A fascinating and fact-filled collection of the greatest and
dumbest missteps of America's bloodiest conflict
For four years in the middle of the nineteenth century, brother
fought brother on American soil. No American war ever had higher
stakes than, or changed a nation as profoundly as, the terrible
conflict between the Union and the Confederacy. A dark historical
panorama populated by a remarkable cast of colorful characters, the
War Between the States was indelibly marked by both brilliant
military maneuvers and mind-boggling battlefield blunders that
gravely threatened the continuation of the American Experiment.
With suitable irreverence, Bill Fawcett chronicles the
unbelievably disastrous decisions made by both sides in this
monumental clash, including:
The Second Battle of Bull Run, where Robert E. Lee looks smart
beating a remarkably stupid general
How the Union's shortsighted Colonel James Ripley's bad decision
arms the Confederate Army better than his own
Lincoln's roller-coaster search for competent commanders, a
long-running dark comedy of tragic errors
A golden opportunity squandered: General Lee fails to exploit a
vulnerable Union and capture Washington, D.C.
Pickett's disastrous charge and the many, many Confederate
command failures at Gettysburg
Lincoln's contentious draft policy that nearly burns New York
City to the ground
General
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