Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain (1828–1914)
Author of The Passing of the Armies
About the Author
Image credit: Wikimedia commons
Works by Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain
Associated Works
The Civil War: The Third Year Told by Those Who Lived It (2013) — Contributor — 167 copies, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Chamberlain, Joshua Lawrence
- Other names
- Chamberlain, Lawrence Joshua
- Birthdate
- 1828-09-08
- Date of death
- 1914-02-24
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Bowdoin College
Bangor Theological Seminary - Occupations
- college professor
college administrator (Bowdoin College president)
army officer
lawyer
politician (governor of Maine) - Organizations
- Union Army
Bowdoin College
Maine state government - Awards and honors
- Congressional Medal of Honor
Phi Beta Kappa - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Brewer, Maine, USA
- Places of residence
- Brunswick, Maine, USA
- Place of death
- Portland, Maine, USA
- Burial location
- Pine Grove Cemetery, Brunswick, Maine, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- Maine, USA
Members
Reviews
The Passing of Armies: An Account Of The Final Campaign Of The Army Of The Potomac by Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain
The first chapter is pretty tedious. Once he gets into the details of his role in the Appomattox campaign, he excels. Decent info on the battle experience of the two regiments of his brigade, and of course the V Corps.. I don't believe there are excessive mention of other soldiers except in the chapter about the last review at DC, as stated by one reviewer. This book shows more realism about the actual conditions of combat, than any other book that I ever read. He describes some gory details show more of battle, like tying off the vein of an injured soldier like it is a common place event, which it may have been.
He does quote Shakespeare, which I really like. Chamberlain is an excellent writer from the late 1800's, and I like his light sarcasm. Actually humorous at times. Not thrilled with the formatting of the book though, no index and not enough maps. show less
He does quote Shakespeare, which I really like. Chamberlain is an excellent writer from the late 1800's, and I like his light sarcasm. Actually humorous at times. Not thrilled with the formatting of the book though, no index and not enough maps. show less
It took me forever to find this book! Every time I went to the library (even with the ISBN #) they told me it was a pamphlet. I'd seen it on a trip to Gettysburg and knew it was a book. Anyway, Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain was an excellent writer and this book kept me enthralled the entire time. Sometimes his rhetoric gets a little heavy (look at the era it was written in, though.) I have a copy of his "The Passing of the Armies" but have yet to read it to compare.
This is a collection of some of General Chamberlain's writings produced during and also after the war. It's refreshing to read somebody talking about duty and honor who actually means it. It took me a while to reconcile our own jaded culture with his time, but the effort was worth it. The transcript of the speech he gave to the reunion banquet of the Sixteenth Maine Volunteers brings tears to my eyes every time I read it!
Through Blood and Fire at Gettysburg: General Joshua Chamberlain and the 20th Maine by Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain
My God that guy can write! I was never more moved than by this short booklet.
I read it (except for Chamberlain's 8 page hand written report at the end) on Tuesday, August 15, 2017. This reading was stimulated by my receipt of '"Bayonet! Forward" My Civil War Reminiscenes', also by Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain. This booklet is actually Chapter 2 of that larger book, without the photographs and the handwritten report and with differences in maps.
If you read the booklet, I suggest that you have show more a good map(s) available. show less
I read it (except for Chamberlain's 8 page hand written report at the end) on Tuesday, August 15, 2017. This reading was stimulated by my receipt of '"Bayonet! Forward" My Civil War Reminiscenes', also by Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain. This booklet is actually Chapter 2 of that larger book, without the photographs and the handwritten report and with differences in maps.
If you read the booklet, I suggest that you have show more a good map(s) available. show less
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 15
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 902
- Popularity
- #28,435
- Rating
- 4.1
- Reviews
- 8
- ISBNs
- 33
- Favorited
- 2













