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Army
Life
From a Soldier’s Journal
A. O. Marshall
Edited by Robert G. Schultz
The engaging account of a young
Union soldier
In 1884, when Albert O. Marshall published Army Life, a memoir
of his service as a private in the Thirty-Third Illinois Regiment,
twenty years had passed since his 1864 discharge. Marshall
left the journal untouched at publication, and today it is
a journal that is rare in what it is not. This memoir is not
a complete story of the Thirty-Third (known as the “Normal
Regiment” because many of its soldiers were from Illinois
State Normal University), nor is it a complete roster of regiment
members, nor a list of killed and wounded.
Army Life is not, even, a purely military account
written from an officer’s point of view. It is the story
of a twenty-year-old private whose engaging writing belies
his age but also allows his youth to shine through. Marshall
tells of the battles he fought and the games he played, of
his friends, fellow soldiers, and officers, and of the regiment’s
activities in Missouri and Arkansas, at Vicksburg, and in
Louisiana and on the Texas Gulf Coast. Enhanced with careful
editing and thorough annotations, this journal Marshall carried
faithfully to every mustering out is a rich and important
Civil War memoir.
Albert O. Marshall was born in 1840 on a
farm in Illinois. He served in the Thirty-Third Illinois Regiment
for three years, after which he became a lawyer and was elected
to a four-year term in the state senate and later to the county
court as a circuit court judge.
Robert G. Schultz teaches at East Central
College in Union, Missouri, and has published numerous articles
on local and regional history and postal history.

November
6 x 9, 400 pages
40 photographs and images, index
$29.95 (s) paper
ISBN 978-1-55728-917-9 | 1-55728-917-4
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