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Confederate Reprint Company

Destruction and Reconstruction: Personal Experiences of the Late War

Destruction and Reconstruction: Personal Experiences of the Late War

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Written by the only son of President Zachary Taylor, this book is the story of the War Between the States and its aftermath as seen through the eyes of a Confederate General. When it first appeared in print, it was tauted by such leading Southern organizations as the Sons of Confederate Veterans and the Southern Historical Society as a valuable resource for future historians. Even the New York Herald described Taylor's memoirs as "the most credible attempt by a Southerner" to interpret the war.

Author: Richard Taylor
Publisher: Confederate Reprint Company
Published: 07/07/2015
Pages: 292
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.87lbs
Size: 9.02h x 5.98w x 0.61d
ISBN: 9780692326787

About the Author
Richard Taylor, the only son of Zachary Taylor, was born at his father's plantation outside Louisville, Kentucky in 1826. His early years were spent on frontier army posts, including an eight-year stay at remote Fort Crawford in what is now Wisconsin. He was sent to a private school in Louisville and later graduated from Yale University in 1845. He spent most of the following years in Mississippi and Louisiana, where he became a sugar planter and earned a reputation as a politician and gentleman scholar. A delegate to the 1860 Democratic convention in Charleston, South Carolina, he worked to prevent the disruption of the Northern and Southern wings. Afterwards, he attended the Southern Democratic convention in Baltimore which nominated John C. Breckinridge for President. Although pessimistic about the prospects of Southern secession, he was a delegate to the Louisiana secession convention at Baton Rouge in January 1861. With the outbreak of war, he first attached himself to the staff of General Braxton Bragg at Pensacola, then accepted a commission from the governor of Louisiana as colonel of the Ninth Louisiana Infantry Regiment and was sent to the Virginia front. He commanded the Louisiana Brigade under General Thomas J. Jackson in the 1862 Shenandoah Valley campaigns. Afterwards he was transferred to the Trans-Mississippi Department, where he led outnumbered Confederate forces to victories in the Red River Campaign. In the closing days of the war he was transferred to command in Alabama and Mississippi, surrendering only after the surrenders of Generals Lee and Johnson and the capture of President Jefferson Davis. After the war Taylor returned to Louisiana, living in New Orleans and participating in the politics of the Reconstruction era. He died in 1879 while on a trip to New York City, and was buried in Metairie Cemetery, New Orleans. His memoir, completed before his death, was published a few days later.

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