Reflections of a Civil War Historian: Essays on Leadership, Society, and the Art of WarUniversity of Missouri Press, 2004 - 254 strani |
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Zadetki 1–5 od 42
Stran 9
... early Confederate strength in cavalry were both significant advantages enjoyed by the Southern comman- ders at the outset. Most important in the Tennessee theater, raids by guerrillas and by substantial forces of regular cavalry could ...
... early Confederate strength in cavalry were both significant advantages enjoyed by the Southern comman- ders at the outset. Most important in the Tennessee theater, raids by guerrillas and by substantial forces of regular cavalry could ...
Stran 12
... early in the war, but with Grant's emergence to high prominence following the fall of Vicksburg, Union com- mand structure, on the whole, thenceforth equaled, and eventually surpassed, that of the Confederates. The collaboration between ...
... early in the war, but with Grant's emergence to high prominence following the fall of Vicksburg, Union com- mand structure, on the whole, thenceforth equaled, and eventually surpassed, that of the Confederates. The collaboration between ...
Stran 14
... early months of the conflict as they would be by war's end, never- theless inflicted serious damage on the Southern cause from the very start. An early and crucial error was to appoint Samuel Cooper to the post of adjutant and inspector ...
... early months of the conflict as they would be by war's end, never- theless inflicted serious damage on the Southern cause from the very start. An early and crucial error was to appoint Samuel Cooper to the post of adjutant and inspector ...
Stran 15
... early in the war: Davis exaggerated the abilities of and placed unrealistic reliance in his old friend Albert Sidney John- ston; this, coupled with Davis's poor judgment under pressures that were created by the Confederacy's inadequate ...
... early in the war: Davis exaggerated the abilities of and placed unrealistic reliance in his old friend Albert Sidney John- ston; this, coupled with Davis's poor judgment under pressures that were created by the Confederacy's inadequate ...
Stran 17
... early have decided to try to “win the peace,” but they knew they had lost the war. Stephen D. Lee and the Guns at Second Manassas This. 4. Nor, as readers know who are familiar with what I and my collaborators tried to prove, and surely ...
... early have decided to try to “win the peace,” but they knew they had lost the war. Stephen D. Lee and the Guns at Second Manassas This. 4. Nor, as readers know who are familiar with what I and my collaborators tried to prove, and surely ...
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35 | |
The War Strikes Home | 52 |
A Virginian | 66 |
Lincolns Presidential Example in Dealing with the Military | 78 |
The War inside the Church | 99 |
The Crux of Frank L | 111 |
We Shall Cease to Be Friends | 133 |
Civil War to World War I | 147 |
The War Board the Basis of the United States | 158 |
Creation Mobilization | 169 |
The Evolution of Tactics in the Civil War | 200 |
On Remembering and Reliving History | 221 |
Index | 237 |
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
Reflections of a Civil War Historian: Essays on Leadership, Society, and the ... Herman Hattaway Prikaz kratkega opisa - 2003 |
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
American American Civil War Archer Jones Army of Tennessee artillery assault attack balloon battalion batteries battle Beauregard became Beringer brigade British campaign cavalry chief civil religion Colonel command Confederacy Confederate armies conscripts corps Davis’s defeat defense early enemy entrenchments essay Federal fight fire forces Fort Sumter Georgia Glatthaar Governor Grant guns Halleck Herman Hattaway historian Ibid infantry Jackson James Jefferson Davis John Johnston later Lee’s Lincoln lines Longstreet Louisiana major March McClellan ment Military History militia Mississippi nation North Carolina North Won Northern officers operations organization Owsley Owsley's P. G. T. Beauregard position president raid raiders rank rebel reenactors regiment Richmond River S. D. Lee Second Manassas Secretary Sherman slavery soldiers South Lost Southern staff Stanton Stephen strategy Sumter tactics theater Thomas Thomas’s tion troops Union army United University Press Vance veterans victory Virginia volunteer war’s West Point western theater Williams wrote Yankee York