It was a few years ago that Ted Savas contacted me about writing the revision of The Destruction of the Weldon Railroad that became The Battles for the Weldon Railroad, August 1864. SavasBeatie does a fine job with its books. They can do footnotes, which I greatly prefer to endnotes. They use fonts that are easily read by old cadgers such as myself. They take care of their authors, as well. In 2015 SavasBeatie arranged for me to speak to the Chicago Civil War Round Table (CWRT), do an interview at Chicago's Abraham Lincoln Bookshop, and do a book-signing at Petersburg National Battlefield Park. This year SavasBeatie set me up to speak to Northern Illinois CWRT, Salt Creek CWRT, Lincoln-Davis CWRT, and South Suburban CWRT. Next year I expect to talk to the Orange County (Ca.) CWRT, the Greater Orlando CWRT, the San Francisco CWRT and the Civil Warriors CWRT in Los Angeles. I might have been able to do more but I'm still practicing law.
Saturday, November 26, 2016
Saturday, November 19, 2016
Thank you, Lincoln-Davis Civil War Round Table and South Suburban Civil War Round Table!
Thank you, members of the Lincoln-Davis and South Suburban Civil War Round Tables. It was very kind of you to invite me to talk about the fighting around Petersburg in August 1864. Both of your meetings are within a few miles of my home and office, and I elected to focus on color bearer and Medal of Honor winner Pvt. Henry M. Hardenbergh of Company G, the Preacher's Company, of the 39th Illinois Veteran Volunteers (Yates Phalanx). On August 16, 1864, the day Hardenbergh won his Medal of Honor by capturing the flag of the 10th Alabama, the 39th lost thirty-six killed or mortally wounded out of scarcely more than 200 taken into action.
I learned from you, too. At the Lincoln-Davis meeting, I learned that descendants of the Indians who inhabited Cook and Will Counties, Illinois, still live among us. At the South Suburban Civil War Round Table I learned that Atlanta's famous Cyclorama, the painting depicting the Battle of Atlanta on July 22, 1864, has in it a soldier with the face of none other than Clark Gable! I can't wait to visit the Cyclorama as soon as it reopens.
Happy Thanksgiving to y'all!
I learned from you, too. At the Lincoln-Davis meeting, I learned that descendants of the Indians who inhabited Cook and Will Counties, Illinois, still live among us. At the South Suburban Civil War Round Table I learned that Atlanta's famous Cyclorama, the painting depicting the Battle of Atlanta on July 22, 1864, has in it a soldier with the face of none other than Clark Gable! I can't wait to visit the Cyclorama as soon as it reopens.
Happy Thanksgiving to y'all!
Friday, November 11, 2016
Confederate Field Marshals?
One could win a marshal's baton (the symbol of the rank) by winning a major battle as well as capturing a major fortress. The Confederacy, however, would have produced fewer field marshals than the Union had the rank existed for them.
General Joseph E. Johnson might have won a marshal's baton for First Manassas. Nothing he did after that merited one.
General Albert Sidney Johnson did nothing to merit a marshal's baton.
General Robert E. Lee won several victories that could have made him a field marshal--The Seven Days, Second Manassas, the capture of Harper's Ferry, Fredericksburg, and Chancellorsville.
General Braxton Bragg's victory at Chickamauga would have earned him a marshal's baton had the field marshal's rank existed.
What about General Pierre Gustave Toutant "Gus" Beauregard? His service as unofficial chief of staff at First Manassas would not have made him a field marshal. His successful defense of Charleston in 1863 might have. His victory over Beast Butler at Second Drewry's Bluff on May 16, 1864 might have. His successful defense of Petersburg June 15-18, 1864, also might have. The Davis Administration would probably not have given him the benefit of the doubt, though--Beauregard and Davis detested one another.
General Joseph E. Johnson might have won a marshal's baton for First Manassas. Nothing he did after that merited one.
General Albert Sidney Johnson did nothing to merit a marshal's baton.
General Robert E. Lee won several victories that could have made him a field marshal--The Seven Days, Second Manassas, the capture of Harper's Ferry, Fredericksburg, and Chancellorsville.
General Braxton Bragg's victory at Chickamauga would have earned him a marshal's baton had the field marshal's rank existed.
What about General Pierre Gustave Toutant "Gus" Beauregard? His service as unofficial chief of staff at First Manassas would not have made him a field marshal. His successful defense of Charleston in 1863 might have. His victory over Beast Butler at Second Drewry's Bluff on May 16, 1864 might have. His successful defense of Petersburg June 15-18, 1864, also might have. The Davis Administration would probably not have given him the benefit of the doubt, though--Beauregard and Davis detested one another.
Saturday, October 29, 2016
Field Marshal Banks
Field Marshal is the highest military rank of many countries, but not of the United States. To become a field marshal, one must capture a significant city (Field Marshal Erwin Rommel of Tobruk or Field Marshal Erich von Manstein of Sevastopol), a significant area (Field Marshal Wavell of Cyrenaica), or win a significant battle (Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery of El Alamein).
Just imagine if the United States Army had had such a rank during the Civil War. We might have had Field Marshal Grant of Fort Donelson and Vicksburg, Field Marshal Burnside of Pamlico Sound, Field Marshal Butler of New Orleans, Field Marshal Buell of Nashville, Field Marshal Banks of Port Hudson, Field Marshal Rosecrans of Chattanooga, Field Marshal Sherman of Atlanta and Savannah, Field Marshal Terry of Fort Fisher, and Field Marshal Canby of Mobile. President Lincoln would probably have had to promote Little Mac to Field Marshal of Antietam to justify issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation.
Just imagine if the United States Army had had such a rank during the Civil War. We might have had Field Marshal Grant of Fort Donelson and Vicksburg, Field Marshal Burnside of Pamlico Sound, Field Marshal Butler of New Orleans, Field Marshal Buell of Nashville, Field Marshal Banks of Port Hudson, Field Marshal Rosecrans of Chattanooga, Field Marshal Sherman of Atlanta and Savannah, Field Marshal Terry of Fort Fisher, and Field Marshal Canby of Mobile. President Lincoln would probably have had to promote Little Mac to Field Marshal of Antietam to justify issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation.
Saturday, October 22, 2016
General Grant and Cavalry at Vicksburg, in the Overland Campaign, and at Petersburg
Diversionary railroad raids exhausted General Grant’s repertoire when it came to cavalry. During the climax of the Vicksburg Campaign,
as his infantry crossed the Mississippi below that Secessionist citadel, Grant had
sent a brigade of horse soldiers southward from LaGrange, Tennessee through
Mississippi to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, ripping up rails, burning cross-ties,
breaking bridges, destroying enemy supplies, tying down enemy infantry in
defense of the vital rail link between Vicksburg and Jackson, and generally
confusing the Confederates.[1] The raid thus contributed to Grant’s
investment and capture of the Gibraltar of the West. During the Overland Campaign, the
general-in-chief had dispatched Sheridan with three divisions of horsemen from
Spotsylvania to defeat Maj. Gen. J. E. B. “Jeb” Stuart, disrupt the railroad
lines supplying Lee’s army, and threaten Richmond. Sheridan accomplished little beyond defeating
and killing Stuart, whom Lee ultimately replaced with a better cavalry
commander—Hampton, the war’s best commander of an army’s cavalry corps.[2]
By sending his cavalry off to divert his
enemy’s attention by ripping up rails, Grant deprived himself of horsemen for
screening and reconnaissance, their traditional functions. The principal value of Sheridan’s raids lay
in that they forced Lee to dispatch his cavalry in pursuit. Unlike Grant, the Southern chieftain employed
his horse soldiers extensively in reconnaissance and screening. For Lee, cavalry functioned as a sensory
organ. The absence of most of Lee’s
horsemen in pursuit of Sheridan on the Trevilian Raid left the Secessionist
commander nearly blind and contributed to the success of Grant’s James
crossing. Grant no sooner gave up his assaults on Petersburg in June 1864 than he launched what cavalry remained with him on a raid against the Weldon, South Side, and Danville railroads.
[1] The great film director John Ford
made a movie based on Grierson’s raid, entitled The Horse Soldiers (1959).
[2] Though Nathan Bedford Forrest
proved formidable in independent command, he performed poorly in command of
part of the Army of Tennessee’s cavalry.
David Powell, Failure in the
Saddle: Nathan Bedford Forrest, Joseph Wheeler, and the Confederate Cavalry in
the Chickamauga Campaign (El Dorado Hills, Ca., 2011), 205-212,
232-235.
Saturday, October 15, 2016
Petersburg at Gettysburg, Douglas Southall Freeman Loses Count
Throw out your books on the second day at Gettysburg. They all need rewriting.
Confusion still exists about what Mahone's Brigade of Anderson's Division did, or did not do, at Gettysburg on July 2, 1863. We know that the attack of Anderson's Division broke down in Posey's Mississippi Brigade, to the immediate right (south) of Mahone's Brigade. We know that a message for Mahone to advance was received with incredulity by General Mahone, who said he had just received an order from General Anderson to stay put on McPherson's Ridge.
There is no question but that Mahone received an order from Anderson to stay put on McPherson's Ridge. Douglas Southall Freeman is among those responsible for the confusion. Longstreet's memoir, From Manassas to Appomattox was available when Freeman wrote. Longstreet was in charge of the attack on Cemetery Ridge on July 2. He says the plan was for Anderson's division to attack with four brigades. OR 27. 2:332, 343. Anderson's division had five brigades. Therefore one brigade was not to attack. That this brigade was Mahone's would be apparent from its position alone if it were not for Mahone's account of the matter. All Freeman had to do was remember that Anderson's Division had five brigades, not four.
As for what Mahone's Brigade did after the confusion caused by Anderson's contradictory orders was sorted out, there was a book in publication at the time Freeman wrote that should have informed him of the action of the Virginians. That book is William H. Stewart's A Pair of Blankets, published in 1911 (at 97-98). Mahone's Brigade sidled to the right and advanced behind the right of Posey's Brigade. See also James Eldred Phillips Memoir, Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, Virginia; Hampton Newsome, John Horn and John G. Selby, eds., Civil War Talks: Further Reminiscences of George S. Bernard and His Fellow Veterans (Charlottesville, 2012), 133, 155-156. Posey confirmed that Mahone was ordered to the right. Report of Brig. Gen. Carnot Posey, C. S. Army, commanding brigade, OR, 27, 2:634.
Confusion still exists about what Mahone's Brigade of Anderson's Division did, or did not do, at Gettysburg on July 2, 1863. We know that the attack of Anderson's Division broke down in Posey's Mississippi Brigade, to the immediate right (south) of Mahone's Brigade. We know that a message for Mahone to advance was received with incredulity by General Mahone, who said he had just received an order from General Anderson to stay put on McPherson's Ridge.
There is no question but that Mahone received an order from Anderson to stay put on McPherson's Ridge. Douglas Southall Freeman is among those responsible for the confusion. Longstreet's memoir, From Manassas to Appomattox was available when Freeman wrote. Longstreet was in charge of the attack on Cemetery Ridge on July 2. He says the plan was for Anderson's division to attack with four brigades. OR 27. 2:332, 343. Anderson's division had five brigades. Therefore one brigade was not to attack. That this brigade was Mahone's would be apparent from its position alone if it were not for Mahone's account of the matter. All Freeman had to do was remember that Anderson's Division had five brigades, not four.
As for what Mahone's Brigade did after the confusion caused by Anderson's contradictory orders was sorted out, there was a book in publication at the time Freeman wrote that should have informed him of the action of the Virginians. That book is William H. Stewart's A Pair of Blankets, published in 1911 (at 97-98). Mahone's Brigade sidled to the right and advanced behind the right of Posey's Brigade. See also James Eldred Phillips Memoir, Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, Virginia; Hampton Newsome, John Horn and John G. Selby, eds., Civil War Talks: Further Reminiscences of George S. Bernard and His Fellow Veterans (Charlottesville, 2012), 133, 155-156. Posey confirmed that Mahone was ordered to the right. Report of Brig. Gen. Carnot Posey, C. S. Army, commanding brigade, OR, 27, 2:634.
Saturday, October 8, 2016
Did Mahone's Brigade Do Its Fair Share of Fighting in the Civil War? Did Virginia?
After I compiled the statistics on the 12th Virginia Infantry, it was easy to compare the regiment with many of its Federal opponents. I had only to look up their statistics in Fox's Regimental Losses and a couple of post-war compilations from New York and Pennsylvania.
It was harder to compare the 12th Virginia's statistics with statistics on other Confederate regiments. Such statistics are difficult to come by, but they exist. I found a lot of partial statistics, only a few complete ones. Some were published, and others I had to count myself. Here's what I came up with:
Now it's true, this is by no means a complete study of Southern regimental statistics. Such a study will probably never exist because of the gaps in the records. To me, the questions seem to jump out. Did Mahone's Brigade do its fair share of fighting? Did Virginia?
It was harder to compare the 12th Virginia's statistics with statistics on other Confederate regiments. Such statistics are difficult to come by, but they exist. I found a lot of partial statistics, only a few complete ones. Some were published, and others I had to count myself. Here's what I came up with:
Killed
or Died Percentage
Regiment Division of Wounds Lost
during War
8th
Alabama Mahone’s 300* 21.1%*
8th
Georgia Hood’s 168* 13.3%*
22nd
Georgia Mahone’s 164* 13.2%*
30th
Georgia Walker’s 85 7.3%
48th
Georgia Mahone’s 200* 14.3%*
60th
Georgia Early’s 162* 12.2%*
18th
Mississippi McLaws’ 214* 14.9%*
21st
Mississippi McLaws’ 210* 17.0%*
7th
North Carolina Pender’s 184* 12.6%*
58th
North Carolina Stevenson’s 91 4.5%
16th
Tennessee Cheatham’s 209* 16.7%*
20th
Tennessee Breckenridge’s 147* 12.3%*
6th
Virginia Mahone’s 124
7.5%
9th Virginia Pickett’s 76 4.5%
12th Virginia Mahone’s 159* 10.3%*
16th
Virginia Mahone’s
92[2]* 7.5%
41st
Virginia Mahone’s 105 7.0%
49th
Virginia Early’s 153* 12.3%*
54th
Virginia Stevenson’s 83 4.5%
61st Virginia Mahone’s 76 6.5%
63rd
Virginia Stevenson’s 68 4.4%
Average
Confederate Regiment (Fox) “almost 10.0%”
* Meets
criterion for Fox’s Fighting 300 Regiments (130 or 10% killed or died of wounds).
[1] Up to March, 1865; probably lost
around 155 killed or mortally wounded.
[2] The 16th Virginia fought with only
seven companies. The equivalent of 130 killed or mortally
wounded among ten companies for a seven company regiment is ninety-one.
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