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When the Hurlyburly's Done / When the Battle's Lost and Won: Service, Suffering, and Survival of Civil War and Great War Veterans

When the Hurlyburly's Done / When the Battle's Lost and Won: Service, Suffering, and... revi ew essay When the Hurlyburly’s Done / When the Battle’s Lost and Won” Service, Suffering, and Survival of Civil War and Great War Veterans ian ish erwood Marching in the Gettysburg Liberty Parade in May 1918 was a drum corps consisting entirely of Civil War veterans. As local citizens demonstrated their patriotism—notably with the Kaiser hanging in effigy—the old sol - diers helped keep the pace for two thousand citizens who turned out to vigorously support the Great War. It was no doubt a moving moment, the nation’s largest veteran demographic encouraging and supporting the next generation of soldiers to fight for cause and country in a very dif - ferent war waged on a very different continent. Though fifty years sepa - rated the trenches of Petersburg from those of the western front, for one moment, the men who fought in the nation’s bloodiest war marched along- side doughboys who were training, on a battlefield of that war, to fight in France. It is common to see the two conflicts as though existing in separate his - torical worlds. One is distinctly nineteenth century in its conduct and in its soldiers’ experiences. The other is decidedly more http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Journal of the Civil War Era University of North Carolina Press

When the Hurlyburly's Done / When the Battle's Lost and Won: Service, Suffering, and Survival of Civil War and Great War Veterans

The Journal of the Civil War Era , Volume 9 (1) – Mar 1, 2019

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Publisher
University of North Carolina Press
Copyright
Copyright @ The University of North Carolina Press
ISSN
2159-9807

Abstract

revi ew essay When the Hurlyburly’s Done / When the Battle’s Lost and Won” Service, Suffering, and Survival of Civil War and Great War Veterans ian ish erwood Marching in the Gettysburg Liberty Parade in May 1918 was a drum corps consisting entirely of Civil War veterans. As local citizens demonstrated their patriotism—notably with the Kaiser hanging in effigy—the old sol - diers helped keep the pace for two thousand citizens who turned out to vigorously support the Great War. It was no doubt a moving moment, the nation’s largest veteran demographic encouraging and supporting the next generation of soldiers to fight for cause and country in a very dif - ferent war waged on a very different continent. Though fifty years sepa - rated the trenches of Petersburg from those of the western front, for one moment, the men who fought in the nation’s bloodiest war marched along- side doughboys who were training, on a battlefield of that war, to fight in France. It is common to see the two conflicts as though existing in separate his - torical worlds. One is distinctly nineteenth century in its conduct and in its soldiers’ experiences. The other is decidedly more

Journal

The Journal of the Civil War EraUniversity of North Carolina Press

Published: Mar 1, 2019

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