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Verlag: University Alabama Press, 2005
ISBN 10: 0817352651ISBN 13: 9780817352653
Anbieter: Ergodebooks, Houston, TX, USA
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Paperback. Zustand: Used: Good.
Verlag: Georgetown University Press, Washington DC, 1945
Anbieter: Ground Zero Books, Ltd., Silver Spring, MD, USA
Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: as is. Presumed First Edition, First printing. xxiii, [3], 244, [2] pages. Endpaper maps. Frontis. Two other illustrations. Footnotes. Appendix. Index. Foreword by Douglas Southall Freeman. This publication was supported by the Sitterding Foundation. Front cover badly marred, with loss at top and bottom foredge corners, holes and other damage to front cover. Some damage to page corners at bottom. Spine is also damaged, especially at top. Rear board is in better condition but has some tears at spine. Text has not been impacted, even on pages with lower corner damage. John Dooley was the youngest son of Irish immigrants to Richmond, Virginia, where his father prospered, and the family took a leading position among Richmond's sizable Irish community. Early in 1862, John left his studies at Georgetown University to serve in the First Virginia Infantry Regiment, in which his father John and brother James also served. John's service took him to Second Manassas, South Mountain, Sharpsburg (Antietam), Fredericksburg, and Gettysburg; before that last battle, Dooley was elected a lieutenant. On the third day at Gettysburg, Dooley swept up the hill in Pickett's charge, where he was shot through both legs and lay all night on the field, to be made a POW the next day. Held until February 27, 1865, Dooley made his way back south to arrive home very near the Confederacy's final collapse. Dooley's account is valuable for the content of his service and because most of the material came from his diary, with some interpolations that he made shortly after the war's end when his memory was still fresh. Dooley's health seems to have been permanently compromised by his wounds; he entered a Roman Catholic seminary after the war and died in 1873 several months before his ordination was to take place.