When Union troops advanced on the Confederate army on 21st July 1861
at 1st Ball Run/Manassas Junction, no one realised that this was the start
of four years of bloody fighting that would not only affect the soldiers
on both sides, but would also affect every civilian that had not taken
up arms.
Civilians on both sides were forced to make sacrifices for the war effort, which
meant not only were their luxury items going to disappear but many of their every
day items to.
Pots and pans, cutlery, cooking utensils went towards making guns and equipment,
spare clothing was collected to cloth both armies. Anything and everything was
collected for the war effort.
It was the South that was hit hardest. When the Union Navy blockaded the Southern
ports the South found themselves alone, and it was as early as the Fall of 1862
that the civilians had to use every means possible just to survive.
They would come to remember the stories their grandparents use to tell when they
were at war with the British, and how they had to find substitutes for everyday
items like foods, medicines clothing and shoes. The list was endless, and substitutes
were found in the most unlikely places.
It was the women & children that they found themselves working in the factories,
ploughing fields, driving wagons and anything their men folk were doing before
the war.
Many civilians in the South did not own slaves, but it still wasn’t normal
for most women to do manual labour.
All this would last for four years until 1865 when the war ended and the fighting
men could finally come home.
The civilians more so in the South had endured pain and hardship in these four
years and through imagination and innovation had in the most part come through
it and survived.
Today within the Civilian Society we do not aim to go around starving, or bare
footed, as some did back then, but, through showing all types of clothing,
displaying items of interest and talking to people, we aim to pass on some
of the things that helped the civilians on both sided endure those four years
of fighting.
We have men, women and children within our Civilian Society, so if you have
an interest and would like to join us please come along to the American Civil
War camp and talk to one of the Civilians dressed in period clothing and they
would be pleased to help you make your mind up.