The battle of Belmont was the first battle in the western theater of the Civil War and, more importantly, the first battle of the war fought by Ulysses S. Grant. It set a pattern for warfare not only in the Mississippi Valley but at Fort Donelson and Shiloh as well. Grant's 7 November 1861 strike against the Southern forces at Belmont, in southeastern Missouri on the Mississippi River, made use of the newly outfitted Yankee timberclads and all the infantry available at the staging area in Cairo, Illinois. The Confederates, led by Leonidas Polk and Gideon Pillow, had the advantages of position and superior numbers. They hoped to smash Grant's expeditionary force on the Missouri shore and cut off the escape of the Illinois and Iowa troops from their boats. The confrontation was a bloody, all-day fight that a veteran of a dozen major battles would later call "frightful to contemplate." At first successful, the Federals were eventually driven from the field and withdrew up the Mississippi to safety. The battle cost some twenty percent of his troops, but as a result of this engagement Grant became known as an audacious fighting general. Using diaries and letters of participants, official documents, and contemporary newspaper accounts, Nathaniel Hughes provides the only full-length tactical study of the battle that catapulted Grant into prominence. Throughout the narrative, Hughes draws sketches of the lives and fates of individual soldiers who fought on both sides, especially of the colorful and enormously dissimilar principal actors, Grant and Polk.
This book is about Confederate innovation as they fought the Civil War.
Johnston Brown passed through W . H . L . Wallace ' s command at Bird ' s Point . See “ pass ” from Grant for Brown , October 6 , 1861 , box 2 , Wallace - Dickey Papers . See also Fremont to B . Gratz Brown , July 31 , 1861 ; and pass ...
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The battle of Bentonville, the only major Civil War battle fought in North Carolina, was the Confederacy's last attempt to stop the devastating march of William Tecumseh Sherman's army north...
William 23 Carr, Eugene A. 127–128; bio 127 Carroll, Capt. Charles 23, 71 Carroll, Col. DeRosey 23, 68, 75, 98 Cawthorn, Col. James 81, 92, 96, 103, 105, 108, 111, 114 Cheatham, Gen. Benjamin 145, 157 Churchill, Col. Thomas J. 45–46, ...
The book is also filled with anecdotes and impressions from the rank and file who wore blue and gray.
Composed almost entirely of Midwesterners and molded into a lean, skilled fighting machine by Ulysses S. Grant and William Tecumseh Sherman, the Army of the Tennessee marched directly into the heart of the Confederacy and won major ...
Faced with failing health and financial ruin, the Civil War's greatest general and former president wrote his personal memoirs to secure his family's future - and won himself a unique...
The Papers of Ulysses S. Grant. 16 Volumes London and Amsterdam: Southern Illinois University Press, 1967. Tzu, Sun. The Art of War, trans. Samuel B. Griffith, New York: Oxford University Press, 1971. REQUEST FROM THE PUBLISHER Thank ...
Not content with illuminating their camps only , the men of Companies D and L distributed more than 100 candles in the front yard of Mr. Pearson , a rebel citizen living near my company camp . Pearson and his family took the joke ...