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Out of the Storm
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Group Read - 1865
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'Aussie Rick'
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Jun 05, 2015 06:29PM


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Read Richmond Burning: The Last Days of the Confederate Capital earlier this year and it was very good.





I'm looking forward to your review. I probably won't get to a Bentonville book this time around and perhaps in the near future.

I am enjoying Last Stand in the Carolinas so far, I think it will be as good an account as was his previous book:


"Johnston was further frustrated by the Richmond bureaucracy. When he sought to obtain pay for his men (many of whom had not been paid in more than a year), Secretary of War Breckinridge informed him that the Confederate Treasury was broke, and suggested that he should 'make the best of the circumstances.' When Johnston asked that a large store of supplies in Charlotte belonging to the navy (which had virtually ceased to exist by this time) be transferred to the army, Secretary of the Navy Stephen R. Mallory refused to part with it. Worse yet, Johnston was unable to procure rifle-muskets for almost 1,300 of his men. They remained unarmed to the end of the war."






A famous South Carolinian and one heck of a fighter. My sons went to Wade Hampton High School. His post-war political activities including incitement of violence against freed black voters and white Republicans didn't reflect well upon his later reputation.


Depends on your point of view. He was a man of his times and many of his actions and beliefs don't stand up too well by current standards. His grandfather was a prominent soldier in the War of 1812.

Maybe he writes from a Southern point of view - he does teach at Clemson and went to University of Georgia. Maybe he just can't help himself.


I enjoyed the collection of esseys but didn't
love them. The four Appendixes moved this one from
a 3.25 to maybe 3.75 rating.

" ... While Butler was massing his force, a handful of dismounted troops fired on the Federal gun crew, killing or wounding all save Lieutenant Stetson, who in the words of one South Carolinian, 'seemed to bear a charmed life.' The dismounted Confederates rushed the lone Federal lieutenant, but he steadfastly stood by his piece and yanked the lanyard, mowing them down with a round of canister. Stetson loaded another round just as Lieutenant Colonel King's force came thundering toward him. The brave officer patiently watched the Rebel horsemen bear down upon him. At the last moment, he pulled the lanyard and sent a hailstorm of shrapnel into the charging grey line .... Moments after King's wounding, Stetson was struck by a pistol shot while loading his cannon. Though the Confederate charge had succeeded in silencing the Federal gun, the 5th Ohio cavalrymen were pouring a murderous fire into the Southerners with their Spencer repeaters. General Butler late wrote that his command had sustained 62 casualties during the five-minute battle for the two Union cannon."
For a more detailed account of this action check this link out:
http://www.historynet.com/kill-cavalr...





"A passing Confederate counted a dozen horses lying dead or wounded in the area of Halsey's guns. The quiet suffering of these wounded creatures made a lasting impression on him: 'To this day I recall the piteous expressions of two or three of these wounded horses, as they raised their heads in their suffering and looked at us as we passed them'."


http://31stwisconsin.com/2015/03/01/m...

http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WM...
http://www.homeofheroes.com/gravesite...

" ... Hendrick emphasized that Stephen's battery repulsed the first Confederate assault by firing only spherical case, 'showing that to be a powerful weapon when properly used.' By day's end the enemy dead would lay six-deep in places across Stephen's front, bearing silent witness to the truth of Hendrick's statement. After the battle a Union burial marked the Confederate mass grave on that part of the field with a crudely lettered headboard. It read: 'These men were killed by Battery C, 1st O.V.A.' "

" ... Like Logan, General Howards spent most of the afternoon at the front, having galloped up to Charles Woods line the moment he had received word of Mower's breakthrough. 'I have been riding with Gen. Howard for five hours, backwards and forwards along our skirmish line, exposed to a deadly fire,' Lt. Col. William E. Strong wrote in his journal. 'I thought both of us would be killed. I never hesitated yet to go where my duty called me ... but I do object most seriously to being made a target for the enemy to practice on.' Strong was reminded of an observation Capt. Charles Henry Howard once made about his brother the general: '[R]riding in battle with a man who is always prepared to die, is not as pleasant as one might think.'
'I agree with Captain Howard,' Strong wrote."
I think he is right too :)

http://www.ncmarkers.com/Markers.aspx...
This makes for some interesting reading:
http://listverse.com/2013/03/17/10-wa...



http://www.militaryhistoryonline.com/...
https://prezi.com/rt0nxwdsbrnq/explos...




Thanks AR, guess I'll just have to go there again!

You can find my full review here: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/... (Hopefully the link works well!)
I'll be starting Marching Home: Union Veterans and Their Unending Civil Warnext. Can't promise I'll have it finished by the end of July, but I'll try!
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Marching Home: Union Veterans and Their Unending Civil War (other topics)
The Last Citadel: Petersburg, Virginia, June 1864-April 1865 (other topics)
A Year in the South: 1865: The True Story of Four Ordinary People Who Lived Through the Most Tumultuous Twelve Months in American History (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Mark L. Bradley (other topics)Mark L. Bradley (other topics)
Rod Andrew Jr. (other topics)
Daniel T. Davis (other topics)
Mark L. Bradley (other topics)
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