War Diaries (May 13) (nonfiction)

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War Diary entries for May 13.

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Diaries

Isaac L. Taylor: May 13, 1863

Clear & warm in AM. Clouds up & sprinkles a little in P.M. I finish reading Hitchcock's Geology. We hear that "Stonewall" Jackson died at 3-30 P.M. of the 10th. inst., from wounds recd. in the late battle. He had his left arm amputated. I send to Philp & Solomons "Metripolitan Book Store" 332 Pa. Avenue, Washington D.C. for Wood's Botany. "The decrease of the mean temperature from the equator towards the poles is nearly in the proportion of the cosines of latitude." Hitchcock's Geology, Pg. 306.

Isaac Lyman Taylor, Company E, First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry (diary)

Elisabeth Kaufmann: May 13, 1940

As a result of the political developments terrible measures were taken today. [Quoting the newspaper:] “. . .Tout les ressortissants de l’Empire Allemand et les Dantzigois, Sarrois, Rheinians [sic] de deux sexes de 17 à 55 vont être internés. . .’ [All nationals of Germany, Danzing, the Saarland, the Rhineland, male and female, age seventeen to fifty-five are going to be interned.] [. . .] Across from us lives a German family. The mother is in her late forties, the father in his mid-fifties. They have two daughters, eighteen and twenty years of age, and one son who will be seventeen next week. The members of the family will be completely separated for the duration of the war. The father will be the first to go into the camp although he was only recently discharged [from the camp] as “loyal.” His son will follow him a few weeks. The mother and her daughters must go into another camp. I should add that the mothers is almost totally deaf and not well.

We, as Austrians, are in a great sense of anxiety. The official decree does not clearly state whether Austrians fall under the internment order, or whether we have been excepted. Mother and I—I skipped school today—are running from one office to another and are being given evasive answers. One commissioner says "yes" and another "no." They play with our nerves as if they were toys. This kind of day is nerve-wracking and filled with doubt about losing in the next three days what one values most in life, what is left of our personal freedom.

Should I now really go to school? One can go crazy. I am going to see whether the people at the Austrian Committee on the Madeleine know anything. They should have been given some instructions, but they usually know nothing when it comes to something important. [. . . ]

Elisabeth Kaufmann, diary (Paris)

E.M. Larsson: May 13, 1983

thumb|Abandoned "Green Line" dividing the warring factions in North and South Mogadishu (January 1993).

One gets so tired of all the gunshot wounds over here.

—E.M. Larsson, a Swedish doctor (diary from the war in Somalia)

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