
A candid, first‑person account of a Union soldier’s early months in the Civil War, this memoir opens with a craftsman from Massachusetts who, after several failed attempts, finally joins the 32nd Massachusetts Volunteers. He writes not as a polished historian but as a man trying to earn a living for his ailing wife, offering an unvarnished view of enlistment, the long sea voyage, and the bewildering arrival at the front near Culpeper.
The narrative quickly moves to the grueling marches and the first clashes with Confederate forces, describing blistered feet, relentless rain, and the thin line between survival and surrender. Through vivid detail, the author captures the loneliness of soldiers far from home, the uncertainty of supply, and the raw emotions that accompany each step toward battle. Listeners will feel the weight of a soldier’s duty and the personal cost of war as told by someone who lived it.
Full title
The Empty Sleeve or, The Life and Hardships of Henry H. Meacham, in the Union Army
Language
en
Duration
~46 minutes (44K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Emmy and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2011-03-15
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1834–1879
A Civil War veteran turned his own hardship into a stark, personal memoir, describing battlefield injury, amputation, and the struggle to survive afterward. His brief self-published book offers a direct window into the human cost of war and disability in 19th-century America.
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