and the Confederate States of America.
 
Bache's diary provides curt but consistent accounts of the Union's military operations, particularly along the Mississippi River. Those include the Battle of Charlotte (4/25), the Battle of Baton Rouge (5/28), and the Battle of Vicksburg (6/28). Notably, Bache travels to shore on at least one occasion, furnishing first-hand accounts of the Confederate South. For example, he attends a religious service, writing, "Some of the officers went to church where they prayed for the President of the Confed. States" (5/13). Later, he describes as Natchez as a "very pretty place" (5/18). Interested researchers might consider pairing this volume with the Thomas Hewson Bache Diary, also from 1862, which provides a surgeon's perspective on the Battle of Baton Rouge.
View Full Description in New Window
 
 
  Selected Quotations
  • "the bombing in the night was beautiful" (4/19)

  • Receives news that "the American flag flies over Jackson" (4/28)

  • "Some of the officers went to church where they prayed for the President of the Confed. States" (5/13)
 
 Subjects:  American Civil War, 1861-1865 | Confederate States of America. | Diaries. | Medicine. | Religion. | Science. | Travel. | United States--Civilization--1783-1865. | United States Coast Survey. | United States--Politics and government--1783-1865. | Weather. 
 Collection:  A. D. Bache Collection  (Mss.B.B123)  
  Go to the collection