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Cedar Mountain to Antietam - A Civil War Campaign History of the Union XII Corps, July - September 1862 (Hardcover)
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Cedar Mountain to Antietam - A Civil War Campaign History of the Union XII Corps, July - September 1862 (Hardcover)
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The diminutive Union XII Corps found significant success on the
field at Antietam. Its soldiers swept through the East Woods and
the Miller Cornfield, permanently clearing both of Confederates,
repelled multiple Southern assaults against the Dunker Church
plateau, and eventually secured a foothold beyond the Dunker Church
in the West Woods. This important piece of high ground had been the
Union objective all morning, and its occupation threatened the
center and rear of Gen. Robert E. Lee's embattled Army of Northern
Virginia. Federal leadership largely ignored this signal
achievement and the opportunity it presented. The XII Corps'
achievement is especially notable given its string of
disappointments and hardships in the months leading up to Antietam.
Cedar Mountain to Antietam: A Civil War Campaign History of the
Union XII Corps, July - September 1862 by M. Chris Bryan is the
story of the formation of this often luckless command as the II
Corps in Maj. Gen. John Pope's Army of Virginia on June 26, 1862.
Bryan explains in meticulous detail how the corps came within a
whisker of inflicting a crushing defeating against Maj. Gen.
"Stonewall" Jackson at Cedar Mountain on August 9, suffered through
the hardships of Pope's campaign before and after the Battle of
Second Manassas, and its resurgence after entering Maryland and
joining the reorganized Army of the Potomac. The men of this small
corps, who would later wear a five-pointed star as their insignia,
went on to earn a solid reputation in the Army of the Potomac at
Antietam that would only grow during the battles of 1863.Bryan's
study, a hybrid unit history and leadership and character
assessment, puts the XII Corps' actions in proper context by
providing significant and substantive treatment to its Confederate
opponents. His unique study, based on extensive archival research,
newspapers, and other important resources, is a compelling story of
a little-studied yet consequential corps and fills a gaping
historiographical gap that has longed needed to be filled.
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