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Where Valor Proudly Sleeps

Where Valor Proudly Sleeps

A History of Fredericksburg National Cemetery, 1866–1933

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Donald C. Pfanz

$16.99

E-book (Other formats: Paperback)
978-0-8093-3646-3
48 illustrations
03/26/2018

Engaging the Civil War

 

Additional Materials

  • Supplemental Materials

Supplemental Materials

Chapter Photo Links

Chapter  1     Chapter  2     Chapter  3     Chapter  4     Chapter  5     Chapter  6

Chapter  7     Chapter  8     Chapter  9     Chapter  10   Chapter  11  Chapter  12

Chapter  13

 

About the Book

Many books discuss in great detail what happened during Civil War battles. This is one of the few that investigate what happened to the remains of those who made the ultimate sacrifice. Where Valor Proudly Sleeps explores a battle’s immediate and long-term aftermath by focusing on Fredericksburg National Cemetery, one of the largest cemeteries created by the U.S. government after the Civil War. Pfanz shows how legislation created the National Cemetery System and describes how the Burial Corps identified, collected, and interred soldier remains as well as how veterans, their wives, and their children also came to rest in national cemeteries. By sharing the stories of the Fredericksburg National Cemetery, its workers, and those buried there, Pfanz explains how the cemetery evolved into its current form, a place of beauty and reflection. 
 

Authors/Editors

Donald C. Pfanz has written five books, including Richard S. Ewell: A Soldier’s Life and War So Terrible: A Popular History of the Battle of Fredericksburg. In his thirty-two-year career with the National Park Service, he worked at Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania County Battlefields Memorial National Military Park, Petersburg National Battlefield Park, and Fort Sumter National Monument. 
 

Reviews

"The meticulousness of this work provides a record that will shape and inform the narratives provided to visitors to the cemetery for decades to come...Pfanz provides scholars with the richest descriptive account of any of the Civil War national cemeteries."—Edward John Harcourt, Journal of Southern History

"This might be the best book ever written about a national cemetery. With a depth of knowledge born of decades of work, Donald Pfanz tells in vivid form and in close detail the story of how, over time, a place of struggle became a place of remembrance."—John J. Hennessy, author, Return to Bull Run: The Campaign and Battle of Second Manassas
 
"Pfanz reveals the horrors of war and the tragic tales of sacrifice that involved incredibly high percentages of unknown dead. Anyone interested in the funeral practices of the Union Army, or in better understanding the sacrifices for freedom, will find this book enlightening."—William A. Blair, author,With Malice toward Some: Treason and Loyalty in the Civil War Era