Mary Boykin Chesnut

Author

1823 – 1886

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Who was Mary Boykin Chesnut?

Mary Boykin Chesnut, born Mary Boykin Miller, was a South Carolina author noted for a book published as her Civil War diary, a "vivid picture of a society in the throes of its life-and-death struggle." She described the war from within her upper-class circles of Southern planter society, but encompassed all classes in her book. She was married to a lawyer who served as a United States senator and Confederate officer. Mary was a secret abolitionist. Her husband was strongly pro-slavery but she thought very poorly of slavery.

Chesnut worked toward a final form of her book in 1881–1884, based on her extensive diary written during the war years. It was published in 1905, 19 years after her death. New versions were published after her papers were discovered, in 1949 by the novelist Ben Ames Williams, and in 1981 by the historian C. Vann Woodward. His annotated edition of the diary, Mary Chesnut's Civil War, won the Pulitzer Prize for History in 1982. Literary critics have praised Chesnut's diary—the influential writer Edmund Wilson termed it "a work of art" and a "masterpiece" of the genre—and the most important work by a Confederate author.

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Born
Mar 31, 1823
South Carolina
Parents
Spouses
Lived in
  • South Carolina
Died
Nov 22, 1886

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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