Wednesday, May 20, 2026
Booknotes: From the Center of America
• From the Center of America: Steamboats and Shipyards Along the Lower Ohio River by Robert H. Swenson (SIU Press, 2026). From the description: "In the heart of America, four major rivers converge―the Cumberland and Tennessee with the Ohio; then the Ohio with the Mississippi. These three confluences, which author Robert Swenson christens the Four Rivers Reach, played a unique role in the development of the steamboats that dominated American continental transport for almost 100 years. Between 1825 and 1936, the river towns of Smithland, Paducah, Metropolis, Mound City, and Cairo launched 295 wood-hulled, steam-powered vessels. "Drawing from a wealth of archival sources," Robert Swenson's From the Center of America: Steamboats and Shipyards Along the Lower Ohio River "presents detailed histories of these steamboats over a span of 110 years, accompanied by nearly one hundred illustrations and photographs." Swenson's study "focuses on distinct events in steamboat history, tracing the impact of these shipyards on the economies and communities of the river towns where they were built. It reveals how the availability of steamboats along this sixty-mile Reach affected migration, politics, and the US economy of the nineteenth century." As mentioned above, vessels produced in this region heavily influenced major events of nineteenth-century western American history and beyond. More from the description: "Steamboats built at the Four Rivers Reach played pivotal roles in the forced relocation of Native Americans from southern Appalachia to Oklahoma, the outcome of the Civil War, and the Montana gold rush." Of course, the area that Swenson calls the Four Rivers Reach was action central during the early phases of the Civil War in the West. The region's shipyards were also where significant parts of Union inland naval power were constructed or modified from earlier builds. Such vessels included "tinclads, troopships, ironclad gunboats, a propeller tug, a fleet of fast Mississippi River packets, and several Missouri River "mountain boats"" (pg. 57). As they are in those parts of the book covering other decades, Chapter 3 recounts the construction of various types of vessels during the 1860s. In helpful fashion, those steamboats built at each river town are compiled in a descriptive register that's arranged in rough chronological order. Photographs and drawings of many of these mid-century steamboats are provided as well. In "(c)harting the legacy of mid-America's shipyards and iconic steamboats," From the Center of America "demonstrates how steamboat building shaped the culture, people, and economy of this region―and how, in turn, the area and its steamships influenced the growth of the young United States."
Monday, May 18, 2026
Booknotes: Haunted by Memory (with excerpt)
• Haunted by Memory: Ghost Stories of the American Civil War edited by John R. Neff and Amy Laurel Fluker (U Tenn Press, 2026). Since this site's inception, a number of Civil War book series published by university presses have sadly either scaled back their offerings or disappeared entirely. On a happier note, though, others have broadened their horizons. One of those is the venerable Voices of the Civil War series from University of Tennessee Press, which has recently expanded beyond its traditional domain of edited letters, memoirs, and diaries into themed anthologies like this one. Roughly halfway to Halloween, we are treated to Haunted by Memory: Ghost Stories of the American Civil War, edited by John Neff and Amy Laurel Fluker. Most Civil War readers possess at least a passing familiarity with the unique brand of supernatural and psychological horror writings of Ninth Indiana veteran and staff officer Ambrose Bierce, but apparently the postwar public's taste for such things was more widespread than many of us realize. From the description: "As America’s bloodiest conflict, it is no surprise that the Civil War gave rise to a golden age of ghost stories. Popular publications were filled with accounts of ghosts―ghosts that appeared in the heat of battle, in the fretful quiet of picket duty, and in the miserable confines of hospitals and prisons. Civil War ghosts continued to haunt the troubled peace that followed, revealing that even so deadly a conflict left unresolved issues in its wake." The era's ghost stories were not just spooky entertainment for the reading masses. More from the description: "They provide powerful evidence of how a wounded country tried to put the trauma, grief, and anxieties inflicted by the Civil War to rest. By telling ghost stories, Americans created narratives that honored the dead, explained the unexplainable, and gave their experiences a broader sense of identity and purpose." At over 400 pages, Neff and Fluker's Haunted by Memory addresses haunted tales in a great variety of formats. "(T)he first scholarly analysis of the significance of ghosts to the history and memory of the Civil War," this volume "includes hundreds of examples of ghostly tales that appeared in newspapers, periodicals, and books between 1861 and 1932. These tales both satisfied and fed popular demand for news, entertainment, and ghostlore, and became powerful tools of cultural memory." In addition to compiling the material, the editors establish historical and cultural context through a lengthy introduction and provide extensive chapter notes. Those annotations "provide important historical context, explanatory detail, and biographical information." Though the task proved not to be entirely possible, the goal was to "provide an annotation for all individuals named in the stories" (pg. xxi). In sum: "(b)y bridging the study of the Civil War, folklore, and memory, this collection expands the parameters of cultural history and reveals how the supernatural became a lasting part of the commemorative landscape of the American Civil War." The publisher has also kindly provided an excerpt for CWBA readers to consider (press the 'read more' button to view it in its entirety):
Haunted by Memory: Ghost Stories of the American Civil War
excerpted commentary from Chapter 1: An Age of Spooks
John R. Neff and Amy Laurel Fluker
Understanding how ghost stories became a popular form of cultural expression in the Civil War era requires an understanding of the war’s nearly incomprehensible death toll. Still the deadliest war in US history, it claimed the lives of at least 800,000 combatants. Taken as an equivalent proportion of the US population in the early twenty-first century, that amounts to 8,000,000 lives. But, as historian J. David Hacker reminds us, even that number is a best-guess estimate. It does not account for civilian deaths, particularly among the enslaved, and only roughly accounts for African American soldier dead.i In short, the Civil War was far deadlier than historians will ever be able to fully appreciate.
...Read more
The
extent of grief in the postbellum era was so overwhelming that it
exerted a palpable force. No one described this atmosphere more
eloquently than novelist Elizabeth Stuart Phelps. She reflected:
At that time, it will be
remembered, our country was dark with sorrowing women. . . . Toward
the nameless mounds of Arlington, of Gettysburg, and the rest, the
yearning of desolated homes went out in those waves of anguish which
seem to choke the very air that the happier and more fortunate must
breathe.
Is there not an actual, occult
force in the existence of a general grief? . . . It is like a
material miasma. The gayest man breathes it, if he breathe at all;
and the most superficial cannot escape it.ii
No
surprise, then, that the war’s survivors were haunted by it. As the
Indiana Plymouth
Tribune
observed
in 1907: “The war is still present, a vivid reality and yet a
memory. And it is not strange that from its bloody happenings have
grown some superstitions, some curious fireside tales that ill assort
with our arrogant workaday disbelief in ghosts and the unusual.”iii What
is perhaps most interesting about the ghost stories collected in
Haunted by Memory,
however, is that they reveal that hauntings were not only a postwar
phenomena. Veterans testified that ghosts were a part of the
experience of Civil War soldiers in combat. Take, for example, the
story of Private Henry Moode, who was confronted by the apparition of
a Confederate soldier he recognized—having accidentally stumbled
over his dead body just moments before. Or, the tale of the “mounted
ghost” that terrorized Union pickets on duty near Blaine’s
Crossroads. In the chaos of combat and confronted on all sides by the
inescapable realities of death, Civil War soldiers manifested ghosts.
Or, perhaps, ghosts manifested themselves. The
daily lives of Civil War soldiers, however, were not constantly
characterized by terror and death. There were idle moments, too. At
such times, soldiers called upon the supernatural as a form of
entertainment. The men of the 116th Pennsylvania, for example, filled
time during the siege of Petersburg by trading accounts of comrades
who returned from the grave to visit their families. Even
when recounted as pastimes, ghost stories offer insights into
nineteenth-century American culture. The ghosts of the 116th, like
many others described in the stories included in Haunted
by Memory, embodied an
age-old theme in the Anglo-American tradition of supernatural tales:
that of the purposeful ghost. The purposeful ghost appears not merely
to frighten the living, but with the intention of achieving some end. Oftentimes,
the ghost returns because it is bound to an unfulfilled promise. Many
Civil War soldiers felt the bonds of camaraderie they formed in
combat might transcend death. Faced by the suddenness of death in
battle and the likelihood they would be denied the opportunity to say
final farewells, soldiers sometimes vowed to return from beyond the
grave to visit their brothers-in-arms. They believed such visitations
might bring closure to grieving friends and provide proof of “the
state of the soul after death.” At least, that was the hope of two
unnamed comrades from the 2nd Iowa Cavalry, who reportedly made such
a promise to one another while on picket duty before the Battle of
Farmington. The ghost of “Copleston” appeared to his friend in
the prison barracks at Camp Chase to fulfill a similar promise and to
relate the details surrounding his death. In
yet another tradition associated with the purposeful ghost, spirits
sometimes returned seeking justice or vengeance. Two stories relate
to wartime homicides, but the most notable is the story of Private
John Rowley. Rowley swore before a US military tribunal that he was
being tormented by the spirit of his comrade, Jerome Dupoy, whom he
confessed to murdering. The haunting of Rowley serves as a reminder
that not all violent deaths came at the hands of the enemy. The
stories also reveal how quickly Civil War sites became associated
with hauntings. At locations where specific incidents of the war
occurred, the past intruded on the present and stirred memories of
the horrors of the war. Battlefields, in particular, emerge from the
stories as unsettling places. Take, for example, the specters of
Savage’s Station who cried for water from beyond the grave. Or, the
ghostly regiments that stalked the cliffs at Pittsburg Landing. The
belief that battlefields were haunted undoubtedly stemmed from the
knowledge that not only were they sites of deaths, but of bad
deaths.
The Civil War shattered the cultural construction of the “Good
Death.” That is, a manner of death that followed a specific set of
rituals designed to reinforce family bonds, provide assurances of
Christian salvation, and offer closure to the grieving.iv
The Civil War bestowed precious few “Good Deaths,” leaving
survivors with little consolation. They had no formula to follow when
it came to mourning the sudden, violent deaths of loved ones far from
home. Their grief was compounded by fears that their loved one’s
remains were unidentified, unattended—or worse—unburied. The
tale of the “Ghost at Post 1” powerfully illustrates not only the
unsettling realities of death in the Civil War, but also the cultural
significance of ghost stories. In this case, the ghost’s purpose is
multi-faceted. In the text, the repeated appearance of a Confederate
apparition led the men of the 6th Illinois Cavalry on an
investigation that resulted in the recovery of his forgotten remains.
After providing the unknown Confederate a decent burial, the ghost
never returned. Beyond
the text, however, the “Ghost at Post 1” serves a larger symbolic
purpose. It is important to note that this particular story appeared
in the National
Tribune.
Founded in 1877, the National
Tribune
played a pivotal role in the construction of Civil War memory among
Union veterans.v
It actively encouraged veterans to submit their recollections of the
war to its regular column “Fighting Them Over”—where the tale
of the “Ghost at Post 1” appeared. Collectively, the column
constituted a history of the war that was shaped by and meaningful
for veterans.vi
The
story of the “Ghost at Post 1” must therefore be understood in
the context of Civil War memory. It reflects the popular turn towards
reconciliation that dominated Civil War commemoration in the late
nineteenth century. In this period, aging white veterans increasingly
relished recollections of the war that emphasized the common bravery
of volunteer soldiers on both sides and minimized the moral and
political opposition over racial slavery that drove them into
conflict.vii
The “Ghost at Post 1” concludes with a particularly meaningful
act of reconciliation. By respectfully tending to the remains of the
unknown Confederate soldier, the men of the 6th Illinois Cavalry
quite literally put the spirit of sectional antagonism to rest.
Death, in this case at least, symbolically restored the common
humanity of erstwhile foes. There
is one final and compelling thread that can be traced through the
selection of stories in Haunted
by Memory: that is the
importance of women’s experiences to understanding the impact,
prosecution, and subsequent interpretation of the Civil War. When,
for example, Sarah Whiteside showed a Boston newspaper correspondent
the spot where fifty soldiers had once been buried in her garden, she
offered chilling testimony of how the war blurred the line between
the battlefield and the home front and, in particular, how it
violated the domestic world of women. Her story reminds readers that
women’s experiences were not ancillary to the war, but rather
central parts of the story.viii The
fortunes of armies in the field rose and fell with those of the
“Nameless Heroines” of the war, as one unknown contributor to the
Anaconda
Standard termed
them. Women both inspired and compelled men to enlist. At the same
time, painful and worrisome separations from female friends,
relatives, and loved ones drove some men to desertion. The anonymous
soldier in “The Corporal’s Story” claimed to have been so
distressed by news that his wife was seriously ill that he put a plan
to desert into action. Before he was missed, however, a female
apparition frightened and shamed him into returning to camp. Perhaps
most powerfully, however, these stories call us to reframe our
understanding of the destruction inflicted by the war. Particularly,
the psychological damage, devastation, and death wreaked on women.ix
Elizabeth Stuart Phelps observed keenly the omnipresence of
“sorrowing women” across the nation—“whose misery crowded the
land.”x
In keeping with the popular gothic tropes of the day, writers often
romanticized women’s grief. See, for example, A. L. Soule’s
account of the death of “Miss Blaine,” who he said succumbed to a
broken heart following the death of her lover in the cavalry. Another
correspondent claimed the ghost of a woman led him to the grave of
Robert H. Lane, who was killed in the Battle of Chantilly. He later
learned the ghostly woman was Lane’s fiancĂ©, who also died of a
broken heart. As
the most divisive and deadly event in US history, the Civil War
forever altered the lives of its survivors and the cultural landscape
of the nation. It encouraged Americans, who already embraced the
supernatural as an important element of their culture, to popularize
ghost stories as a means of examining the unsettling legacies of the
war. Whether they brought readers any degree of closure is hard to
say, but their prevalence indicates the extent of suffering the Civil
War inflicted. i
J. David Hacker, “A Census-Based Count of the Civil War Dead,”
Civil
War History
vol. 57, no. 4 (December 2011), 307–348. ii
Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Chapters
From a Life
(Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1896), 96–97. iii
Plymouth
[In.]
Tribune,
February 7, 1907. iv
See John R. Neff, Honoring
the Civil War Dead (Lawrence:
University of Kansas Press, 2005);
Faust, This
Republic of Suffering: Death and the American Civil War (New
York: Vintage, 2009). v
Crompton B. Burton, “‘Let Every Comrade Lend Us a Hand’:
George E. Lemon and the National
Tribune
in James Marten and Caroline E. Janney, Buying
and Selling Civil War Memory in Gilded Age America (Athens:
The University of Georgia Press, 2021), 68, 69. See also Brian
Matthew Jordan, Marching
Home: Union Veterans and Their Unending Civil War (New
York: Liveright, 2014), 75–79; Steven E. Sodergren, “‘Exposing
False History’: The Voice of the Union Veteran in the Pages of the
National
Tribune”
in Brian Matthew Jordan and Evan C. Rothera, eds. The
War Went On: Reconsidering the Lives of Civil War Veterans (Baton
Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2020), 137, 139. vi
Steven E. Sodergren, “‘Exposing False History’: The Voice of
the Union Veteran in the Pages of the National
Tribune” in The
War Went On: Reconsidering the Lives of Civil War Veterans,
eds. Brian Matthew Jordan and Evan C. Rothera (Baton Rouge:
Louisiana State University Press, 2020), 143–144. vii
Neff, Honoring
the Civil War Dead,
5; Caroline E. Janney, Remembering
the Civil War: Reunion and the Limits of Reconciliation (Chapel
Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 2013), 5–7; Nina
Silber, The
Romance of Reunion: Northerners and the South, 1865–1900 (Chapel
Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 1993), 162; Paul H.
Buck, The
Road to Reunion, 1865–1900 (New
York: Vintage, 1927), 310, 318–319. viii
See Stephanie McCurry, Women’s
War: Fighting and Surviving the Civil War
(Cambridge: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2019). ix
Lisa Tendrich Frank, “The Union War on Women” in The
Guerrilla Hunters: Irregular Conflicts during the Civil War (Baton
Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2017), 174–175. x
Phelps, 97.
Friday, May 15, 2026
Booknotes: Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville
• Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville: A Battlefield Guide by Brian K. Burton (Univ of Neb Press, 2026). University of Nebraska Press's This Hallowed Ground series of Civil War campaign and battlefield guidebooks debuted in 1999. Over the next decade and a half, a total of seven volumes sampling battles from all three major theaters of operation were published. Time between releases widened significantly after 2008, with gaps of six and twelve years between the two most recent publications, but it is great to see that the series is still going. I've always found the books to be useful and interesting alternatives to those following the well-established U.S. Army War College guide format. The newest installment, eighth in the series, is Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville: A Battlefield Guide. Its author, Brian Burton, is the contributor of another series volume, 2007's The Peninsula & Seven Days. Since both campaigns shared significant physical space, it is natural for a guide to combine Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville into a single volume. That way, visitors, especially those from afar who might have only one chance to drive the routes and walk the ground, can take in all or most of the sites during a one-day outing. From the description: "Through the winter of 1862 and spring of 1863, the U.S. Army and Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia clashed along the Rappahannock River in two major battles. Both demonstrated the height of power for the Confederacy in the Eastern Theater. The Battle of Fredericksburg was a tactically defensive triumph for Lee over the Army of the Potomac. The Battle of Chancellorsville, often described as Lee’s masterpiece, was a surprisingly aggressive response to Joseph Hooker’s operational flanking maneuver, as Lee sent Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson on a flanking maneuver of his own, dividing an army that already was substantially smaller than its Union counterpart to deliver a crushing blow at a decisive spot. It was in the latter stages of that blow that Jackson was mortally wounded by his own men. The battles, failed campaigns with high casualty rates for the Union, were a lead-up to the armies’ meeting at Gettysburg in July 1863." One of the strongest features of the series as a whole is how well the reader/user is oriented to the key visual cues at each stop (with solid maps to assist in that). In this volume, there are eleven stops for the Fredericksburg tour and thirteen for Chancellorsville, and if users follow only the most basic elements (with minimal walking) perhaps only eight hours are required to complete them.
Wednesday, May 13, 2026
Review - "William Watson and the Rob Roy: The Adventures of a Civil War Blockade Runner" by Walter Wilson
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
Booknotes: Crisis At Antietam
• Crisis at Antietam: The Cornfield and West Woods, September 17, 1862 by Steven Eden (Savas Beatie, 2026). Steven Eden's Crisis at Antietam: The Cornfield and West Woods, September 17, 1862 "provides a meticulous tactical analysis of the opening brutal hours of the Civil War’s bloodiest single day." As most Civil War readers already know, the sustained fighting on the northern end of the Antietam battlefield on September 17 was a horrifically bloody back and forth affair that could very easily have gone disastrously for the Confederates. That it didn't, and the Confederates narrowly but successfully held their positions at the end of the day, was the result of a combination of factors and decisions. From the description: "Eden’s in-depth study of the fighting on the Confederate left uncovers critical missed opportunities, profound command failures, and the unpredictable hand of sheer chance. The fighting that raged through the Miller Cornfield and West Woods quickly spiraled beyond command control. Officers often failed to restore order amid the maelstrom; regiments and brigades acted independently, pushing forward without orders or full awareness of the battle’s unfolding horror. Union forces drove the Confederate front to the precipice of collapse on three occasions, only for the Rebels to miraculously rally each time, stabilizing their fragile lines against overwhelming odds." Of course, much excellent work has already detailed the fighting in this sector of the battlefield as well as the battle on the whole, but there is always room for new angles. As Eden writes in his introduction, with both sides (at least in his view) poorly served by the generals at the top, his book differs most from previous accounts in its focus on "the decisions made by the colonels and captains" on the battlefield. Eden's text endeavors "to show what the men in the regiments saw, what they believed was happening, and why they acted the way they did" (pg. xi). As was the case with very recent works from other Savas Beatie authors such as Joseph Boslet and Scott Fink, Eden's investigation of Civil War combat incorporates his own personal combat experiences on the modern battlefield. Eden "draws on extensive original sources, including memoirs, official reports, and soldier letters, together with his own invaluable combat experience as a retired Army officer and former West Point military history instructor. His insights are fresh and authoritative. Crisis at Antietam challenges even seasoned readers to fundamentally reconsider the traditional narrative of that pivotal bloody September day by exposing the raw, brutal reality of command and combat at Antietam."
Thursday, May 7, 2026
Review - "Stonewall Jackson’s Winter Operations: The Raids Against the C&O Canal and the Bath-Romney Campaign, December 1861 to February 1862" by Timothy Snyder
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
Booknotes: Reasons We Fight
• Reasons We Fight: Tejanos and American Wars, 1836-1972 by Alex Mendoza (OU Press, 2026). Starting with the Texas Revolution and ending with the exit of U.S. forces from Vietnam, Alex Mendoza's Reasons We Fight: Tejanos and American Wars, 1836-1972 examines what motivated Texans of Mexican descent to fight for the United States. In the process, Mendoza "discovers a complex landscape of shifting loyalties, motivations, and notions of nationalism reflecting Tejanos' conflicted relationship with America as it changed over time." From the description: During much of the long period covered in the book, Tejano military service "often had less to do with nationalism or patriotism than with individual decisions. A soldier might be motivated by local allegiances, ethnic pride, a desire to defend his home, escape poverty, or seek adventure in a foreign war." However, "(b)y World War II, these notions had become stronger, and the Tejano community responded to the attack on Pearl Harbor with the patriotic fervor of their Anglo-American neighbors." More from the description: As referenced above, the twentieth century marked a significant transformation in Tejano patriotism and nationalism. Mendoza's study "traces a growing sense of nationalism through the mid-twentieth century, as Tejanos sought to refute their second-class status as "inferior" individuals—and to demonstrate their warrior tradition, thus confirming their rights to citizenship through battle. In essence, by the Second World War, Tejanos who joined the ranks of the military adopted the characteristics of American nationalism—sentiments that would only expand during the Cold War era conflicts in Korea and Vietnam." Since this is an ACW site, it behooves us to look at how much Civil War-era content and analysis is present. The war with Mexico and the Civil War are covered in Chapter 2, while the following chapter pairs Reconstruction with the Spanish-American War. According to the summary in the introduction, Tejano participation in the Mexican War was minimal, with "less than two dozen Spanish-surnamed volunteers" among Texas forces. Tejano allegiances were split during the American Civil War, with around 2,500 joining the Confederate Army and 958 donning Union blue. During Reconstruction, Tejanos "served as a paramilitary force" until the U.S. Army fully took over frontier and border security (pp. 4-5). In sum: "The first comprehensive record of Tejanos in war, Mendoza's account documents the forces and circumstances that shaped military attitudes among Mexican Texans, along with the challenges they faced navigating a complex of shifting ideas about identity, community, and nationalism—and America itself."
Thursday, April 30, 2026
Coming Soon (May '26 Edition)
• Many a Hand: Michigan and the Civil War by Roger Rosentreter.
• The Man Behind the Cane: Preston Brooks, Political Violence, and the Road to the Civil War by Paul Quigley.
• Henry Eustace McCulloch: Texas Ranger, Legislator, Civil War General by David Paul Smith.
• Retreat from Victory: The Battle of Malvern Hill and the End of the Seven Days, July 1, 1862 by Francis O'Reilly.
• Crisis at Antietam: The Cornfield and West Woods, September 17, 1862 by Steven Eden.
• Don Troiani's Civil War Uniforms of Union and Confederate Soldiers by Troiani & Field.
• Haunted by Memory: Ghost Stories of the American Civil War by Neff & Fluker, eds.
• Civil War Camps and Soldier Health: Sanitation and Military Effectiveness in the Union Army by Earl Hess.
1 - These monthly release lists are not meant to be exhaustive compilations of non-fiction releases. They routinely do not include reprints that are not significantly revised/expanded, publisher exclusives, children's books, and digital-only titles. Works that only tangentially address the war years are also generally excluded. Inevitably, one or more titles on this list will get a rescheduled release (and they do not get repeated later), so revisiting the past few "Coming Soon" posts is the best way to pick up stragglers.
Monday, April 27, 2026
Booknotes: The Battle of Fort Stedman
• The Battle of Fort Stedman: Lee's Forlorn Hope, March 25, 1865 by Edward B. McCaul, Jr. (McFarland, 2026). Given the advanced nature of the Union siege lines on the Petersburg front in 1864-65, it often seemed like Grant and Meade were overcautious in retaining so many men in the trenches during their series of offensives south and west of the city. Clearly, they feared a Confederate breakthrough counterstroke against a siege ring too thinly occupied, but that understandable defensiveness often robbed their assaulting columns of overwhelming numerical superiority over already overstretched Confederate positions. In the spring of 1865, a desperate Lee finally did try to directly test the Union death grip on his army, but the resulting Battle of Fort Stedman failed with predictable results. Historian Edward McCaul revisits that late-campaign event with his new book The Battle of Fort Stedman: Lee's Forlorn Hope, March 25, 1865. From the description: "The Confederate attack on Fort Stedman, near Petersburg, Virginia, was a desperate gambit that nearly succeeded in the final weeks of the Civil War. Shedding light on a battle that, despite being well known to historians, has received less attention than it deserves, this book examines the reasons for the battle, the Confederate preparations, the Federal defenses, the Confederate attack, the Federal counterattack, and the impact of the engagement in the overall war." Hindsight suggests that the attack's goals were impossible to achieve given the state and position of Lee's army along with the disparity in numbers between the two sides, but at the time "both Generals Robert E. Lee and John Gordon had great hopes of success. "The plan was well conceived and the execution of it very well done indeed," wrote Ulysses S. Grant, but confusion, misorientation, and daylight, along with a stubborn Federal defense, doomed it to failure." The Battle of Fort Stedman "analyzes the Confederate plan in depth, finding it prescient of much modern day military strategy. A breakthrough was to be followed by expansion of the breach and the entry of fast moving mobile units whose mission was to destroy the enemy's logistical base." McCaul's analysis is supported by maps and numerous period and modern photographs of the battlefield. Appendices explore the life of the fort's namesake (BG Griffin A. Stedman, Jr.), medal of honor awards associated with the battle, the Confederate force dispositions prior to the battle, Petersburg Campaign mining operations, and controversies. Discussion of the last seems to center around the signal for the attack and the time of the attack's launch. In the author's view, Fort Stedman lacks detailed coverage in the literature due to it being quickly overshadowed by the flurry of dramatic events that followed it from Five Forks onward. McCaul also argues that the battle's brevity, the overall dearth of Confederate reports, and comparatively small losses in killed and wounded when weighed against major Civil War battles, were other factors that heavily contributed to Fort Stedman being a well recognized but underscrutinized battle. This book aims to fill in those details.
Friday, April 24, 2026
Booknotes: Deserter Declarations
• Deserter Declarations: Letters from North Carolinians Who Abandoned Their Confederate Units edited by Judkin Browning (UGA Press, 2026). It's easy to see why Judkin Browning selected North Carolina for his study of deserter appeals. In addition to his earlier published work on the Civil War in the state, North Carolina was a natural choice given that, among the Confederate states, it "had the highest number of deserters. The Old North State also represents a microcosm of the entire South’s geography and demography." Browning's Deserter Declarations: Letters from North Carolinians Who Abandoned Their Confederate Units "explores nearly two hundred letters from Confederate deserters to Governor Zebulon B. Vance from 1861 to 1865." The letters, "from 169 individuals referring to 228 North Carolina deserters," were written by soldiers and citizens alike but "usually take the form of humble petitions written by those who were hiding in the woods or languishing in prison" (pp. 1-3). More from the description: Browning's study "shares the voices of deserters or friends and family petitioning on their behalf. Browning helps us understand who deserters were and lets us tease out some of the factors that motivated soldiers to leave their posts. These letters add vivid specificity to the often-contentious debates over deserters in the Confederacy and shed light on the changing attitudes of deserters over the course of the war." These appeal letters petered out in number by the final six months of the war, a situation Browning primarily attributes to soldiers being "no longer willing to risk their lives to rejoin the army in a doomed cause" (pg. 1). The letters are presented chronologically in six chapter groupings corresponding to time intervals of varying lengths. In addition to a general introduction, Browning contributes chapter introductions and footnotes identifying persons, places, and events mentioned in the letters. Browning has also posted supplemental material related to this study at the website www.tarheeltroops.org.
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
Booknotes: This Great Contest Afloat
• This Great Contest Afloat: The Civil War on the Seas, Coastline, Rivers, and Oceans by Neil P. Chatelain (Savas Beatie, 2026). From the description: During the Civil War, "(t)housands of ships took part, fighting battles alongside the armies and patrolling the globe. The actions of more than 100,000 sailors on both sides impacted military, naval, economic, and diplomatic aspects, all while providing the tools to realize the Anaconda Plan of isolating and splitting the Confederacy." The enormity of the Civil War's naval component is not lost on any experienced reader, but you can make an argument that it still occupies second fiddle status to the land forces when explaining Union victory and Confederate defeat. Neil Chatelain's new overview of the subject, This Great Contest Afloat: The Civil War on the Seas, Coastline, Rivers, and Oceans, serves as a strong reminder of the "extent and impact of Civil War naval activity." More from the description: Chatelain's discussion of the naval war divides the waterborne conflict into "four distinct theaters of conflict."
"(1)The offshore blockade was an economic and logistical campaign waged to determine whether Southern armies would remain properly supplied. (2) Sailors enacting that blockade worked in tandem with armies to assault cities and coastal areas to deny the Confederacy its ports and coastal infrastructure, while Confederate sailors fought to both break the blockade and keep control of its ports. (3) Meanwhile, fleets on both sides battled for control over the Mississippi River Valley in an effort to cleave off the Trans-Mississippi Theater from the rest of the Confederacy. (4) Finally, an economic and diplomatic war was waged across the oceans, where Southern privateers and commerce raiders prowled for Federal merchant ships."As the author "unpacks each of these naval theaters," he is aided by numerous maps (17), photographs, and period illustrations. Additional topics—the role of black men in the war's naval activity (both aboard ship and ashore), the naval organization of each side, and prominent naval war sites to visit today—are briefly explored in the appendix section. Books included in the Suggested Reading section, part of every Emerging Civil War series title, are well selected.
Monday, April 20, 2026
Booknotes: The First Pariah State
• The First Pariah State: How the Proslavery Confederacy Menaced the World by Robert E. Bonner (Princeton UP, 2026) From the description: "In 1861, proslavery secessionists severed ties with the United States, launched the Confederacy, and readied their new government to join the international community as a sovereign nation." In The First Pariah State, historian Robert Bonner "tells the story of how a transatlantic publicity campaign dashed Confederate hopes by ostracizing its rebellion as an immoral, global menace." With the largest South American state, Brazil, and the Spanish Empire still holding onto slavery (and they would do so for more than two decades after the end of the American Civil War), and with neither shunned internationally, convincing the world that the CSA was a unique proslavery threat was an essential part of the argument. According to Bonner, "anti-Confederates as a group routinely took up this issue, though never to the full satisfaction of skeptics." The chief proponent of the claim that the Confederacy displayed "unique depravity" as a slaveholding power was Massachusetts senator Charles Sumner, who was also the domestic ringleader of those who wanted to alter international law in ways that would formally ban recognition of states like the Confederacy (pp. 8-9). Regardless, the international campaign went beyond antislavery activism in its scale and sophistication. More from the description: "Improvised indictments circulated secessionists’ most incendiary words across the world. The Union and its foreign allies condemned the marauding Southern navy for disrupting high-seas commerce, violating civilized norms, and preparing for the resumption of the African slave trade. Abraham Lincoln and Senator Charles Sumner sought to convert rhetorical barbs and maritime anxieties into novel doctrines of international law designed to counter rogue regimes. And Union opinion-makers, including Black abolitionists, worked with European supporters to stymie the South’s naval expansion, war finances, and diplomatic efforts to gain formal recognition." In the introduction, Bonner acknowledges the pitfalls of applying modern diplomatic and political constructs to the mid-nineteenth century world order, but he nevertheless maintains that the Confederacy fits the mold as a precursor. One has to wonder, however, the degree to which things might have changed had the Confederate states achieved their independence. Attempting to paint the Confederacy as a rogue state seems to have been effective wartime propaganda on both sides of the Atlantic, but it's not difficult to imagine European powers, given past history, trans-Atlantic cultural ties, and the Confederacy having a form of government closely based on the USA model, forging diplomatic ties and trade agreements with a newly independent CSA. Perhaps he speculates on that in his coverage of the post-Civil War period. More from the description: "International worries about the Confederate rebellion waned after U.S. victory, and the Southern pariahdom of the 1860s left few enduring traces in international law or overseas remembrances. In fact, over the next century and a half, the pro-Confederate “Lost Cause” mythology proved to be as powerful abroad as it was within the restored United States."













