Bloody Dawn: The Story of the Lawrence Massacre

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Kent State University Press, 1991 - 207 páginas

On August 21, 1863, William Quantrill led 400 Confederate irregulars to a rise on the outskirts of Lawrence, Kansas. For two years, the 3,000 inhabitants of this prosperous frontier community had managed to escape the Civil War which raged in the East. At Quantrill's command, the horrors of that war were brought directly into their homes. The attack began at dawn. When it was over, more than 150 townsmen were dead and most of the settlement burned to the ground.

In Bloody Dawn, Thomas Goodrich considers why this remote settlement was signaled out to receive such brutal treatment. He also describes the retribution that soon followed, which in many ways surpassed the significance of the Lawrence Massacre itself. The story that unfolds reveals an event unlike anything our nation has experienced before or since.

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Índice

OLD SCORES
1
THE DEAD MEN
9
THE LIVE MAN
18
THE DARKEST HOUR
30
THE FAIREST CITY
46
VENGEANCE IN MY HEART
66
DEATH IN MY HAND
84
THE HEATHEN ARE COME
123
THE CHASE
133
THIS SAVAGE WAR
150
WHEN PATHS JOIN
173
NOTES
187
BIBLIOGRAPHY
199
INDEX
203
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Sobre el autor (1991)

Veteran Civil War author Thomas Goodrich and his wife, Debra, a freelance journalist, divide their time between their native states of Kansas and Virginia, and speak throughout the country while researching new projects.

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