Dennis Peterson’s Look Unto the Hills: Stories of Growing Up in Rural East Tennessee is such an engaging memoir. He’s also written several scholarly books, including these two that I found especially fascinating. (The notes are from the books’ descriptions on Amazon.)
How chaplains, missionaries, and colporteurs prepared Confederate soldier for life here and hereafter.Religion has too often been relegated to the far periphery of the history of the War Between the States, eclipsed by the emphases on the battles, tactics, and personalities of the conflict. In reality, religion was the very marrow of who Americans were. Religion, specifically traditional and evangelical Christianity, was the very foundation of Southern society during the antebellum period, and that spiritual emphasis permeated society during the war.
When the war came, ministers and Christian laymen alike were burdened for the spiritual welfare of the generation of warriors who answered their country’s call to defend their homelands and who were fated to give their lives for its honor and preservation. A plethora of volunteers from every denomination of Protestant Christianity, as well as from among Roman Catholicism and Judaism, became chaplains, missionaries, and colporteurs. Their mission was to help the soldiers avoid the negative temptations of a life away from the positive influences of home, church, and community and to prepare them for the real possibilities of death and gruesome wounds. They not only encouraged them to prepare for eternity but also to accept the ultimate defeat of the Confederacy as God’s will.
Christ in Camp and Combat is the story of those Christian heroes, spiritual soldiers in a spiritual conflict amidst the raging winds of earthly warfare.
Dennis L. Peterson
Dennis L. Peterson is an independent author, historian, and editor with numerous published credits in regional and national journals and magazines. A former history teacher and history curriculum writer, his areas of special interest include Southern history, the War Between the States, the Great Depression, and World War II as well as biblical studies.
He is a member of several historical organizations, including the Society of Independent Southern Historians, the East Tennessee Historical Society, and the Travelers Rest (SC) Historical Society. He is also a docent for the History Museum of Travelers Rest. A native of East Tennessee, he now lives in Taylors, South Carolina. Here is his website.
Christian missionaries prepared the Cherokees for civilization, education, government, and eternity.
Thank you for introducing this wonderful book and historian, Joy!
And he’s got more–the next one is a WWII book. It’s finished, just waiting on the publisher! Thanks, GP.
We’ll have to keep an eye out!!
I’m humbled by your wholesale promotion of my books, Joy. Thank you! Not only are you a great writer yourself, chronicling your family’s history, but also a great encourager!
You have several books that will encourage and inform generations to come, Dennis! (I wish it would encourage your publisher to release your next book!)
Very interesting historian. Thanks for telling us about him and his book, Joy.
He has even more, and his WWII history, Dillon’s War, should be out anytime! Thank you, Don.
Interesting historian and book. Thank you Joy for introducing him to me
Thank you, Don.
Thank you, Joy, for sharing the descriptions of Dennis Peterson’s latest books to consider. We need not to forget history and Peterson appears to be stoking the embers for it to live on for the next generations. 🙂
I’d not considered that there were Christians on both sides praying for their soldiers. Thank you, Nancy. Dennis has more scholarly works and is awaiting the publication of his WWII history based on family letters, Dillon’s War.
Both of these books provide historical perspectives I haven’t encountered before.
The same for me, Liz!
This sounds very interesting, a view of war that is different. Thanks for bringing this to our attention, Joy.
I hadn’t thought about Confederate troops as draftees, many unwilling.