Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
Sports
History
Fiction
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts116/v4/33/61/59/336159f2-7a6a-7bad-7fc5-9547375668a1/mza_2748362629444324975.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Learn Civil War History
Jonathan R. Allen
15 episodes
1 day ago
The purpose of this podcast is to help you Learn Civil War History. You are invited to learn about a crucial time in the history of the United States. Any and all aspects of the Civil War will be subjects of this podcast. Battles, leaders, soldiers, civilians, before the Civil War, after the Civil War, Reconstruction, abolitionists, slaves, freedmen, the Underground Railroad, politics, politicians, equipment, cavalry, infantry, artillery, medicine, heroes, villains, and scoundrels - any topic related to the Civil War might be covered here. - Jonathan R. Allen: LearnCivilWarHistory.com
Show more...
History
RSS
All content for Learn Civil War History is the property of Jonathan R. Allen and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
The purpose of this podcast is to help you Learn Civil War History. You are invited to learn about a crucial time in the history of the United States. Any and all aspects of the Civil War will be subjects of this podcast. Battles, leaders, soldiers, civilians, before the Civil War, after the Civil War, Reconstruction, abolitionists, slaves, freedmen, the Underground Railroad, politics, politicians, equipment, cavalry, infantry, artillery, medicine, heroes, villains, and scoundrels - any topic related to the Civil War might be covered here. - Jonathan R. Allen: LearnCivilWarHistory.com
Show more...
History
https://d3t3ozftmdmh3i.cloudfront.net/staging/podcast_uploaded_episode/36416286/36416286-1681145224504-52d683682c2f.jpg
Freedman Jourdon Anderson Writes A Letter To His Old Master
Learn Civil War History
10 minutes 12 seconds
2 years ago
Freedman Jourdon Anderson Writes A Letter To His Old Master

Jourdon Anderson was born a Tennessee slave around 1825. When he was only seven or eight-years-old he was sold by his first owner to General Paulding Anderson of Wilson County, Tennessee. General Anderson then gave Jourdon to his son Patrick Henry to be his servant and playmate. Patrick and his slave Jourdon were about the same age.


Jourdan was Colonel P. H. Anderson’s slave until Yankee soldiers camping on the Anderson plantation freed him in 1864.


The Civil War was over and the slaves were free. Colonel Anderson’s plantation was in bad shape after the war, he needed help, and he was in debt. The 1865 harvest season was coming soon. Anderson had to have the crop harvest’s income, but he could not do the work alone of bringing in the crops. In August, Anderson sent a letter to Jourdon desperately asking his former slave and childhood playmate to return and help with the back breaking work of crop harvest.


In response, Jourdon Anderson dictated a scornful, humorous, and mocking letter to his former master.


Visit my LearnCivilWarHistory.com blog:

http://www.learncivilwarhistory.com/

Learn Civil War History
The purpose of this podcast is to help you Learn Civil War History. You are invited to learn about a crucial time in the history of the United States. Any and all aspects of the Civil War will be subjects of this podcast. Battles, leaders, soldiers, civilians, before the Civil War, after the Civil War, Reconstruction, abolitionists, slaves, freedmen, the Underground Railroad, politics, politicians, equipment, cavalry, infantry, artillery, medicine, heroes, villains, and scoundrels - any topic related to the Civil War might be covered here. - Jonathan R. Allen: LearnCivilWarHistory.com