
|
|
||||
|
||||
$30.00 |
Civil War Animal Heroes: By Charles G. Worman. Published by Schroeder Publications in 2011. Hardcover with dust jacket, 288 pages, index, 94 photos illustrations and maps.
Pets provided a valuable service in relieving homesickness and other stresses of war. Dogs were the most common but cats found favor within the Union and Confederate navies for their role in combating the hordes of rats and mice which infested ships. But tales of such other creatures as squirrels, raccoons, bears, and even a camel are found within this book. Some accounts are humorous, but others are tragic.
Useful as pets were as morale builders, they weren’t the
essential resource which horses and mules were for cavalry, artillery, and
transportation units as well as for officers’ mounts. It has been estimated
that more than two million horses and mules served during the war. Their
tales too sometimes are tragic. Best known of officers’ mounts are Gen.
Robert E. Lee’s Traveller and perhaps “Stonewall” Jackson’s Little Sorrel.
The skeleton of Old Fly of the 1st Indiana Cavalry is exhibited
in an obscure museum in Indiana. The stories of these animal heroes were
drawn largely from memoirs, regimental histories, and Civil War letters.
They offer insight into a little studied aspect of this very uncivil war’s
history and should be of interest not only to students of that conflict but
to animal lovers as well.
|
||
|
|
|||
|
|||
|
|
|||
Copyright (c) 2000 The Bivouac |
The Bivouac
|
||