A Scientific Way of War: Antebellum Military Science, West Point, and the Origins of American Military Thought

Similar documents
As our Army enters this period of transition underscored by an

HIST 6501 HISTORIOGRAPHY: AMERICAN MILITARY HISTORY

Broken Promises: A History of Conscription in Canada Revised edition (Book Review) by J.L. Granatstein and J.M. Hitsman

Winfield Scott. States Army. A veteran of the War of 1812, Seminole War, Black Hawk War, Mexican-

CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION. To a variety of lay and professional historians the. American Civil War was fought in Virginia with only minor

DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE

REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL. Report on the interim evaluation of the «Daphne III Programme »

Curriculum Vita. Education

U.S. MILITARY HISTORY HISTORY Spring Location: 123 GHS Tuesdays/Thursdays 8:30-9:50 CRN 36766

Marrow of Tragedy: The Health Crisis of the American Civil War

Separate Beds: A History of Indian Hospitals in Canada, 1920s-1980s, by

SSUSH4: ANALYZE THE IDEOLOGICAL, MILITARY, SOCIAL, AND DIPLOMATIC ASPECTS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTON

The. Smithfield Review. Volume 21, Published by the. Smithfield-Preston Foundation

PROVIDING FOR THE CASUALTIES OF WAR

INFORMATION PAPER SUBJECT:

Hey there, my name is (NAME) and today we re going to talk about Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee.

Westpac Research Fellowship Funding Guidelines

IM ET Donald F. Cameron for the first time on Albany Street

Lesson: The War of Key Battles & the Effects of the War of Lauren Webb {a social studies life}

It is now commonplace to hear or read about the urgent need for fresh thinking

University of Michigan, Ph.D., American History, University of Michigan, M.A., American History, 1995

I. The Pacific Front Introduction Read the following introductory passage and answer the questions that follow.

West Virginia. Copyright 2010 LessonSnips

Command and General Staff Officer Course (CGSOC) Common Core (CC)

Nursing Theory Critique

Introduction The Study of Strategy

To be prepared for war is one of the most effectual means of preserving peace.

The Indian Army on the Western Front

Canada s Space Policy and its Future with NORAD

Reflections Of A Civil War Medical Cadet, Burt Green Wilder

2019 Westpac Research Fellowship. Funding Guidelines

Hybrid Warfare Fighting Complex Opponents from the Ancient World. to the Present

"Americans at War in Foreign Forces: A History, (Book Review)" by Chris Dickon

UNITED STATES ARMY TRAINING AND DOCTRINE COMMAND. NCO 2020 Strategy. NCOs Operating in a Complex World

How did the Second World War start?

The Mask Of Command: A Study Of Generalship By John Keegan

The Civil War Crittenden Compromise last minute attempt to avoid war protect slavery south of north of popular sov. Rejected by Lincoln

The War of 1812 Webquest and Video Analysis- Key Directions: Complete the following questions using resources from the link listed below:

Fighting for a Job: The Reality of Veteran Unemployment in Virginia

YEAR-END SUMMARY REPORT

... from the air, land, and sea and in every clime and place!

Discussion of each topic will centre on a distinctive set of problems:

The role of the Secretary of Defense has been a major focus of

J. L. Jones General, U.S. Marine Corps Commandant of the Marine Corps

Women and the Draft. what does "equal rights" mean?

THE CIVIL WAR LESSON TWO THE CONFEDERATE ARMY

Recruitin g Solders And Financing The War

The best days in this job are when I have the privilege of visiting our Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen,

Shiloh: A Battlefield Guide (This Hallowed Ground: Guides To Civil War Battlefields) By Steven E. Woodworth, Mark Grimsley READ ONLINE

The Necessity of Human Intelligence in Modern Warfare Bruce Scott Bollinger United States Army Sergeants Major Academy Class # 35 SGM Foreman 31 July

Army Doctrine Publication 3-0

Army Planning and Orders Production

Expeditionary Force 21 Attributes

Generals In Gray: Lives Of The Confederate Commanders By Ezra J. Warner

Katlyn Marie Carter Department of History, Princeton University 129 Dickinson Hall Princeton, NJ (510)

THE SUPPLY OF ARTILLERY MUNITIONS

AMERICAN PUBLIC TELEVISION NATIONAL PROGRAM FUNDING GUIDELINES. Editorial Control Test: Has the underwriter exercised editorial control? Could it?

United States Colored Troops (U.S.C.T.) Lesson Plan

Culture / Climate. 2-4 Mission command fosters a culture of trust,

Haggard International Scholarship Application

38 th Chief of Staff, U.S. Army

The Introduction of the Secondary Education Program at SUNY Brockport and the Changes the Program and College Shared

The American Civil War

Surgeon in Blue: Jonathan Letterman, the Civil War Doctor Who Pioneered Battlefield Care

Executing our Maritime Strategy

STATEMENT OF GORDON R. ENGLAND SECRETARY OF THE NAVY BEFORE THE SENATE ARMED SERVICES COMMITTEE 10 JULY 2001

Post-Professional Doctor of Occupational Therapy Advanced Practice Track

Agency for Volunteer Service

AAN wargames would benefit from more realistic play of coalition operations. Coalition members could be given strategic goals and

The Austrian Army

APUSH THE CIVIL WAR REVIEWED!

Advisory Board Chair Job Description

Introduction and Welcome to Public Universities and the Humanities. By Lloyd Kramer

China U.S. Strategic Stability

Class of 1968 Rotunda

Foreign Policy related to the War of 1812 The Young Republic. President Washington through President Monroe

SPONSORSHIP COVENANT ALVERNIA UNIVERSITY AND THE BERNARDINE FRANCISCAN SISTERS

Answering the Hottest Question in Army Education What Is Army University?

Helmholtz-Inkubator INFORMATION & DATA SCIENCE

IT: College of Science and Engineering: The Institute of Technology Years ( ) Thomas J. Misa and Robert W. Seidel, eds.

Fighters on leave By Emmanuelle Cronier, Marie Curie Fellow, University of Birmingham.

Bell Ringer: April 16(17), 2018

JOB MARKET REPORT Q Britain s job market in the first quarter after the EU referendum

The 19th edition of the Army s capstone operational doctrine

British Contingency Operations since 1945: Back to the Future. Dr Paul Latawski Department of War Studies

Label Fort Sumter on your map

María del Coriseo González Izquierdo

UNIVERSITY OF SAN FRANCISCO DEAN OF THE SCHOOL OF NURSING POSITION DESCRIPTION

HUMAN RESOURCES ADVANCED / SENIOR LEADERS COURSE 42A

"Sister Soldiers of the Great War: The Nurses of the Canadian Army Medical Corps (Book Review)" by Cynthia Toman

Advanced Operations Course (AOC)

Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) Post-Master s DNP

An Introduction to Strategic Studies

CREIGHTON UNIVERSITY Fact Sheet

The War of 1812 Parts 1-5

Sustaining the Transformation

Building the foundation for a culture of trust -Presentation to the Joint Legislative Task Force 2016

CHAPTER TEN SUSTAINING THE TRANSFORMATION

Causes and Features on the Reform of American Inter-government Transfer Payment*

Master of the Arts, The University of Texas at Austin, December 1993 Major: European History

Transcription:

Civil War Book Review Summer 2016 Article 10 A Scientific Way of War: Antebellum Military Science, West Point, and the Origins of American Military Thought Charles R. Bowery Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/cwbr Recommended Citation Bowery, Charles R. (2016) "A Scientific Way of War: Antebellum Military Science, West Point, and the Origins of American Military Thought," Civil War Book Review: Vol. 18 : Iss. 3, Article 10. Available at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/cwbr/vol18/iss3/10

Bowery: A Scientific Way of War: Antebellum Military Science, West Point, Review Bowery, Charles R. Summer 2016 Hope, Ian C. A Scientific Way of War: Antebellum Military Science, West Point, and the Origins of American Military Thought. University of Nebraska Press, $55.00 ISBN 9780803276857 By Scientific Means: A Fresh Perspective on the Origins of American Military Thought The historiography of the American Civil War tends to hold the conflict apart from the wider military history of the nineteenth-century world, perhaps because of the mass citizen armies that fought the war on both sides, and the proportionately small presence of career- and professional-soldier leaders on both sides. The related debate, over whether the Civil War was the last pre-industrial war or the first modern" or total" war both terms that obscure more than they illuminate (blank)also tends to work against attempts to contextualize the American Iliad. Several historians, including Jay Luvaas, Edward C. Hagerman, Brian Holden Reid, Wayne Hsieh, and Carol Reardon, have attempted to analyze the war s conduct within a wider global context, but despite the quality and depth of these studies, a conceptual wall seems to separate these works from the seminal cultural history of the antebellum American army, Edward M. Coffman s 1986 study, The Old Army: A Portrait of the American Army in Peacetime, 1784-1898. Coffman and Russell Weigley, author of another foundational work of American military history, The American Way of War (1973), analyzes the American conduct of war separately from its intellectual underpinnings, created in peacetime and in various educational settings, the most important of which is naturally the United States Military Academy at West Point. In spite of considerable evidence to the contrary, we still tend to view the Civil War in an intellectual vacuum. Ian C. Hope, a serving Canadian Army officer and associate professor of history at the Royal Military College, seeks to merge these lines of inquiry with A Scientific Way of War. Hope posits that the military doctrine developed and Published by LSU Digital Commons, 2016 1

Civil War Book Review, Vol. 18, Iss. 3 [2016], Art. 10 taught at West Point, defined here as military science," formed the basis for a uniquely American brand of military thought that hundreds of West Point graduates used in the service of both the Union and the Confederacy during the Civil War. American military science, Hope asserts, had its beginnings in the military science of the European Enlightenment, translated for American use in the early years of the Republic. The Revolutionary and Napoleonic armies made France the model for all things military in nineteenth-century America. U.S. military science developed along four lines of instruction: tactics and strategy, artillery and cavalry, civil engineering and fortifications, and topographical engineering. The book begins with a comprehensive review of the sources of American military thought, through a useful survey of late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth century European developments. The author then surveys the West Point curriculum as it developed during the nineteenth century. This portion of the book will provide the military historian with few new insights, but the author s rigorous demonstration of the intellectual roots of the West Point curriculum will make this volume a regularly consulted reference. Other historians continue to develop the institutional history of America s military academy, but Hope grounds its development in a broader context that is really useful. After describing the West Point program of instruction and its intellectual underpinnings, the book places the evolving curriculum into a national context. American national security policy in the early decades of the nineteenth century focused on the Third System of fortifications and depots, reflecting American concerns over European developments and the possibility of a third war with Great Britain. This subject is ably covered by Mark A. Smith in Engineering Security: The Corps of Engineers and Third System Defense Policy, 1815-1861 (2009), and Hope s treatment of West Point s education of engineers complements it nicely. Few Americans questioned West Point s focus on engineering and mathematics during this time. With the European peace that followed the Congress of Vienna, the Jacksonian era saw a more inward focus in the United States, with a shift in military policy to complement westward expansion and Indian removals. At West Point, this new focus manifested itself in a new emphasis on topographical engineering, cavalry, and engineering skill adapted for growing internal improvements in roads and infrastructure. During the antebellum period, America went to war with Mexico and engaged in large-scale unconventional warfare in the West, demonstrating the value of a West Point education, but also the need for increased focus on the liberal arts https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/cwbr/vol18/iss3/10 2

Bowery: A Scientific Way of War: Antebellum Military Science, West Point, languages and history. On the eve of the Civil War, U.S. Army Commanding General Winfield Scott directed an expansion of the West Point curriculum to five years to incorporate these additional subjects while maintaining the academy s traditional focus on the sciences. This gradual development in the West Point program faced constant opposition in Congress and in some sectors of the American populace, and the academy s leaders worked hard to justify its continued existence even as its graduates shaped national development in a number of critical ways. The book s final chapter, in which the author surveys the role of American military science in the conduct of the Civil War, is of greatest interest to the readership of this review. A total of 1,135 West Point graduates served in the Civil War on both sides. Over 370 of them possessed some antebellum military experience, and a quarter had prewar staff, engineer, or instructor experience. Almost one-third rose to general-officer rank. West Point graduates shared a military language and an understanding of standard processes." A commonality of thinking about la grande guerre amongst West Pointers formed the basis for large-scale staff planning that gave the Civil War something more than what the vagaries of individual personality would have provided." West Point-trained officers shared a mindset about how to raise, organize, train, supply, move, encamp, feed, and fight armies of volunteers and conscripts- all of the elements of military science they had learned at West Point." (216) There is nothing groundbreaking in this idea, and indeed Hsieh and Reardon have addressed it in their works, but the clarity with which Hope connects the Civil War to the wider nineteenth century, to Western military thought, and to the institutional development of West Point and the U.S. Army makes this book different from those on similar topics. Hope also makes the useful distinction between military education and experience, and the character traits necessary for high command," characteristics such as decision making, courage, determination, and resilience. Most of the historiography of Civil War generalship defaults to the latter set of characteristics, and they frequently defy nuanced analysis. The result is a body of scholarship that actively denies the role of education and experience, highlighting instead the role of personality in generalship. A Scientific Way of War adds to our understanding of the conduct of the Civil War because Hope evaluates the war through the lens of military science, as opposed to the personality-based approach that has dominated Civil War historiography to this point. This approach supports a number of younger Civil War scholars, including Published by LSU Digital Commons, 2016 3

Civil War Book Review, Vol. 18, Iss. 3 [2016], Art. 10 Ethan S. Rafuse and Christopher S. Stowe, who have moved in recent years toward a more rational and wide-ranging analysis of Union and Confederate generalship, incorporating political and social history, gender studies, and the study of military organizations and change over time. Hope admits that an analysis of every Civil War battle and campaign through this method is beyond the scope of the book, but he does offer numerous avenues for further scholarship. One under-studied area concerns the role of staff officers in numerous capacities during the Civil War, especially within geographic departments and staff bureaus. The chapter s concluding statement, that The legacy of the Civil War in the U.S. Army was of continued faith in staff planning, logistics, engineering, artillery competency, and integration of the means for industrial warfare and a reliance on volunteers," (244) is difficult to dispute. A Scientific Way of War is an excellent book. It is deeply researched, thoughtful, and engagingly written, and supported with a number of useful tables. Hope engages some of the giants of the American historical profession in spirited debate, but in a collegial way. The end notes alone will be of great use to scholars or graduate students, and the book will make an excellent addition to graduate courses in military history. It is highly recommended. Colonel (Retired) Charles R. Bowery, Jr., is Executive Director of the U.S. Army Center of Military History in Washington, D.C., and is the author or co-author of three books on the American Civil War, including Richmond-Petersburg 1864-65, published by Praeger in 2014. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/cwbr/vol18/iss3/10 4