CHAPTER I. | | Page | Beginnings of the Secession Movement—A Negro Wedding | 1 | | CHAPTER II. | Devices rendered necessary by the Blockade—How the South met a Great Emergency | 16 | | CHAPTER III. | War-time Scenes on an Alabama Plantation—Southern Women—Their Ingenuity and Courage | 31 | | CHAPTER IV. | How Cloth was dyed—How Shoes, Thread, Hats, and Bonnets were manufactured | 45 | | CHAPTER V. | Homespun Dresses—Home-made Buttons and Pasteboard—Uncle Ben | 61 | | CHAPTER VI. | Aunt Phillis and her Domestic Trials—Knitting around the Fireside—Tramp, Tramp of the Spinners | 76 | | CHAPTER VII. | Weaving Heavy Cloth—Expensive Prints—“Blood will tell” | 89 | | CHAPTER VIII. | Substitutes for Coffee—Raspberry-leaf Tea—Home-made Starch, Putty, and Cement—Spinning Bees | 101 | | CHAPTER IX. | Old-time Hoopskirts—How the Slaves lived—Their Barbecues | 113 | | CHAPTER X. | Painful Realities of Civil Strife—Straitened Condition of the South—Treatment of Prisoners | 125 | | CHAPTER XI. | Homespun Weddings—A Pathetic Incident—Approach of the Northern Army | 137 | | CHAPTER XII. | Pillage and Plunder—“Papa’s Fine Stock”—The South overrun by Soldiers | 154 | | CHAPTER XIII. | Return of the Vanquished—Poverty of the Confederates | 164 | | CHAPTER XIV. | Repairing Damages—A Mother made Happy—Conclusion | 170 |
A BLOCKADED FAMILY.
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