Saturday, May 28, 2016

Petersburg and Atlanta, Castel and McMurry, Part 1

My quest for regimental statistics comparable to those of the 12th Virginia, Mahone's Brigade, Anderson's Division, Army of Northern Virginia, has led me west.  My studies of western regiments and their statistics has reminded me that the eastern and western campaigns of 1864 require comparison.  This set me to rereading Castel's Decision in the West and McMurry's Atlanta 1864:  Last Chance for the Confederacy.

I like both books very much.  I keep my copy of Castel at home and would keep my copy of McMurry there except I've lent it to a friend.  Though I like them very much, I disagree with them strongly in some respects.

First, Castel and McMurry explain President Jefferson Davis' decision to put General Joseph E. Johnston in command of the Army of Tennessee at the beginning of the campaign, without really commenting on it pro or con.  I strongly disagree with Davis' decision, with an asterisk.

The record shows that General Pierre Gustave "Gus" Toutant Beauregard was the better choice for command of the Army of Tennessee.  In 1863, while Johnston was failing to mount a defense of Vicksburg, Beauregard was successfully defending Charleston, South Carolina.  In 1864, while Johnston rarely mounted a counterattack of any kind against his opponent, Maj. Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman, Beauregard successfully attacked his opponent, Maj. Gen. Benjamin Franklin Butler, and bottled him up in Bermuda Hundred, then successfully defended Petersburg against the overwhelmingly strong forces of Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant.  In August 1864, Beauregard fought more effectively than General Robert E. Lee, inflicting disproportionate losses on August 18 and 19 while Lee, insisting on a set piece attack, was bloodily repulsed on August 21.

Davis detested Beauregard and Johnston equally.  The president could not know the futeure, but he ought  to have looked at the 1863 outcomes and decided on the facts.  Furthermore, Beauregard had commanded the Army of Tennessee in 1862 and thus was more familiar with its officers than Johnston, who had merely exercised regional command over the Army of Tennessee and the Army of Mississippi.

The asterisk?  If Davis had put Beauregard in charge of the Army of Tennessee, he would almost certainly have had to put Johnston in command of the Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia--the defense of Petersburg.  With Johnston defending the Cockade City, little chance existed of him bottling up Butler though he might have withstood Grant.  Johnston was always hoping that Sherman would attack him in some impregnable position, and Grant would have obliged.


Saturday, May 21, 2016

When in Doubt, Google.

When trying to track down a citation, Google it.  Often one is dealing with a mis-citation.  This is particularly true when dealing with material cited to the files of one of the national battlefield parks.  These are often snippets of information from one repository or another.

This evening, I was trying to find the whereabouts of a memoir cited to the private collection of a park historian.  Google informed me that the document was a book published in 1950.  I can and shall get it interlibrary loan.

I was searching for another memoir mis-cited in the bibliography of a monograph.  Google informed me that it is a manuscript in a library in Rome, Georgia.  My experience with libraries has been good.  The Augusta, Georgia library a few weeks ago free of charge provided me with a copy of another memoir I sought.  I fired off an email to the Rome, Georgia library tonight. 

Saturday, May 14, 2016

Bibliographies--Expedite Your Research!

One need not reinvent the wheel when researching.  Bibliographies are a handy way to find relevant books.  As I research the action of June 22, 1864, where three brigades under Mahone routed three divisions of the Federal Second Corps, I'm looking at a number of published annotated bibliographies to speed my research.

Of course there's Dornbusch's Military Bibliography of the Civil War.

There are also two annotated bibliographies covering the period from 1955 to 1996 by Garold Cole.

Then there is an Alabama bibliography online at https://sites.google.com/site/kenj680/home/albiblio

There are digital state archives guides at http://www.digitalstatearchives.com/

There's the index to manuscripts at the Library of Congress.  http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/gdc/scd0001/2004/20040324001cw/20040324001cw.pdf

There's a guide to manuscripts of Georgia.  https://books.google.com/books?id=ryu00_YxdRcC&pg=PA256&lpg=PA256&dq=elbert+willett+diary&source=bl&ots=YJTczX_xBU&sig=z1P15nkmzo0QNoRCFpibqXS7WKI&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjD3NC6pZLMAhUsuIMKHQ3wCLwQ6AEIJDAB#v=onepage&q=elbert%20willett%20diary&f=false

There are many other bibliographies available, I'm sure.  Google them!


Friday, May 6, 2016

Gordon Rhea to Follow Campaign of 1864 across James River to Petersburg

In a new volume, impressively researched and written, Gordon Rhea will soon be following the campaign of 1864 across James River to Petersburg.  We can all look forward to this addition to Rhea's history of the struggle between Grant and Lee in eastern Virginia.  Welcome to the Cockade City, Mr. Rhea!

Friday, April 29, 2016

8th Alabama Infantry, a Great Regiment

Here's a solid statistic from the Alabama Archives.  The 8th Alabama Infantry had lost 297 killed or dead of wounds as of January 1, 1865.  It lost two killed or mortally wounded at Hatcher's Run on February 6, 1865, and one killed or dead of wounds April 7, 1865, for a total of 300. Alabama Department of Archives and History, Confederate Regimental History Files, 8th Alabama Infantry, Folder 4, Part 3, 34-36.  300 exceeds the 295 battle fatalities suffered by the 5th New Hampshire, the Union regiment that Fox calculated lost the most battle fatalities on the Union side.  If you read the capsule histories of the Alabama regiments set forth by the Alabama Archives, the 8th's is the only overall number of killed or mortally wounded that is not qualified by a "nearly," "almost," "around," or the like.  I saw no bases for the estimates of the killed or dead of wounds in the 9th, 10th, 11th or 14th Alabama.  There are no estimates for the Alabama regiments in the Army of Tennessee.  

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

Baker's Brigade, Clayton's Division, Lee's Corps, Army of Tennessee

After I found the source stating that Baker's Brigade departed Atlanta for Mobile on August 25th, 1864, I went back and looked for this in what by now is my well-thumbed copy of Castel's Decision in the West.  Sure enough, a published version of the source is in the bibliography.  And Castel mentions the departure of Baker's Brigade for Mobile on page 499, but without the comment the information demands:  what in heavens were Hood and the Confederate high command thinking?  Had they grown that complacent that they were sending men away from the decisive point?  Didn't they know how important the capture of Atlanta would be for the North?  As Frederick the Great said, "He who defends everything, defends nothing."  The presence of Baker's Brigade at Atlanta probably would not have made much difference, but sending it away a week before Atlanta's (and consequently the war's) loss was sheer madness.  

Saturday, April 16, 2016

Shocking, Confederate Command Dispatching Troops from Atlanta on the Eve of its Fall

My studies have taken me west as I've tried to find comparable regiments to the 12th Virginia Infantry in the Army of Tennessee.  Last night I discovered that on August 25, 1864, the Army of Tennessee sent a brigade of infantry from Atlanta to Mobile, Alabama, arriving a few days later.  This suggests that contrary to the opinion of Castel, the historian of the Atlanta Campaign, General Hood, the commander of the Army of Tennessee, failed entirely to apprehend that Sherman had not abandoned the siege but was headed for Atlanta's last rail link with the rest of the Confederacy.  Atlanta fell September 1, 1864.  No wonder Atlanta fell.  The Confederacy's leadership had lost touch with reality.