
audiobook
by Eliza Ripley
A WOMAN’S ADVENTURES AND EXPERIENCES IN THE SOUTH DURING THE WAR, IN MEXICO AND IN CUBA
NOTE.
CHAPTER I.A PLANTATION HOME IN LOUISIANA.
CHAPTER II.THE NEW FLAG—CAMPAIGN SEWING SOCIETY—CAPTURE OF NEW ORLEANS.
CHAPTER III.A CREVASSE—OCCUPATION OF BATON ROUGE—DEFENSELESS CITIZENS.
CHAPTER IV.WILLY’S ERRAND—BRECKENRIDGE’S MESSAGE—THE RAW RECRUITS.
CHAPTER V.THE BATTLE—RUSH TO ARLINGTON—DISASTER—DEPARTURE OF OUR GUESTS.
CHAPTER VI.RESTORING ORDER—SCENES OF VANDALISM—PREPARATIONS FOR DEPARTURE.
CHAPTER VII.SECOND VISIT OF THE ENEMY—MIDNIGHT FLIGHT—FAREWELL TO ARLINGTON.
CHAPTER VIII.“PICKETS DOWN DAR!”—HARD JOURNEYING—WILLY’S FATE—CHARLOTTE.
A young Southern woman’s memoir carries listeners from the tranquil lawns of a Louisiana plantation through the turmoil of the Civil War’s final years. She recounts the sudden shift from genteel domesticity to the frantic scramble of armies, sewers, and makeshift societies as New Orleans falls and Baton Rouge changes hands. Her vivid descriptions of nightly camps, hurried escapes, and the raw uncertainty of a nation at war paint a personal portrait of resilience amid national upheaval.
Beyond the battlefield, the narrative widens to include daring journeys across the Rio Grande, encounters with French‑occupied Mexican towns, and a colorful sojourn in bustling Havana. She observes the everyday lives of locals, the clash of cultures, and the rhythms of plantation work under new regimes. Through these varied landscapes, her voice remains steady, offering a candid glimpse into a world in transition while preserving the intimate details of love, loss, and the simple pleasures that sustained her across continents.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (401K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United States: D. Appleton and Company, 1888.
Credits
Emmanuel Ackerman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2023-03-14
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1832–1912
A Southern memoirist with a sharp eye for place and character, this writer preserved vivid memories of plantation life, the Civil War, and old New Orleans. Her books remain valuable for the detail they offer about a world transformed by conflict and change.
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