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All Roads Led to Gettysburg - A New Look at the Civil War's Pivotal Battle (Hardcover)
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All Roads Led to Gettysburg - A New Look at the Civil War's Pivotal Battle (Hardcover)
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It has long been a trope of Civil War history that Gettysburg was
an accidental battlefield. General Lee, the old story goes, marched
blindly into Pennsylvania while his chief cavalryman Jeb Stuart
rode and raided incommunicado. Meanwhile, General Meade, in command
only a few days, gave uncertain chase to an enemy whose exact
positions he did not know. And so these ignorant armies clashed by
first light at Gettysburg on July 1, 1863. In the spirit of his
iconoclastic Lee's Real Plan at Gettysburg, Troy D. Harman argues
for a new interpretation: once Lee invaded Pennsylvania and the
Union army pursued, a battle at Gettysburg was entirely
predictable, perhaps inevitable. Most Civil War battles took place
along major roads, railroads, and waterways; the armies needed to
move men and equipment, and they needed water for men, horses, and
artillery. And yet this perspective hasn't been fully explored when
it comes to Gettysburg. Look at an 1863 map, says Harman: look at
the area framed in the north by the Susquehanna River and in the
south by the Potomac, in the east by the Northern Central Railroad
and in the west by the Cumberland Valley Railroad. This is where
the armies played a high-stakes game of chess in late June 1863.
Their movements were guided by strategies of caution and
constrained by roads, railroads, mountains and mountain passes,
rivers and creeks, all of which led the armies to Gettysburg. It's
true that Lee was disadvantaged by Stuart's roaming and Meade by
his newness to command, which led both to default to the old
strategic and logistical bedrocks they learned at West Point-and
these instincts helped reinforce the magnetic pull toward
Gettysburg. Moreover, once the battle started, Harman argues, the
blue and gray fought tactically for the two creeks-Marsh and Rock,
essential for watering men and horses and sponging artillery-that
mark the battlefield in the east and the west as well as for the
roadways that led to Gettysburg from all points of the compass.
This is a perspective often overlooked in many accounts of the
battle, which focus on the high ground-the Round Tops, Cemetery
Hill-as key tactical objectives. Gettysburg Ranger and historian
Troy Harman draws on a lifetime of researching the Civil War and
more than thirty years of studying the terrain of Gettysburg and
south-central Pennsylvania and northern Maryland to reframe the
story of the Battle of Gettysburg. In the process he shows there's
still much to say about one of history's most written-about
battles. This is revisionism of the best kind.
General
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