Diary of Judith Brockenbrough McGuire

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Title

Diary of Judith Brockenbrough McGuire

Description

“I am too nervous, too wretched to-day to write in my diary, but that the employment will while away a few moments of this trying time. Our friends and neighbors have left us. Every thing is broken up. The Theological Seminary is closed; the High School dismissed. Scarcely any one is left of the many families which surrounded us. The homes all look desolate; and yet this beautiful country is looking more peaceful, more lovely than ever, as if to rebuke the tumult of passion and the fanaticism of man. We are left lonely indeed; our children are all gone—the girls to Clarke, where they may be safer, and farther from the exciting scenes which may too soon surround us; and the boys, the dear, dear boys, to the camp, to be drilled and prepared to meet any emergency.1 Can it be that our country is to be carried on and on to the horrors of civil war? I pray, oh how fervently do I pray, that our Heavenly Father may yet avert it.” Judith Brockenbrough McGuire

Citation

“Diary of Judith Brockenbrough McGuire,” EHS History Project, accessed May 4, 2024, https://ehshistoryproject.org/items/show/155.

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