| Acknowledgments | |
| Introduction | |
| Pt. 1 | Filling the Ranks | |
| 1 | "We Are All in This War": The 148th Pennsylvania and Home Front Dissension in Centre County during the Civil War | 3 |
| 2 | "Volunteer While You May": Manpower Mobilization in Dubuque, Iowa | 30 |
| 3 | "If They Would Know What I Know It Would Be Pretty Hard to Raise One Company in York": Recruiting, the Draft, and Society's Response in York County, Pennsylvania, 1861-1865 | 69 |
| Pt. 2 | Northerners and Their Men in Arms | |
| 4 | "Tell Me What the Sensations Are": The Northern Home Front Learns about Combat | 119 |
| 5 | "Listen Ladies One and All": Union Soldiers Yearn for the Society of Their "Fair Cousins of the North" | 143 |
| 6 | Soldiering on the Home Front: The Veteran Reserve Corps and the Northern People | 182 |
| 7 | Saving Jack: Religion, Benevolent Organizations, and Union Sailors during the Civil War | 219 |
| 8 | In the Lord's Army: The United States Christian Commission, Soldiers, and the Union War Effort | 263 |
| 9 | Carrying the Home Front to War: Soldiers, Race, and New England Culture during the Civil War | 293 |
| Pt. 3 | From War to Peace | |
| 10 | "Surely They Remember Me": The 16th Connecticut in War, Captivity, and Public Memory | 327 |
| 11 | "Honorable Scars": Northern Amputees and the Meaning of Civil War Injuries | 361 |
| 12 | The Impact of the Civil War on Nineteenth-Century Marriages | 395 |
| 13 | A Different Civil War: African American Veterans in New Bedford, Massachusetts | 417 |
| 14 | "I Would Rather Shake Hands with the Blackest Nigger in the Land": Northern Black Civil War Veterans and the Grand Army of the Republic | 442 |
| 15 | "For Every Man Who Wore the Blue": The Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States and the Charges of Elitism after the Civil War | 463 |
| Afterword | 483 |
| Contributors | 489 |
| Index | 493 |