At 5:31 AM -0700 6/2/99, Linda Crannell wrote: >Can anyone direct me to sources which may help me better understand the >economic impact (on families) of service in the Civil War? I am >researching the history of a county Poor House. I have little knowledge >about how soldier were (or were not) paid for their military service, how >families were economically effected by such service, how soldiers who were >killed or (especially) handicapped by their service may have been assisted >financially, or even how the process worked by which those whose service >might have posed a severe economic threat to the welfare of their families >might have avoided service. I guess my major problem involves the fact >that there has been such a vast amount written about the history of the >Civil War that trying to find sources that dealt with this specific >economic issue is like trying to find the proverbial needle in a haystack! >Any assistance will be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Linda I have seen references to poverty in the NYS 1865 census of Brooklyn wards 4 & 5; also the lack of information about the men serving. This usually at the end of an ED in comments by the cnesus taker. regards m ================================================================= Getting out of Long Kesh was easier than getting a job in Ardoyne. Jimmy Smyth