What was Sullivan Ballou fighting for?
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In respect to this, did Sullivan Ballou believe in the cause he was fighting for?
Sacred Beliefs. The letter that Union soldier Major Sullivan Ballou wrote to his wife, Sarah, a week before the First Battle of Bull Run expressed his belief that he fought for a just cause. He was killed in the battle. Abolitionists believed they were acting with divine guidance to fulfill God's will.
what happened to Sullivan Ballou's wife? When he died, his wife was 24. She later moved to New Jersey to live out her life with her son, William, and never remarried. She died at age 80 in 1917. Sullivan and Sarah Ballou are buried next to each other at Swan Point Cemetery in Providence, Rhode Island.
Furthermore, what is the purpose behind Sullivan Ballou's letter to his wife?
With the movement of the federal forces into Virginia imminent, Sullivan Ballou penned this letter to his wife. His concern that he "should fall on the battle-field" proved all too true.
Where did Sarah Ballou live?
Sullivan Ballou was born March 28, 1829, in Smithfield, R.I. Although he grew up in poverty, he would attend Brown University and become known as an orator. In 1850, Ballou moved to Ballston, N.Y., to teach oratory at the National Law School, where he also studied law.
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