Mary Boykin Chesnut began her diary on February 18, 1861, and ended it on June 26, 1865. She would write at the outset: "This journal is intended to be entirely objective. My subjective days are over." Chesnut was an eyewitness to many historic events as she accompanied her husband to significant sites of the American Civil War. Among them were
Montgomery, Alabama, and
Richmond, Virginia, where the
Provisional Congress of the Confederate States of America convened;
Charleston, where she was among witnesses of the first shots of the Civil War; Columbia, South Carolina, where her husband served as the Chief of the Department of the Military of South Carolina and brigadier general in command of South Carolina reserve forces; and again Richmond, where her husband served as an aide to the president. At times, they also lived with his parents at their house at
Mulberry Plantation near Camden. While the property was relatively isolated in thousands of acres of plantation and woodland, they entertained many visitors. Chesnut was aware of the historical importance of what she witnessed. The diary was filled with the cycle of changing fortunes of the South during the Civil War. Chesnut edited the diary, wrote new drafts in 1881–1884 for publication, and retained the sense of events unfolding without foreknowledge. She had the sense of the South's living through its time on a world stage, and she captured the growing difficulties of all classes of the Confederacy as they faced defeat at the end of the war. Chesnut analyzed and portrayed the various classes of the South throughout the war, providing a detailed view of Southern society and especially of the mixed roles of men and women. She was forthright about the complex and fraught situations related to slavery, particularly the
abuses of women's sexuality and the power exercised by white men. For instance, Chesnut discussed the problem of white slaveowners' fathering
mixed-race children with enslaved women within their extended households. Examination of Mary Chesnut's papers has revealed the history of her development as a writer and of her work on the diary as a book. Before working to revise her diary as a book in the 1880s, Chesnut wrote a translation of French poetry, essays, and a family history. She also wrote three full novels that she never published:
The Captain and the Colonel, completed about 1875; and
Two Years of My Life, finished about the same time. She finished most of a draft of a third long novel, called
Manassas.
Elisabeth Muhlenfeld, who edited the first two novels for publication by the
University of Virginia Press in 2002 and wrote a biography of Chesnut, described them as her writing "apprenticeship." Chesnut used her diary and notes to work toward a final version in 1881–1884. Based on her drafts, historians do not believe she was finished with her work. Because Chesnut had no children, before her death she gave her diary to her closest friend, Isabella D. Martin, and urged her to have it published. The diary was first published in 1905 as a heavily edited and abridged edition. Williams' 1949 version was described as more readable, but sacrificing historical reliability and many of Chesnut's literary references.
Publication history • 1905:
A Diary From Dixie. Mary Boykin Miller Chesnut, 1823-1886, ed. by Isabella D. Martin and
Myrta Lockett Avary. New York: D. Appleton and Company 1905, available online as a part of the UNC-CH database "
Documenting the American South." • 1949:
A Diary from Dixie, an expanded version edited by the novelist
Ben Ames Williams to enhance its readability and annotated. Reissued in 1980 by
Harvard University Press, with a foreword by Edmund Wilson, originally published in 1962 as an essay on Chesnut. • 1981: ''Mary Chesnut's Civil War'', edited and with an introduction by
C. Vann Woodward. Reprinted in 1993 and available in preview online. • 2002, Mary Chesnut,
Two Novels, includes
The Colonel and the Captain; and
Two Years - or The Way We Lived Then, edited and Introduction by Elisabeth Muhlenfeld, University of Virginia Press. • 2011: ''Mary Chesnut's Diary'', with an introduction by Catherine Clinton, Penguin Classic edition. ==Reception and legacy==