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General Henry Lockwood of Delaware - Shipmate of Melville, Co-builder of the Naval Academy, Civil War Commander (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,553
Discovery Miles 35 530
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General Henry Lockwood of Delaware - Shipmate of Melville, Co-builder of the Naval Academy, Civil War Commander (Hardcover)
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This book is the story of the fascinating and accomplished life of
a 19th-century Delaware favorite son, Brig. Gen. Henry Lockwood,
who sailed aboard the U.S. Navy man-of-war United States with
novelist Herman Melville and figures importantly in Melville's
novel White-Jacket; who participated in Commodore Thomas ap Catesby
Jones's seizure of Monterey from Mexico; who was a progenitor and
co-builder of the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis; who pacified the
slavery-bound Delmarva peninsula during the Civil War; who
distinguished himself as a brigade commander at Gettysburg; and who
later commanded Maryland Heights at Harper's Ferry, the Middle
Department/8th Corps, and a division at Cold Harbor. All these
accomplishments occurred in the face of a stuttering tendency that
afflicted him throughout his life. The book also notices important
family members such as son Lieut.James Lockwood, who died of
starvation during the Greely polar expedition after having reached
the furthest point north of any human; brother Navy Surgeon John
Lockwood, whose polemical essays in conjunction with Melville's
didactic message in White-Jacket were major factors in the
outlawing of punitive flogging in the Navy; and son-in-law Adm.
Charles Sigsbee, who was in command of the Maine when it blew up in
Havana Harbor, thus adding to the cries for war against Spain.
Three pivotal events in Lockwood's military career have unjustly
detracted from his historical reputation: the failure of the Naval
Academy to memorialize him for his seminal role its building; the
lack of historical notice of his pacification and reconciliation of
Delmarva without a shot being fired; and his relief from division
command at Cold Harbor by an unhinged corps commander. For the
historical record, Lockwood finally receives vindication in this
book.
General
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