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  1. George Cary Eggleston (26 November 1839 – 14 April 1911) American writer and brother of fellow writer Edward Eggleston (1837–1902). Sons of Joseph Cary Eggleston and Mary Jane Craig. After the American Civil War he published a serialized account of his time as a Confederate soldier in The Atlantic Monthly. These serialized ...

  2. His boyhood home at Vevay, known as the Edward and George Cary Eggleston House, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. His summer home, Owl's Nest, in Lake George, New York, eventually became his year-round home. Eggleston died there on September 3, 1902, at the age of 64.

  3. Egglestons writing is particularly important because it gives the perspective of early settlers moving into Indiana when it was still heavily forested. He gives us an idea of what they were thinking and feeling as they first began to change the land into the Indiana we know today.

  4. But nearly a decade after the war ended, the magazine offered a Southerner’s perspective, via a seven-part series by George Cary Eggleston, whose family had owned a Virginia plantation and...

  5. Eggleston, George Cary (1839–1911) in A Dictionary of Writers and their Works (2) Length: 33 words

  6. ←. Author Index: Eg. George Cary Eggleston. (1839–1911) sister projects: Wikipedia article, Commons category, Wikidata item. American writer. George Cary Eggleston. Works [ edit] How to Educate Yourself: With or Without Masters (1872) A Man of Honor (1873), first serialized in Hearth and Home. A Rebel's Recollections (1874)