Whip the Rebellion: Ulysses S. Grant's Rise to Command

Whip the Rebellion: Ulysses S. Grant's Rise to Command

by George Walsh
Whip the Rebellion: Ulysses S. Grant's Rise to Command

Whip the Rebellion: Ulysses S. Grant's Rise to Command

by George Walsh

Paperback(First Edition)

$21.99 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

How the unprepossessing Ulysses S. Grant, whose military genius ultimately preserved the Union, came to the forefront in the Civil War is a story as surprising as it is compelling. Forced to resign his commission in the peacetime army for drinking, and thereafter reduced to eking out a living for himself and his family with hardscrabble jobs, at the outbreak of hostilities he suddenly found himself a colonel, and then a general, of volunteers. Grant made the most of unexpected commands. What he knew best, it turned out, was how to wage war, relentlessly and with irresistible force.

Early in 1862, with the conflict a year old and both sides in the West reluctant to fight, Grant seized the initiative and took Forts Henry and Donelson, capturing an entire rebel army. Later, in Mississippi, he conducted the arduous campaign against Vicksburg, cutting the confederacy in half and capturing a second army. All the time Grant was forced to cope with jealous superiors, like General Henry Halleck, while finding staunch allies in General William Sherman and Admiral David Dixon Porter, and dealing with disloyalty, like that of General John McClernard, who actually came close to replacing him. But for his many victories Grant was named commander in the West, and sent to relieve the siege of Chattanooga, which earned him his promotion to general-in-chief.

"Whip the Rebellion" were Grant's watchwords every day of the war. This dramatic narrative—peopled with the heroics of hundreds of officers and enlisted men, crammed with first-hand accounts of battles, tactics, and civilian hardships—offers fresh insights into both the public and personal lives of Grant and his immediate circle.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780765305275
Publisher: Tor Publishing Group
Publication date: 02/07/2006
Edition description: First Edition
Pages: 480
Sales rank: 311,321
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.97(d)

About the Author

GEORGE WALSH, is the former editor-in-chief at Macmillan Publishing Group and a longtime journalist. He discovered and published the Pulitzer Prize winning Civil War classic The Killer Angels, which still has more than two and half million copies in print. His recent books include "Damage Them All You Can." He lives in New York City.

Table of Contents

Preface9
1862
1Grant, Sherman, and Halleck15
2Forts Henry and Donelson45
3Bloody Shiloh63
4Controversy and Intrigue83
5Iuka, Corinth, and Rosecrans96
6Chickasaw Bluffs, McClernand, and Porter111
1863
1Wet Interregnum133
2Bypassing Vicksburg149
3Grant Goes on the Attack167
4Siege of Vicksburg187
5Revenge at Chattanooga212
1864
1Lincoln Meets His General243
2Grant versus Lee in Virginia257
3The Atlanta Campaign288
4Petersburg, Richmond, and the Shenandoah318
5March to the Sea348
6Last Hurrah in Tennessee366
1865
1Moving Up the Carolinas385
2Grant Crushes a Proud Foe399
3Politics and Plaudits422
4The Survivors432
Notes447
Index473
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews