The year 1861 found the Bulloch and Roosevelt families divided by allegiance. Now living in the North, the Bulloch women supported their Southern roots, while their northern husbands stayed true to the Union. The War created additional hardships, limiting the family's correspondence, travel, and finances. With two sons fighting for the South and one drying back home in Georgia, the family letters tell of the ladies' struggles to aid and comfort those they loved, all amidst a background of the Civil War.