Marching To Gettysburg
Civil War authors Scott Mingus and Eric Wittenberg have collaborated many times, most recently in the two-volume study "If We Are Striking for Pennsylvania: The Army of Northern Virginia and the Army of the Potomac March to Gettysburg". The study examines the Gettysburg Campaign, beginning with Robert E. Lee's fateful decision to invade Pennsylvania and concluding on June 30, 1863, on the eve of the Battle of Gettysburg (July 1 -- 3, 1863). Volume I, which I am reviewing here, covers the period June 3 -- 21, 1863, while Volume II takes the campaign from June 22 -- 30, 1863. The title of the study derives from a letter that Confederate Major General Lafayette McLaws wrote to his wife just before the beginning of the campaign. McLaws said: "If we are striking for Pennsylvania, we are actuated by a desire to visit upon the enemy some of the horrors of war, to give the northern people some idea of the excesses committed by their troops upon our houses and inhabitants". (Prologue, p. xxxv)
Gettysburg is a critical moment in American history and its study can be endlessly fascinating. Lee's invasion of Pennsylvania and the march to Gettysburg have been covered in many studies of the Gettysburg campaign, such as the books by Coddington and Sears. And crucial incidents of the campaign, such as the Battle of Winchester or the Battle of Brandy Station, also have received their own detailed individual treatment, including works by Mingus and Wittenberg. This new study is set apart by its detail and its sweep. It tells a story and offers a view of the Gettysburg Campaign that makes a whole out of many separate elements. The book enhanced my knoweldge of Gettysburg and held my attention.
The study begins with a Prologue discussing the Battle of Chancellorsville (April 30 -- May 6, 1863) and its impact in leading to the Confederate decision to invade Pennsylvania. The book proceeds with chapters on a day-by-day basis, beginning with the first Confederate movements West and North on June 3 and concluding in this volume on June 21. The chapters are of varying lengths and complexity as the course of the campaign gradually unfolds. Disussions of broad questions of politics and military strategy are interwoven with particulars of individual soldiers and civilians with life on the march. On each day, the reader sees different events in different places and gradually gets a feel for how the incidents of the Gettysburg Campaign come together.
The book explores throughout the audacity of the Gettysburg Campaign and of the decision for a full-scale invasion of the North. Overall, the book shows Lee rolling the dice with his movement North and with the difficulty the Union had in figuring out Lee's movements and his goals. During the early days, the North did not know where Lee was heading. Union General Joseph Hooker, much criticized for the Chancellorsville loss, defended cautiously because he didn't know what Lee's intentions were and because his cavalry, under General Alfred Pleasanton, gave him little help in scouting Southern movements. Later in the Campaign, the situation would be reversed when Lee lost track, in part through failures of his cavalry, of the location of the Army of the Potomac, a matter for the second volume of this study.
With the uncertainty, panic set in in many quarters of the Union, described well and in detail in this book.. Thus, while the focus of this book is on troop movements and strategic decisions, it gives a great deal of attention to matters that don't receive much attention in other studies, such as the preparations for an invasion, the rasing of militia, the fortifications and the movements of citizens for safety and shelter in Pennsylvania, in particular.
The major events of the campaign such as Brandy Station, Winchester, and the cavalry battles at the Blue Ridge Mountain passes offer focus to the study. But the value of the book lies in its detail and in its integration of activities in different places. The treatment of the early stages of the Campaign in Maryland and Pennsylvania is particularly insightful in showing the varied nature of the interactions between the frightened civilian populations and the advance units of the Confederate cavalry.
The part of this book I enjoyed most was the focus on the marching of the various units of the armies, Union and Confederate. The book follows the armies and the soldiers through long forced marches in sweltering heat, through clouds of dust, over swollen streams, through pelting rain and cold nights. As much as the battles, the marches stretched the limits of endurance, with many soldiers dying from sunstroke and otherwise falling by the wayside. The book gave me more of a sense than I have received from other studies of the harshness of these marches and of the endurance and fortitude of the men. There are also many telling indvidual details, including at least two extended scenes involving the executions of indivduals who had deserted from their units. I felt involved with the story of the marches and their hardships.
I have read a substantial amount about Gettysburg over the years, and I learned from this book. To help the reader along, the book includes brief biographical paragraphs of the primary individuals involved, Union and Confederate, in an opening section titled "Dramatis Personae". A brief concluding Appendix summarizes the daily movements of the armies. And the book includes an unusually good selection of maps, arranged by day of the Campaign, together with many photographs of the key participants. . The book might be overwhelming for a reader with only a casual interest in Gettysburg or new to the subject. But it will fascinate readers with a passion for the subject and with a good, basic knowledge of the Campaign and the Battle.
The book reminded me of why I have studied Gettysburg over the years. I am looking forward to reading the second volume. Savas Beatie, the publisher, kindly sent me a copy of the book to review.
Robin Friedman