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Book details
  • Genre:FICTION
  • SubGenre:Historical / General
  • Language:English
  • Pages:543
  • eBook ISBN:9781483514789

Marching Through Culpeper

A Novel of Culpeper, Virginia, Crossroads of the Civil War

by Virginia Beard Morton

Book Image Not Available Book Image Not Available
Overview
Through the pages of this meticulously researched epic march the heroes of both great armies. We share their triumphs, feel their pain, and sense their vulnerability. This gripping page-turner, set in the most marched across county of the Civil War, is sure to please lovers of history, romance, and adventure. Spirited eighteen-year-old Constance Armstrong, younger of two daughters, has been raised by her elderly judge father as a free thinking intellectual. She shares his love of politics and harbors literary aspirations. Constance’s surrogate brother, Frank Stringfellow, is rejected by the cavalry due to his sparse size. Undeterred, he captures the pickets of one cavalry unit, and gains acceptance due to his daring. He becomes a scout and spy and undertakes countless hair-raising adventures, frequently entangling Constance. Three dashing officers, two Confederate and one Union, vie for her affection as she struggles to survive the swirling chaos of war. Contending armies destroy her world but not her iron will as she doggedly provides for her sister's family. We watch this unpredictable heroine nurture, heal, kill, spy, hate bitterly, and ultimately love passionately
Description
Through the pages of this meticulously researched epic march the heroes of both great armies. We share their triumphs, feel their pain, and sense their vulnerability. This gripping page-turner, set in the most marched across county of the Civil War, is sure to please lovers of history, romance, and adventure. Spirited eighteen-year-old Constance Armstrong, younger of two daughters, has been raised by her elderly judge father as a free thinking intellectual. She shares his love of politics and harbors literary aspirations. At a picnic, Constance meets West Point graduate Robert Beckam whose quiet maturity attracts her. Virginia secedes and troops flood into Culpeper for training. Constance’s surrogate brother, Frank Stringfellow, is rejected by the cavalry due to his sparse size. Undeterred, he captures the pickets of one cavalry unit, and gains acceptance due to his daring. He becomes a scout and spy and undertakes countless hair-raising adventures, frequently entangling Constance. Constance is enthralled while watching John Pelham train recruits for J. E. B. Stuart’s Horse Artillery. During a blizzard, Judge Armstrong invites Pelham’s Alabamians to the shelter of his home, thus beginning Constance’s fascination with the dashing officer. After the Confederate Army marches towards Richmond, three Union cavalrymen pilfer the Armstrong farm and kill an elderly free servant. Days later a company of Union infantry commanded by recent Harvard graduate Aaron Ames approach the farm. Constance brazenly marches out to confront them and bitterly complains about the pilfering and murder. Her spirit and beauty impress Ames. Beckam, Pelham, and Ames vie for her affection as she struggles to survive the swirling chaos of war. We watch this unpredictable heroine nurture, heal, kill, spy, hate bitterly, and ultimately love passionately Praise from Reviewers Constance, while a woman of “inordinate passion”…remains chaste throughout the novel, never once compromising herself, and thus becomes even more impressive. Morton is to be commended for creating a fascinating character of such moral clarity and transparent strength. Constance Armstrong is the kind of woman not readily found in the pages of contemporary fiction. Morton even manages another tour de force—the fictional portrayal of actual historical personages, both Southern and Northern. General Lee is here, as dignified as one would expect. So is Jeb Stuart, jovial and fun-loving. George Armstrong Custer makes a number of memorable appearances, with his flowing golden locks and his accompanying band of musicians, and it is hard, try as one may, not to like him and to be infected by his joie de vivre. Most delightful of all is Frank Stringfellow, the intrepid Confederate scout and beloved friend of Constance Armstrong, whose endless inventiveness allows him to escape the clutches of the Yankees while procuring valuable information for the Confederate Army. …Finally, and best if all, Morton offers characters whose steadfastness, faith, and courage make them models of emulation. How many other present-day novels can be similarly praised? Southern Partisan Magazine, Dec. 2004
About the author
Bio – Virginia Beard Morton Richmond native Virginia Morton has lived in Culpeper for over forty years. The Longwood University graduate is a former teacher. She became fascinated with Culpeper’s vast Civil War history and after several years of intense research, decided to tell Culpeper’s story to the world. Her historical novel, Marching Through Culpeper, has sold over 10,000 copies, garnered 51 five-star reviews on www.amazon.com, and drawn over 6,000 tourists to the town and county’s battlefields. In addition, she conducts Civil War Walking Tours of the historic downtown Culpeper, as well as battlefield tours at Brandy Station, Cedar Mountain, and Kelly’s Ford by appointment. Her tours, which have been enjoyed by over 5000 people, have been shown on Richmond Public TV. She was featured in a PBS travel show “Great Drives: The Journey through Hallowed Ground.” In an interview, California filmmaker Michael Rose said of the show, “Virginia Morton was brilliant and passionate. I can only hope that everyone who comes to Culpeper has the opportunity to meet her.” A frequent speaker at Civil War Round Tables, civic groups, libraries, and book clubs, she also served as leader of a Feb. 2004 HistoryAmerica Mississippi Riverboat Cruise focusing on “Women in the Civil War.” She led her second HistoryAmerica Riverboat Tour in Sept. 2006, “Love and War: Great Love Stories of the Civil War.” The United Daughters of the Confederacy presented her with the Jefferson Davis Gold Medal in April 2006. Her article about Confederate scout Frank Stringfellow appeared in the Washington Times. In August 2012 her book was brought to life on stage as a musical with original songs written by Rod Stone of Anacortes, Washington www.rodstonemusic.com. The show received standing ovations from over 2,000 people. Active in her community, she served on the boards of the Brandy Station Battlefield Foundation and the Friends of Cedar Mountain Battlefield, was co-founder of the Academic Booster’s Club, has served as Youth Counselor at the Culpeper United Methodist Church, and as chairman of the Congressional Award Committee. (vbmorton@edgehillbooks.com, 540-825-9147, www.marchingthroughculpeper.com)