Description
Author: Oscar Williams Blacknall
Publisher: Confederate Reprint Company
Published: 09/09/2016
Pages: 100
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.28lbs
Size: 8.50h x 5.50w x 0.21d
ISBN13: 9781945848056
ISBN10: 1945848057
BISAC Categories:
- History | United States | Civil War Period (1850-1877)
About the Author
Oscar William Blacknall was born on September 6, 1852 on his parents' farm near Kittrell, North Carolina. His father, Col. Charles C. Blacknall, served in the Granville Rifles, Co. G, 23rd N.C. Regiment until he was mortally wounded at the Battle of Winchester in November, 1864. Only a young lad when the War began in 1861, the junior Blacknall nevertheless was an unreconstructed defender of the Confederate cause until his death, defying even many of his fellow Southerners in his unvarnished post-bellum criticisms of the Lincoln Administration. Several of his non-polemical essays, written under the pseudonym "David Dodge," were published in the Atlantic Monthly in the latter years of the Nineteenth Century, such as "Domestic Economy of the Confederacy" and "Home Scenes at the Fall of the Confederacy." Blacknall also wrote a manual on berry cultivation, as well as numerous letters to journals and newspapers in his area. Having long suffered from poor physical and mental health, he committed suicide on July 6, 1918 and was buried in Kittrell Cemetery.
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