In 1854 Caroline Seabury of Brooklyn; New York; set out for Columbus; Mississippi; to teach French at its Institute for Young Ladies. She lived in Columbus until 1863; through the years of mounting sectional bitterness that preceded the Civil War and through the turmoil and hardships of the war itself. During that time; her most intimate confidant was her diary. Discovered in the archives of the Minnesota State Historical Society; it is published here for the first time. The diary is an illuminating account of southern plantation society and the “peculiar institution†of slavery on the eve of its destruction. Seabury also records her uneasy attempts to come to terms with her position as an unmarried; white; Northern woman whose job was to educate wealthy; white; Southern girls in a setting seemingly oblivious to the horrors of slavery. The diary is not simply a chronicle of daily happenings; Seabury concentrates on remarkable events and the memorable feelings and ideas they generate; shaping them into entries that reveal her as an accomplished writer. She frames her narrative with her journey south in 1854 and the hazardous and exhausting return north through battle lines in 1863. Disapproving of slavery; yet deeply attached to friends and her life in Columbus and also painfully conscious of the fragility of her own economic and social position; Seabury condemned privately in her diary the evils that she endured silently in public. There are striking scenes of plantation life that depict the brutalities of slavery and benumbed responses to them. Seabury also successfully captures the mood of Mississippi as it changed from a fire-eating appetite to fight the Yankees to a grim apprehension of inexorable defeat. Most impressive of all is Seabury’s poignantly honest presentation of herself; caught in the middle.
#685527 in Books 2016-05-11Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.20 x 1.00 x 6.30l; .0 #File Name: 0295995505312 pages
Review
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. If you are interested in Iceland; this is a great bookBy Discerning in SeattleThis is so well written - I learned a lot about the Seawomen of Iceland; while enjoying the read. The author captures the spirit of the women beautifully. I also appreciated getting a better 'sense of place' than the usual guide book.2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Some Icelandic HistoryBy Michael H. PackerExcellent history of Iceland's Seawomen; as well as some history of the country and it's farmers.2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Four StarsBy Paul Bunyanexcellent book. Great country!