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3 kirjaa tekijältä Gen. Edward J. Stackpole

They Met at Gettysburg

They Met at Gettysburg

Gen. Edward J. Stackpole

Stackpole Books
1982
nidottu
They Met at Gettysburg has long been regarded as the classic treatment of one of the greatest, most fascinating, and most decisive battles in history. Originally published in 1956, the book became a bestseller and has continues for over half a century to bring alive the battle and its heroes for historians and students of the battle.
Fredericksburg Campaign

Fredericksburg Campaign

Gen. Edward J. Stackpole

Stackpole Books
1991
nidottu
In four dreadful hours in the murk of a December day in 1862, substantial portions of a magnificent Union Army were shattered in fruitless charges against a stone wall on the outskirts of Fredericksburg, Virginia. From above and behind that wall, continous sheets of musketry fire and devastating artillery bursts crashed into wave upon wave of incomparably brave Yankee troops marching to their death. Whatever credit may be gleaned from the wreckage of Northern hopes on the Rappahannock that winter belongs to the well-disciplined fighting men of the Army of the Potomac who were needlessly slaughtered as a result of inept leadership at teh higher command levels. This book covers the period from October 1862 through January 1863, during which the Army of the Potomac under Ambrose Burnside crossed swords with the apparently invincible Army of Northern Virginia under Robert E. Lee and once again went down to a crushing and bloodly defeat. Longstreet, Stonewall Jackson, J. E. B. Stuart, A. P. Hill, Jubal Early, and others played important parts for the South, and Meade, Reynolds, Hooker, Hancock, Couch, and others did so for the North.
Sheridan in the Shenandoah

Sheridan in the Shenandoah

Gen. Edward J. Stackpole

Stackpole Books
1992
nidottu
In the summer of 1864, Lee sent Early into the Shenandoah Valley to relieve a Federal threat against his communication and supply lines and to draw Grant's troops away from the siege of Petersburg. Early cleared the Valley of enemy forces and came within sight of the Capitol dome at Washington, badly frightening the Union. Grant chose Sheridan to neutralize Early. Sheridan took his time getting ready but then struck with overwhelming force, defeating Early and virtually destroying his command.