My Life in the Irish Brigade: The Civil War Memoirs of Private William McCarter, 116th Pennsylvania Infantry
Kevin E. O'Brien, ed. (Cambridge: Da Capo Press,1996)
Civil War memoirs are far from scarce, yet this book is one of the rare few written entirely by an enlisted soldier. William McCarter's story is one of simultaneous fear and courage. His time in combat was brief due to injury yet his story is a primary account of the events that unfolded on the battlefield in Fredericksburg, Virginia on December 13, 1862. The Private skims very lightly on the political aspects of the battle, and the war as a whole, but rather focuses only on the sensory information he received. His accounts of daily camp life and the ordeals he and his comrades faced in the Virginia winter are vivid and at times incredulous. McCarter takes pride in his Irish heritage and American service and vividly recounts the horrors of war. Overall, this is an engrossing read and important story to be told.
Other Suggestions:
The Green and the
Gray: The Irish in the Confederate States of America, David T. Gleeson (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2013).
A meticulously researched and expertly written
text, this book recognizes the identity shifts of not only the Irish, but the
Confederacy itself. As the societal identity of Irish residents transformed, so
too did the identity of the region. When such prominent Irish southerners as
Bishop Patrick Lynch and Irish hero John Mitchel aired their strong support of
the Confederate cause, namely the South’s “peculiar institution,” they became
beloved heroes of the southern people.
Gleeson’s excellent scholarship also
offers insight into the hypocrisy of the Irish in avoiding conscription. Many
of these men availed themselves of their British citizenship in order to avoid
the horrors of battle. The Green and Gray
provides objective and pertinent information that will undoubtedly become part
of the discourse for a number of disciplines. Southern Irish immigrants during
this period are often overshadowed by their northern counterparts thus making
Gleeson’s work all the more relevant to a comprehensive study of ethnic and personal
identity during the Civil War period.
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Conyngham, D.P. The Irish Brigade and Its Campaigns. Edited by Lawrence Frederick
Kohl.
New
York: Fordham University Press, 1994.
Corby, William. Memoirs of Chaplain Life: Three Years with the Irish Brigade in the
Army of
the Potomac. Edited by Lawrence
Frederick Kohl. New York: Fordham University
Press, 1992.
McCarthy, Cal. Green, Blue and Gray: The Irish in the American Civil War. Cork,
Ireland:
Collins
Press, 2009.
Tucker, Phillip Thomas. Irish Confederates: The Civil War’s
Forgotten Soldiers. Abilene, TX:
McWhitney
Foundation Press, 2006.