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Kirjailija

Perry D. Jamieson

Kirjat ja teokset yhdessä paikassa: 8 kirjaa, julkaisuja vuosilta 1984-2013, suosituimpien joukossa Khobar Towers. Vertaile teosten hintoja ja tarkista saatavuus suomalaisista kirjakaupoista.

Mukana myös kirjoitusasut: Perry D Jamieson

8 kirjaa

Kirjojen julkaisuhaarukka 1984-2013.

Khobar Towers

Khobar Towers

Perry D. Jamieson; C. R. Anderegg

Books Express Publishing
2011
pokkari
Discusses the terrorist truck bombing of Khobar Towers that occurred in Saudi Arabia on June 25, 1996. Nineteen American servicemen were killed and many people were injured. First published in 2008. Illustrated.
Crossing the Deadly Ground

Crossing the Deadly Ground

Perry D. Jamieson

The University of Alabama Press
2004
nidottu
Weapons improved rapidly after the Civil War, raising difficult questions about the battle tactics employed by the United States Army. The most fundamental problem was the dominance of the tactical defensive, when defenders protected by fieldworks could deliver deadly fire from rifles and artillery against attackers advancing in close-ordered lines. The vulnerability of these offensive forces as they crossed the so-called ""deadly ground"" in front of defensive positions was even greater with the improvement of armaments after the Civil War.
Winfield Scott Hancock

Winfield Scott Hancock

Perry D. Jamieson

McWhiney Foundation Press
2003
sidottu
In addition to contributing to the Federal victory at Gettysburg, Hancock also served during the Mexican-American War, Reconstruction and the Indian Wars. This title introduces readers to an American soldier who put his mark on many of the important military and political events of his lifetime.
Attack and Die

Attack and Die

Grady McWhiney; Perry D. Jamieson

The University of Alabama Press
1984
nidottu
"In the first twenty-seven months of combat 175,000 Southern soldiers died. This number was more than the entire Confederate military force in the summer of 1861, and it far exceeded the strength of any army that Lee ever commanded. More than 80,000 Southerners fell in just five battles. At Gettysburg three out of every ten Confederates present were hit; one brigade lost 65 percent of its men and 70 percent of its field officers in a single charge. A North Carolina regiment started the action with some 800 men; only 216 survived unhurt. Another unit lost two-thirds of its men as well as its commander in a brief assault." Why did the Confederacy lose so many men? The authors contend that the Confederates bled themselves nearly to death in the first three years of the war by making costly attacks more often than the Federals. Offensive tactics, which had been used successfully by Americans in the Mexican War, were much less effective in the 1860s because an improved weapon - the rifle - had given increased strength to defenders. This book describes tactical theory in the 1850s and suggests how each related to Civil War tactics. It also considers the development of tactics in all three arms of the service during the Civil War. In examining the Civil War the book separates Southern from Northern tactical practice and discusses Confederate military history in the context of Southern social history. Although the Southerners could have offset their numerical disadvantage by remaining on the defensive and forcing the Federals to attack, they failed to do so. The authors argue that the Southerners' consistent favoring of offensive warfare was attributable, in large measure, to their Celtic heritage: they fought with the same courageous dash and reckless abandon that had characterized their Celtic forebears since ancient times. The Southerners of the Civil War generation were prisoners of their social and cultural history: they attacked courageously and were killed - on battlefields so totally defended by the Federals that "not even a chicken could get through."