My copies arrived this evening. To everyone who helped, thanks!
John Horn
"One of a score or so of outstanding unit histories."
--Ralph Peters, author, Cain at Gettysburg and The Damned of Petersburg
John Horn has written important books on the entire Siege of Petersburg and on some of its most crucial battles. His latest book focuses on the “Petersburg Regiment,” the 12th Virginia Infantry. This hard-fighting unit of Robert E. Lee’s army was heavily engaged from early 1862 to the Civil War’s final days. Its significant service is compellingly narrated throughout these pages. Complementing this narration are keen analyses of the 12th’s strengths – and shortcomings. This book is essential reading for anyone interested in the humanity of the military experience.
John Horn
"One of a score or so of outstanding unit histories."
-- Edwin C. Bearss, former Chief Historian,
National Park Service, author, The Petersburg Campaign
Regimental histories are, for the most part,
necessary resources for campaign histories but rarely worth reading beyond
that. John Horn’s The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War is a decided
exception to this rule. Charting the course of a single regiment from 1861 to
the war’s end is a daunting challenge but Horn is up to the task. His handling
of the numerous campaigns is solid, and he deftly fits his regiment into the
mix, almost always adding vivid anecdotes to the overall narrative (many
appearing for the first time) by skillfully employing an extensive selection of
first-hand accounts drawn from published and unpublished sources. As an added
plus, the maps are numerous and well-drawn. John Horn’s book is a model of its
kind.
-- Noah Andre Trudeau, author, The Last Citadel: Petersburg, Virginia, June 1864-April 1865 and Lincoln’s Greatest Journey
-- Noah Andre Trudeau, author, The Last Citadel: Petersburg, Virginia, June 1864-April 1865 and Lincoln’s Greatest Journey
John Horn’s
splendid history of the 12th Virginia will stand among the classics of the
discipline.
Long years of
research and patient crafting allowed the author to deliver an account as
detailed and precise, as honest and clear, as any regimental accounting we’ll
ever see. Following the men of Petersburg and its environs from the
naïve enthusiasm of the war’s initial months through near-disaster amid the
gore at Crampton’s Gap, and on through a series of tough stands in the
Chancellorsville campaign to the blunt savagery of the war’s last year, this
chronicle of one hard-used, heroic regiment is a true soldier’s book—and that
is a great compliment. John Horn takes us as close as words on a
page can bring us to the soldier’s experience. From merry snowball
fights between entire brigades, to the final, bitter defense of their home
city, the men of the 12th Virginia leap to life.
Horn’s reliance
on first-hand accounts reminds us of how casual death became—as well as how
hungry those men in gray became as early as the winter of 1863, when at least a
few acquaintances of the regiment found rat meat a tasty supplement to their
rations.
Simple pleasures and
harsh punishments, battlefield confusion and clashes of character…informal
truces on the picket line and the shock of finding your powder wet as the enemy
approaches…so often, it’s the telling detail, the tidbit ignored by the
proponents of grand history, that really bring those Civil War soldiers to life
again. And Horn is the master of such details.
--Ralph Peters, author, Cain at Gettysburg and The Damned of Petersburg
The culmination of years of study and research,
John Horn’s definitive history of the Petersburg Regiment narrates the wartime
adventures of the 12th Virginia Regiment with the skill of a master
story-teller. We meet the regiment’s members and experience with them the
horrors of battle, the exhaustion of the march, and the tedium of camp
life. Grounded in primary source materials, told with engaging verve, and
accompanied by an ample array of maps, this is Civil War history at its best.
The Petersburg Regiment sets a new standard for regimental histories.
--Gordon C. Rhea, author, On to
Petersburg: Grant and Lee, June 4-15, 1864
John Horn has written important books on the entire Siege of Petersburg and on some of its most crucial battles. His latest book focuses on the “Petersburg Regiment,” the 12th Virginia Infantry. This hard-fighting unit of Robert E. Lee’s army was heavily engaged from early 1862 to the Civil War’s final days. Its significant service is compellingly narrated throughout these pages. Complementing this narration are keen analyses of the 12th’s strengths – and shortcomings. This book is essential reading for anyone interested in the humanity of the military experience.
--Dr. Richard J. Sommers, author, Challenges
of Command in the Civil War and Richmond Redeemed
The 12th Virginia had not consistently
distinguished itself early in the war, John Horn writes, but in his stirring
regimental history, the Petersburg Regiment finally gets its
(over)due. Horn writes with humanity of a band of brothers who push
through the hard work of war across Virginia only to spend the last unhappy
months fighting on their own doorsteps to protect their home
town. Horn’s book is a model for the way regimental histories should
be written: compelling, empathetic, and highly readable.
--Chris Mackowski, editor, The Emerging Civil
War Series, author, Hell Itself: The Battle of the Wilderness,
May 5-7, 1864
A comprehensive biography of a fighting
regiment in the Army of Northern Virginia, especially useful in delineating the
hometown support system that sustained the regiment throughout the war.
--Dr. William Glenn Roberson, author, The
First Battle of Petersburg
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