
eBook - ePub
From Second Bull Run to Gettysburg
The Civil War in the East, 1862-63
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
About this book
Stackpole Books presents Gen. Edward J. Stackpole’s Civil War classics -- They Met at Gettysburg, Drama on the Rappahannock, Chancellorsville, and From Cedar Mountain to Antietam -- in a single abridged volume that covers the war’s pivotal and turbulent middle year in the Eastern Theater, from the summer of 1862 through the summer of 1863. This year of bloody conflict included the war’s defining battles: Second Bull Run, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, and Gettysburg. It was a year during which the Union cycled through generals as Lincoln sought one who could fight and win – from McClellan to Pope for Second Bull Run, back to McClellan for Antietam, to Burnside for Fredericksburg, to Hooker for Chancellorsville, and to Meade for Gettysburg. As Union command in the East remained unsettled and these generals proved incompetent, timid, or both – or worse – this was the South’s chance, and Lee came into his own as a general for the ages during these months, besting Pope at Second Bull Run, decimating Burnside at Fredericksburg, and outsmarting and outfighting Hooker, with help from Stonewall Jackson, at Chancellorsville. Lee, with a growing belief in his army’s invincibility and an awareness that the Union’s considerable resources in men and material would soon tell, twice mounted invasions of the North during these months, first at Antietam, where he fought McClellan to a draw but had to turn back, and last and more disastrously at Gettysburg, where Meade defeated Lee in three days of hard fighting and sent the Confederates reeling back to Virginia. This was also the year during which Lincoln gave the war higher purpose and greater stakes: Antietam enabled him to issue the Emancipation Proclamation while Gettysburg yielded the famous address. The new birth of freedom Lincoln promised would be won or lost on the battlefield.
This is epic history, told in sweeping, dramatic style by a master of the craft. One battle flows seamlessly to the next in Stackpole’s grand narrative, which also turns a soldier’s eye to the leadership of the men in blue and gray. This book will find enthusiastic readers among general readers as well as among Civil War buffs, military history aficionados, and military officers seeking insightful professional reading.
This is epic history, told in sweeping, dramatic style by a master of the craft. One battle flows seamlessly to the next in Stackpole’s grand narrative, which also turns a soldier’s eye to the leadership of the men in blue and gray. This book will find enthusiastic readers among general readers as well as among Civil War buffs, military history aficionados, and military officers seeking insightful professional reading.
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Yes, you can access From Second Bull Run to Gettysburg by Edward J. Stackpole in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & American Civil War History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Halftitle
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Chapter 1: Union Frustrations
- Chapter 2: Pope versus Jackson
- Chapter 3: The Battle of Cedar Mountain
- Chapter 4: Lee’s Campaign against Pope
- Chapter 5: Second Bull Run I: The Fight Near Groveton
- Chapter 6: Second Bull Run II: The Main Battle Opens
- Chapter 7: Second Bull Run III: The Climax
- Chapter 8: The Battle of Chantilly
- Chapter 9: Lee Invades Maryland
- Chapter 10: The Battle of South Mountain
- Chapter 11: The Harpers Ferry Diversion
- Chapter 12: Antietam I: The Bloodiest Single Day
- Chapter 13: Antietam II: Final Phase
- Chapter 14: Lincoln Tries Another General
- Chapter 15: The Strategy of the Fredericksburg  Campaign
- Chapter 16: Interlude on the Rappahannock
- Chapter 17: The Curtain Rises at Fredericksburg
- Chapter 18: Across the Rappahannock at Last
- Chapter 19: Fredericksburg I: Union Failure on the  Southern Flank
- Chapter 20: Fredericksburg II: Slaughter at the Stone Wall
- Chapter 21: Burnside Is Relieved of Command
- Chapter 22: Hooker Plans a Campaign
- Chapter 23: The Strategy of the Chancellorsville  Campaign
- Chapter 24: Chancellorsville I: Jackson’s Flank Attack
- Chapter 25: Chancellorsville II: May 3
- Chapter 26: Chancellorsville III: Fredericksburg  and Salem Church
- Chapter 27: Lee Invades Pennsylvania
- Chapter 28: Confederate Strategy in June 1863
- Chapter 29: Meade Takes Command
- Chapter 30: Gettysburg I: July 1, 1863
- Chapter 31: Gettysburg II: July 2, 1863
- Chapter 32: Gettysburg III: July 3, 1863
- Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index