Notes of a staff officer of our First New Jersey Brigade on the Seven Day's…

(12 User reviews)   2061
By Christopher Ilic Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Family Life
Grubb, E. Burd (Edward Burd), 1841-1913 Grubb, E. Burd (Edward Burd), 1841-1913
English
Hey, I just read this incredible firsthand account from the Civil War that feels like finding a lost diary. It's called 'Notes of a Staff Officer' by E. Burd Grubb. Forget the dry history books—this is the real, unfiltered stuff. Grubb was a young officer in the First New Jersey Brigade during the brutal Seven Days Battles in 1862. His journal isn't about grand strategy; it's about the mud, the exhaustion, the confusion, and the sheer terror of being there. The main thing that hooked me was the tension between the official reports and what actually happened on the ground. Grubb writes about orders that made no sense, the fog of war where no one knew what was going on, and the quiet moments of humanity between the fighting. It’s a mystery of survival, told by someone who lived through it. If you've ever wondered what it was really like to be a soldier in that war, this is as close as you can get without a time machine.
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The Story

This book is the personal journal of Edward Burd Grubb, a 21-year-old staff officer for a Union brigade from New Jersey. It covers just one week in the summer of 1862—the Seven Days Battles outside Richmond, Virginia. The Union army, under General McClellan, is trying to capture the Confederate capital. Grubb’s job is to carry orders across the battlefield, putting him right in the thick of the action.

The ‘plot’ is the daily reality of the campaign. One day, he’s describing the beautiful Virginia countryside. The next, he’s riding through a hellscape of cannon fire and retreating troops. He writes about the intense heat, the lack of sleep, and the constant movement. There are frantic battles at places like Gaines’ Mill and Malvern Hill, but the story is less about who won and more about the gritty experience of being there. It ends not with a grand conclusion, but with the exhausted army pulling back, having failed its objective.

Why You Should Read It

You should read this because it strips away the myth and shows you the war. Grubb doesn’t write like a historian looking back; he writes in the moment. His confusion is your confusion. When he gets a vague order to find a general ‘somewhere on the left,’ you feel his frustration. The fear is palpable, but so is the dark humor and the bond between soldiers.

What struck me most was the ordinary stuff. Descriptions of trying to find a dry place to sleep, sharing a rare good meal, or the strange quiet after a battle. These details make the soldiers human, not just names in a textbook. Grubb also doesn’t shy away from criticizing his superiors or pointing out mistakes, which gives you a sense of the real chaos of command.

Final Verdict

This book is perfect for anyone who loves personal stories from history. If you’re a Civil War buff, it’s an essential primary source that reads like an adventure. If you’re just curious about the past, it’s a gripping, human-scale entry point. It’s not a long, sweeping narrative, but a focused, intense snapshot. Think of it as the literary equivalent of a documentary filmed on a soldier’s helmet cam. Be ready for some old-fashioned language and military terms, but push through—the raw honesty on the other side is worth it.

Logan Wright
1 year ago

Having read this twice, the arguments are well-supported by credible references. Worth every second.

Matthew Thompson
1 year ago

I was skeptical at first, but it challenges the reader's perspective in an intellectual way. Definitely a 5-star read.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (12 User reviews )

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