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Chancellorsville: The Battle and Its Aftermath PDF

282 Pages·1996·20.68 MB·English
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Chancellorsville Military Campaigns of the Civil war Chancellorsville The Battle and its aftermath Edited by Garf W. Gallagher The University of North Carolina Press Chapel Hill and London ©1996 The University of North Carolina Press All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Chancellorsville : the battle and its aftermath / edited by Gary W.Gallagher. p. cm. — (Military campaigns of the Civil War) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-8078-2275-3 (cloth: alk. paper) ISBN 978-0-8078-5970-4 (pbk. : alk. paper) i. Chancellorsville (Va.), Battle of, 1863. I. Gallagher, GaryW. II. Series. £475.35.047 1996 973-7'34—dc20 95-43508 GIF The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources. cloth oo 99 98 97 5 4 32 paper 12 n 10 09 5 4 3 21 For Norma Lois Peterson and John E. McDaniel, who set an admirable standard of scholarship and teaching for their students to emulate This page intentionally left blank Contents Introduction, ix We Shall Make Richmond Howl: The Army of the Potomac on the Eve of Chancellorsville, 1 JohnJ. Hennessy East of Chancellorsville: Jubal A. Early at Second Fredericksburg and Salem Church, 36 Gary W. Gallagher Stoneman's Raid, 65 A. Wilson Greene The Smoothbore Volley That Doomed the Confederacy, 107 Robert K. Krick The Valiant Rearguard: Hancock's Division at Chancellorsville, 143 Carol Reardon Medical Treatment at Chancellorsville, 176 James L Robertson, Jr. Disgraced and Ruined by the Decision of the Court: The Court-Martial of Emory F. Best, C.S.A., 200 Keith S. Bohannon Stern Realities: Children of Chancellorsville and Beyond, 219 James Marten Bibliographic Essay, 245 Contributors, 249 Index, 251 This page intentionally left blank Introduction R. E. LEE'S stunning tactical victory at Chancellorsville capped a remarkable eleven-month period during which he built the Army of Northern Virginia into a self-confident and formidable weapon. Conditioned to expect success after defeating the Army of the Potomac at the Seven Days battles, Second Manassas, and Fredericksburg, the officers and men of Lee's army entered the spring of 1863 with abundant faith in their commander and his principal lieutenants. Their triumph at Chancellorsville cemented a bond with Lee unrivaled on either side during the Civil War. Even the costly defeat at Gettysburg two months later failed to weaken that bond, which sustained the Army of Northern Virginia for nearly two more years. Beyond its effect on the internal dynamics of the Confederate army, Chancellorsville contributed to a growing impression among white southerners that the future of their incipient nation lay with Lee and his men in Virginia. The comments of a British observer in March 1865 suggest that faith in Lee's ability to carry Confederate hopes for independence—a legacy of Chancellorsville and other victories in 1862-63—continued during the final grinding year of the conflict: "Genl R. E. Lee ... [is] the idol of his soldiers & the Hope of His Country.... The prestige which surrounds his person &, the almost fanatical belief in his judgement &, capacity ... is the one idea of an entire people."1 The sheer odds against Confederate success at Chancellorsville elevated the battle to a special position among Lee's victories. Union general Joseph Hooker had rebuilt and reinspirited the Army of the Potomac in the wake of Ambrose E. Burnside's removal from command in January 1863. Hooker entered the Chan- cellorsville campaign at the head of a force with ample equipment, strong discipline, and high morale. He pronounced it "the finest army on the planet," and as astute an observer as Confederate artillerist Edward Porter Alexander spoke of it after the war as "Hooker's great army—the greatest this country had ever seen."2 During the difficult winter, Lee had dispersed his cavalry to secure sufficient fodder and detached two divisions under James Longstreet to South- side Virginia to forage on a wide scale and block threatened enemy movements from Norfolk or the Carolina coast. Lee could count on the redoubtable spirit of his men, but he knew their ranks were dangerously thin to hold off a determined enemy offensive. With more than 133,000 men to Lee's 61,000, Hooker enjoyed the widest margin of manpower of any Union general who had fought against the Army of Northern Virginia to that point in the conflict.3

Description:
A variety of important but lesser-known dimensions of the Chancellorsville campaign of spring 1863 are explored in this collection of eight original essays. Departing from the traditional focus on generalship and tactics, the contributors address the campaign's broad context and implications and rev
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