Butternut & Blue Announces its Newest Publication
Set for a Late Spring 2005 Release, "From Mosby's Command": Newspaper Letters and Articles by and About John S. Mosby and His Rangers by Horace Mewborn
will be the latest addition to the Butternut & Blue family of publications. This new 295 page book will be limited to only 500 copies, with over 100 copies already
having been preordered. The intial price for the book will be $40.00 + Shipping.
Description from the dust jacket...
One of the last frontiers for
research on the war that
raged across the American
landscape from 1861 to 1865 is
newspapers, both war-date and
postwar. During the war soldiers
and civilians wrote countless
letters that were published in the
daily and weekly journals. After
the war the papers published
innumerable articles from
veterans recording their
experiences, as well as their
thoughts on how the war was
fought or how it should have been
fought. This book is composed
of select letters that were
published both during and after
the war about John Mosby and his
Rangers.
Among the war-date items is a
letter written by Mosby a few
days after the capture of General
Edwin Stoughton that provides
some details of that raid.
Interestingly, several letters by an
unidentified author or authors
from the Upperville area were
published in the Richmond Daily
Enquirer during the war. These
letters provide information and
insight about life in Mosby’s
Confederacy, as well as some
actions of the Rangers. Among
the postwar items are a set of
articles in which Sam Chapman
described his activities with the
43rd Battalion. Other articles
discuss the Berryville wagon
train raid, the executions at Front
Royal, and Wat Bowie’s
controversial raid into Maryland
in October 1864.
In the late 19th Century, John
Mosby authored two books and
numerous newspaper and
magazine articles about the war.
While many of his articles
defended Jeb Stuart’s actions in
the Gettysburg campaign, several
dealt with the Rangers. The last
three items in this book, prepared
by Mosby in 1894, detail his
conflict with Philip Sheridan in
the Shenandoah Valley in 1864.