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9780700635252 Academic Inspection Copy

Grant's Lieutenants

From Cairo to Vicksburg
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Ulysses S. Grant did more than any other single Union general to secure the North's victory in the Civil War, but he did not achieve that victory alone. Grant's ability to inspire and cultivate the talents of the officers serving under him was a key factor in his remarkable military success. Steven Woodworth and his fellow authors provide ample evidence for that in this first of a two-volume reassessment of Grant's officer corps from Cairo to Appomattox.Covering the war's western theater through July 1863, Woodworth et al. highlight the character and accomplishments of these men and show how their individual relationships with Grant helped pave the way to Union victory. They demonstrate how each officer's service contributed to Grant's success and development as a general, how interaction with Grant affected each officer's career, and how the relationship ultimately contributed to the course of battle and the war's final outcome. These portraits include the most important of Grant's lieutenants as well as some who are representative of various officer types. Here are William T. Sherman and Grant's other trusted commanders from the Army of the Tennessee, revered mentor Charles F. Smith, and difficult subordinate William S. Rosecrans. Here too are such citizen soldiers as Lew "Ben Hur" Wallace and Peter Osterhaus, de facto intelligence chief Grenville Dodge, and naval officers Andrew Foote and David Dixon Porter, whose relationships with Grant proved crucial to the war effort. Full of revealing insights regarding military leadership and the special problems of Civil War command, Grant's Lieutenants adds a new dimension to our understanding of the Union road to victory and gives us the true measure of these dedicated men.
Steven E. Woodworth is associate professor of history at Texas Christian University and author of Jefferson Davis and His Generals, Davis and Lee at War, and While God is Marching On.
Introduction "A Full Share of All the Credit": Sherman and Grant to the Fall of Vicksburg, John F. Marszalek "Earned on the Field of Battle": William H.L. Wallace, Steven E. Woodworth The Reliable First Team: Grant and Charles Ferguson Smith, Benjamin Franklin Cooling "If He Had Less Rank": Lewis Wallace, Stacy D. Allen The Forging of Joint Army-Navy Operations: Andrew Hull Foote and Grant, Benjamin Franklin Cooling "I Could Not Make Him Do As I Wished": The Failed Relationship of William S. Rosecrans and Grant, Lesley J. Gordon Fighting Politician: John A. McClernand, Terrence J. Winschel A Matter of Trust: Grant and James B. McPherson, Tamara A. Smith "We Had Lively Times up the Yazoo": Admiral David Dixon Porter, R. Blake Dunnavent The War of Spies and Supplies: Grant and Grenville M. Dodge in the West, 1862-1864, William B. Feis Grant's Ethnic General: Peter J. Osterhaus, Earl J. Hess Notes List of Contributors Index
"In the long run, the relationships commanders forge with subordinates are no less important than the decisions they make on a battlefield. Informed, insightful and sometimes surprising, these eleven essays extend and revise our perspective on Grant during the first three years of the Civil War. Highly recommended."-Mark Grimsley, author of The Hard Hand of War: Union Military Policy Toward Southern Civilians, 1861-1865
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