New Arrival:
• Dread Danger: Cowardice and Combat in the American Civil War by Lesley J. Gordon (Cambridge UP, 2024).
I've been looking forward to reading Lesley Gordon's Dread Danger: Cowardice and Combat in the American Civil War for quite a while now, and after some publishing delays (it was in my June "Coming Soon") it's finally here. With so many subjective elements involved with it, evaluating cowardice in Civil War combat seems like it would be a daunting task to undertake. Nevertheless, I fully anticipate that Gordon has come up with some valid and interesting ways of looking at the topic that together impart "a fuller understanding of the soldier experience and the overall costs and sufferings of war." The book is surely an extension of Gordon's highly praised earlier work in A Broken Regiment: The 16th Connecticut's Civil War, which also examined a regiment that suffered from a stained martial reputation (the 16th broke at Antietam and suffered further humiliation in 1864 at Plymouth, North Carolina).
The book is structured around two case study regiments, one a Union short-timer and the other a Confederate unit that served throughout the entire war. From the description: "When confronted with the abject fear of going into battle, Civil War soldiers were expected to overcome the dread of the oncoming danger with feats of courage and victory on the battlefield. The Fire Zouaves and the 2nd Texas Infantry went to war with high expectations that they would perform bravely; they had famed commanders and enthusiastic community support. How could they possibly fail? Yet falter they did, facing humiliating charges of cowardice thereafter that cast a lingering shadow on the two regiments, despite their best efforts at redemption."
The two unit selections are intriguing ones. I'm familiar with the reputational hit suffered by the 11th New York "Fire Zouaves" regiment, which infamously broke and ran at First Bull Run, but, at least for me, nothing like that immediately comes to mind for the 2nd Texas. My own lasting image of them is their incredibly brave and costly charge against Battery Robinett on October 4, 1862 at Corinth (you might recall the fairly frequently reproduced photograph of Texas bodies, including that of its colonel, William P. Rogers, piled up against the earthwork battery's exterior slope) and the regiment stalwartly defended the 2nd Texas Lunette at Vicksburg. The specific circumstances surrounding the substance of General Hardee's charges against the Texans at Shiloh doesn't ring a bell for me (was Hardee a major general who frequently singled out regiments for alleged bad behavior?), and I'm quite interested to learn more about that.
According to Gordon, public allegations of collective cowardice directed toward the 11th New York and 2nd Texas didn't much survive the conflict itself let alone stalk those individuals throughout the rest of their lives. More from the description: "By the end of the war, however, these charges were largely forgotten, replaced with the jingoistic rhetoric of martial heroism, a legacy that led many, including historians, to insist that all Civil War soldiers were heroes."
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