Rebekah Colburn
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New Release: FROM FIELDS OF PROMISE

5/19/2017

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I'm very excited to announce that FROM FIELDS OF PROMISE is now available on amazon.com in kindle or paperback formats! You can also contact me to order an autographed copy. And if you enjoy the novel, please take a few minutes to leave a review.

From Fields of Promise
Belonging neither to the South where its sympathies lay, nor to the North which held it captive, Maryland’s Eastern Shore forges a new path through the havoc left by the Civil War.
Mariah Wright, a Confederate widow, must find a way to keep her husband’s farm from falling into poverty and ruin. Most of the former slaves have headed north to freedom, and there aren’t enough hands to work the fields. Left with the care of her aging mother-in-law and young sister-in-law, Mariah strives to carry the burdens the war has left her.
Isaac Roberts, a veteran of the Confederate Army, returned from Appomattox to discover that the life he’d dreamed of coming home to is gone forever. Disillusioned from the loss of a cause to which he had given everything, and damaged from the savage realities of war, Isaac fears he has nothing left to live for.
With nowhere else to turn, Isaac accepts the challenge of helping a fallen comrade’s widow save what she has left of her husband’s legacy. As the fractured nation struggles to come together after four bitter years of fighting, Mariah and Isaac must find their place in a world which has changed forever.
Amazon Kindle
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The War of Northern Aggression

5/17/2017

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Someone recently asked me which war I was referring to when I spoke of the “War of Northern Aggression.” This is one of many names given to the Civil War, each of which reflected a different point of view.

As I have previously mentioned, the term “Civil War” is actually a misnomer as the conflict was not over the same seat of government. The North and the South were not at war to determine which would retain authority over the United States, but rather over the question of whether or not the South would be granted the sovereignty it desired.

For this reason, many Southerners called it the “War for Southern Independence,” using terminology that parallels the “American War for Independence.” At the time, it was viewed by those sympathetic to the cause as the “Third War for Independence,” with the War of 1812 being the second. Having joined the Union voluntarily, the seceding states sought to exit it in the same way and to form a separate government. Thus, it was also called the “War of Secession.”

It was the argument of the opposition that the Union must be held together at all costs. Abraham Lincoln and the Northern Republicans held that “the Union of these states is perpetual” based on implied language within the Constitution. They sometimes used the term “The War for the Union,” or the “War of Southern Aggression,” implying that the Confederacy was the belligerent party having started the war when they initiated combat at Fort Sumter.

This battle, the Battle of Fort Sumter, South Carolina, is generally recognized as the opening battle of the Civil War. After the declaration of secession by seven Southern States, South Carolina demanded that the U.S. Army abandon its facilities in Charleston Harbor. When an attempt was made by President James Buchanan to reinforce and resupply Major Anderson, who had moved his command from a more vulnerable location to the fortress built on an island, the merchant ship was fired upon.

In November of 1860, an effort to resupply Fort Sumter was made by the newly elected President Abraham Lincoln. In response, the Governor of South Carolina demanded once again the evacuation of the fort, which Major Anderson refused. On April 12, the Confederates responded by bombarding the fort who were significantly outgunned and low on supplies. After 34 hours, Major Anderson conceded to evacuate.

Immediately Lincoln called for 75,000 volunteers to suppress what he deemed to be a rebellion. It was this action which resulted in the secession of an additional four southern states, and which launched the conflict into a full-scale war.
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When considering the term “War of Northern Aggression,” it is important to remember that in addition to Lincoln’s plea to expand the army in order to bring the Southern States back under his authority, Lincoln also sanctioned General Sherman’s March to the Sea. His goal was to “make Georgia howl,” and he accomplished this objective by employing the tactics of Total War, destroying anything which might be useful to the Confederate Army, including factories, farms, and railroads. Civilians and their property were not exempt.

Sherman allegedly declared that “Until we can repopulate Georgia, it is useless to occupy it, but the utter destruction of its roads, houses and people will cripple their military resources. …I can make the march and make Georgia howl!” He further articulated his intent was “to whip the rebels, to humble their pride, to follow them to their inmost recesses and make them fear and dread us.”
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The longstanding ill feelings in the South toward Sherman and the victorious Union Army is evidence of his success.
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FROM FIELDS OF PROMISE

5/3/2017

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Coming soon, a continuation of the story which began with the series, MY BROTHER'S FLAG:

​FROM FIELDS OF PROMISE

Belonging neither to the South where its sympathies lay, nor to the North which held it captive, Maryland’s Eastern Shore forges a new path through the havoc left by the Civil War.

Mariah Wright, a Confederate widow, must find a way to keep her husband’s farm from falling into poverty and ruin. Most of the former slaves have headed north to freedom, and there aren’t enough hands to work the fields. Left with the care of her aging mother-in-law and young sister-in-law, Mariah strives to carry the burdens the war has left her.

Isaac Roberts, a veteran of the Confederate Army, returned from Appomattox to discover that the life he’d dreamed of coming home to is gone forever.


Disillusioned from the loss of a cause to which he had given everything, and damaged from the savage realities of war, Isaac fears he has nothing left to live for. With nowhere else to turn, Isaac accepts the challenge of helping a fallen comrade’s widow save what she has left of her husband’s legacy.

​As the fractured nation struggles to come together after four bitter years of fighting, Mariah and Isaac must find their place in a world which has changed forever.
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    Rebekah Colburn

                   Novelist
    Historical Fiction/ Romance 

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