Experience of a Confederate States Prisoner Being an Ephemeris Regularly Kept by an Officer of the Confederate States Army

audiobook

Experience of a Confederate States Prisoner Being an Ephemeris Regularly Kept by an Officer of the Confederate States Army

by Beckwith West

EN·~3 hours·2 chapters

Chapters

2 total

Transcriber’s Notes

0:15

EXPERIENCE OF A Confederate States Prisoner,

3:15:32

Description

This short work presents the raw entries of a Confederate officer who found himself a prisoner of war in the spring of 1862. Written in a straightforward, almost report‑like style, the journal records daily movements, orders, and the uneasy hope of parole that never materialized. The writer notes the scarcity of paper and supplies, yet his observations cut through the fog of battle to reveal the lived reality of confinement.

Beyond the military details, the diary captures moments of unexpected humanity: the generosity of local families who tended the sick, the courteous exchanges with Union soldiers, and the chatter of fellow captives about their leaders and the war’s outcome. Listeners will hear a voice that balances bitterness with camaraderie, offering a window into the personal side of a conflict often told in grand narratives. The account remains a vivid snapshot of a tumultuous time, inviting reflection on the costs of war.

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Details

Full title

Experience of a Confederate States Prisoner Being an Ephemeris Regularly Kept by an Officer of the Confederate States Army Being an Ephemeris Regularly Kept by an Officer of the Confederate States Army

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (187K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by the Library of Congress)

Release date

2018-07-09

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

BW

Beckwith West

A Civil War diarist whose surviving work reads with the immediacy of lived experience, he left behind a compact but vivid account of captivity in 1862. His writing offers a firsthand look at prison life, military routine, and the personal strain of war.

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