The first comprehensive assessment of the experience of common Union sailors during the Civil War. Bennett provides a look into the everyday lives of sailors and illuminates where they came from, why they enlisted, and how their origins shaped their service. By showing how these Union sailors lived and fought on the sea, Bennett brings an important new perspective to our understanding of the Civil War.
I positively loved this book. Although I mainly read it for my job - I work as a museum educator on the USS Constellation (1854) - I found myself personally engrossed in the story Bennett weaves of the average life of ol' Jack Tar. This study becomes something of a historical demography, because - as Bennett asserts - sailors in the Union Navy really were something of a breed apart. Sadly, theirs is a story that is seldom told, but Bennett has scoured across the country to bring their personal accounts to light. This was more than just a study of a fighting force; it was a study of a way of life.
Part of my "U.S.S. Constellation" orientation. Focuses on sailor culture, monotony, isolation, relations with "contraband" sailors, religion and the impact of naval combat. The reader comes away with some idea of what it was like on Blockade duty and service in the Mississippi Squadron, little prize money and dealing with guerrillas harassing crews.
One of the few books to tell about the Navy's role in the Civil War and the sailors. Jacktar is an old reference to a sailor. The book was very factual but I got feeling that the author, from a Southern State, may have been biased.
Certainly differs from most other civil war naval reads. No sugar coating here. The part cotton and prize money played in the Western Squadron was an eye opener!!