In May 1861, a month after the outbreak of the war, Stone began to keep a diary that, as an "ego document", provides insights into her own sensitivities and looks at her social environment, providing a revealing moral portrait of her time. Stone supported the cause of the Southern States with a youthful-romantic enthusiasm, even though the picture of just war, in which "dashing young officers in magnificent uniforms are inspired by patriotic maidens to heroic exploits," gave way to the reality on how the Union front approached their plantation. In 1862, after the Union's first gunboats took up position on the banks of the Mississippi River just a few miles from their plantation, the skirmishes in the area increased with the
Vicksburg campaign, leaving the family in March 1863 to escape through the swamps of Louisiana. As refugees, the Stones reached
Tyler, Texas, where they spent two and a half years - much to the disfavor of the privileged Kate Stone, who disliked anything but refined Texan manners. In this "dark corner of the Confederacy," as Stone calls it, she received news of the deaths of her brothers Walter and Coleman on the battlefield, further eclipsing her mood. After the defeat of the Confederacy, Stone returned in 1865 to Louisiana and found the family mansion looted and the plantation devastated. With the reconstruction, the entries become rarer; the diary ends in 1868. ==Personal life==