Savas Beatie Battles & Leaders
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Outwitting Forrest
The Tupelo Campaign in Mississippi, June 22 - July 23, 1864
by Edwin C. Bearss
Part 1 of the Savas Beatie Battles & Leaders series
Few students of the Civil War know that legendary historian Edwin C. Bearss produced a classic study on the little-known but significant Tupelo Campaign. The fighting in Mississippi was overshadowed by Nathan Bedford Forrest's more spectacular victory at Brice's Crossroads a month earlier. Bearss performed the research and writing for the Department of the Interior in 1969, and only a handful of softcover copies were circulated. It is published here for the first time, with the assistance of award-winning author David A. Powell, as Outwitting Forrest: The Tupelo Campaign in Mississippi, June 22–July 23, 1864.
The engagement came about when Maj. Gen. A. J. Smith marched a Federal expeditionary force (his XVI Army Corps) into northern Mississippi in early July 1864. The thrust forced a response, the largest of which was delivered by the combined Confederate cavalry of Stephen D. Lee (who was in general command) and Forrest.
The tactical result was a Union defensive success. The larger Confederate strategic play, however-one that might have impacted the course of the war in the Western Theater-would have been to unleash Forrest on a raid into Middle Tennessee to destroy the single line of railroad track feeding and supplying the Union armies of William T. Sherman in his ongoing operations around Atlanta. Instead, his troopers were contained within the Magnolia State, where his combat effectiveness was severely curtailed.
Editor Powell has left Bearss's prose and notes intact, while adding additional sources and commentary of his own. The result is an exceptional study that has finally been made available to the general reading public as part of the Savas Beatie Battles & Leaders Series.
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The Johnson-Gilmor Cavalry Raid Around Baltimore
by Eric J. Wittenberg
Part of the Savas Beatie Battles & Leaders series
The Johnson-Gilmor Raid, a gripping tale of desperation and high stakes during the American Civil War, unveils the doomed attempt to free Confederate prisoners of war, shedding light on the intricacies of wartime strategies and the relentless pursuit of liberty.
The Johnson-Gilmor Raid represents one of three major attempts to free prisoners of war during the American Civil War. Like the other two, it was destined to fail for a variety of reasons, mostly because the timetable for the operation was a schedule impossible to meet. The mounted raid was a fascinating act of increasing desperation by the Confederate high command in the summer of 1864, and award-winning cavalry historian Eric J. Wittenberg presents the gripping story in detail for the first time in The Johnson- Gilmor Cavalry Raid Around Baltimore, July 10–13, 1864, the fourth book in the bestselling Battles & Leaders Series.
The thundering high-stakes operation was intended to free the suffering of 15,000 Confederate prisoners held at Point Lookout, Maryland, a peninsula at the confluence of the Potomac River and the Chesapeake Bay. The operation consisted of two mounted columns, one under Bradley Johnson and a second smaller one under Harry Gilmor. Each had different objectives. The former would move directly on Point Lookout, while the other destroyed bridges and created other mischief to tie up enemy forces. (The wild plot initially envisioned launching a simultaneous naval strike, which went awry at the 11th hour.) Success would have released thousands of men behind enemy lines, created significant chaos and, with a little more luck, returned veterans into the fighting ranks.
The fast-paced July 1864 drama has never been told in such depth and with such precision. Wittenberg draws upon a wide variety of sources to do so, including contemporary newspapers. Part of his analysis compares and contrasts this raid to a pair of other unsuccessful attempts to free Union prisoners of war-the Kilpatrick-Dahlgren Raid of February–March 1864, and the Stoneman Raid on Macon, Georgia, of July 1864-as well as Gen. George S. Patton's attempt to free his son-in-law and other American prisoners in March of 1945.
The Johnson-Gilmor Cavalry Raid Around Baltimore will be welcomed by anyone with an interest in the Civil War, high-stakes cavalry operations, or the politics of Civil War high command.
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