
In the quiet New England village of Rossville, the town hall becomes a crucible of opinion as the Civil War’s draft summons the community to decide who will answer the President’s call for soldiers. The meeting, held on a crisp September afternoon in 1862, gathers farmers, shopkeepers, and outspoken locals who argue over leadership, strategy, and the very purpose of the conflict. Their spirited debates echo through the modest hall, revealing a mix of patriotic fervor, cynical skepticism, and personal ambition.
Among the voices are a gaunt skeptic who doubts the government’s competence, a confident young man eager to offer his own plan for ending the war, and a modest doctor reluctantly thrust into a leadership role. As the townspeople nominate a chairman and a clerk, the gathering captures the tension between collective duty and individual doubt, setting the stage for the choices that will shape both the farm fields and the battlefront.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (338K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
1998-12-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1832–1899
Best known for stories of poor boys who rise through grit, luck, and good character, this 19th-century American writer helped shape the classic “rags-to-riches” tale. His hugely popular juvenile novels became a lasting part of American culture.
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