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Crosshairs on the Capital - Jubal Early's Raid on Washington, D.C., July 1864: Reasons, Reactions, and Results (Hardcover)
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Crosshairs on the Capital - Jubal Early's Raid on Washington, D.C., July 1864: Reasons, Reactions, and Results (Hardcover)
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In an era of battlefield one-upmanship, the raid on the Nation's
capital in July 1864 was prompted by an earlier failed Union
attempt to destroy Richmond and free the Union prisoners held
there. Jubal Early's mission was in part to let the North have a
taste of its own medicine by attacking Washington and freeing the
Confederate prisoners at Point Lookout in southern Maryland. He was
also to fill the South's larder from unmolested Union fields, mills
and barns. By 1864 such southern food raids had become annual
wartime events. And he was to threaten and, if possible, capture
Washington. This latter task was unrealistic in an age when the
success of rifle fire was judged to be successful not by accuracy,
but by the amount of lead that was shot into the air. Initially,
the Union defenders of the city were largely former slaves,
freemen, mechanic, shopkeepers and government clerks, as well as
invalids. They might not have known much about riflery and
accuracy, but they were capable of putting ample lead on the long
until Regular Union regiments arrived. Jubal Early hesitated in
attacking Washington, but he held the City at bay while his troops
pillaged the countryside for the food Lee's Army needed to survive.
This new account focuses on the reasons, reactions and results of
Jubul Early's raid of 1864. History has judged it to have been a
serious threat to the capital, but James H. Bruns examines how the
nature of the Confederate raid on Washington in 1864 has been
greatly misinterpreted - Jubal Early's maneuvers were in fact only
the latest in a series of annual southern food raids. It also
corrects some of the thinking about Early's raid, including the
reason behind his orders from General Lee to cross the Potomac and
the thoughts behind the proposed raid on Point Lookout and the role
of the Confederate Navy in that failed effort. It presents a new
prospective in explaining Jubal Early's raid on Washington by
focusing on why things happened as they did in 1864. It identifies
the cause-and-effect connections that are truly the stuff of
history, forging some of the critical background links that
oftentimes are ignored or overlooked in books dominated by battles
and leaders.
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