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Loading... Gettysburg: A Testing of Courage (original 2002; edition 2002)by Noah Andre Trudeau
Work InformationGettysburg: A Testing of Courage by Noah Andre Trudeau (2002)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Excellent account of the 3 days of fighting at Gettysburg. Trudeau includes personal stories and official accounts of the battle which serve to make it both interesting and poignant. His writing style seems to work in concert with the rapid pace in which the events at Gettysburg unfolded. The only drawback to this book is that some of his maps are remarkably complex and difficult to read. In addition there are instances when the typeset on these maps and subsequent keys or legends is so small that it actually requires a magnifying glass --at least for anyone who already uses bifocals to read! This is a meticulously researched, in-depth study of the battle and the men who fought it. Trudeau draws not only on official documents and the activities of the general staffs, but also on the letters and diaries of common soldiers and citizens. Yes, the maps are small and hard to read, and there is a great deal of detail about troop movements. But larger maps would have made for a much bigger book, and it is impossible to discuss a battle intelligently without knowing who was where, when, and why. Trudeau's writing, in any event, makes it all come alive in a way that few other civil war historians can. This is really the first book about a CW battle that I've read. It detailed nearly every skirmish of the battle, but it never seemed dry. If I had read more books on the battles, I could perhaps give a better 'comparison' review. If you want to know everything there is about this battle, this book would certainly cover it. An engrossing history of a battle that many have felt has been studied to the point of exhaustion. Trudeau is especially a master of making first hand accounts of the battle come to life, as if their authors were sitting in front of the reader. The biggest drawback to the history is the author’s long and extensive descriptions of troop movement, which become too complicated to follow without a map of which there are too few of. Overall though, I enjoyed the book which gave me a better appreciation of the sacrifice witnessed over those three days. I would recommend it to a select group of people. no reviews | add a review
America's Civil War raged for more than four years, but it is the three days of fighting in the Pennsylvania countryside in July 1863 that continues to fascinate, appall, and inspire new generations with its unparalleled saga of sacrifice and courage. From Chancellorsville, where General Robert E. Lee launched his high-risk campaign into the North, to the Confederates' last daring and ultimately-doomed act, forever known as Pickett's Charge, the battle of Gettysburg gave the Union army a victory that turned back the boldest and perhaps greatest chance for a Southern nation. Now acclaimed historian Noah Andre Trudeau brings the most up-to-date research available to a brilliant, sweeping, and comprehensive history of the battle of Gettysburg that sheds fresh light on virtually every aspect of it. Deftly balancing his own narrative style with revealing firsthand accounts, Trudeau brings this engrossing human tale to life as never before. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)973.7349History and Geography North America United States Administration of Abraham Lincoln, 1861-1865 Civil War Operations Campaign of 1863 Battle of Gettysburg, Pa. (1-3 July)LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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I assume most here know about Gettysburg – for the benefit of our non-USA friends, here’s a rough summary.
Robert E. Lee and the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia defeat the Army of the Potomac at Chancellorsville, leaving Union General Joe Hooker to pull back and refit. Lee is pressured by Richmond to send some of his army west to help out at the siege of Vicksburg, but demurs and decides to invade the North instead. The ANV steals a march on Hooker and heads into Pennsylvania. Hooker eventually follows, but like many Union generals feels he is outnumbered and demands reinforcements. Hooker is relieved and replaced by George Meade. In the mean time, Lee’s army is wandering around central Pennsylvania scooping up supplies and generally making mischief; unfortunately for him his cavalry under J.E.B. Stuart has managed to get itself on the wrong side of the Army of the Potomac and is unavailable to perform reconnaissance. Even though neither side wants a general engagement, a Union cavalry screen under General John Buford encounters a Confederate force under Henry Heth on July 1, 1863. Both sides throw in reinforcements – the Union First Corps arrives and things are temporarily going the Union’s way when another confederate force under Richard Ewell arrives on the north. After fierce fighting, the Federals break and retreat to positions on Cemetary Hill and Seminary Ridge. First day to the Army of Northern Virginia.
On July 2nd Lee tries to outflank the Union left with Longstreet’s corps. The Federals are generally in a fairly strong position, except they have neglected to put troops on Little Round Top, a commanding hill on their extreme left; and eccentric General Daniel Sickles either fails to understand Meade’s orders or ignores them and positions his Third Corps in front of Seminary Ridge instead of on top of it. This is where many of the famous places on the battlefield are – The Peach Orchard, Devil’s Den, The Wheatfield, and, of course, Little Round Top, where the 20th Maine under Joshua Chamberlain holds off the 15th Alabama under Warren Oates until out of ammunition, then breaks the exhausted Confederates with a bayonet charge (Trudeau points out that this wasn’t quite as dramatic as depicted in the movie, but he’s still full of praise for Chamberlain). In the meantime, Sickles is pushed out of his position and back to Seminary Ridge, losing a leg in the process. (Well, he didn’t actually lose it; it just wasn't attached to him any more. It ended up in an army medical museum, where Sickles would frequently visit it after war.) Second day slightly in favor of the Army of Northern Virginia.
Having attacked the Union right and left, on July 3rd Lee goes after the Union center, a decision forever controversial. Pickett’s Division goes after the Union Second Corps in the infamous Pickett’s Charge. Unfortunately for them, Union artillery commander Henry Hunt has anticipated this move and positioned all his reserve artillery in this sector. Further, Hunt orders units to stop firing and conserve their ammunition, to make the Confederates think their own preparatory counterbattery fire has been successful. Pickett’s Division goes down to bloody ruin in the face of massed Union artillery and musket fire; a little copse of trees (still there) at the crest of Seminary Ridge is the “high water mark” of the Confederacy. Although Lee is able to retreat the battered Army of Northern Virginia back to friendly soil, he’s never able to take the offensive again. Day Three, battle, and war to the Union.
Up to now, my understanding of the battle was strongly influenced by the movie Gettysburg and my own visits to the site, which mostly focused on the more accessible sites of the second and third days of fighting. I hadn’t realized that the first days fighting was that extensive, or the degree of action at Cemetery and Culp’s Hills on the Union right, or the location of the cavalry battle between Stuart and Custer on the third day. The actions of the Eleventh Corps on the Union right were especially interesting; this unit had a strong contingent of immigrants. If you asked somebody “In what war did officers Leopold Von Gilsa, Detleo von Einsiedal, Gotthilf Bourry, Alexander Schimmelfennig, Georg von Amsberg, Adolphus Dobke, Adolph von Hartung, Alexander von Mitzel, Gustav Schleiter, August Otto, Emil Koenig, and Wlodzimierz Kryzanowski lead units of regiment size or greater?” they probably wouldn’t guess the American Civil War. I wonder if there’s some chauvinism acting there, with Union and Confederate historians both reluctant to admit the participation of non-anglosaxons?
There are extensive maps, both of strategic and tactical situations; the maps for Hooker and Mead’s pursuit of Lee show the position of each Union corps at the start and end of each day. The one salient drawback to the maps is Trudeau uses black rectangles to indicate Confederate units and dark gray rectangles to indicate Union ones; in this edition they are practically indistinguishable. I wonder if the hardcover version had them in different colors, or perhaps on coated paper? Fortunately, units also have the commanding officer’s name alongside, so as long as you are reasonably familiar with Civil War generals things usually make sense, although it may take some perusal of the organization tables for both armies in the appendix to figure out the complicated fighting on the second day. Although I very seldom write in books, I’m tempted to go over all the maps with a highlighter to distinguish the units.
Highly recommended; Trudeau isn’t quite as readable a historian as Bruce Catton or quite the narrator as Shelby Foote, but he comes close enough in both areas. I’m hyped for another visit to Gettysburg with this book in hand. ( )