A collection of letters portraying the impact of the Civil
War on the Irion family and postwar life as a white Southern
woman
From 1871 to 1883, Eliza Lucy Irion Neilson
(1843–1913) composed and saved more than 130
letters documenting family and domestic life in Columbus,
Mississippi. A New Southern Woman features 80 letters
from Neilson's correspondence, providing readers with a
glimpse into the recovery of domestic culture in postwar
Mississippi, the impact of the war on marriage and
education, and a reflection on family relationships after the
conflict ended.
Lucy Irion married farmer John Abert Neilson (1842–1922) in April 1871, and together the couple created an
agricultural partnership out of the scrimping modesty of a
new Southern ethos. As Lucy built her life around visions
of a domestic ideal, she also watched her widowed sister,
Lizzie, her single sister, Cordele, and her schoolgirl niece,
Bess, search for their own ways of becoming women of
the New South. When it came to turning the war-torn
vestiges of antebellum femininity into a workable postwar
reality, white Southern women no longer looked to one
ideal. Instead Neilson's correspondence suggests that
elite white womanhood remained a fluid and negotiated
territory where submissive wives, memorial crusaders, and
single and self-sufficient women created a new Southern
consciousness under a broader rubric of genteel postwar
femininity.
Fashioning their contrasting individual
stories within the collective bonds of family
and community, the Irion women met and
overcame the generational challenges of postwar
life together—and, by celebrating both the
traditional and nondependent ideals of womanhood,
they made a dynamic contribution to the
creation of a New South.
Giselle Roberts is an honorary research associate
in American history at La Trobe University
in Melbourne, Australia. She is the author of The
Confederate Belle and editor of The Correspondence
of Sarah Morgan and Francis Warrington
Dawson.
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