Despite the literary outpouring on the life of Robert E. Lee, the southern chieftain remains an enigma. The existing scholarship is so voluminous, complex, and contradictory that it is difficult to penetrate the inner Lee and appreciate him as a general. Peter S. Carmichael has assembled a formidable array of Civil War historians who rigorously return to Lee's own words and actions in interpreting the war in Virginia. This is the first collective volume to scrutinize specific aspects of the general's military career. Carmichael's opening contribution confronts Lee's supposed drive for a victory of annihilation and takes issue with claims that he was too aggressive. William J. Miller's novel analysis of Lee's leadership during the pivotal Seven Days battles reconstructs his strategic thinking and corrects old assumptions. Gordon C. Rhea overturns the common notion that Lee anticipated his adversaries with uncanny precision in the Overland campaign of 1864. Robert E. L. Krick takes aim at the oft-repeated criticism that Lee was not attuned to the demands of modern warfare because he failed to surround himself with enough subordinates to ensure the smooth operation of the army; in fact, Krick argues, Lee continually fine-tuned the performance of his support staff, striving to eliminate deficiencies. Finally, Max R. Williams's examination of the relationship between Lee and North Carolina governor Zebulon B. Vance, and Mark L. Bradley's portrait of Lee's relationships with Jefferson Davis and Joseph E. Johnston, offer contrasting views of the soldier as both politically assertive and reticent, respectively. Falling easily into neither the pro- nor anti-Lee camp, Audacity Personified challenges long-standing beliefs accepted since Douglas Southhall Freeman's influential biography of Lee was published seventy years ago. These diverse scholarly visions of the great Confederate general move beyond cliché, iluuminating Lee's career with fresh interpretations.
... George Foster Pierce in Eugene D. Genovese and Elizabeth Fox - Genovese , " The Social Thought of Antebellum Southern Theologians , " in Wilfred B. Moore , Jr. , and Joseph F. Tripp , eds . , Looking South : Chapters in the Study of ...
44 France, 18, 22, 37, 63, 77, 96, 121 Frederick the Great, 55, 62, 193, 208 Freeman, Douglas S., 231 Fuller, ... 203 Hunt, Henry J., 153 Hunter, Andrew, 179 Hunter, David, 200, 204, 214 Hunter, Robert M. T., 180 Imboden, John, 78, ...
The book thus offers fresh and innovative interpretations in considering the old question of why the South lost the Civil War"--
No other Civil War veteran of his stature matched Alexander's ability to discuss operations in penetrating detail-- this is especially true of his description of Gettysburg.
It is my sincere hope this volume provides a greater understanding and appreciation for Robert E. Lee during the four ... Kris White, Michael Jordan, Jason Amico, Robert Moore, Frank O'Reilly, Terry Lowry, Scott Mingus, Garry Adelman, ...
While en route, Lee received supposed intelligence from General Whiting that he had in fact observed Yankee troops and wagons moving off the summit of Malvern Hill, and from this Whiting ...
For all the literature about Civil War military operations and leadership, precious little has been written about strategy, particularly in what has become known as the eastern theater.
REL to Edward G. W. Butler , Oct. 11 , 1867 , in " Unpublished Letters of Gen. Lee , " Missouri Republican , Oct. 3 , 1885 ; David D. Plater , The Butlers of Iberville Parish , Louisiana : Dunboyne Plantation in the 1800s ( Baton Rouge ...
Jeffry D. Wert re-creates the last day of the bloody Battle of Gettysburg in astonishing detail, taking readers from Meade's council of war to the seven-hour struggle for Culp's Hill -- the most sustained combat of the entire engagement.
A military historian and author of How Wars Are Won looks at the costly errors that cost the South victory during the Civil War and outlines the tactical and strategic approaches the Confederacy should have used that could have changed the ...