A Palmetto Boy: Civil War-Era Diaries and Letters of James Adams Tillman

A Palmetto Boy: Civil War-Era Diaries and Letters of James Adams Tillman

by Bobbie Swearingen Smith (Editor)
A Palmetto Boy: Civil War-Era Diaries and Letters of James Adams Tillman

A Palmetto Boy: Civil War-Era Diaries and Letters of James Adams Tillman

by Bobbie Swearingen Smith (Editor)

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Overview

These diaries and family letters reveals the experiences of Senator Benjamin Tillman’s brother as a Confederate captain during and after the Civil War.

Though the Tillman family of Edgefield, South Carolina, is important to Palmetto State history, James Adams Tillman never became a politician like his famous brothers Ben and George. Instead, at the age of twenty-four, James died from injuries sustained during the Civil War. Now, in this collection of diary entries and family letters, James’s story is finally told. Edited by Bobbie Swearingen Smith, this collection offers a significant historical record of the Civil War era as experienced by a member of this prominent South Carolina family.

At nineteen, Tillman enlisted with the Twenty-fourth South Carolina Volunteer Infantry of Edgefield. He served on the coastal defenses south of Charleston and fought in both battles of Secessionville, as well as at Chickamauga, where he was wounded. Under the command of General Johnston in Tennessee and North Carolina, Tillman retreated from General Sherman’s advance. At the war’s end, Tillman wrote about the onset of Reconstruction and those he saw as descending on South Carolina to profit from the defeated South.

A Palmetto Boy shares both the immediacy of Tillman’s thoughts from the war front and his contemplative expressions of those experiences for his family on the home front. Tillman’s personal narrative adds another layer to our understanding of the historical significance of the Tillman family and offers a compelling firsthand account of the motivations and actions of a young South Carolinian at war.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781611172294
Publisher: University of South Carolina Press
Publication date: 04/13/2022
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 210
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Bobbie Swearingen Smith (1931–2009), the grandniece of James Adams Tillman, was born in Georgia and raised on Tillman family land. Smith was an accountant and published author of short stories and poetry. Her lifelong interest in history led her to explore her ancestor's life and inspired her to share his Civil War correspondence through this book.

What People are Saying About This

Orville Vernon Burton

Insightful and succinct, James Tillman chronicles his service, his ideas, and his ideals through war and early peace from the end of 1859 through May 1866. Meticulously annotated by Bobbie Swearingen Smith, this rich and vivid collection of diaries and letters deserves a worthy place among Civil War narratives.

Bettis C. Rainsford

This sweeping story of the Civil War years, as told by the scion of one of South Carolina's most famous families, is as compelling an account of the trials of war as has ever been written. The reader is immersed in the grim reality of a soldier's everyday life and the ultimate horrors of mortal combat. Through reading this book one can come to a much more complete and accurate understanding of the motivations underlying the deep devotion of Confederate soldiers to their cause. Here we also come to see how a soldier grappled with defeat and came back home to rebuild his life upon the ashes of war. This is a must-read for any student of the Civil War.

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