| A.
C. Pickett’s Private Journal of the U.S.-Mexican War
Edited by Jo Blatti
An eyewitness account of America
at war
On June 11, 1846, A. C. Pickett was ready to embark from Mobile,
Alabama, with other recruits on the greatest adventure of
their young lives. The native Alabamian spent the next twelve
months recording the scenes before him while the United States
fought against Mexico. Well-educated and articulate, Pickett
used a reporter’s style to write about everything from
the condition of crops to church services, local markets,
and the people he met. Pickett later settled in northeast
Arkansas where he worked as an attorney. During the Civil
War, he formed the Jackson Guards (Company G, 1st Ark. Infantry
Regiment) and later was active in Reconstruction politics
in Arkansas.
Jo Blatti, an
independent historian based in Little Rock, is the project
director for If A Stranger Sojourns among Thee, an
oral history series documenting Hispanic migration to north
Arkansas. She is curating the exhibit, Harry Miller’s
Vision of Arkansas, 1900–1910, for Crystal Bridges
Museum of American Art. Blatti frequently contributes reviews
and essays to professional journals.
April 2010
6 x 9, 160 pages
$19.95 paper
ISBN 978-1-935106-17-3
Distributed for the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies.
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