Charles Wadsworth Camp (1879-1936) was a journalist, critic, playwright, novelist, and soldier. Born in Philadelphia and educated at Princeton University, his work appeared in publications like Collier’s and The New York Sun. He met the pianist Madeleine Barnett Camp at a wedding in Jacksonville, Florida, and they were married. Together they traveled extensively for his writing assignments until the outbreak of World War I. Charles covered both the Easter Rising in Ireland, and the front in 1916. War’s Dark Frame is a collection of his journalism from that assignment, and it follows his journey from New York to England to France. Based in Paris, he reported from various places on the front and wrote about the devastation, technologies, spycraft, and democratic effects of the war.
When the United States entered the war, he volunteered, and was asked by his colonel to write a history of his battalion. The result was History of the 305th Field Artillery, and it is a record of the building of the National Army and its service, told with his characteristic wry humor and dialogue. His daughter, Madeleine L’Engle Camp, was born just after the armistice in November 1918, but he didn’t return home until May 1919. He was exposed to toxic gas during deployment and suffered from recurring pneumonia as a result. He died at age 57 after catching a cold at a Princeton football game. Daughter Madeleine grew up to become the author of more than 60 books, including the classic A Wrinkle in Time, a story in which a daughter embarks on an interstellar journey to find her lost father.
This edition brings together his two books on World War I and includes an introduction by Jonathan D. Bratten, author of To the Last Man: A National Guard Regiment in the Great War, 1917-1919. It is edited and with an afterword by Charlotte Jones Voiklis, great-granddaughter of Charles Wadsworth Camp and executor of her grandmother Madeleine L’Engle’s estate.
The original editions, which have additional material not included in this bound volume, are available for free at www.madeleinelengle.com
İçerik tablosu
Introduction
Note on the Text
War’s Dark Frame
History of the 305th Field Artillery
Afterword: The Anguish Left Behind: Charles Wadsworth Camp’s Influence on his daughter Madeleine L’Engle
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Jonathan D. Bratten has been the Maine National Guard Command Historian since 2014 and was the Army Center of Military History’s first Scholar in Residence at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. In 2021 his book To the Last Man: A National Guard Regiment in the Great War, 1917-1919 received the Army Historical Foundation’s award for best unit history. He is a National Guard officer and a veteran of Afghanistan.