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The Union Army's green riflemen at war
The important role of sharpshooters on the battlefield had been
recognised by armies since the time when firearms were developed
with a greater degree of accuracy. This key factor combined with a
soldier of higher intelligence, capable of independent thought and
action and skilful in the use of his weapons, made for a highly
effective light infantryman, skirmisher and scout. Green was often
their uniform colour irrespective of the nation they served, for it
referenced the 'hunter' from whose origin their service developed
in spirit and action. In the British Army the 60th and 95th
(Rifles) became famous during the Napoleonic Wars, though the
senior regiment, the 60th, had grown from the Royal Americans who
had proved their mettle on a battlefield where the skills of this
kind of infantryman were entirely applicable-the French and Indian
War. Warfare in the great North Eastern forests of America brought
forth many green clad riflemen and those raised in the cause of the
Union by the state of Vermont were among its most notable. With
their distinctive uniforms, high leather leggings and hair covered
knapsacks they were the very epitome of their forebears, the
Jaegers. This immediate account takes the reader on campaign
throughout the Civil War on the Peninsular Campaign, at Second Bull
Run, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, the
Wilderness, Spotsylvania, Cold Harbor and Petersburg. Available in
softcover and hardback with dustjacket.
The Union Army's green riflemen at war
The important role of sharpshooters on the battlefield had been
recognised by armies since the time when firearms were developed
with a greater degree of accuracy. This key factor combined with a
soldier of higher intelligence, capable of independent thought and
action and skilful in the use of his weapons, made for a highly
effective light infantryman, skirmisher and scout. Green was often
their uniform colour irrespective of the nation they served, for it
referenced the 'hunter' from whose origin their service developed
in spirit and action. In the British Army the 60th and 95th
(Rifles) became famous during the Napoleonic Wars, though the
senior regiment, the 60th, had grown from the Royal Americans who
had proved their mettle on a battlefield where the skills of this
kind of infantryman were entirely applicable-the French and Indian
War. Warfare in the great North Eastern forests of America brought
forth many green clad riflemen and those raised in the cause of the
Union by the state of Vermont were among its most notable. With
their distinctive uniforms, high leather leggings and hair covered
knapsacks they were the very epitome of their forebears, the
Jaegers. This immediate account takes the reader on campaign
throughout the Civil War on the Peninsular Campaign, at Second Bull
Run, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, the
Wilderness, Spotsylvania, Cold Harbor and Petersburg. Available in
softcover and hardback with dustjacket.
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