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Unconditional Surrender - The Capture of Forts Henry and Donelson (Paperback)
Loot Price: R406
Discovery Miles 4 060
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Unconditional Surrender - The Capture of Forts Henry and Donelson (Paperback)
Series: Civil War Campaigns & Commanders Series
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Loot Price R406
Discovery Miles 4 060
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Civil War scholars and buffs alike have long differed on the
turning point of the war. Gettysburg, Vicksburg, and Chattanooga,
to name but a few, have garnered attention as turning points.
Seldom do the names of Forts Henry and Donelson enter the argument.
But as prolific military historian Spencer C. Tucker points out,
the capture of these river bastions in Tennessee became the first
important Federal victories of a war still in its infancy. From the
beginning Union leaders devised a plan to capitalize on their
command of America's waterways as a means of dividing and
conquering the Confederacy. Large, navigable rivers such as the
Mississippi, the Tennessee, and the Cumberland formed gateways to
the Southern heartland. In February 1862 a combined effort by the
land forces of unheralded Federal General Ulysses S. Grant and a
flotilla of gunboats commanded by veteran Flag Officer Andrew Foote
moved on the inadequate Confederate defenses of northwestern
Tennessee in a attempt to open the South to deeper penetration.
Ill-prepared Fort Henry on the Tennessee fell on February 6; ten
days later Grant offered the hapless commander of Fort Donelson on
the Cumberland the terms for which he would become famous -
Unconditional Surrender. The loss of these two important forts
opened Tennessee to Union invasion. Within weeks Nashville fell,
and soon the state and most of its resources were in Union hands.
Grant became an instant hero in the North, while in the South the
Confederacy scrambled to recover. It never would. Tucker, an
authority on naval warfare, deftly blends the elements of naval
innovation, combined operations, and political considerations into
a compelling story about the beginning of the end for the Southern
Confederacy.
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