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Saturday, June 27, 2026

Coming Soon (July '26 Edition)

Scheduled for JULY 20261:

Forward to Richmond: The Virginia Campaign of 1862 by Brian Burton.
Civil War Chaos in Texas: The Tumultuous Tenure of Governor Pendleton Murrah by Lori Duran.
An Officer of Six Navies: The Life of Confederate Commander Hunter Davidson by Coski & Jacobs.
Unparalleled Horror: The Battles of Jerusalem Plank Road and the Crater, June 19-July 31, 1864 by Chick & Schmutz.
The Boy Generals: George Custer, Wesley Merritt, and the Cavalry of the Army of the Potomac, from the Shenandoah Valley to the Surrender at Appomattox by Adolfo Ovies.
The Civil War in Hampton Roads and the Outer Banks by Matthew Ericson.

Comments: Light Julys are a routine thing now (although SB took the opportunity to put out a full slate), but it does give me a chance to catch up. At least it's an interesting lineup.

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.

Thursday, June 25, 2026

Review - "Abraham Lincoln and the Heroic Legend: Reconsidering Lincoln as Commander in Chief" by Kenneth Noe

[Abraham Lincoln and the Heroic Legend: Reconsidering Lincoln as Commander in Chief by Kenneth W. Noe (Louisiana State University Press, 2026). Hardcover, 7 maps, photos, notes, bibliography, index. Pages main/total:xix,278/420. ISBN:978-0-8071-8521-6. $49.95]

Civil War readers raised on the vast body of post-Centennial publications can be forgiven for assuming that profound admiration for Abraham Lincoln as commander in chief has been an unbroken popular and scholarly phenomenon ever since the martyred president's April 1865 assassination. While this "heroic legend," as historian Kenneth Noe puts it, of Lincolnian strategic brilliance formed through a winning combination of exceptional natural intellect, close study of contemporary military science, and bitter early-war experience still predominates to this day, a closer following of the historiography reveals a winding road rather than a straight, well-worn pathway. Delving deeply into a near century-long stretch of Lincoln publishing produced after the end of the Civil War, Noe's Abraham Lincoln and the Heroic Legend: Reconsidering Lincoln as Commander in Chief reinvestigates this widely cherished component of the set of core beliefs that still surround our assessment of Lincoln's war presidency.

So how does Noe define the Lincoln "heroic legend?" Intertwined with it are key elements of Lincoln's statesmanship, character/personality,  legendary eloquence, and mastery of the political game, but it is centrally about war leadership. Noe's conceptualization of the heroic legend is identified, developed, and scrutinized at great length in the book, but, for our purposes here, it can be summarized (in the author's own words) as "the now-canonical assertion that Abraham Lincoln as commander in chief was a military genius both strategically and tactically, not to mention a naturally intuitive and self-taught military thinker so modern in his views that he became a superior commander to his generals" (pg. 1). Though the biographical and military history literature published over the past few decades has exposed (or, in many cases, revived from earlier writings) the evident flaws in that edifice, the concept of Commander in Chief Lincoln as natural military genius still holds broad sway, especially in the popular mind.

As referenced above, the heroic legend and its principal assumptions, as deeply ingrained as they are, nevertheless continue to be reevaluated. Over the first four chapters of this book comprising Part I, Noe offers readers a well-structured critical survey of Lincoln as commander in chief, one that explores broad themes as well as very specific strategic decisions and tactical interventions. It was over this 1861-65 period, obviously, that the heroic legend was spawned, and Noe's text highlights both key elements of the developing legend and those objections that strongly challenge its central tenets.

Naturally, every discussion of Lincoln as commander in chief devotes a great deal of attention to the president's fraught relationship with George McClellan, and Noe's does as well. That troubled relationship dominated how Union forces conducted themselves over much of the war's first half, and, with the top leadership duo during that period frequently at loggerheads, the heroic legend practically demands that Lincoln be right and McClellan be wrong. Nevertheless, a common strain of Lincoln criticism is heavily grounded in a corresponding defense of McClellan (and the reverse is also the case, with Lincoln hagiography routinely pairing profound admiration of Lincoln with deep disdain for all things McClellan). Noe assiduously avoids both camps. An important theme that emerged from the messy final break-up between the two in late-1862 was Lincoln's development of an almost knee-jerk negative response to his top generals proposing to conduct their campaigns through "strategy." After McClellan left the scene, a frustrated Lincoln tended to equate any favoring of the indirect approach with McClellan-like (as he saw it) combat hesitation and avoidance. As Brooks Simpson has maintained in his persuasive rebuttal to the notion that Lincoln finally found his man in U.S. Grant and consequently gave the new General in Chief a free hand in planning the end of the war, this stubborn mistrust even extended to Grant's proposals for the eastern theater in 1864, committing the Army of the Potomac to a grinding overland campaign.

In addition to critiques related to specific campaign decisions, significant among them Lincoln's personal management of the final stages of the 1862 Shenandoah Valley Campaign (a meddling that failed spectacularly), more general themes that contest the Lincoln heroic legend emerge in Noe's retelling. All of these issues have been raised before in some way or another, but Noe's fresh synthesis is well-organized and engagingly presented. Among these challenges to the heroic legend are Lincoln's untimely interventions in military affairs, his curtailment of civil liberty protections, his flawed appreciation of weather and logistical limitations, his impairment of army discipline and efficiency through allowing scheming officers to bypass the proper chain of command, his arguably imbalanced prioritization of political considerations when it came to important command appointments and strategic goals, and his inability until late in the process to find top generals who could fulfill his expectations. The weight assigned to these and other objections to the heroic legend might lead some readers to accuse the author of being too harsh toward Lincoln's wartime leadership (which achieved total victory in the end after all), but one might argue that it is a necessary precondition for comprehending the depth and pervasiveness of the skepticism Lincoln contemporaries and successive generations alike felt toward the president's military management skills before the tide of interpretation shifted decisively during the period between the two world wars (all of that addressed in Part II).

Part II brilliantly traces the development and evolution of the Lincoln heroic legend. Wading through both well-known and obscure Lincoln biography and commentary (both domestic and foreign) that emerged between roughly 1865 and 1959 must have involved an incredible effort of new reading and fresh revisitation. As Noe explains, the legend really originated with Lincoln himself. In matters of military strategy, Lincoln quickly transformed from hesitant amateur conscious of his inexperience to self-confident interventionist entirely willing to question and overrule his professional military advisers and commanders in the field. Indeed, as the war progressed, Lincoln damned his top generals again and again for not recognizing what he himself claimed to recognize as the proper course for employing a national strategy that would crush Confederate resistance. After the war, the most notable early proponents of the heroic legend were former Lincoln secretaries Hay and Nicolay, whose ten-volume Abraham Lincoln: A History sanctified the Lincoln memory and was the leading early image maker of the slain president as masterful strategist. Full enshrinement would arrive much later.

Noe's Part II chapters offer readers a wonderfully comprehensive and incisively written crash course in the extended historiography of Lincoln as commander in chief. Readers unfamiliar with that literature will likely be surprised to discover that Lincoln's wartime role as commander in chief was little discussed by contemporary biographers and for decades after the beloved president's death, and when it was it was a mixed commentary at best, often negative in nature. Nevertheless, it is often the case that current events trigger intense reappraisal, sometimes seismic in nature, of historical figures. In Lincoln's case it was the civilizational trauma of the Great War and the rise of totalitarian regimes in Europe that spawned a new positive outlook on Lincoln as commander in chief. Even though American writers and historians of the time continued to focus on other parts of Lincoln's life and presidency, British military authors spawned a new appreciation of Lincoln's alleged military genius. While some writers such as Viscount Wolseley, G.F.R. Henderson, and B.H. Liddell Hart found little in Lincoln's military mind to admire, others such as Sir Frederick Barton Maurice, disgusted with his own country's civilian leadership, looked to Lincoln as a modern role model. Much more positive in his attempt to reboot the entire debate over Lincoln's abilities as a strategist was the enthusiastic championing of Lincoln from General Colin Robert Ballard. Ballard and Maurice both lauded Lincoln as the benevolent dictator made necessary by the times. Finally, J.F.C. Fuller further idealized Lincoln and especially his relationship with Grant. Though sincere, Fuller's appreciation of Lincoln's superior statesmanship and the president's development into a gifted strategist was, in Noe's view, also wielded as a "tool to pillory the generals of the Great War and shape the future" (pg. 230). In the end, Noe concludes that these writer-generals "completed the British reconstruction of the heroic legend," and, in the process, "canonized it." (pg. 234). The opinions of those disillusioned British generals possessed considerable trans-Atlantic influence, but a pair of American scholars, late to the game, eventually set things in stone.

Just like the Great War and interwar years influenced Lincoln's broader meaning to British writers, World War II and the ensuing Cold War deeply impacted how American writers revisited the Lincoln war presidency. Prior to WW2, Revisionist leading light James Randall spurred a renewed positivity when it came to Lincoln, his leadership, and his controversial exercise of presidential war powers. Still though, Randall did not rate Lincoln a military genius, his assessment of Lincoln as commander in chief far from bolstering the heroic legend (and he defended McClellan more than most). Lincoln was not a military despot (enlightened or otherwise) in Randall's view either. Noe does not equate Randall's views on avoiding war to isolationism, but he sees Randall's impact as fading alongside the spirit of the times, as U.S. involvement in WW2 took on the popular spirit of a moral crusade and, under the influence of the Roosevelt war presidency, "Lincoln metamorphosed into a symbol of democracy, freedom, just war, and military preparedness" (pg. 237). Out were Randall's strident antiwar stance and doubts about ending domestic slavery being worth the destructive costs of war, and in was a New Nationalist revival of "an interpretation of the Civil War that revolved around slavery, irrepressible conflict, and a good war" (pg. 242). This new intellectual climate primed a massive expansion of the heroic legend, and the two men leading that charge were Kenneth P. Williams and T. Harry Williams. In Lincoln Finds a General, Kenneth Williams, with both world wars in the back of his mind, lauded Lincoln's genius in both military and political affairs and praised Grant from on high while at the same time heaping scorn upon McClellan. Both books remain major forces in the field, but T. Harry Williams's Lincoln and His Generals, with its more sophisticated approach to Lincoln, McClellan, Grant, and the rest, ultimately proved the most influential of the two groundbreaking works. Though it is understandable that Part II ends with T. Harry Williams's grand triumph and the enshrinement of his contribution to the Lincoln heroic legend, it still would have been interesting to read the author's evaluation of more recent popular proponents such as James McPherson.

Even today, the heroic legend that still shapes our modern understanding of Lincoln as commander in chief is so ironclad that attempts to challenge it have only scratched the armor. It is not for want of trying, however. Casting aside the cranks, Noe's conclusion outlines the game efforts of four writers, Brooks Simpson, Geoffrey Perret, William Marvel, and Elizabeth Brown Pryor, whose sound criticisms on a variety of fronts tried but failed to substantially dent, let alone shatter, the legend. Noe ends the discussion on a bit of a down note by linking the uses and misuses of the Lincoln heroic legend to a buttressing of the modern "Imperial Presidency," with its ever further expansions of presidential war powers.

Of all the enduring components of the Lincoln canonization, his performance as commander in chief provides some of the most fertile ground for critical reevaluation. Kenneth Noe's impressive Abraham Lincoln and the Heroic Legend provides both new thrust to that movement as well as an essential historical framework for understanding exactly how and why Lincoln came to be celebrated as one of the finest, if not the finest, presidential war leaders in our nation's history.

Monday, June 22, 2026

Booknotes: Through the Civil War with the 14th Ohio Infantry

New Arrival:

Through the Civil War with the 14th Ohio Infantry: Horatio Quiggle’s Memoir of Service, 1861-1865 edited by Joanna R. Hagopian & David A. Powell (Savas Beatie, 2026).

Ohioan Horatio Quiggle was as dedicated a Union soldier as one could be. "He initially joined the 14th Ohio Infantry, a three-month militia unit from northwestern Ohio, in April 1861. After its term expired that August, he promptly reenrolled in the three-year organization of the 14th, serving with the Army of the Ohio (later christened the Army of the Cumberland). On December 17, 1863, he again reenlisted for the duration of the war, not mustering out until the summer of 1865. His enduring commitment offers a unique perspective on the entire wartime experience."

Quiggle's postwar account of his Civil War experiences, which was based on his wartime diary, has been co-edited by Joanna Hagopian and David Powell and published under the title Through the Civil War with the 14th Ohio Infantry: Horatio Quiggle’s Memoir of Service, 1861-1865. Apparently, there isn't terribly much primary source material available out there for the 14th, which makes this publication all the more valuable.

Quiggle's regiment certainly had an eventful fighting career. More from the description: "It fought at Mill Springs in early 1862 and engaged repeatedly under Generals Don C. Buell, William S. Rosecrans, and George H. Thomas. Among its most brutal engagements were the battles in Georgia at Chickamauga in September 1863, and a year later at Jonesboro outside Atlanta. Quiggle’s firsthand descriptions of Chickamauga’s bloody scenes are particularly striking, offering vivid insight into the realities of combat."

The Quiggle memoir and other connected materials have been preserved by Hagopian's family for generations, and with the expert assistance of David Powell, these are presented to the reader in well-organized fashion. Hagopian starts things off with a brief Quiggle family history. Each chapter of Quiggle's account is duly footnoted but also enhanced through inclusion of other letters from the regiment as well one or two local newspaper articles. The appendix section contains a brief 14th Ohio unit history, a collection of 14th Ohio soldier letters published in the Daily Toledo Blade newspaper, and a compilation of veteran writings (both campaign reports and National Tribune articles).

Friday, June 19, 2026

Booknotes: The Fenian Empire

New Arrival:

The Fenian Empire: A Hemispheric History of Irish Republican Nationalism by Patrick J. Mahoney (NYU Press, 2026).

Most visitors to this site have at least some notion, vague as it might be, of the impact of those involved in the Fenian Movement and their activities in North America during the Civil War era. The war itself produced a large body of experienced fighters, but where would they be deployed in service of the cause?

From the description: "In the aftermath of the American Civil War, the Fenian movement stood at a crossroads. Thousands of demobilized Irish soldiers held the power to reshape history. Inspired by a popular desire to expel monarchical and aristocratic influence from the New World, many American Fenians began to align their efforts to establish an independent Irish Republic with the wider aims of American republican expansion. In doing so, the Fenians’ fight for Irish liberation became more than a single cause. It was a web of alliances, contradictions, and ambitions, carried out under a common banner of republicanism."

Irish historian Patrick Mahoney reminds us that that common banner was raised in the western hemisphere over a wide geographical area, involving many peoples and groups. His book, The Fenian Empire, "uncovers the untold story of how Fenianism intersected with race, colonialism, and internationalist solidarity across North America and the Caribbean at a time of intense political turmoil." Mahoney's examination unfolds across four major fronts: the Reconstruction South, the American frontier, Mexico, and Cuba. More from the description: "Fueled by the cause of republican expansion, the period saw the unlikely emergence of Black Fenian volunteers, attempts to land Fenian troops into Mexico and Cuba, and the participation of many Fenians in the subjugation of Native peoples along the western plains of North America. While their views and strategies varied, their aim remained clear: Irish freedom."

Utilizing an "expansive range of archives and sources across multiple languages," Patrick Mahoney's The Fenian Empire "delivers a fresh take on the Fenian story, guiding readers through a world of clandestine meetings, personal networks, propaganda, and long-forgotten military operations."

Thursday, June 18, 2026

Booknotes: Retreat From Victory

New Arrival:

Retreat from Victory: The Battle of Malvern Hill and the End of the Seven Days, July 1, 1862 by Francis Augustín O’Reilly (Savas Beatie, 2026).

With book-length popular and scholarly histories detailing Civil War battles of all sizes and significance released in great numbers over the years, one might have expected that all of the big fights of the 1862 Peninsula Campaign, and perhaps most of the smaller ones, would have been the objects of one or more standalone studies by now. Oddly enough, though, that has not been the case. However, two long-anticipated projects, R.E.L. Krick's Gaines's Mill study and now Frank O'Reilly's Retreat from Victory: The Battle of Malvern Hill and the End of the Seven Days, July 1, 1862, are finally in our hands.

From the description: "Malvern Hill on July 1, 1862, marked the climax of the Seven Days’ Battles around Richmond, Virginia. For the first time since the Civil War began, the full might of Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan’s Union Army of the Potomac and Gen. Robert E. Lee’s Confederate Army of Northern Virginia met on one field. The world watched and wondered as this high-stakes combat played out on the doorstep of the Confederate capital. The Union army emerged victorious with its superior positions and overwhelming artillery firepower, yet McClellan retreated from victory to establish a safe base on the James River. Lee’s army secured a default victory simply by holding the battlefield and saving Richmond from capture."

Prior to O'Reilly's work, the best overall account of Malvern Hill sat inside Brian Burton's excellent Seven Days campaign study Extraordinary Circumstances (2001). Of course, in describing one of many major battles fought during that week, the space devoted to Malvern Hill coverage was necessarily limited. Now, in O'Reilly's book we get "the first book-length treatment of this critical and pivotal combat."

Indeed, O'Reilly's book, with its nearly 400 pages of main narrative supported by 20 original maps, offers a comprehensive portrait of the battle that's unprecedented in detail and scope. More from the description: O’Reilly's Retreat from Victory "examines the singular struggle at Malvern Hill in depth and from a wide variety of perspectives, including its implications for the war, the armies, the opposing governments, the people, and slavery. He pieces together the tactical movements of troops on the battlefield and the intentions of leaders on the front lines and in the halls of government in Washington, D.C., and Richmond, Virginia. Above all, he gives voice to the soldiers, sharing their experiences in combat and on campaign."

In the larger picture, Malvern Hill, the bloody conclusion to the Seven Days epic, "elevated General Lee’s career and marked the beginning of the end of General McClellan’s. It was a watershed moment when the Civil War transformed from a rebellion into a revolution."

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Fall/Winter University Press Catalogs '26

It's that time of year again when the university presses roll out their upcoming seasonal catalogs. Overall numbers aren't terribly high (they would be higher if we include Civil War-adjacent stuff), but I am really liking the range of topics spread out across the board.

LSU:
Grant and His Generals by Henry Laver.

Kent State:
(forthcoming)

Friday, June 12, 2026

Booknotes: The U.S. Navy Medical Department in the Civil War

New Arrival:

The U.S. Navy Medical Department in the Civil War by Guy R. Hasegawa (McFarland, 2026).

During the Civil War, the United States Navy sustained active operations in some of continent's most dangerously unhealthy climes, those extreme challenges to personnel fitness under extended periods of close confinement being one of the more understudied aspects of the service.

From the description: "The Civil War U.S Navy--charged with blockading the Southern coast, controlling the Mississippi River and participating in Army-Navy operations--faced daunting medical difficulties. These included not only combat injuries but also malaria, yellow fever and other infectious diseases that all hampered the Navy's ability to wage war."

Content inside Guy Hasegawa's new book The U.S. Navy Medical Department in the Civil War is similar in nature and structure to that of a pair of his earlier works, Matchless Organization: The Confederate Army Medical Department (2021) and The Confederate Navy Medical Corps: Organization, Personnel and Actions (2024). All explore key matters such as departmental administration, organizational hierarchy, procurement, personnel assignments and duties, and hospital management.

As was the case with the army, U.S. Navy medical services were initially overwhelmed but soon adapted to the scale of the conflict. More from the description: "The tremendous wartime expansion in naval personnel and vessels outpaced the ability to provide sufficient qualified medical personnel, and the initial absence of Union naval hospitals in the South forced officials to improvise care for the most seriously ill or injured sailors and marines. The wide dispersal of vessels and facilities necessitated changes in the distribution of supplies. The U.S. Navy Medical Department responded to these challenges creatively, transforming their methods, calling on other government entities for assistance and applying political maneuvers."

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Booknotes: The Forts Henry and Donelson Campaign

New Arrival:

The Forts Henry and Donelson Campaign: February 6–16, 1862 edited by Steven E. Woodworth and Charles D. Grear (SIU Press, 2026).

Southern Illinois University Press's Civil War Campaigns in the Heartland essay anthology series, edited by Steven Woodworth, opened its doors in 2009 with the publication of The Shiloh Campaign. From the start, planning was very ambitious (see series roadmap), and pacing challenges have produced some wide gaps between releases, but it is great to see that the wheels are still turning. Changes over the years include the addition of a series co-editor, Charles Grear, and the renaming of the series to Civil War Campaigns in the West. Releasing hardcover and paperback versions at the same time is a new development. The eighth and newest installment, the first in six years, is The Forts Henry and Donelson Campaign: February 6–16, 1862. It addresses a series of military events that not only resulted in the "first major strategic breakthrough of the war" but "signaled a dramatic shift in momentum and elevated Grant’s national profile."

From the description: In the volume's seven essays "leading and emerging scholars provide in-depth analyses of previously overlooked aspects of the Forts Henry and Donelson campaign. Contributors examine how ecological forces influenced the campaign, the effectiveness of the joint command between the Union army and navy, and Union brigadier general Charles F. Smith’s assault that doomed Fort Donelson. They also explore the battle’s impact on the military career of Nathan Bedford Forrest, the effects of surprise during the Confederate breakout attempt from Fort Donelson, Confederate colonel Gabriel Wharton’s memoir, and how the loss of the forts showed Texans that the fight to preserve the enslaved South would cost them more than they had imagined."

Here's the full Table of Contents:

Introduction - Steven E. Woodworth
1. Natural Chaos: Ecological Forces and the Struggle for Forts Henry and Donelson by Michael Burns.
2. Joint Command: The Union Gunboats at Forts Henry and Donelson by Blakeney K. Hill.
3. Nathan Bedford Forrest and the Fort Donelson Dilemmas by Brian S. Wills.
4. Surprise and Security: Launching and Resisting the Confederate Breakout at Fort Donelson by Jonathan M. Steplyk.
5. C. F. Smith's Attack at Fort Donelson by Steven E. Woodworth.
6. Justifying Surrender: Colonel Gabriel C. Wharton at Fort Donelson by Sheilah R. Elwardani.
7. “This Time of Our Ill Success and Defeat”: Texans' Reaction to the Battle of Fort Donelson by Charles D. Grear.

All of the previous series volumes have been covered on the site, the full reviews easily found using the search bar.

Monday, June 8, 2026

Booknotes: Rebels and Regimes

New Arrival:

Rebels and Regimes: The Nature of Violent Resistance in the Nineteenth Century edited by Andrew Fialka & Aaron Sheehan-Dean (LSU Press, 2026).

From the description: Rebels and Regimes "presents a global view of the nature of violent resistance throughout the nineteenth century. The volume’s breadth and scope reveal commonalities and differences among regimes and insurgents in their different contexts, offering a view that the participants themselves never had."

More from the description: "Using a comparative approach to show how established regimes fought rebels, the volume emphasizes the importance of race, political rhetoric, and historians’ paradigms in understanding nineteenth-century violence."

In pursuit of that, volume editors Andrew Fialka and Aaron Sheehan-Dean assembled ten essays "each focused on a specific conflict or period of colonial overreach: imperialist efforts against Caribbean maroons, the Peninsular War, the Second Seminole War, the Taiping Rebellion, the American Civil War, Russian imperial expansion, British imperial expansion in both India and South Africa, the War of the Triple Alliance, and the Dutch-Aceh War."

The American Civil War essay, from historian Joseph Beilein, offers a "short biography" of the irregular warfare aspect of the conflict. In it, Beilein "carefully tracks the origins of the regular/irregular dichotomy to one of the American conflict's chief thinkers, Henry W. Halleck." In documenting this part of the ACW, "participants crafted an archival record and a language of war to valorize or demonize, and later generations of historians adopted or ignored those labels at their own peril" (pg. 4).

Friday, June 5, 2026

Review - "Decisions on Western Waters: The Twenty-Seven Critical Decisions That Defined the Battles" by Michael Becker

[Decisions on Western Waters: The Twenty-Seven Critical Decisions That Defined the Battles by Michael D. Becker (University of Tennessee Press, 2026). Softcover, 10 maps, photos, illustrations, driving tour, orders of battle, glossary, notes, bibliography, index. Pages main/total:xv,142/290. ISBN:979-8-89527-045-5. $24.95]

Naturally enough, the major land campaigns and battles fought in the eastern and western theaters have been the primary focus of University of Tennessee Press's prolific Campaign Decisions in America's Civil War series. However, there has been some shift in direction over the past year and a half or so, with the subject matter of two volumes [Decisions of the Galveston Campaigns (2024) and Decisions of the Red River Campaign (2025)] finally crossing into the Trans-Mississippi theater of operations. Naval orientation is also on the rise, another welcome development. As was the case with Edward Cotham's Galveston book, Michael Becker's Decisions on Western Waters: The Twenty-Seven Critical Decisions That Defined the Battles centers naval and combined operations in its analysis while also departing significantly from the established structural format of addressing only a single, sharply defined campaign. Indeed, Becker's book covers a series of interconnected land and naval operations played out over an extended period of time (1861-64), the unifying theme of which was the bitterly contested strategic struggle for control over the mighty Mississippi River and its major tributaries. Both Cotham and Becker's contributions demonstrate that the format of the series can be adaptable without losing the core elements of its character and identity.

Many readers of this review will already be familiar with the series and its structure, at the center of which is the concept of the "critical decision." For those new to the series, critical decisions, as distinct from mere important decisions, not only have major consequences in their own right but possess the key added feature of substantially shaping those decisions and events that follow it over the course of the rest of the campaign and beyond. For each critical decision, identification and analysis unfolds in the following sequence: Situation, Options, Decision, and Result(s)/Impact. Situation describes a particular state of politico-military affairs (categorized as strategic, operational, tactical, organizational, personnel related, or logistical in nature) at a moment pivotal enough to prompt a critical decision. That decision framework provides readers with the background context necessary to recognize and evaluate the Options (two or more in number) available to the decision-maker. The historical Decision selected from those options by a critical decision-maker is then briefly described. The ensuing Result(s)/Impact section recounts what happened and outlines the ways in which the decision's outcome shaped the historical events that followed. An Alternative Decision/Scenario section is optional for contributors (some go deep into alternate history conjecture while others omit it altogether). In this case, Becker ventures into that territory selectively.

Each of the six categories of critical decisions are represented at least twice in Becker's analysis. While operational and tactical decisions comprise the majority, their sources (both military and civilian leaders) and categorical diversity are emblematic of the range of key actors and factors involved with the initial conception, support, and conduct of Civil War military campaigns. The expansive time interval and geographical space involved with the events of this particular volume are uniquely broad, but the author is up to the challenge when it comes to connecting the decisions in coherent fashion.

The twenty-seven critical decisions involved in securing control over the key waterways of the inland West are organized into four chapters by year: 1861 (9 decisions), 1862 (14), 1863 (2), and 1864 (2). That the great majority are concentrated in the first two years of the war really highlights the exemplary foresight, urgency, determination, and flexibility of Union planners, who built a vast squadron of river gunboats of various types from scratch and quickly put them to highly effective use without any prior experience in the areas of design and tactics from earlier wars. The great rapidity with which that process occurred denied their much more resource-strapped and disorganized Confederate opponents the breathing space needed to coordinate an effective response. The result was that squadron-scale Confederate naval resistance on the western rivers was effectively destroyed by mid-1862. In terms of assessing the campaign to control the western waterways, it might be argued that there were no more critical decisions to had after Vicksburg and Port Hudson were both secured by Union forces in July 1863, but the Red River Campaign of the following spring placed a large proportion of Mississippi River Squadron capital ships at great risk, making Becker's two 1864 decisions (both related to that campaign) worthy of consideration. Nevertheless, even if the entire Union naval contingent was lost it is difficult to imagine the Confederates gaining the capacity to seriously threaten Union control of Mississippi River navigation at that late stage of the war.

Becker's discussion demonstrates strong awareness and appreciation of recent contributions to the literature. His presentation and analysis of critical 1861-62 Confederate decision-making aligns closely with the mistakes and challenges so astutely identified and examined in Neil Chatelain's insightful 2020 study Defending the Arteries of Rebellion: Confederate Naval Operations in the Mississippi River Valley, 1861-1865. Among these were inefficient resource allocation, dispersal of effort through debilitating competition over scarce resources, strategic indecision, and lack of unified command. Becker usefully reminds us that, at one point, five different civilian and governmental entities had jurisdiction over fighting vessels in the region, and the single professional naval officer given the most authority, George Hollins, was relieved of command at the worst possible moment. As the author outlines in the book, all of those factors impacted critical decision-making in ways that directly contributed to epic disaster for the Confederate defense of the Upper and Lower Mississippi River Valley during the early war period. In similar vein, the critical decision involving staff officer Lewis B. Parsons's reorganization of theater transportation resources demonstrates keen appreciation of the recent literature's assessment of Union rail and river logistics.

Books of this type are always going to have a subjective element to them. Some readers will point toward possible omissions or differ with the author in identifying certain decisions as being truly critical. One of the latter might be the decision surrounding Union construction of a mortar boat flotilla for shore bombardment. While these vessels were deployed during a number of important ship vs. shore actions fought along the Mississippi River Valley, it would be difficult to maintain that they had a critical impact on any of them. In the area of possible omissions, Becker makes strong cases for designating a number of naval administration matters as critical decisions, but one might also suggest that promoting David Dixon Porter to command the new Mississippi River Squadron was a critical personnel related decision. Compatible personalities mattered a very great deal when any and all naval assistance provided to army operations had to be framed as an interservice request. The personal and professional harmony that existed between Porter's navy and Grant and Sherman's army was instrumental to Union victory on a multitude of occasions, not least of which during the very difficult Vicksburg Campaign. In terms of actual complaints, the Decision and Results/Impact sections of some situations draw significant elements from more than one Option choice, which is a practice not typical of the series. Given that that pops up most often in situations with option numbers as high as four and five, option consolidation would have been one way to address that occasional source of confusion.

A major feature of every book in the series is the driving tour appendix tied to the main text's critical decision analysis. This is achieved through a combination of additional support text from the author and focused excerpts from official reports and military communications. As one might imagine, Becker's task was an especially challenging one given the vast size of the Mississippi River Valley area of operations. Even with careful organization, the twelve tour stops between Cairo, Illinois and Bailey's Dam on the Red River in Louisiana take the user on a journey of 1,300 miles! The appendix section also contains vessel orders of battle for each of the major actions discussed in the text.

A novel variation on the typical subject matter of the Campaign Decisions in America's Civil War series, Michael Becker's Decisions on Western Waters successfully applies the critical decision analysis structure to one of the war's longest running and most geographically extensive military contests, effectively framing the opening of the Mississippi as a single campaign of critical significance. With available land campaigns of major status dwindling in number, it will be interesting to see what other unusual pathways the series might take.

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Booknotes: Out of This Strife Will Come Freedom

New Arrival:

Out of This Strife Will Come Freedom: Free People of Color and the Fight for Equal Rights in the Civil War Era by Warren Eugene Milteer, Jr. (UNC Press, 2026).

In the introduction to his book Out of This Strife Will Come Freedom: Free People of Color and the Fight for Equal Rights in the Civil War Era Warren Eugene Milteer argues that his fellow historians "have done little to examine the lived experiences of free people of color in a way that highlights their distinct position in Civil War-era society." Spread across the entire breadth of the country and numbering almost half a million, with just over half concentrated along the Atlantic Seaboard, the experience of freedom held by these individuals molded "(t)heir understandings of the importance of national unity, slavery and emancipation, military participation, equal rights, and other issues..." (pg. 2).

From the description: "Their unique status as already free persons before emancipation shaped their experiences of military service, political activism, and community life in ways distinct from those newly freed from slavery and affected how they navigated the pursuit of equal rights."

Milteer recognizes these already free persons as a "diverse lot," his study group including both persons born free and those who "had gained their liberty at some point in their lives through the legal process of manumission." Others "obtained their freedom through purchases, gifts, court cases, and the last wills and testaments of masters" (pg. 2-3).

Out of This Strife Will Come Freedom "brings the stories of free people of color to the forefront, revealing that freedom was not simply the absence of enslavement but a powerful foundation of identity, rights, and belonging. Their determined struggles and strategies before, during, and after the war helped redefine what it meant to be a citizen in a nation grappling with democracy and equality."

Monday, June 1, 2026

Booknotes: Henry Eustace McCulloch

New Arrival:

Henry Eustace McCulloch: Texas Ranger, Legislator, Civil War General by David Paul Smith (LSU Press, 2026).

Parlaying his considerable antebellum frontier military service into a position in the Confederate high command typically reserved for West Pointers, Texan and brigadier general Ben McCulloch led southern armies in the two most prominent early-war battles fought west of the Mississippi, Wilson's Creek and Pea Ridge. His Civil War career was cut short by a sharpshooter's bullet in the opening stages of the latter fight, leaving us to wonder what might have been, but the McCulloch name and influence carried on in the form of his lesser-known brother, Henry McCulloch, who was in his own right a significant Texas military figure both before and during the Civil War.

From the description: "In his military career, Henry McCulloch served with his brother Ben in one of the first Texas Ranger companies after the Texas Revolution of 1836, defended settlers during the Great Comanche Raid of 1840, and helped to defeat Mexican forces that reoccupied San Antonio in 1842. He also served as a captain in the United States Army during the Mexican-American War." David Paul Smith's Henry Eustace McCulloch: Texas Ranger, Legislator, Civil War General offers the first full account of the younger McCulloch's life in politics and the military.

Directing Confederate troops throughout the Civil War, Henry McCulloch eventually led a brigade in Walker's Texas Division and commanded large administrative sub-districts in Texas. More from the description: McCulloch "commanded a regiment of Rangers that became the first unit sworn in by the Confederacy. McCulloch later served as the temporary commander of the Department of Texas, directed regiments defending territory around San Antonio, briefly led the Texas Division, and participated in the attack at Milliken’s Bend, Louisiana."

As referenced earlier, Henry McCulloch was also a noteworthy Civil War-era politician. More: "In the 1850s, voters in Texas elected McCulloch to the state legislature, where he advocated for creating additional Ranger units to defend settlers on the frontier." "After the Civil War, McCulloch remained active in politics, leading a group supporting Richard Coke during the Coke-Davis imbroglio in 1873 and running as the Populist Party’s candidate for governor in 1892."

Those primarily interested in McCulloch's Civil War military career will be not be disappointed at the level of attention paid to that period. Roughly half the book examines that prominent phase of McCulloch's life, with the first four chapters covering his antebellum life in Texas and two additional chapters addressing his pre-war and post-war political activities. Smith's biography "reveals McCulloch’s involvement in events that shaped nearly all of nineteenth-century Texas history, restoring his legacy as one of the state’s most important military leaders and politicians."

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Coming Soon (June '26 Edition)

Scheduled for JUN 20261:

Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville: A Battlefield Guide by Brian Burton.
Emancipation War: The Fall of Slavery and the Coming of the Thirteenth Amendment by Damon Root.
The Forts Henry and Donelson Campaign: February 6–16, 1862 by Woodworth & Grear, eds.
The Federal Signal Service at Antietam: Stations, Officers and Battlefield Intelligence on America's Bloodiest Day by Cory Pfarr.
The Fenian Empire: A Hemispheric History of Irish Republican Nationalism by Patrick Mahoney.
Through the Civil War with the Fourteenth Ohio Infantry: Horatio Quiggle’s Memoir of Service, 1861-1865 by Hagopian & Powell, eds.
Lincoln Home by Jonathan White.
A Hell of a Regiment: To Gettysburg and Beyond with the Twentieth Maine by Jared Peatman.
The U.S. Navy Medical Department in the Civil War by Guy Hasegawa.

Comments: The first three on the list are already out.

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.

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Booknotes: Emancipation War

New Arrival:

Emancipation War: The Fall of Slavery and the Coming of the Thirteenth Amendment by Damon Root (Potomac Bks, 2026).

From the description: "Speaking to a fractured country for the first time as president, Abraham Lincoln endorsed a constitutional amendment designed to permanently safeguard slavery in every state in which the institution already existed. If that proslavery provision had been ratified, it would have become the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Three years later, Lincoln again threw his support behind a constitutional amendment to address slavery: this time to abolish it. Formally ratified in 1865, this is the Thirteenth Amendment we know today."

As was the case with all other major conciliatory proposals that preceded it, the idea that the 1861 version of what might have been a Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution being anything more than a legislative dead end seems very unlikely. Nonetheless, Damon Root's new book Emancipation War: The Fall of Slavery and the Coming of the Thirteenth Amendment seeks to provide answers to some key questions surrounding the matter: "What happened in those intervening years that led Lincoln to switch from supporting a proslavery amendment to embracing the antislavery provision that ultimately became enshrined in the Constitution? Why did the Thirteenth Amendment of 1864–65 win out over that of 1861?"

Following the multitude of forces involved "from both the top down and the bottom up," Root's Emancipation War "chronicles the great legal, political, and military struggle to amend the U.S. Constitution to outlaw slavery once and for all." It was those parts of a "wide-ranging movement against slavery―operating both inside and outside the halls of government power, fighting both on and off the battlefield―that made an antislavery constitutional amendment possible."