I rarely write reviews of CD-ROM disks or books about individual
families or about one person. The reason is simple: there are far too many of
those books and CDs! However, this week I had a chance to read a Civil War diary
that has been transcribed to CD-ROM, and I must say that technically it is one
of the best such efforts I have seen. It is also a very interesting story, so
I decided to write about this one.
Quoting from the Preface of Hugh St. Clair's Civil War Diary on
CD-ROM:
Hugh St. Clair was born on his parents farm in West
Wheatfield Township, Indiana County, Pennsylvania on the 12th of June in
1827. His father, Archibald St. Clair, was born in County Tyrone, Ireland,
and came to America in 1802 at the age of seven years with his parents Hugh
and Rebecca (Beatty) St. Clair. In 1850, Hugh moved northwest to Oil Creek
Township, Crawford County, Pennsylvania where relatives of his mother Esther
Alcorn, and his grandmother Mary Mars, had been living since around 1800.
Here Hugh married, on December 28 of that same year, his second cousin Mary
Crawford Kerr.
Hughs father Archibald St. Clair also moved to Crawford
County in 1859, where most of his sons and daughters then lived. Three of
Archibalds sons -Hugh, Samuel and Archibald Jr., and two of his sons-in-law
- John Mack and Samuel M. Edmond, enlisted for three-year terms in Company
D of the 18th Pennsylvania Volunteer Cavalry. The capture of Arch Jr. is
noted in Hughs diary on 6 July, 1863, and his death noted on 6 September.
In September of 1862 when Hugh enlisted in the 18th Pennsylvania Cavalry,
he was 35 years old and the father of 5 children, the oldest still ten years
old, and the youngest not yet two. The 6th child, a daughter Maria Isabelle,
was born two months later, and lived just over a year. She died while Hugh
was home on furlough in January of 1864.
Two years after his discharge, Hugh St. Clair moved his family
west to Benton County, Iowa, where a number of related families had settled
in the area around Vinton. Here he lived for thirty-one years on his farm on
section 10 in Jackson Township. He then moved to Vinton, where he died on 25
June 1911. An item in his obituary in the Vinton Eagle adds a footnote to the
diary account of 6 July 1863, which tells of Hugh taking refuge in the cellar
of one D. Williamson during a battle in Hagerstown, Maryland - "An incident
that serves to show his spirit of gratitude occurred during the Civil War, etc
. . . each Christmas until his death, Mr. Williamson received a ten dollar bill
from Mr. St. Clair."
Hugh St. Clair kept a diary every day for the year 1863, a diary
that still exists today and has been transcribed to CD-ROM. Private St. Clair
apparently purchased a blank book made for this purpose. The journal is printed
with a title page, "Pocket Diary for 1863, Containing a Blank Space for
Every Day in the Year." Hugh St. Clair then filled in an entry almost every
day. One would assume that Private St. Clair may have kept diaries in the years
before and after 1863. However, if he did so, those diaries have never been
found and made public. The details of 1863 are all that are available to date.
Patricia St. Clair Ostwald eventually obtained the original diary,
transcribed it, and published it in book format in 1993. W. Michael Kiteley
of the SoftEase Company converted the book to Adobe Acrobat format in 2000,
and SunShine Press Publications soon published the result on CD-ROM. The Adobe
Acrobat software is an excellent choice as the CD-ROM disk can be used on Windows,
Macintosh, Linux, and some other systems as well. I wish that all CD-ROM disks
were operating system-independent.
Opening up the Hugh St. Clair Civil War Diary on CD-ROM for the
first time, you see a colorful title page and a Table of Contents list at the
extreme left side of the screen. You can then leaf through the diary, one page
at a time, or else jump to any section by clicking on the appropriate entry
in the Table of Contents.
The interesting part is that you see an image of the actual diary
in the center of your screen, surrounded by transcribed text from the page displayed.
In other words, you see an open diary showing the pages for one week. For instance,
page 24 of the Acrobat document covers the week of April 28 through 3 May 1863.
The handwritten words on the page can be read, although with some difficulty.
To the left of the image you see the transcribed words for 28, 29 and 30 April
as computer text. To the right, you see similar computer text for each day from
1-3 May. For instance, the entry for 29 April says, "arrived in camp 2
AM, captured 75 prisoners and 100 horses, lost 8 men and 1 Lieut in advance
gard [sic], tired and sleepy."
Page after page follows, detailing the life of a soldier in the
American Civil War. He chronicles the tedium of camp life along with the horror
of battle. This diary provides a fascinating insight into one persons
experiences in the most difficult of times.
The CD-ROMs images of the original pages can be manipulated
easily in Adobe Acrobat. You can zoom in to examine the handwriting closely.
You can rotate the images clockwise or counterclockwise, a nice feature since
some of the text at the beginning was written sideways on the page. You can
also print individual pages on your local printer. I found that copies printed
on my inkjet printer were clear and rather easy to read.
The CD-ROM disk includes full text as well as images of the original
diary pages. This information is supplemented with numerous articles, photographs,
etchings, and even an animated map showing encampments, movements, skirmishes,
and battles of Mr. St. Clair's regiment.
The Hugh St. Clair Civil War Diary on CD-ROM should appeal to
many people. Obviously, any of his descendants will want to obtain this fascinating
account of an ancestors life. However, many students and historians will
also be interested in this "insiders view" of the American Civil
War. His daily entries are usually brief, but Private St. Clair did record a
lot of details not always found in history books.
The Hugh St. Clair Civil War Diary on CD-ROM is one of the better
genealogy CD-ROM disks I have used. It combines excellent image reproductions
of the original historical document, a full text transcription of every word
in the original document, plus a lot of supplementary material. All of this
is wrapped up in a software package that is easy to use on Windows, Macintosh,
and Linux.
Hugh St. Clair Civil War Diary on CD-ROM sells for $19.95 plus
shipping. It is available directly from its publisher, SunShine Press Publications.
For more information, Look at: www.sunshinepress.com/cds.htm