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More Damning than Slaughter - Desertion in the Confederate Army (Paperback)
Loot Price: R567
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More Damning than Slaughter - Desertion in the Confederate Army (Paperback)
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List price R606
Loot Price R567
Discovery Miles 5 670
You Save R39 (6%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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More Damning than Slaughter is the first broad study of desertion
in the Confederate army. Incorporating extensive archival research
with a synthesis of other secondary material, Mark A. Weitz
confronts a question never fully addressed until now: did desertion
hurt the Confederacy? Coupled with problems such as speculation,
food and clothing shortages, conscription, taxation, and a
pervasive focus on the protection of local interests, desertion
started as a military problem and spilled over into the civilian
world. Fostered by a military culture that treated absenteeism
leniently early in the war, desertion steadily increased and by
1863 reached epidemic proportions. A Union policy that permitted
Confederate deserters to swear allegiance to the Union and then
return home encouraged desertion. Equally important in persuading
men to desert was the direct appeal from loved ones on the home
front-letters from wives begging soldiers to come home for
harvests, births, and other events. By 1864 deserter bands infested
some portion of every Confederate state. Preying on the civilian
population, many of these bands became irregular military units
that frustrated virtually every effort to subdue them. Ultimately,
desertion not only depleted the Confederate army but also
threatened "home" and undermined civilian morale. By examining
desertion, Weitz assesses how deteriorating southern civilian
morale and growing unwillingness to contribute goods and services
to the war led to defeat. Mark A. Weitz is the former director of
the Civil War Era Studies Program at Gettysburg College. He is the
author of A Higher Duty: Desertion among Georgia Troops during the
American Civil War (Nebraska 2005).
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