The Army Of The Potomac In The Overland And Petersburg Campaigns: Union Soldiers And Trench Warfare,

Similar documents
A Nation Torn Apart: The Civil War, Chapter 13

Chapter 16, Section 5 The Tide of War Turns

Label Fort Sumter on your map

Junior High History Chapter 16

2014 Events May 9 Petersburg Before the Siege May 10 From Slavery to Freedom May 15 Lecture: Soldier s Life Demonstration

Advantages for both sides. List advantages both sides had going into the War.

Evaluate the advantages the North enjoyed in the Civil War.

Secession & the Outbreak of the Civil War

General Lee's Army: From Victory to Collapse

Name Class Date. The Vicksburg Campaign Use the information from pages to complete the following.

The first engagement of the Civil War took place at Fort Sumter on April 12 and 13, After 34 hours of fighting, the Union surrendered the fort

Chapter 17: The Tide of War Turns

Election of Campaign a four-way split. Republicans defeat the splintered Democrat party, and the Do Nothing party who wanted to compromise

The. Most Devastating War Battles

Civil War Part 2. Chapter 17

HIST 103: CHAPTER 14 THE CIVIL WAR

Kindle The American Civil War

The Civil War Begins. The Americans, Chapter 11.1, Pages

Civil War Soldiers Buried in Portland s St. Mary s Cemetery

Chapter 16 and 17 HOMEWORK. If the statement is true, write "true" on the line. If it is false, change the underlined word or words to make it true.

Fort Sumter-Confederate Victory

The Furnace of Civil War

The American Civil War

Chapter 16, Section 3 The War in the West

150 th Special Events

The Civil War Early Years of the War: Chapter 13, Section 2

Created by Andrea M. Bentley. Major Battles

Eastern Theatre of the American Civil War (1861 to 1865) Military History Tour From Manassas to Appomattox Court House

Map of Peninsula Camp

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

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

SSUSH9 C, D, & E The Civil War

SWBAT: Identify the lasting legacy of Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War? Do Now: a) Advantages and Disadvantages of the Civil War Worksheet

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

The Call to Arms. Hardships of Both Sides

Civil War Battles & Major Events

3. The first state to formally withdraw from the Union, after the election of Abraham Lincoln, was a. Mississippi. b. South Carolina. c. Alabama.

The American Civil War Please get out your Documents from Last week and Write your Thesis Paragraph.

Directions: 1. Write vocabulary words on page Read and Summarize the major events by answering the guided questions

The Civil War Webquest. Type in the following web address, feel free to look at the images and read the information

Emancipation Proclamation

THE US CIVIL WAR. Give each battle a clever and creative nickname that will help you remember the even.

Guided Reading Activity 16-1

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

The Vietnam War. Nour, Kayti, Lily, Devin, and Hayleigh

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

World Book Online: The trusted, student-friendly online reference tool. Name: Date:

Josiah Goodwin Diaries and Research Collection (Mss. 4886) Inventory

PART ONE: PRESERVE THE UNION

The colonists prepared for war Colonial early warning system The Minutemen Lexington and Concord

Brilliant Scenes: Army Engineers in the Overland Campaign. Past in Review. The Overland Campaign. By Mr. Donald J. McConnell and Mr. Gustav J.

57TH INDIANA INFANTRY REGIMENT RECORDS,

The Civil War { Union Forces vs. Confederate States of America (CSA) North vs. South Blue vs. Grey

Confederate Postal History. A Virginia First Day of Independent Use

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

The American Civil War

Timeline: Women in the Civil War. By: Ida Allen-Auerbach, Juliette Williamson, June Meredith, and Maia Supple

GUIDED READING ACTIVITY Which four states joined the Confederacy when President Lincoln issued a call to save the Union?

The Civil War Begins

The Civil War Chapter 15.1

Recruitin g Solders And Financing The War

Services asked me to be here with you today to recognize our. veterans. If you are a veteran, would you please stand up/raise

F o rt S u m t e r, S C

North & South: The Civil War. May 4-13, Hosted by Dan Miller

The Civil War ( ) 1865) Through Maps, Charts, Graphs & Pictures

-Charleston Harbor, SC -Anderson Union -Beauregard Confederate. Confederate victory when Union surrenders. -Beginning of Civil War.

The Significance of Women Army Nurses in the United States Civil War. Noël Bishop Spring 2017: Dr. Robert J. Mueller: Utah State University

Battle of Nashville By Darrell Osburn 1996

The Tide of War Turns,

1 Create an episode map on the Civil Rights Movement in the U.S.A.

The American Civil War

REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE

SS8H6b. Key Events of the

The Civil War Begins

Civil War & Reconstruction. Day 16

American Defeat in New York, Summer 1776

Chapter 17. The Civil War. The Start of the Civil War. West Virginia/Virginia. Everyone thought that it would be a short & quick war

Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park Summer Programs PARK RANGER GUIDED BATTLEFIELD TOURS

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

The Civil War. Generals, Soldiers, and Civilians

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

Strategies, Advantages, and Disadvantages for the North and South Fill in the Blank as you listen to the vodcast.

CHAPTER 20 Girding for War: The North and the South,

Soldiers and officers did not anticipate how technological advances changed warfare. The Civil War was the first major conflict in which the railroad

Famous Women of the War Women Support the War Civil War Soldiers. Anaconda Plan. Battle of Bull Run. Battle of Antietam. Proclamation Lincoln

Lest We Forget: Memorial Art and Architecture on Civil War Battlefields

1863: Shifting Tides. Cut out the following cards and hand one card to each of the pairs.

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

Battle of Falling Waters 1863 Custer, Pettigrew and the End of the Gettysburg Campaign

Chapter 7.3 The War Expands

3/8/2011. Most of the world wasn t surprised when the war broke out, but some countries were better prepared than others.

CHAPTER 14: The Course of the Battle

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

WOD Partners 10 Min AMTAP Union & Confederate Strengths and Weaknesses Chart A The War Begins. Name: Date: Period: Mr. Mize

Vimy Ridge and Passchendaele. Birth of a Nation

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

Chapter 16, Section 3

THE CIVIL WAR LESSON TWO THE CONFEDERATE ARMY

The Civil War

The Greatest Civil War Battles: The Second Battle Of Bull Run (Second Manassas) [Kindle Edition] By Charles River Editors READ ONLINE

Transcription:

Civil War Book Review Winter 2018 Article 2 The Army Of The Potomac In The Overland And Petersburg Campaigns: Union Soldiers And Trench Warfare, 1864-1865 Charles R. Bowery Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/cwbr Recommended Citation Bowery, Charles R. (2018) "The Army Of The Potomac In The Overland And Petersburg Campaigns: Union Soldiers And Trench Warfare, 1864-1865," Civil War Book Review: Vol. 20 : Iss. 1, Article 2. Available at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/cwbr/vol20/iss1/2

Bowery: The Army Of The Potomac In The Overland And Petersburg Campaigns: Review Bowery, Charles R. Winter 2018 Sodergren, Steven E. The Army of the Potomac in the Overland and Petersburg Campaigns: Union Soldiers and Trench Warfare, 1864-1865. LSU Press, $47.95 ISBN 9780807165560 After their Breaking Point: Petersburg and the Refuge of Trenchwarfare Beginning in the late nineteenth century, and continuing into the Centennial period, the eastern campaigns in the Civil War s last year suffered from a dearth of serious scholarship. For a long time, authors and historians consigned the Overland and Richmond-Petersburg Campaigns to the province of legend and memory, with a few iconic moments Robert E. Lee being led to the rear by his men; the mud and blood of the Mule Shoe; frontal assaults at Cold Harbor; the maelstrom of the Crater; the surrender at Appomattox shaping our collective memory of the period from May 1864 to April 1865. The air of inevitability in which this period is often cast, especially moving into the late summer and fall of 1864, has worked against deep contextual analysis of these campaigns. The two decades from 1997 to the present have seen a significant improvement to this historiographical imbalance. I can turn to my personal bookshelf now and see dozens of quality books and essay collections on various aspects of the 1864-1865 campaigns, many informed by viewing the battles, armies, and leaders through the analytical frameworks of race, gender, and the physical environment. It is in this vein that Steven Sodergren, an associate professor of history at Norwich University, offers his social history of the Army of the Potomac in the Overland and Petersburg campaigns. In its primary source base, structure, and argument, Sodergren s book resembles J. Tracy Power s Lee s Miserables (1998), which analyzes the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia during the same period. Sodergren argues that the uninterrupted nature of the fighting during the Overland Campaign drove Union soldiers to the physical and psychological breaking point by the time they crossed the James River in June 1864, and Published by LSU Digital Commons, 2018 1

Civil War Book Review, Vol. 20, Iss. 1 [2018], Art. 2 confronted General Robert E. Lee s Confederate forces around Petersburg. The shift to a more static mode of warfare over that summer, based on the extensive field fortifications employed by both sides, gave Union soldiers a physical refuge of sorts, and allowed them to adjust to their physical conditions. This process of adaptation regenerated the morale and combat effectiveness of the Union Army, creating the conditions for the successful campaign of March-April, 1865. Two historiographical schools guide our understanding of Civil War combat motivation and unit effectiveness. The first, which may be labeled the Patriotism School, looks to James M. McPherson s For Cause and Comrades (1997) in tracing soldier motivation to the causes for which they fought. The second, or Coping School, looks to Gerald M. Linderman s Embattled Courage (1987) to find soldier service in more basic conditions of personal courage (or cowardice) in the face of the fear, chaos, and destruction of combat. A number of more recent studies add to the debate by introducing deep contextual factors that affect individual motivation. Mark Grimsley s And Keep Moving On (2002) places the Overland Campaign in a political, strategic, and social context. Earl Hess s work on field fortifications throughout the war help us to understand their impact on the soldier experience. His book on field fortifications in and around Petersburg, and his micro-tactical study of the Battle of the Crater, are on the short list of essential books about the last year of the war in the East. Other recent studies add nuance to the Patriotism School by examining soldier and Army political activity in 1864-65. Michael Barton s Goodmen: The Character of Civil War Soldiers (1981) is also important in establishing the inner world of these soldiers. Kathryn Shively Meier s excellent essay, I Told Him to Go On: Enduring Cold Harbor, part of Gary W. Gallagher and Caroline E. Janney s 2015 collected essays on the end of the Overland Campaign, is a recent addition to the Coping School. Sodergren s book clearly hews to the Coping School in its argument. Nine chapters take the reader from the Overland Campaign, with its grinding operational and tactical tempo, into the environs of Petersburg, where the armies establish themselves for a ten-month campaign that is unprecedented in American history for its scale and diversity. The losses Major General George Meade s Army of the Potomac incurred from May through June 1864 causes a decline in troop morale and unit effectiveness that stretched the army to the breaking point by mid-june. Both armies reacted to this destruction and loss of life by entrenching. The rest of the campaign would be conducted with these fortifications as a base of operations. Sodergren uses soldier letters and diaries, https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/cwbr/vol20/iss1/2 2

Bowery: The Army Of The Potomac In The Overland And Petersburg Campaigns: as well as unit action reports, to trace the army s process of adaptation to its environment. The physical reprieve offered by fortifications, combined with the massive Federal logistics effort and the presence of northern charitable organizations and an influx of mail from the home front, allowed the Army of the Potomac to regenerate its combat effectiveness. By March 1865, this process was complete, and the army was ready, as the countryside dried following winter rains, for the campaign that led to the surrender of General Robert E. Lee and his Confederate army at Appomattox Court House. My critiques of this book center around the author s framing of this campaign as a siege. In our guide to the campaign published in 2014, Professor Ethan Rafuse and I argue that the Richmond-Petersburg Campaign is more properly understood as a land campaign conducted across a vast landscape, comprising battles of maneuver and raids, with episodic siege operations. Professor Sodergren focuses his analysis of the campaign on the periods when the soldiers of the Army of the Potomac occupy their trenches; in reality, they conducted maneuver and battle during the entire ten-month campaign, even during the fall and winter months when field operations tended to stop. This focus may cause the book to miss some important dynamics at work in the Union Army s equation of combat effectiveness. The battles of July through September 1864 involved large numbers of conscript soldiers and recent immigrants, and the army s high command and unit leaders struggled to assimilate these soldiers into the ranks of veteran units in the midst of aggressive maneuvers around Petersburg and Richmond. The author s linkage to the trench fighting of World War I is also, in my mind, problematic. Civil War historians make these connections at their peril, as scholarship on the Great War has taken a much more nuanced turn in the last decade. These very minor criticisms aside, The Army of the Potomac in the Overland and Petersburg Campaigns is a comprehensively researched, persuasively argued, and engagingly written study that advances significantly our understanding of this pivotal period in the Civil War. It will take its place among the small number of standard works on this campaign, and it offers a number of fruitful avenues for further study. 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. Published by LSU Digital Commons, 2018 3

Civil War Book Review, Vol. 20, Iss. 1 [2018], Art. 2 https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/cwbr/vol20/iss1/2 4