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Black Black Black - S/T
Jason Alexander Byers, Johnathan Swafford, Jacob Cox
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R312
Discovery Miles 3 120
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Often hailed as a stroke of military genius, General William T.
Sherman's decision to divide his command and his subsequent,
infamous march through the interior of Georgia to the Atlantic
coast inaugurated the final phase of the war. General Jacob D. Cox
(1828-1900) played key roles in most of the decisive actions that
followed. Left with Generals Schofield and Thomas to delay Hood's
advance, Cox led his men through the night and at Spring Hill; he
supervised the construction of the fortifications that proved so
effective against Hood's assaulting columns at Franklin; at
Nashville his division joined the attack on the crucial Confederate
position at Shy's Hill; and later he finished his service with
Sherman in North Carolina. It was Cox's self-professed qualities of
"a bold heart, a cool head, and practical common-sense" that
subsequently earned him the command of the entire Twenty-third
Corps and the rank of major general. After the war, Cox applied
those same attributes to his books, "Sherman's Battle for Atlanta,"
and" Sherman's March to the Sea," two volumes in the landmark
series Campaigns of the Civil War. If readers are seeking concise,
astute, and balanced accounts of Sherman's march to the sea, the
burning of Columbia, the bloody battles of Franklin and Nashville,
the oft-overlooked assault on Fort Fisher (which sealed the
Confederacy from Europe), and the surrender of Johnston's Army,
Cox's single volume provides all the scope, detail, and color that
these critical campaigns demand.
In 1864 Abraham Lincoln had privately predicted his defeat in the
impending election, but ten days later Atlanta fell, assuring his
victory. General Jacob D. Cox (1828-1900) played a key role in the
Union success at Atlanta, a city of profound strategic and
political significance. At Kenesaw Mountain in June, his division
seized a ridge opposite the Confederate left, allowing Sherman to
flank the Confederates out of their prepared position in late
August Cox's men served the city's final rail line, forcing Hood's
evacuation. It was Cox's self-professed qualities of "a bold heart,
a cool hand, and practical common-sense" that later earned him the
command of the entire Twenty-third Corps and the rank of major
general. After the war, Cox applies those same attributes to his
books, Sherman's Battle for Atlanta and Sherman's March to the Sea/
two volumes in the landmark series Campaigns of the Civil War. In
Atlanta Cox offers readers a compact, comprehensive, and balanced
history of that campaign. William T. Sherman emerges as the primary
hero of events, but he does not remain unscathed by Cox's
evaluation. Cox's insightful chronicle of the campaign,from the
performances of Generals Johnston's evasive maneuvers through
Hood's three desperate attempts to dispel the Yankees to Sherman's
triumphant telegram to Washington that "Atlanta is ours, and fairly
won",has endured the scrutiny of time.
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