Who were the greatest commanders of the American Civil War, and what made them so? In The Great Commanders of the American Civil War, the best military leaders of both sides are pitted against each other and their strengths and weaknesses examined – Robert E. Lee versus George Meade at Gettysburg, Ulysses S. Grant versus Albert Sidney Johnston at Shiloh, William Tecumseh Sherman versus John Bell Hood in the March to the Sea, along with eight other pairs. The book also explores a decisive battle between each pair of adversaries, highlighting the decisions made and why the battle was won. Each featured battle includes a contextual introduction, a description of the action, and an analysis of the aftermath. A specially commissioned colour map illustrating the dispositions and movement of forces brings the subject to life and helps the reader grasp the course of each battle. Featuring full-colour illustrations, paintings and photographs alongside the battle maps, The Great Commanders of the American Civil War is a fascinating comparison of the greatest Confederate and Union military leaders.
Introduction
1. Beauregard vs McDowell (First Manassas)
2. Jackson vs Shields (Kernstown)
3. Grant vs Johnston (Shiloh)
4. Farragut vs Lovell (New Orleans)
5. McClellan vs Johnston (Gaines’ Mill)
6. Lee vs McClellan (Antietam)
7. Buell vs Bragg (Perryville)
8. Lee vs Hooker (Chancellorsville)
9. Lee vs Meade (Gettysburg)
10. Grant vs Lee (Spotsylvania)
11. Sherman vs Hood (March to the Sea)
Bibliography
Index
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Kevin J. Dougherty is an instructor at The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina in Charleston. He is a retired U.S. Army officer who previously spent five years teaching military history and world civilizations in the Department of History at the University of Southern Mississippi. Dougherty is the author of The Peninsula Campaign of 1862: A Military Analysis *(2005), *Civil War Leadership and the Mexican War Experience (2007), Encyclopedia of the Confederacy (2010), Campaigns for Vicksburg, 1862–63: Leadership Lessons (2011), and Ships of the Civil War (2013).