Notes Of A Confederate Staff-Officer At Shiloh by Thomas Jordan, Brigadier General. (At Shiloh, Adjutant
General Of The Confederate Army.)
Battles And Leaders Of The Civil War Written By Leading Participants Originally Published in 1884-1887
AFTER 10 o'clock at night, on the 2d of April, 1862, while in my office
as adjutant-general of the Confederate army assembled at Corinth, a telegram was brought to me from General Cheatham, commanding
an outpost on our left flank at Bethel, on the Mobile and Ohio railway, some twenty odd miles northward of Corinth. General
Cheatham had addressed it to General Polk, his corps commander, informing him that a Federal division, under General Lew Wallace,
had been manoeuvring in his proximity during the day. General Polk had in due course sent the message to General Beauregard,
from whom it came to me with his indorsement, addressed to General A. S. Johnston, in substance: "Now is the time to advance
upon Pittsburg Landing." And below were these words, in effect, if not literally: "Colonel Jordan had better carry this in
person to General Johnston and explain the military situation.--G. T. B."
At the time Colonel Jacob Thompson, formerly Secretary of the Interior of
the United States, was in my office. I read the telegram aloud to him and immediately thereafter proceeded to General Johnston's
quarters, nearly a quarter of a mile distant, where I found the general surrounded by his personal staff, in the room which
the latter habitually occupied. I handed him the open dispatch and the indorsements, which he read without comment. He then
asked me several questions about matters irrelevant to the dispatch or what might naturally grow out of it, and rose, saying
that he would cross the street to see General Bragg. I asked if I should accompany him. "Certainly," was his answer. We found
that General Bragg had already gone to bed, but be received us in dishabille, General Johnston handing him the dispatch at
once, without remark. Bragg, having read it, immediately expressed his agreement with Beauregard's advisement. General Johnston
thereupon very clearly stated strongly some objections, chiefly to the effect that as yet our troops were too raw and incompletely
equipped for an offensive enterprise, such as an attack upon the Federal army in a position of their own choosing, and also
that he did not see from what quarter a proper reserve could be assembled in time.
As General Beauregard had discussed with me repeatedly within a week the details
of such an offensive operation in all its features, and the necessity for it before the Federal army was itself. ready to
take the offensive, I was able to answer satisfactorily the objections raised by General Johnston, including the supposed
difficulty about a reserve--for which use I pointed out that the Confederate forces posted under General Breckinridge at several
points along the line of the Memphis and Charleston railroad, to the eastward of Corinth, could be quickly concentrated at
Burnsville, and be moved thence direct to Monterey, and there effect a junction with our main force. General Johnston at last
assented to the undertaking. Thereupon I turned to a table in General Bragg's chamber, and wrote a circular order to the three
corps commanders, Major-Generals Polk, Bragg, and Hardee, directing that each should hold his corps under arms by 6 A. M.,
on the 3d of April, ready to March, with one hundred rounds of ammunition; three days' cooked provisions per man in their
haversacks, with two more to be transported in wagons. This circular also prescribed the ammunition for the artillery, and
the number of tents each company should be provided with; all of which was approved by General Johnston when I read the rough
draught of it. Afterward the copies were made by an aide-de-camp on the staff of General Bragg.
These orders were delivered to Generals Polk and Hardee by 1:40 A. M., as
shown by their receipts, which I required to be taken. The orders to General Breckinridge were given by telegraph, he having
been called by me to the military telegraph office nearest his headquarters to receive them and to answer queries regarding
his command. Thus did it happen that the Confederate army was brought
to undertake the offensive at Pittsburg Landing.
II.
UPON quitting General Bragg's quarters I proceeded immediately to the tent
of Colonel A. R. Chisolm, aide-de-camp to General Beauregard, separated from my office by some thirty or forty yards, roused
him from sleep, and asked him to inform the general at daylight that the order to advance at midday had been issued.
Soon after sunrise I was called to the quarters of General Beauregard, whom
I found with the notes of the plan of operations and orders of engagement. These, I may add, had just been copied by Colonel
Chisolm from the backs of telegrams and envelopes upon which the general had made them during the night while in bed. Taking
these notes and the general's sketchmap of the roads leading from all surrounding quarters to Monterey and thence to Pittsburg
Landing, I returned to my office and began to draw up the order for the battle (Special Orders, No. 8), which will be found
in the "Official Records," X., 392 -395.
Called to my breakfast before the order could be framed, I met General Johnston
en route for General Beauregard's quarters, where I said I would meet him as quickly as possible, and where I soon joined
him. General Beauregard was explaining the details as to the roads by which the several corps would have to move through the
somewhat difficult, heavily wooded country, both before and after leaving Monterey; and to make this clear, as I had from
General Beauregard the only sketch extant, General Beauregard drew a rough sketch on his camp-table top. Meanwhile, General
Bragg and afterward Generals Polk and Hardee had joined the conference. As I remarked that it would take me some time to formulate
the order and issue all the requisite copies, General Beauregard explained orally to the three generals their routes of march
for the first day, so that they might not wait for receipt of the written. orders, which would be in all proper hands before
night. Accordingly, these explanations were carefully made, and the corps commanders went away with distinct instructions
to begin the movement at midday, as prescribed in the written orders subsequently issued. Pursuant to the terms of the circular
order which I had written and issued from General Bragg's headquarters the night before, the troops were brought under arms
before noon, by which time the streets and all approaches to the railway station, as well as the roads leading from Corinth,
were densely packed with troops, wagons, and field-batteries ready for the march. But no movement was made; General Polk's
corps in some way blocked the line of march,--as was reported to General Beauregard at a late hour in the afternoon by General
Hardee in person. Thereupon, an aide-de-camp was sent to General Polk, who, to the surprise of all, explained that he had
kept his corps at a stand awaiting the written order. Thus it was so late before the movement actually began, that, coupled
with the really inexplicable tardiness with which Bragg's corps was moved, it caused the arrival of the Confederate army in
the near presence of their adversary twenty-four hours later than was intended, as, by reason of this tardiness, it was not
until the late afternoon of the 5th of April that the head of the Confederate column reached a point within less than two
miles of the Federal lines, instead of on the 4th, in which case the battle would have been fought with General Grant alone,
or without the material and moral help derived from the advent of Buell on the field, as happened on the night of April 6th
and morning of the 7th.
III.
GENERAL BEAUREGARD with his staff left Corinth the afternoon of the 4th of
April, and reaching Monterey, twelve miles distant, found the Confederate corps massed in that quarter. He was hardly encouraged,
however, by the manner in which they had been handled to that stage in the operation. General Johnston and his staff were
already at the same point, in occupation of a house at which we dismounted just as some cavalry brought from the front a soldierly
young Federal volunteer officer, Major Le Roy Crockett, of the 72d Ohio, who had been captured a few hours before in a sharp
skirmish in close proximity to the Federal lines, brought on by a Confederate reconnoitering force pressed most indiscreetly
from General Bragg's corps almost upon the Federal front line. As this officer rode beside his captors through the mass of
Confederate infantry and batteries, and his eyes rested intelligently on the warlike spectacle, he exclaimed, "This means
a battle"; and he involuntarily added, " They don't expect anything of this kind back yonder." He was taken in charge by myself,
and, assisted by Major Gilmer, chief engineer on the staff, I interrogated him with the least possible semblance of so doing,
with the result of satisfying me, as I reported to Generals Johnston and Beauregard, that we should have no earth-works to
encounter, and an enemy wholly unaware of what was so near at hand.
IV.
IT has more than once been represented with pencil, as well as with pen, that
there was a somewhat dramatic conference of the Confederate generals around the camp-fire the night before the battle of the
6th of April. The simple fact is this: Hardee, whose corps was to be in the advance in the attack, having reached a point
known to be somewhat less than two miles from our adversary, was halted and deployed in line of battle across the Pittsburg
road to await the arrival and formation in his rear of the rest of the army as prescribed in the battle order. As this was
not effected until after 3 o'clock, it was too late to make the attack that day. As a matter of course in such a contingency,
the corps commanders were called to meet Generals Johnston and Beauregard, who, having gone from Monterey together with the
general staff and their respective personal staffs, had taken a position, dismounted, on the Pittsburg road, somewhat to the
rear of Hardee's corps. The meeting took place about 4 o'clock. General Polk now reported that his men were almost destitute
of provisions, having either already consumed or thrown them away. General Bragg reported that his own men had been more provident,
and therefore could spare enough for the emergency. Deeply dissatisfied with the inexplicable manner in which both Bragg's
and Polk's corps had been delayed, both before reaching and after leaving Monterey, as well as by the injudicious manner in
which a reconnoissance had been made with such aggressiveness and use of artillery as ought to have apprised any sharp-sighted
enemy that an offensive army was not far distant, General Beauregard--though it had been upon his urgent instance that the
advance had been made--did not hesitate to say that, inasmuch as it was scarcely possible for the enemy to be unaware of our
presence and purpose, should we attack next morning we would find the Federals ready for us intrenched to the eyes; whereas
the whole success of the movement had depended on our ability to assail our enemy unexpectedly. Therefore he advised the return
of the Confederate army to Corinth, as it assuredly was not in a condition to attack an army superior in numbers and behind
the intrenchments that would now be thrown up in expectation of our approach.
General Johnston listened attentively to what General Beauregard said, and
at length replied in substance that he recognized its weight; nevertheless, as he hoped the enemy was not suspecting our proximity,
be felt bound, as he had put the army in motion for a battle, to venture the hazard. Whereupon the officers rapidly dispersed
to their respective commands for that venture. As I have seen it intimated, among others by General Bragg, that this conference
was a mere casual or "partly accidental meeting of general officers," it may not be amiss to recall that such a conference
was the inevitable consequence of the arrival of the Confederate army at the point from which it was to spring upon the enemy,
as it were from an ambush. Naturally, moreover, by a conference with their corps commanders, Johnston and Beauregard could
best ascertain the condition of all the troops and determine the best course to be pursued. It was after the reports thus
made with the mutual blame of each other of two of the corps commanders for the delay, that Beauregard, confirmed in his apprehension
that the campaign had miscarried, urged that its objective should be given up,--much as Wellington once, in Spain, after taking
the field to attack Massena, finding the latter more strongly posted and prepared than he had been misled to believe, had
not hesitated to retire without fighting. The course of events demonstrated the correctness of Beauregard's judgment.
V.
THAT night, soon after supper, an aide-de-camp from General Johnston informed
me of the general's desire to see me, and guided me to where he was bivouacking in the open air. I was wanted to issue the
order for the immediate transfer of Maney's regiment of Tennessee infantry from a brigade in Bragg's corps to a certain brigade
in Polk's corps, of which Colonel Maney would have the command as senior officer, which order I wrote, in the absence of any
table or other convenience, outstretched upon General Johnston's blankets, which were spread at the foot of a tree. After
this was done, and the order dispatched by a special courier so that the transfer might be made in time to place Colonel Maney
at the head of the brigade in the coming battle, something led us to talk of the Pacific Coast, in which quarter I had served
eight years. Having been at Washington during the momentous winter of 1860-61, I spoke of the fact that when Colonel Sumner
had been sent via the Isthmus of Panama to supersede him (Johnston) in the command of the Department of the Pacific in April,
1861, Sumner's berth in the steamer had been taken under an assumed name, so that the newspapers might not get and divulge
the fact of his departure on that errand in time for intelligence of it to reach the Pacific Coast by the overland route,
and lead General Johnston to act with a supposed powerful disunion party in California in a revolt against the Federal authority
before Sumner's arrival. "Yes," answered the general, with much quiet feeling in his manner, "while distrusting me sufficiently
to act thus toward me, my former adjutant-general, Fitz John Porter, was induced to write me of their great confidence in
me, and to say that it was their purpose to place me in command of the Federal army, immediately next to General Scott." He
had evidently been deeply hurt that his personal character had not shielded him from the suspicion of doing aught while holding
a commission that could lead his superiors to suppose it necessary to undertake his supersedure by stealth.
VI.
THE next morning, as the Confederate army, deployed in the three lines prescribed
in the order of march and battle, moved before sunrise down the gentle wooded slope toward Shiloh Chapel, Generals Johnston
and Beauregard, with the general staff as well as aides-de-camp, stood upon a slight eminence, delighted with the evident
alacrity, animated faces, and elastic gait with which all moved forward into action. Hardly had the last line passed them
before the rattle of musketry announced that Hardee's corps was engaged. General Johnston now informed General Beauregard
that he would go to the front with the troops engaged, leaving General Beauregard to take the proper central position from
which to direct the movement as the exigencies of the battle might require. Then General Johnston rode off with his personal
staff exclusively, except possibly Major Gilmer, the chief engineer. Soon the sound of battle became general; and, as during
the battle of Manassas, I had been left at headquarters to send reënforcements into action as they came up by rail, I reminded
General Beauregard of the fact, and requested to be dispatched to join General Johnston. He assented, and I set off, accompanied
by my friend Colonel Jacob Thompson. In a little time I found that the corps commanders were ahead of or separated from a
material part of their troops, whom I repeatedly found halted for want of orders. In all such cases, assuming the authority
of my position, I gave the orders in the name of General Johnston. At one time I had with me the chiefs-of-staff of Polk,
Bragg, and Hardee, Colonel David Urquhart, the chief aide-de-camp of Bragg, and Colonel William Preston, the chief aide-de-camp
of General Johnston, all of whom I employed in assisting to press the Confederate troops toward the heaviest firing and to
keep the batteries advancing. Colonels Preston and Urquhart remained with me the longer time and assisted greatly. Finally,
however, Urquhart, learning from some of the troops encountered that he was in proximity to his chief, General Bragg, left
me to join him, while I, accompanied by Colonel Preston, rode to the right wing in the direction of sharp battle. Soon we
came in near view of a deserted Federal encampment in an open field, with a Federal battery of four or six guns unlimbered
and horseless, while in advance of it were to be seen a brigade of Confederate troops at a halt. Urquhart now galloped up
and informed me that General Bragg had sent him to me with the request that I should find and order forward some troops to
turn and capture some batteries just in his front which obstructed his advance. I at once pushed across a deep ravine with
Urquhart and Preston to the troops in view, which proved to be Statham's brigade of the reserve under General Breckinridge;
but because it belonged to the reserve, I hesitated to take the responsibility to employ it, and said so; however, asking
Colonel Presten--the brother-in-law as well as aide-de-camp of General Johnston--the hour, he replied, from his watch, twenty
minutes after 2 o'clock. I then said that the battle ought to be won by that time, and "I think the reserve should be used."
Colonel Preston expressed his agreement with me, and I rode at once to General Breckinridge, who was not far to the rear of
his troops, surrounded by a number of officers.
Accosting him, I said, "General Breckinridge, it is General Johnston's order
that you advance and turn and take those batteries," pointing in the direction indicated by Urquhart, and where was to be
heard the din of their discharges. As the order was given, General Breckinridge, clad in a well-fitting blouse of dark-colored
Kentucky jeans, straightened himself in his stirrups. His dark eyes seemed to illuminate his swarthy, regular features, and
as be sat in his saddle he seemed to me altogether the most impressive looking man I ever had seen.
I then turned, accompanied both by Urquhart and Preston, with the purpose
of going to the camp and battery previously mentioned, and from that point to observe the movement. On reaching the ravine,
which we had crossed, Colonel Preston, who possibly had just heard from some of the officers of the command just set in motion
of General Johnston's recent presence with them, said to me, "I believe I will make another attempt to find General Johnston,"
and rode down the ravine toward the left, and as it so happened, did find General Johnston, but already unconscious, if not
dead.
General Johnston had received his death-wound near the very troops I had found
standing at ordered arms, but who were unaware of the fact, and therefore were not, as has been written, brought to a stand-still
by reason of that catastrophe, and who undeniably were put in effective forward movement by me within twenty minutes after
his wounding.
A striking incident of the first day's battle may be here mentioned for its
novelty on battle-fields. A completely equipped Federal battery was so suddenly turned and environed by the Confederates,
that it was captured with all the guns limbered up en règle for movement as upon drill, before its officers could possibly
unlimber and use its guns in self-defense. The drivers were in their saddles, the gunners seated side by side in their places
upon the ammunition-boxes of the caissons, grinning over the situation, and the officers with their swords drawn were mounted
on their horses. Not a horse had been disabled.
VII.
AT the time of the reception of the order given as the sun was setting on
the 6th of April by General Beauregard for his greatly disarranged and scattered troops to withdraw from action and reorganize
for the next day's operations, I had reached a point very close to the Tennessee River where it was densely wooded. The large
ordnance of the gun-boats was raking this position, creating more noise in some quarters than harm to the Confederates, as
the heavy projectiles tore and crashed in all directions through the heavy forest.
Riding slowly backward to the point at which I understood I should find General
Beauregard, it was after sunset when I dismounted at the tent of a Federal officer, before which the general was standing
with some of his staff and with an officer in the uniform of a Federal general, to whom I was introduced. It was General Prentiss.
Several hours previously a telegraphic dispatch addressed by Colonel Helm to General Johnston (as well as I now remember,
from the direction of Athens, in Tennessee) was brought me from Corinth by a courier, saying that scouts employed in observing
General Buell's movements reported him to be marching not toward a junction with Grant, but in the direction of Decatur, North
Alabama. This assuring dispatch I handed to General Beauregard, and then, at his order, I wrote a telegraphic report to the
Confederate adjutant-general, Cooper, at Richmond, announcing the results of the day, including the death of Johnston.
Meanwhile, it had become so dark that I could barely see to write, and it
was quite dark by the time Generals Hardee and Breckinridge came to see General Beauregard for orders for the next day's operations.
General Bragg, who had also come from the front, had taken up his quarters for the night in a tent which General Sherman had
previously occupied at the Shiloh Chapel. This chapel, a rude log-hut of one story, was only two or three hundred yards distant
from the spot at which I had found General Beauregard. Leaving General Prentiss in my charge, General Beauregard soon after
dark took up his quarters for the night with General Bragg. The corps commanders had meanwhile been personally directed to
assemble their respective commands at the earliest possible moment in the morning to be ready for the final stroke.
Colonel Thompson and myself, with General Prentiss sandwiched between us,
shared a rough makeshift of a bed made up of tents and captured blankets. Prentiss and Thompson had been old acquaintances,
and the former talked freely of the battle, as also of the war, with a good deal of intelligence and good temper. With a laugh,
he said: "You gentlemen have had your way to-day, but it will be very different to-morrow. You'll see! Buell will effect a
junction with Grant to-night, and we'll turn the tables on you in the morning."
This was said evidently with sincerity, and was answered in the same pleasant
spirit, and I showed him the dispatch that had reached me on the field. He insisted, however, that it was a mistake, as we
would see. Tired as we were with the day's work, sleep soon overtook and held us all until early dawn, when the firing first
of musketry and then of field-artillery roused us, and General Prentiss exclaimed: "Ah! didn't I tell you so! There is Buell!"
And so it proved.
VIII.
UP to half-past two o'clock on the 7th of April, or second day's conflict,
General Beauregard had his headquarters at the Shiloh Chapel, or immediately at Sherman's former headquarters. The Confederate
troops, now hardly 20,000 men, were all either directly in advance of that position, or, to the right and left of it, somewhat
in advance, hotly engaged, having only receded from the places occupied during the night sufficiently to be better massed
and organized for fighting. But our losses were swelling perilously, and the straggling was growing more difficult to restrain.
A little after two o'clock, Governor Harris of Tennessee, who, after the death of General Johnston, had joined the staff of
Beauregard in action, taking me aside, asked if I did not regard the day as going against us irremediably, and whether there
was not danger in tarrying so long in the field as to be unable to withdraw in good order. I answered that I thought it would
soon be our proper course to retreat. Having an opportunity a moment later to speak to General Beauregard in private, I brought
the subject before him in almost these words:
"General, do you not think our troops are very much in the condition
of a lump of sugar thoroughly soaked with water, but yet preserving its original shape, though ready to dissolve? Would it
not be judicious to get away with what we have?"
"I intend to withdraw in a few moments," was his reply.
Calling upon his aides-de-camp present, he dispatched them with orders to
the several corps commanders to begin the rearward movement. He also directed me to collect as many of the broken organizations
as I could,--both of infantry and artillery,--post them in the best position I might find, and hold it until the whole army
had passed to the rear of it. Such a position I quickly found on an elevated ridge in full view of the chapel and the ground
to the right and left of it, and also somewhat more elevated, rising abruptly toward the enemy but receding gently toward
Corinth. There I collected and posted some two thousand infantry, making them lie down at rest. I also placed in battery some
twelve or fifteen guns, so as to command and sweep the approach from the direction of the enemy. There also I remained until
after 4 o'clock, or until the entire Confederate force had retired, General Breckinridge's troops being the last, and without
seeing a single Federal soldier within the wide range of my eyes. I then retired, carrying from the field the caissons loaded
down with muskets and rifles picked up on the field.
Recommended
Reading: Shiloh and the Western Campaign
of 1862. Review: The bloody and decisive two-day
battle of Shiloh (April 6-7, 1862) changed the entire course of the American Civil War. The
stunning Northern victory thrust Union commander Ulysses S. Grant into the national spotlight, claimed the life of Confederate
commander Albert S. Johnston, and forever buried the notion that the Civil War would be a short conflict. The conflagration
at Shiloh had its roots in the strong Union advance during the winter of 1861-1862 that resulted in the capture of Forts Henry
and Donelson in Tennessee. Continued below…
The offensive collapsed General Albert S. Johnston advanced line in Kentucky and forced him to withdraw all
the way to northern Mississippi. Anxious to attack the enemy,
Johnston began concentrating Southern forces at Corinth, a major
railroad center just below the Tennessee border. His bold
plan called for his Army of the Mississippi to march north and destroy General Grant's Army
of the Tennessee before it could link up with another Union
army on the way to join him. On the morning of April 6, Johnston boasted to his subordinates,
"Tonight we will water our horses in the Tennessee!" They
nearly did so. Johnston's sweeping attack hit the unsuspecting Federal camps at Pittsburg Landing
and routed the enemy from position after position as they fell back toward the Tennessee River.
Johnston's sudden death in the Peach Orchard, however, coupled
with stubborn Federal resistance, widespread confusion, and Grant's dogged determination to hold the field, saved the Union
army from destruction. The arrival of General Don C. Buell's reinforcements that night turned the tide of battle. The next
day, Grant seized the initiative and attacked the Confederates, driving them from the field. Shiloh
was one of the bloodiest battles of the entire war, with nearly 24,000 men killed, wounded, and missing. Edward Cunningham,
a young Ph.D. candidate studying under the legendary T. Harry Williams at Louisiana
State University, researched and wrote Shiloh and the Western Campaign of 1862 in 1966. Although it remained unpublished, many Shiloh
experts and park rangers consider it to be the best overall examination of the battle ever written. Indeed, Shiloh
historiography is just now catching up with Cunningham, who was decades ahead of modern scholarship. Western Civil War historians
Gary D. Joiner and Timothy B. Smith have resurrected Cunningham's beautifully written and deeply researched manuscript from
its undeserved obscurity. Fully edited and richly annotated with updated citations and observations, original maps, and a
complete order of battle and table of losses, Shiloh and the Western Campaign of 1862 will
be welcomed by everyone who enjoys battle history at its finest. Edward Cunningham, Ph.D., studied under T. Harry Williams
at Louisiana State
University. He was the author of The Port Hudson Campaign: 1862-1863
(LSU, 1963). Dr. Cunningham died in 1997. Gary D. Joiner, Ph.D. is the author of One Damn Blunder from Beginning to End: The
Red River Campaign of 1864, winner of the 2004 Albert Castel Award and the 2005 A. M. Pate, Jr., Award, and Through the Howling
Wilderness: The 1864 Red River Campaign and Union Failure in the West. He lives in Shreveport,
Louisiana. About the Author: Timothy B. Smith, Ph.D., is author of Champion Hill:
Decisive Battle for Vicksburg (winner of the 2004 Mississippi
Institute of Arts and Letters Non-fiction Award), The Untold Story of Shiloh: The Battle and the Battlefield, and This Great
Battlefield of Shiloh: History, Memory, and the Establishment of a Civil War National Military Park. A former ranger at Shiloh,
Tim teaches history at the University of Tennessee.
Recommended Reading: Shiloh: The Battle That Changed the Civil
War (Simon & Schuster). From Publishers Weekly: The bloodbath at Shiloh, Tenn. (April 6-7, 1862), brought
an end to any remaining innocence in the Civil War. The combined 23,000 casualties that the two armies inflicted on each other
in two days shocked North and South alike. Ulysses S. Grant kept his head and managed, with reinforcements, to win a hard-fought
victory. Continued below…
Confederate
general Albert Sidney Johnston was wounded and bled to death, leaving P.G.T. Beauregard to disengage and retreat with a dispirited
gray-clad army. Daniel (Soldiering in the Army of Tennessee) has crafted a superbly researched volume that will appeal to
both the beginning Civil War reader as well as those already familiar with the course of fighting in the wooded terrain bordering
the Tennessee River.
His impressive research includes the judicious use of contemporary newspapers and extensive collections of unpublished letters
and diaries. He offers a lengthy discussion of the overall strategic situation that preceded the battle, a survey of the generals
and their armies and, within the notes, sharp analyses of the many controversies that Shiloh
has spawned, including assessments of previous scholarship on the battle. This first new book on Shiloh
in a generation concludes with a cogent chapter on the consequences of those two fatal
days of conflict.
Recommended
Reading: Shiloh--In Hell before Night. Description: James McDonough has written a good, readable and concise history of a battle that the author
characterizes as one of the most important of the Civil War, and writes an interesting history of this decisive 1862 confrontation
in the West. He blends first person and newspaper accounts to give the book a good balance between the general's view and
the soldier's view of the battle. Continued below…
Particularly
enlightening is his description of Confederate General Albert Sidney Johnston, the commander who was killed on the first day
of the battle. McDonough makes a pretty convincing argument that Johnston fell far short of the image that many give him
in contemporary and historical writings. He is usually portrayed as an experienced and decisive commander of men. This book
shows that Johnston was a man of modest war and command experience,
and that he rose to prominence shortly before the Civil War. His actions (or inaction) prior to the meeting at Shiloh -- offering
to let his subordinate Beauregard take command for example -- reveal a man who had difficulty managing the responsibility
fostered on him by his command. The author does a good job of presenting several other historical questions and problems like
Johnston's reputation vs. reality that really add a lot of
interest to the pages.
Recommended
Reading: Seeing the Elephant: RAW RECRUITS AT THE BATTLE
OF SHILOH.
Description: One of the bloodiest battles in the Civil War, the two-day engagement near Shiloh,
Tennessee, in April 1862 left more than 23,000 casualties. Fighting alongside
seasoned veterans were more than 160 newly recruited regiments and other soldiers who had yet to encounter serious action.
In the phrase of the time, these men came to Shiloh to "see the elephant". Continued below…
Drawing on
the letters, diaries, and other reminiscences of these raw recruits on both sides of the conflict, "Seeing the Elephant" gives
a vivid and valuable primary account of the terrible struggle. From the wide range of voices included in this volume emerges
a nuanced picture of the psychology and motivations of the novice soldiers and the ways in which their attitudes toward the
war were affected by their experiences at Shiloh.
Recommended
Reading: The Shiloh
Campaign (Civil War Campaigns in the Heartland)
(Hardcover). Description: Some 100,000 soldiers fought in the April 1862 battle of Shiloh, and nearly 20,000 men were killed
or wounded; more Americans died on that Tennessee
battlefield than had died in all the nation’s previous wars combined. In the first book in his new series, Steven E.
Woodworth has brought together a group of superb historians to reassess this significant battle and provide in-depth analyses
of key aspects of the campaign and its aftermath. The eight talented contributors dissect the campaign’s fundamental
events, many of which have not received adequate attention before now. Continued below…
John R. Lundberg
examines the role of Albert Sidney Johnston, the prized Confederate commander who recovered impressively after a less-than-stellar
performance at forts Henry and Donelson only to die at Shiloh; Alexander Mendoza analyzes the crucial, and perhaps decisive,
struggle to defend the Union’s left; Timothy B. Smith investigates the persistent legend that the Hornet’s Nest
was the spot of the hottest fighting at Shiloh; Steven E. Woodworth follows Lew Wallace’s controversial march to the
battlefield and shows why Ulysses S. Grant never forgave him; Gary D. Joiner provides the deepest analysis available of action
by the Union gunboats; Grady McWhiney describes P. G. T. Beauregard’s decision to stop the first day’s attack
and takes issue with his claim of victory; and Charles D. Grear shows the battle’s impact on Confederate soldiers, many
of whom did not consider the battle a defeat for their side. In the final chapter, Brooks D. Simpson analyzes how command
relationships—specifically the interactions among Grant, Henry Halleck, William T. Sherman, and Abraham Lincoln—affected
the campaign and debunks commonly held beliefs about Grant’s reactions to Shiloh’s aftermath. The Shiloh Campaign
will enhance readers’ understanding of a pivotal battle that helped unlock the western theater to Union conquest. It
is sure to inspire further study of and debate about one of the American Civil War’s momentous campaigns.
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