This remarkable biography and edited diary tell the story of William Ellis Jones (1838–1910), an artillerist in Crenshaw’s Battery, Pegram’s Battalion, the Army of Northern Virginia. One of the few extant diaries by a Confederate artillerist, Jones’s articulate writings cover camp life as well as many of the key military events of 1862, including the Peninsula Campaign, the Second Battle of Manassas, the Maryland Campaign, and the Battle of Fredericksburg.
In 1865 Jones returned to his prewar printing trade in Richmond, and his lasting reputation stems from his namesake publishing company’s role in the creation and dissemination of much of the Lost Cause ideology. Unlike the pro-Confederate books and pamphlets Jones published—primary among them the Southern Historical Society Papers—his diary shows the mindset of an unenthusiastic soldier. In a model of contextualization, Constance Hall Jones shows how her ancestor came to embrace an uncritical veneration of the army’s leadership and to promulgate a mythology created by veterans and their descendants who refused to face the amorality of their cause.
Jones brackets the soldier’s diary with rich, biographical detail, profiling his friends and relatives and providing insight into his childhood and post-war years. In doing so, she offers one of the first serious investigations into the experience of a Welsh immigrant family loyal to the Confederacy and makes a significant contribution to our understanding of Civil War–era Richmond and the nineteenth-century publishing industry. Invitingly written, The Spirits of Bad Men Made Perfect is an engaging life-and-times story that will appeal to historians and general readers alike.
Acknowledgments
Preface
1. Prelude to Soldiering
2. Stumbling in the Shadows of Giants
3. Before Dixie
4. A True Virginian
5. Prelude to War
6. The Civil War Diary of William Ellis Jones, of Richmond, Virginia
Part 1 – First Muster at Richmond
Part 2 – The Peninsula Campaign | May 24 through July 28, 1862
Part 3 – March to Join Jackson and on to Second Manassas | July 29 through September
1, 1862
Part 4 – On to Maryland, Harpers Ferry, and Antietam | September 2 through September
20, 1862
Part 5 – Meandering Toward Fredericksburg | September 21 through December 14, 1862
Part 6 – March to Winter Quarters | December 15 through December 31, 1862.
7. A Strange and Severe Life
8. The Spirits of Bad Men Made Perfect
Appendix
Additional Online Appendixes
Endnotes
Bibliography
Index