Challenge and Change: History of the Jews in America

Civil War Links

 

Jews in the Civil War

(Book 2, Unit 1, chapters 1, 2, & 3)

http://www.jewish-history.com/civilwar/Default.htm
This site contains many primary source documents and articles about Jews in the Civil War from Jews representing both the Union and Confederate States.          

US FlagUNION

Union Soldiers celebrate Passover as mentioned in Unit 4, chapter 10.


Colonel Max Einstein, by Shalom E. Lamm


Frederick Knefler -- Hungarian Patriot and American General, by Stephen Beszedits


Introduction to "The American Jew as Patriot, Soldier and Citizen

 
A Black, Jewish USCT Officer


"Sketches From the Seat of War," letters of a Jewish soldier as mentioned in Unit 4, chapter 10.


Letters of Lt. Jacob C. Cohen, 27th Ohio Infantry


April 27, 1865, a poem by Emma Lazarus (age 16)


Civil War letters of Rabbi Arnold Fischel, chaplain


Jewish victims of "General Orders No. 11"

Resignation of Capt. Philip Trounstine, 5th Ohio Cavalry, protesting "General Orders #11"

On Persecution: Isaac Leeser's essays on "General Orders #11", from "The Occident"

Benjamin Levy, Heroic Drummer Boy

U.S. Grant meets a Chabad Hasid from the Holy Land

Diary of Michael M. Allen, chaplain, 5th Pennsylvania Cavalry

Jewish Life in Wartime Washington

"Bible View of Slavery" by Rabbi Morris J. Raphall


Anti-Slavery Reply to Dr. Raphall, by Michael Heilprin


Anti-Slavery Reply to Dr. Raphall, by Rabbi David Einhorn


Medal of Honor winner Abraham Cohn, by Mark Starin


THE BEN BERITH: A Jewish Soldier Wounded in Battle (short story, 1866)


A Jewish Mother's Last Letter to her Son


A Jewish Soldier at Andersonville


Stand By the Flag! Jewish Messenger editorial on Ft. Sumter


"Semi Occasional" writes from Washington to The Jewish Messenger

"Beast" Butler and the Israelites


Letter to Abraham Lincoln, from the father of a Shomer Shabbat soldier as mentioned in Unit 4, chapter 10.


82nd Illinois Volunteer Infantry-"A Regiment of Immigrants"

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Confederate FlagCONFEDERATE

Confederate Soldiers Celebrate Passover

Judah P. Benjamin: "The Brains of the Confederacy"

Rabbi Henry S. Jacobs on the burning of Columbia, SC.

Rosanna Osterman: The Heroine of Galveston, Texas

Eugenia Phillips and General Butler: "Beauty" vs. "The Beast"

Rabbi Ber Illowy, Rav of New Orleans

Pro-secession Sermon by Rabbi Illowy, Jan. 4, 1861

Rothschild Visits The Confederacy

Jewish Confederate Soldiers Cemetery

Isaac J. Levy, Hebrew Confederate hero

Memoir of Joseph Goldsmith, Confederate "chaplain"

Diary of Maj. Alexander Hart, 5th Louisiana Infantry

Prayer for the Confederacy, for Jewish soldiers

Letters from Robert E. Lee to Rabbi Michelbacher of "Beth Ahabah"

Memoir of Philip Sartorius, citizen of Vicksburg

Memoir of Philip Whitlock, "Richmond Grays"

Letter of Judah P. Benjamin to E. Porter Alexander

Moses J. Ezekiel, VMI cadet, by Albert Conner

Diary of Eleanor Cohen Seixas, Southern Patriot

Civil War letters of Edwin I. Kursheedt, Washington Artillery

Letter from Maj. Isaac Scherck on the Fall of Atlanta

"Kronikals of the Times--Memphis 1862" Memoir of A.E. Frankland (Confederate Megillah)

Memoir of Robert H. Little, 1st Georgia Infantry

A Southern Woman's Story, Memoir of Phoebe Yates Levy Pember

A Tar Heel Jewish Soldier at Gettysburg: Diary of Louis Leon, 53rd NCV, eText at UNC

 

Another Order No. 11 -A Near-American Holocaust of 1862

http://www.mmcwrt.org/2001/default0104.htm
This electronic essay is from the Mid-Missouri Civil War Round Table and gives an in-depth view of the origins of Order No. 11 and its eventual cancellation by President Lincoln.

Civil War Medal of Honor Recipient Leopold Karpeles

http://www.medalofhonor.com/LeopoldKarpeles.htm
The Medal of Honor, established by joint resolution of Congress, 12 July 1862 (amended by Act of 9 July 1918 and Act of 25 July 1963) is awarded in the name of Congress to a person who, while a member of the Armed Services, distinguishes him/herself conspicuously by gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while engaged in an action against any enemy of The United States; while engaged in military operations involving conflict with an opposing foreign force; or while serving with friendly foreign forces engaged in an armed conflict against an opposing armed force in which The United States is not a belligerent party. The deed performed must have been one of personal bravery or self-sacrifice so conspicuous as to clearly distinguish the individual above his comrades and must have involved risk of life. Read about Leopold Karpeles and all of the recipients who have received our nation's highest military award.

Israelites in the South

http://www.wofford.edu/southernSeen/content.asp?id=292
This essay by Larry McGehee of Wofford College, June 2003, provides a short overview of Jews contribution to the South during the Civil War.

The Last Meeting by Lewis Regenstein

http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig3/rengenstein3.html
This short article, by Lewis Regenstein, whose great great uncle was Major Raphael Moses (Unit 4, chapter 11), is about the events of May 5th, 1865, which is the anniversary of the last meeting held, and the last order given, by the Confederate government, which by then consisted of President Jefferson Davis and some of his cabinet officers and soldiers fleeing pursuing Yankee troops after the end of the War in 1865.

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