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Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Book: Unvanquished: How Confederate Women Survived the Civil War

 



Brave southern women tell how they survived the desperate last days of the Confederacy in eyewitness accounts.  They outwitted the plundering Yankees and fed starving children. Includes accounts of slave women. 

Civil War food recipes:  cabbage stew, hoppin' John, oatmeal pie, Johnny cakes, molasses cookies etc.  Amazon Best Seller.
  
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Monday, May 12, 2025

Civil War: Starvation Descends Upon the South

Starvation loomed as a stark possibility for many Southern women. Desperate women, trying to feed hungry children resorted to robbery.  

"To be hungry is there an everyday occurrence. For ten days, ...lived off just hominy enough to keep their bodies and souls from parting, without being able to procure another article; not even a potato... I am satisfied that two months more of danger, difficulties, perplexities, and starvation will lay her (Mother) in her grave. "~ Sarah Morgan, Louisiana


Food Riots
The women knew food was stored in depots and warehouses.  In cities from Alabama, to Virginia, gatherings often erupted into riots in which crowds of women, broke into stores, depots, and warehouses and carried off supplies.

In the town of Salisbury, North Carolina in March 1863, a group of 75 women armed with axes and hatchets descended upon the railroad depot and local stores, desperate for food.  The women thought that the railroad agent and the store owners were hoarding flour, to sell later at a higher price.  When faced with the angry mob, the storekeepers reluctantly gave flour, molasses, and salt to the women.”

Richmond, Virginia - Bread Riot

In April 1863, a “mob of women” desperate with hunger, marched up Main Street, entered the stores of the suspected speculators and emptied them of their contents.  


Eventually Jefferson Davis appeared, spoke to the crowd, and calmed the women who left, reluctantly, with their stolen baked goods.


Yankee marauders made the situation worse. Luckily, two factors saved the Confederate families: 1) the local southerners knew the land well and hid food and livestock, 2) Yankees thought sweet potatoes were weeds and overlooked them, when they plundered.

Sunday, March 30, 2025

Food of a Civil War Soldier

 The soldiers gathered in small groups each evening to prepare their food.  The food was low quality for both armies, but the Confederate soldier suffered more from lack of food.   For soldiers of the North, some food was obtained by plunder.  When food deliveries were interrupted by weather delays or other challenges, soldiers were forced to forage the countryside to supplement their meager diets.


Yankee Soldier
Hardtack

Hard as a rock, this cracker was the bane of many a Civil War soldier.  The ingredients were simple: wheat flour, water, and maybe some salt, mixed into a dense dough, rolled and cut into biscuit sized squares.  Mostly a food of the Yankee or Union Army, soldiers called the hard little biscuits, “tooth-dullers”.  Hardtack was almost inedible and nearly dense enough to stop a musket ball.  To soften, hardtack was often dunked in brine, coffee, or cooked with salt pork.  You can make hardtack, the recipe follows:

Ingredients:
2 cups of flour
 1/2 to 3/4 cup water 
6 pinches of salt
Optional:  add 1 tbsp of vegetable fat 

Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.  Mix the ingredients together into a stiff dough, knead several times, and spread the dough out flat to a thickness of 1/4 inch on a non-greased cookie sheet.  Using a knife, cut dough into 3-inch cracker squares.  Punch four rows of holes, four holes per row, into each cracker.

Bake for 30 minutes. Remove from oven, turn crackers over on the sheet and return to the oven and bake another 30 minutes. Cool completely.


Confederate Soldier
Sloosh

Many Southern soldiers simply cooked cornmeal mush around a rifle ramrod.  They took the cornmeal and swirled it around in grease, making a dough.  They then wrapped the dough around their rifle ramrod and cooked it over the campfire. That was called "sloosh". 

Corn Pone
Corn pone was a staple of early settlers and Civil War soldiers.


Recipe

4 cups ground white or yellow cornmeal 
1 tablespoon salt 
2-3 cups of very hot (not boiling) water 
 1/4--1/2 cup bacon grease or other oil


In a large bowl, add the hot water to the corn meal and mix into a thick batter. Cover with a dishcloth and let it sit for 15 to 20 minutes. The batter should still be soft enough to mold into a small cake. 

Take your cast iron skillet and put it over a medium heat on the stove or over your fire, add the bacon grease or oil. When the oil is hot lay the cakes into the pan. Cook them until they are browned on one side, this should take about 3 minutes. Turn each and brown on the other side. Drain the fat and serve.


Food on the Home front 
Lacking many ingredients, the southern women learned to alter food recipes according to their scarce available resources.  



Oatmeal pie recipe:


The military needed a cheap way to feed a lot of people, and soldiers across the country were introduced to the idea they could eat their horses' oats.  So oats become a popular food.  During the Civil War  pecans were in short supply in the South, so oatmeal pie was a good substitute for southern pecan pie.

      


Idiot's Delight cake recipe:


An easy dessert to make, "Idiot's Delight" cake was quick and frugal.  It was often served on Christmas and Holidays.


To learn more Civil War food recipes and learn the history of survival of women in the south...

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Brave southern women tell how they survived the desperate last days of the Confederacy in eyewitness accounts.  They outwitted the plundering Yankees and fed starving children. Includes accounts of slave women. Civil War food recipes:  cabbage stew, hoppin' John, oatmeal pie, Johnny cakes, molasses cookies etc.   

Friday, April 19, 2024

Civil War: Buried Treasure

Ex Slave Finds Buried Treasure

Many plantation owners buried their jewels, silver, and gold coins to keep it out of the hands of Yankee marauders. A lot of these men never told their wives of its location, afraid that under pressure it would be revealed. Some of these Confederate soldiers died in battle, never to return to unearth it. It still lies underground not yet found.

Sharecroppers Find Buried Wealth:
Martha Richardson had been a slave girl in Columbia, South Carolina. Martha and her brothers were working in the fields one day as sharecroppers. As they chopped, her older brother’s shovel hit something hard. He dug more and saw it was the lid of a pot.


They removed the lid and saw it was filled with silver and gold coins. They quickly return to their family cabin to show the pot to their Mother.  She first tells the children to watch the door and see that no one enters.  She counts the coins slowly and tells them the money amounts to $5,700.  ($5,700 is equivalent to $95,000 in today’s money). She asks them to swear to tell no one about their find.

With the newly found wealth, Martha’s Mother bought 2 lots of land.  They continued to present a humble appearance and work as sharecroppers, but they also built a house for the family and a cottage they rented out.  Martha was eternally grateful for this money which allowed her family to escape from debt and to find some relief from their hard toil.  Their lives were completely changed.  

Source:  Federal Writers' Project: Slave Narrative Project, Vol. 14, South Carolina, Part 4, Raines-Young

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Monday, January 16, 2023

Returning Defeated Soldiers

Mary Ann Harris Gay describes the family reunion with her returning Confederate soldier brother:

"As we stood upon the platform of the Decatur depot, and saw him step from the train ... our hearts were filled with consternation and pity, and tears unbidden coursed down our cheeks, as we looked upon the brave and gallant brother, who had now given three years of his early manhood to a cause rendered dear by inheritance and the highest principles of patriotism, and, in doing so, had himself become a physical wreck. 

He was lean to emaciation, and in his pale face was not a suggestion of the ruddy color he had carried away. A constant cough, which he tried in vain to repress, betrayed the deep inroads which prison life had made upon his system."

These young, handsome boys that had gone to war came back changed.9

READ MORE about women and the Civil War, read eyewitness accounts.  Available on Amazon.com Kindle ebooks.  Click below:


Monday, March 23, 2020

Epidemics, Pandemics, Infectious Diseases of the American Civil War

The deadliest thing that faced the Civil War were infectious diseases. For every soldier who died in battle, two died of disease.   During the 1860's, doctors had yet to develop bacteriology and were generally ignorant of the causes of disease. Generally, Civil War doctors underwent two years of medical school, though some pursued more education.  Some 10,000 surgeons served in the Union army and about 4,000 served in the Confederate.


Surgeons of the Civil War

In the years before the war, training for physicians in the United States was mostly unregulated, and medical schools' access to cadavers for teaching purposes was highly restricted. In spite of these limitations, many army physicians rose to the challenges of the war, undertaking new methods of study and experimentation.


"Government inaction or delay have shaped the course of many infectious disease outbreaks in our country, including the American Civil War.  

There were smallpox epidemics among civilians, although a vaccine existed.  Smallpox exploded at this time not because of a lack of protocols or knowledge—a vaccine even existed—but because political leaders simply didn’t care about the group that was getting sick. Government inaction or delay—due to racial discrimination, homophobia, stigma, and apathy—have shaped the course of many epidemics in our country. (Jim Downs, The Epidemics America Got WrongThe Atlantic Magazine, Mar 22, 2020)

When the first cases of smallpox broke out among troops during the Civil War, military officials—on the Union and Confederate sides alike—immediately quarantined the infected in a tent or a makeshift hospital to prevent the transmission of the virus. But when smallpox began spreading among formerly enslaved people, officials either ignored it or argued that the virus spread viciously among black people because of racial inferiority and unsanitary habits.

In the months after President Lincoln had issued the Emancipation Proclamation in January of 1863, no infrastructure was in place to provide new freed people with basic necessities, let alone to combat a deadly virus. Mortality rates increased. In the face of a widespread epidemic, the people had to help themselves in order to survive. Harriet Jacobs, a formerly enslaved woman who had escaped to the North but returned to the South to help, wrote to charitable groups and asked them to immediately send clothing, blankets, and other resources. With the money Northern benevolent associations sent, Jacobs, with the eventual assistance of the military, constructed a makeshift hospital for freedpeople.


READ MORE about women and the Civil War.  Eyewitness accounts:



Wednesday, October 16, 2019

Slaves Find a Pot of Gold - Civil War Stories


A Pot of Gold
During the Civil War, many a Southern family buried their jewels, silver and gold coins in the ground, to hide from Yankee plundering.  Many Confederate men died in battle, never to return to unearth it. They often hid the location even from their wives, so the site would not be revealed under pressure.

Martha Richardson had been a slave girl in Columbia, South Carolina.   

Martha and her brothers were sharecroppers, working in the fields.  

As they chopped, her older brother’s shovel hit something hard.  He dug more and saw it was the lid of a pot.  Martha describes what happened:

“It was no sooner out than we takes off de lid and we is sho’ surprised at what we see. Big silver dollars lay all over de top.  

We takes two of them and drops them together and they ring just lak we hear them ring on de counters. Then we grabble in de pot for more.

De silver went down about two inches deep. Twenty dollar gold pieces run down for about four inches or so and de whole bottom was full of big bundles of twenty dollar greenbacks.”


They quickly return to their family cabin to show the pot to their Mother, who begins to empty it.  She first tells the children to watch the door and see that no one enters. 

She counts the coins and tells them the money amounts to $5,700.   (This money is equivalent to $90,000 today.) She asks them to swear to tell no one about their find.

Martha’s family continued to work, tilling the land.  With the newly found wealth, Martha’s Mother bought 2 lots of land and built a house for the family and a cottage she rented out.  Martha was eternally grateful for this money which allowed her family  to escape from debt and to find some relief from their hard toil.

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