Philip LeVal: Difference between revisions

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'''{{PAGENAME}}''' was [[Paul LeVal]]'s father.  When he caught wind of his son's insubordinate attitude in the [[Confederate States of America|CSA]] army, he wrote to [[Jacob Wallace]], Paul's commanding officer, to request that his son be sent to a command with greater discipline. Paul thus ended up under Colonel [[Jubal Eustace]], a cruel officer tasked with catching runaway [[slave]]s. Eustace, it was hoped, would instil discipline in the younger LeVal. This never completely worked, because Paul never accepted the necessity of slavery. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Blood and Hope (novel)|Blood and Hope]]'')
'''{{PAGENAME}}''' was [[Paul LeVal]]'s father.  When he caught wind of his son's insubordinate attitude in the [[Confederate States of America|CSA]] army, he wrote to [[Jacob Wallace]], Paul's commanding officer, to request that his son be sent to a command with greater discipline. Paul thus ended up under Colonel [[Jubal Eustace]], a cruel officer tasked with catching runaway [[slave]]s. Eustace, it was hoped, would instil discipline in the younger LeVal. This never completely worked, because Paul never accepted the necessity of slavery. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Blood and Hope (novel)|Blood and Hope]]'')
It was not known if the elder LeVal survived the war, or even if he actively fought in it. He may have spent the whole war at his home in [[Lyon Ridge]], [[South Carolina]].


[[Category:19th century individuals]]
[[Category:19th century individuals]]
[[Category:Human parents]]
[[Category:Human parents]]

Revision as of 02:11, 18 January 2014

Philip LeVal was Paul LeVal's father. When he caught wind of his son's insubordinate attitude in the CSA army, he wrote to Jacob Wallace, Paul's commanding officer, to request that his son be sent to a command with greater discipline. Paul thus ended up under Colonel Jubal Eustace, a cruel officer tasked with catching runaway slaves. Eustace, it was hoped, would instil discipline in the younger LeVal. This never completely worked, because Paul never accepted the necessity of slavery. (PROSE: Blood and Hope)