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Manuscript diary, 1860-1866, of Margaret Ann ("Meta") Morris Grimball, with the greater part of the entries concentrated in 1861 and 1862. Mrs. Grimball wrote from the Grove Plantation (Colleton District, S.C.), primary Grimball residence until after the Civil War; from Charleston, where the family spent the summer months; and from Spartanburg, S.C., where they took refuge in May 1862 from anticipated Union attacks on the South Carolina coast. Topics include plantation life; slave management; the progress of the Civil War and its effects on the lives of those close to Mrs. Grimball, including the activities of her sons in the Confederate army and navy, and civilian relief efforts; sickness among the civilian and military population; the family's removal to the relative safety of Spartanburg, where they rented quarters at St. John's College; her husband's conversion from Presbyterianism to Episcopalianism; her daughters' teaching careers; and other family and community matters.
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Subjects
Diaries, Women, Social life and customs, Plantation life, Slavery, History, Military life, Sea life, Refugees, Civilian relief, Confederate Personal narratives, Confederate States of America. Army, Confederate States of America. NavyPlaces
South Carolina, Colleton County (S.C.), Charleston (S.C.), Confederate States of America, United StatesTimes
19th century, Civil War, 1861-1865Showing 1 featured edition. View all 1 editions?
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Journal of Meta Morris Grimball: South Carolina, December 1860-February 1866
1998, Academic Affairs Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
in English
- Electronic ed.
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Edition Notes
Title from TEI header.
The electronic edition is a part of the UNC-CH digitization project, Documenting the American South, or, The Southern Experience in 19th-century America.
"Text typed in from a prepared transcript by Jordan Davis. Text encoded by Jordan Davis and Natalia Smith."
Text in both HTML and SGML formats.
Transcribed from: Journal of Meta Morris Grimball : South Carolina December 1860 - February 1866 (transcript) From the manuscript (#957) in the Southern Historical Collection, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
System requirements: PC with modem or direct Internet connection; World Wide Web browser; Panorama for SGML files.
Mode of access: Internet World Wide Web.
Wife of John Berkley Grimball (1800-1892), rice planter of St. Paul's Parish in the Colleton District of South Carolina, with connections to the Manigault and Lowndes families of South Carolina and to the Morris family of Morrisania, N.Y.
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