Armies
74 |
| Military Organization |
78 |
| Alabama Soldiers: Number and Character |
78 |
| Negro Troops |
86 |
| Union Troops from Alabama |
87 |
| Militia System |
88 |
| Conscription and Exemption |
92 |
| Confederate Enrolment Laws |
92 |
| Policy of the State in Regard to Conscription |
95 |
| Effect of the Enrolment Laws |
98 |
| Exemption from Service |
100 |
| Tories and Deserters |
108 |
| Conditions in North Alabama |
109 |
| Unionists, Tories, and Mossbacks |
112 |
| Growth of Disaffection |
114 |
| Outrages by Tories and Deserters |
119 |
| Disaffection in South Alabama |
122 |
| Prominent Tories and Deserters |
124 |
| Numbers of the Disaffected |
127 |
| Party Politics and the Peace Movement |
131 |
| Political Conditions, 1861-1865 |
131 |
| The Peace Society |
137 |
| Reconstruction Sentiment |
143 |
| |
| CHAPTER IV |
| Economic and Social Conditions |
| Industrial Development during the War |
149 |
| Military Industries |
149 |
| Manufacture of Arms |
150 |
| Nitre Making |
153 |
| Private Manufacturing Enterprises |
156 |
| Salt Making |
157 |
| Confederate Finance in Alabama |
162 |
| Banks and Banking |
162 |
| Issues of Bonds and Notes by the State |
164 |
| Special Appropriations and Salaries |
168 |
| Taxation |
169 |
| Impressment |
174 |
| Debts, Stay Laws, Sequestration |
176 |
| Trade, Barter, Prices |
178 |
| Blockade-running and Trade through the Lines |
183 |
| Scarcity and Destitution, 1861-1865 |
196 |
| The Negro during the War |
205 |
| Military Uses of Negroes |
205 |
| Negroes on the Farms |
209 |
| Fidelity to Masters |
210 |
| Schools and Colleges |
212 |
| Confederate Text-books |
217 |
| Newspapers |
218 |
| Publishing Houses |
221 |
| The Churches during the War |
223 |
| Attitude on Public Questions |
223 |
| The Churches and the Negroes |
225 |
| Federal Army and the Southern Churches |
227 |
| Domestic Life |
230 |
| Society in 1861 |
230 |
| Life on the Farm |
232 |
| Home Industries; Makeshifts and Substitutes |
234 |
| Clothes and Fashions |
236 |
| Drugs and Medicines |
239 |
| Social Life during the War |
241 |
| Negro Life |
243 |
| Woman’s Work for the Soldiers |
244 |
| |
| PART III |
| THE AFTERMATH OF WAR |
| |
| CHAPTER V |
| Social and Economic Disorder |
| Loss of Life in War |
251 |
| Destruction of Property |
253 |
| The Wreck of the Railways |
259 |
| The Interregnum: Lawlessness and Disorder |
262 |
| The Negro testing his Freedom |
269 |
| How to prove Freedom |
270 |
|
|