The Websters: Letters of an American Army Family in Peace and War, 1836-1853
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The couple was barely married before being separated by orders that sent Lucien Þrst to south Florida, where he established a post on the site of present-day Miami, and then to North Carolina, where he participated in the army’s sad duty of driving the Cherokee Indians onto their “trail of tears.†When finally reunited, the newlyweds were posted to duty in Maine for seven years and then Pensacola Bay for a few months while Lucien’s unit prepared for the imminent war with Mexico. For the next two years Frances and Lucien’s letters were filled with the details of their lives.
The Websters has the rare distinction of containing both sides of a correspondence between an “Old Army†officer and his socially prominent wife, one that reflects both their private lives and many of the public events of the times and that interweaves their responses to one another’s experiences.

