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Thomas' Legion |
American Civil War HOMEPAGE |
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Causes of the Civil War : What Caused the Civil War |
Organization of Union and Confederate Armies: Infantry, Cavalry, Artillery |
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American Civil War: The Soldier's Life |
Civil War Turning Points |
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HISTORY OF WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA |
Western North Carolina and the American Civil War |
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HISTORY OF THE CHEROKEE INDIANS |
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Researching your Cherokee Heritage |
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Union Navy Captain Melancton Smith
USS Syracuse USS Commodore Hull USS Ceres USS Miami USS
Wyalusing USS Sassacus USS Mattabesett - flagship USS Whitehead
Confederate Navy [Mosquito Fleet] Commander John
W. Cooke
Source: Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies
Recommended Reading:
Rebels and Yankees: Naval Battles of the Civil War (Hardcover). Description:
Naval Battles of the Civil War, written by acclaimed Civil War historian Chester G. Hearn, focuses on the maritime battles
fought between the Confederate Rebels and the Union forces in waters off the eastern seaboard and the great rivers of the
United States during the Civil War. Since
very few books have been written on this subject, this volume provides a fascinating and vital portrayal of the one of the
most important conflicts in United States
history. Naval Battles of the Civil War is lavishly illustrated with rare contemporary photographs, detailed artworks, and
explanatory maps, and the text is a wonderful blend of technical information, fast-flowing narrative, and informed commentary.
Recommended
Reading:
Civil War Navies, 1855-1883 (The U.S. Navy Warship Series) (Hardcover). Description: Civil War Warships, 1855-1883
is the second in the five-volume US Navy Warships encyclopedia set. This valuable reference lists the ships of the U.S. Navy
and Confederate Navy during the Civil War and the years immediately following - a significant period in the evolution of warships,
the use of steam propulsion, and the development of ordnance. Civil War Warships provides a wealth and variety of material
not found in other books on the subject and will save the reader the effort needed to track down information in multiple sources.
Continued below…
Each
ship's size and time and place of construction are listed along with particulars of naval service. The author provides historical
details that include actions fought, damage sustained, prizes taken, ships sunk, and dates in and out of commission as well
as information about when the ship left the Navy, names used in other services, and its ultimate fate. 140 photographs, including
one of the Confederate cruiser Alabama recently uncovered by the author further contribute to this
indispensable volume. This definitive record of Civil War ships updates the author's previous work and will find a lasting
place among naval reference works.
Recommended Reading:
Naval Campaigns of the Civil War. Description: This analysis of naval
engagements during the War Between the States presents the action from the efforts at Fort Sumter during the secession of
South Carolina in 1860, through the battles in the Gulf of Mexico, on the Mississippi River, and along the eastern seaboard,
to the final attack at Fort Fisher on the coast of North Carolina in January 1865. This work provides an understanding of
the maritime problems facing both sides at the beginning of the war, their efforts to overcome these problems, and their attempts,
both triumphant and tragic, to control the waterways of the South. The Union blockade, Confederate privateers and commerce
raiders are discussed, as is the famous battle between the Monitor and the Merrimack.
Continued below…
An overview of the events in the
early months preceding the outbreak of the war is presented. The chronological arrangement of the campaigns allows for ready
reference regarding a single event or an entire series of campaigns. Maps and an index are also included. About the Author:
Paul Calore, a graduate of Johnson and Wales University,
was the Operations Branch Chief with the Defense Logistics Agency of the Department of Defense before retiring. He is a supporting
member of the U.S. Civil War Center and the Civil War Preservation Trust and has also written Land Campaigns of the Civil
War (2000). He lives in Seekonk, Massachusetts.
Recommended
Reading: A History of the Confederate Navy
(Hardcover). From Publishers Weekly: One of the most prominent European scholars of the Civil War weighs in with a provocative
revisionist study of the Confederacy's naval policies. For 27 years, University of Genoa history professor Luraghi (The Rise
and Fall of the Plantation South) explored archival and monographic sources on both sides of the Atlantic to develop a convincing
argument that the deadliest maritime threat to the South was not, as commonly thought, the Union's blockade but the North's
amphibious and river operations. Confederate Navy Secretary Stephen Mallory, the author shows, thus focused on protecting
the Confederacy's inland waterways and controlling the harbors vital for military imports. Continued below…
As a result,
from Vicksburg
to Savannah to Richmond, major
Confederate ports ultimately were captured from the land and not from the sea, despite the North's overwhelming naval strength.
Luraghi highlights the South's ingenuity in inventing and employing new technologies: the ironclad, the submarine, the torpedo.
He establishes, however, that these innovations were the brainchildren of only a few men, whose work, although brilliant,
couldn't match the resources and might of a major industrial power like the Union. Nor did
the Confederate Navy, weakened through Mallory's administrative inefficiency, compensate with an effective command system.
Enhanced by a translation that retains the verve of the original, Luraghi's study is a notable addition to Civil War maritime
history. Includes numerous photos.
Recommended Reading: Confederate Ironclad 1861-65 (New Vanguard). Description: The creation of a Confederate
ironclad fleet was a miracle of ingenuity, improvisation and logistics. Surrounded by a superior enemy fleet, Confederate
designers adapted existing vessels or created new ones from the keel up with the sole purpose of breaking the naval stranglehold
on the nascent country. Her ironclads were built in remote cornfields, on small inland rivers or in naval yards within sight
of the enemy. The result was an unorthodox but remarkable collection of vessels, which were able to contest the rivers and
coastal waters of the South for five years. This title explains how these vessels worked, how they were constructed, how they
were manned and how they fought.
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