Winner of the 2007 Laney Prize for distinguished scholarship
and writing on the American Civil War
Few wartime cities in Virginia held more importance than Petersburg.
Nonetheless, the city has, until now, lacked an adequate military
history, let alone a history of the civilian home front. The noted
Civil War historian A. Wilson Greene now provides an expertly
researched, eloquently written study of the city that was second
only to Richmond in size and strategic significance.
Industrial, commercial, and extremely prosperous, Petersburg
was also home to a large African American community, including
the state's highest percentage of free blacks. On the eve of the
Civil War, the city elected a conservative, pro-Union approach
to the sectional crisis. Little more than a month before Virginia’s
secession did Petersburg finally express pro-Confederate sentiments,
at which point the city threw itself wholeheartedly into the effort,
with large numbers of both white and black men serving.
Over the next four years, Petersburg's citizens watched their
once-beautiful city become first a conduit for transient soldiers
from the Deep South, then an armed camp, and finally the focus
of one of the Civil War's most protracted and damaging campaigns.
(The fall of Richmond and collapse of the Confederate war effort
in Virginia followed close on Grant’s ultimate success in Petersburg.)
At war's end, Petersburg's antebellum prosperity evaporated under
pressures from inflation, chronic shortages, and the extensive
damage done by Union artillery shells. Greene's book tracks both
Petersburg's civilian experience and the city's place in Confederate
military strategy and administration. Employing scores of unpublished
sources, the book weaves a uniquely personal story of thousands
of citizenfree blacks, slaves and their holders, factory
owners, merchantsall of whom shared a singular experience
in Civil War Virginia.
A. Wilson Greene, Executive Director of
Pamplin Historical Park and the National Museum of the Civil War
Soldier, is the author of Breaking the Backbone of Rebellion
and Whatever You Resolve to Be: Essays on Stonewall Jackson.