Genesis of the Civil War

Samuel Wylie CRAWFORD

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Genesis of the Civil War
Genesis of the Civil War
Genesis of the Civil War

“A PICTURE OF WHAT THE COMBAT WAS ABOUT”: FIRST EDITION OF CRAWFORD’S GENESIS OF THE CIVIL WAR, 1887

CRAWFORD, Samuel Wylie. The Genesis of the Civil War. The Story of Sumter. 1860-1861. New York: Charles L. Webster, 1887. Octavo, original green cloth with shoulder-strap spine emblem, circular gilt medallion on front board, patterned endpapers.

First edition of Crawford’s eyewitness account of the earliest stirrings of the Civil War, with portrait frontispiece, double-page plan of Charleston Harbor, 12 full-page (including facsimile leaves) and many in-text illustrations, in original gilt-decorated cloth.

A surgeon attached to the Union command at Forts Moultrie and Sumter, Crawford personally witnessed the events in Charleston that led to the outbreak of the Civil War. The fear of Yellow Fever in Charleston was such that Crawford, though a Northerner, received, as medical officer, a degree of access to the city few “Yankees” did. He attended much of the convention that passed the Ordinance of Secession, keeping daily records. “I did it for the purpose of embodying at some future time… the events which constituted so important an era in the history of the country. Volumes have been written about the battles which followed the intellectual combat which provoked the war… But the connected story of the beginning, and a picture of what the combat was about, have never yet been presented in consecutive form” (Preface). During the bombardment he commanded a battery at Sumter; he later commanded units at Antietam, Gettysburg and the final campaigns in Virginia. Eventually, he rose to the rank of major-general. The Genesis of the Civil War contains not only his personal observations but also official records and reports. Dornbusch III:2428. Ex-libris Eastport Public Library, with title page stamp and accession stamp and number on endpaper.

Faint dampstaining to corners of frontispiece, a few pinpoint spots to cloth, only light rubbing to spine ends. A near-fine copy.

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