Paul Varnes

Confederate Money


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      To all those who suffered or died during the Civil War, especially to my grandfathers and grandmothers and their dozens of brothers and sisters

       Confederate Money

      Paul Varnes

      Copyright © 2003 by Paul Varnes

      First paperback edition 2013

      All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

      Inquiries should be addressed to:

      Pineapple Press, Inc.

      P.O. Box 3889

      Sarasota, Florida 34230

       www.pineapplepress.com

      ISBN (pbk): 978-1-56164-624-1

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Varnes, Paul.

      Confederate money / by Paul Varnes.

      p. cm.

      ISBN 1-56164-271-1 (alk. paper)

      1.United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Fiction. 2. Southern States--Fiction. 3. Young Men--Fiction. I. Title.

      PS3622.A75 C66 2003

      813’.6--dc21

      2002014659

      First Edition

      10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

      Design by Shé Hicks

      Printed in the United States of America

      Contents

       Author’s Note

       Acknowledgments

       PART I Revenge

       October 4, 1861

       October 7, 1861

       October 22, 1861

       October 28, 1861

       November 15, 1861

       November 30, 1861

       December 21, 1861

       January 12, 1862

       PART II The Flight

       February 26, 1862

       March 28, 1862

       April 8, 1862

       April 16, 1862

       July 3, 1862

       May 22, 1863

       September 5, 1863

       September 27, 1863

       PART III Jaking up Arms

       November 8, 1863

       November 25, 1863

       February 8, 1864

       March 1, 1864

       April 26, 1864

       June 4, 1864

       PART IV The Final Trade

       November 30, 1864

       April 22, 1865

       May 2, 1865

       May 17, 1865

       May 25, 1866

       Author’s Note

      Many of the episodes in this novel of the Civil War are based on stories passed along in my family. Great-great-great-grandfather Isaac Varnes Sr. moved his family to Florida in 1823, twenty-two years before Florida became a state. (A military census estimated that less than 14,000 people lived in Florida in 1835.) Isaac Jr. married Louisa Ann Mettair, a Florida native of French descent whose parents, grandparents, great-grandparents, and great-great-grandparents date back to early-eighteenth-century Saint Augustine.

      Isaac Sr., his son Isaac Jr., and his grandson Henry are designated Florida Pioneers. Isaac Jr. named his first son after Andrew Jackson, with whom his father had served in the First Seminole Indian War. Isaac Sr., at age fifty-five, fought also in the Second Seminole War, alongside all his sons and all of Louisa’s brothers.

      Of the three sons of Isaac Jr. and Louisa’s who fought in the Civil War, two died in service to their country. Andrew Lewis Varnes died November 30, 1862, in Vicksburg, Mississippi, while he was a prisoner en route to a prisoner exchange. Isaac Varnes III died September 3, 1864, near Atlanta. Though seriously ill at the time, Isaac III was in the first wave of the Confederate charge at Jonesboro when he was killed. Isaac Jr. died in 1864 near Olustee, Florida. Louisa died in Lulu, Florida, in 1878.

      Isaac Sr.’s fifth child, Henry, was born in Florida. The Florida Ninth Infantry Regiment, with which he served during the Civil War, was assigned to General Lee’s army. Henry served with Lee at Petersburg, Virginia, until August of 1864, when he was sent home due to chronic diarrhea with chronic dyspepsia and a degeneration of his arteries. He married Susanna Melissa Hunter in 1867. Isaac Jr.’s brother, George, also had two sons