REHEARSAL FOR RECONSTRUCTION (Part the Second)
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| Salmon Portland Chase (1808-1873) |
REHEARSAL FOR RECONSTRUCTION (Part the Second)
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| Salmon Portland Chase (1808-1873) |
REHEARSAL FOR RECONSTRUCTION (Part the First)
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| Former slaves of Confederate Brigadier General Thomas Drayton photographed on Hilton Head Island, May 1862. |
In which we set the stage for a discussion of the Port Royal Experiment, which took place on South Carolina’s Sea Islands and which many people view as a “rehearsal for reconstruction.”
Our book recommendation for this episode is Freedom National: The Destruction of Slavery in America, 1861-1865 by James Oakes.
“Was Lincoln really a ‘Reluctant Emancipator’? Freedom National answers that question eloquently and fully. Oakes argues that Lincoln, from the moment of his inauguration, began using every political and military means at his disposal to wipe out slavery forever.” ~ Howell Raines, Washington Post
Listen to Episode 77: PortRoyalExperiment
PORT ROYAL SOUND
In which we look at the Battle of Port Royal Sound, South Carolina (November 7, 1861).
Our book recommendation for this episode is Now for the Contest: Coastal & Oceanic Naval Operations in the Civil War by William H. Roberts.
“Now for the Contest tells the story of the Civil War at sea in the context of three campaigns: the blockade of the southern coast, the raiding of Union commerce, and the projection of power ashore. The book also examines how both sides mobilized and employed their resources for a war that proved to be of unprecedented intensity and duration. For both antagonists, the conduct of the naval war was complicated by rapid technological change, as steam power, metal armor, and more powerful ordnance sparked experiment and innovation both in naval construction and tactics.”
Listen to Episode 76: PortRoyalSound
THE ORDEAL OF GENERAL STONE (Part the Second)
In which we continue our discussion of the ordeal of Brigadier General Charles P. Stone.
Our book recommendation for this episode is Over Lincoln’s Shoulder: The Committee on the Conduct of the War by Bruce Tap.
“Tap’s case is one worth making. He argues that the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War produced little good and some harm, polarizing politicians against professional soldiers, limiting strategic options, and inflating the reputations of military incompetents. These errors, he shows, stemmed from ignorance of military art and from partisanship. Although his conclusions will raise some eyebrows, he provides good evidence for his case. A solid and readable old-fashioned political history, this book will correct our image of the relationship between Republicans and the army in the Civil War.” ~ Mark E. Neely, Jr.
Listen to Episode 75: GeneralStonePartSecond
THE ORDEAL OF GENERAL STONE (Part the First)
In which we discuss the persecution of Brigadier General Charles Stone by the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War.
Our book recommendation for this episode is Controversies and Commanders of the Civil War: Dispatches from the Army of the Potomac By Stephen W. Sears.
“There is drama and intrigue aplenty here, and Sears lays it out with great skill.” ~ Noah Andre Trudeau
Listen to Episode 74: GeneralStonePartFirst
BALL’S BLUFF
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| Edward Dickinson Baker (1811-1861) |
McCLELLAN TAKES CHARGE
In which we discuss George McClellan’s arrival in Washington in July of 1861, and his taking command of the defeated & demoralized force that would become the Union’s famed Army of the Potomac.
Our book recommendation for this episode is George B. McClellan: The Young Napoleon by Stephen W. Sears.
“A dozen years after the Civil War, General Ulysses S. Grant said that ‘McClellan is to me one of the mysteries of the war.’ Historian Stephen Sears has finally unraveled most of that mystery. He has probed the puzzling personality of this complex, brilliant man of whom so much was expected but who delivered so little. A fascinating story of the reasons for the Union military failure in Virginia during the first half of the war.” ~ James M. McPherson
Listen to Episode 72: McclellanTakesCharge
CHEAT MOUNTAIN
In which we look at Robert E. Lee’s Cheat Mountain campaign in western Virginia in September, 1861.
Our book recommendations for this episode are:
September Blood: The Battle of Carnifex Ferry by Terry Lowry
R.E. Lee’s Cheat Mountain Campaign by Jack Zinn
Listen to Episode 71: CheatMountain
THE BLOCKADE (AGAIN) / HATTERAS ISLAND
In which we discuss the Blockade Board, Confederate privateers, and the capture of Hatteras Island by a Federal joint army-navy task force in August, 1861.
Our book recommendation for this episode is The Civil War in Coastal North Carolina by John S. Carbone.
“From the drama of blockade-running to graphic descriptions of the battles on the islands and sounds of the Tar Heel State, The Civil War in Coastal North Carolina portrays the explosive events that took place on the North Carolina coast during America’s great sectional conflict.”
Listen to Episode 70: BlockadeAgain
FREMONT’S FOLLIES
In which we look at John C. Fremont’s tenure as commander of the Federal’s Western Department in 1861 and see how troubled Missouri proved to be his downfall.
Our book recommendation for this episode is Pathfinder: John Charles Fremont and the Course of American Empire by Tom Chaffin.
“The most eloquent, understanding, and yet very candid biography of Fremont that has appeared to date.” ~ Howard R. Lamar, Yale University
Listen to Episode 69: Fremont’sFollies