
Attribution
Bevin AlexanderPublication Details
Book1st edCrown Publishers2007Availability
LOCATION CALL # STATUS (LOWER LEVEL) E470 .A36 2007 AVAILABLE New Feature: Text this to your cellphone
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Description
Jackson?clashed over how to fight the war ?How the Civil War?s decisive turning point came in a battle that the Rebel army never needed to fight ?How the Confederate army devised?but never fully exploited?a way to negate the Union?s huge advantages in manpower and weaponry ?How Abraham Lincoln and other Northern leaders understood the Union?s true vulnerability better than the Confederacy?s top leaders did ?How it is a myth that the Union army?s accidental discovery of Lee?s order of battle doomed the South?s 1862 Maryland campaign ?How the South failed to heed the important lessons of its 1863 victory at Chancellorsville How the South Could Have Won the Civil War shows why there is nothing inevitable about military victory, even for a state with overwhelming strength. (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)Subject
- Confederate States of America. — Army — Drill and tactics — History
- Generals — Confederate States of America — History
- Strategy — History — 19th century
- Command of troops — History — 19th century
- Military art and science — Confederate States of America — History
- United States — History — Civil War, 1861-1865 — Campaigns
Notes
- Conventional wisdom holds that the South’s defeat was inevitable. Yet military historian Alexander’s new look at the Civil War documents how a Confederate victory could have come about–and how close it came to happening. Moving beyond theoretical conjectures to explore actual plans that Confederate generals proposed and the tactics ultimately adopted in the war’s key battles, he shows why there is nothing inevitable about military victory, even for a state with overwhelming strength, and provides a startling account of how a relatively small number of tactical and strategic mistakes cost the South the war– and changed the course of history.–From publisher description
Contents
- No victory is inevitable
- "There stands Jackson like a stone wall"
- A new kind of war
- The Shenandoah Valley campaign
- The Seven Days
- The sweep behind Pope
- Second Manassas
- The lost order
- Antietam
- Fredericksburg
- Chancellorsville
- Gettysburg
- Appomattox
ISBN
- 9780307345998
- 0307345998
LCCN
Open Library ID
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