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Fairfax Davis Downey (1893–1990)

Author of Texas and the War with Mexico

52+ Works 516 Members 3 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: Fairfax Downey, Fairfax Downey

Works by Fairfax Davis Downey

The Guns at Gettysburg (1958) 52 copies, 1 review
Indian-Fighting Army (1943) 33 copies
Horses of Destiny (2007) 22 copies
Dogs of Destiny (2023) 15 copies
Burton, Arabian nights adventurer (1931) 12 copies, 1 review
When we were rather older (1926) 9 copies

Associated Works

The Colophon a Book Collectors Part Sixteen (1934) — Contributor — 8 copies
The American Legion Reader (1953) — Contributor — 4 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1893-11-28
Date of death
1990-05-31
Gender
male
Education
Yale University
Occupations
journalist
historian
army officer
Organizations
United States Army
Awards and honors
Silver Star
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
California, USA
Place of death
New London, New Hampshire, USA
Burial location
Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
During the American Civil War, numerous improvements were made to the "art of war" for the time but the most surprising may have been the improvement of the Calvary for the Northern/Union forces. This may have been best seen at the battle of Brandy Station (a small railroad post near Culpepper VA less than 40 miles from Washington, D.C. so named because "they had Brandy") which was fought on June 9, 1863 and by some historians was the opening of the Gettysburg campaign.

The main focus for the show more Confederate Army was to take the war to the North while for the Union forces, their goal was reconnaissance of the Rebel army. During this battle with JEB Stuart in charge of the Southern units and Pleasanton commanding the Union troops, the northern Calvary made tremendous gains in confidence while the battle was a considered a draw.

Many historians apparently argue over the importance of this battle citing the start of the supremacy of Northern Calvary troops and at the same time, the deterioration of Stuart's Confederate dominion.

This was an unusual book and I don't necessarily mean that in a good way. It was filled with information - maps that were too small to read, lists of military officers and units from numerous states and areas of the nation, commanders of both sides, descriptions of horses and what color horse went with what unit (did I really need to read that?), sheet music which told the troops to charge, retreat, etc., pictures of armaments and their use and descriptions, troop movements, it went on and on. I did manage to gather in the midst of all this miscellaneous information the value of the Calvary officers and their role in the battles - not clearly but to a certain extent. This book was poorly written, very disjointed and jumpy and, I fear, that this little known battle does not receive it's proper significance because of such coverage. But I am glad I read it.
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½
A book still in print today, as it has much to offer. The appendices contain the official reports from both sides regarding the three day battle. There is also a handbook for artillerymen and other useful material for the study of the artillery for the rest of the war. The text is also interspersed with the tunes of the artillery bugle calls, a useful detail. It sets a high standard for later publications on this material.
½

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Statistics

Works
52
Also by
2
Members
516
Popularity
#48,119
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
3
ISBNs
25

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