Covered with Glory : The 26th North Carolina Infantry at the Battle of Gettysburg
معرفی کتاب «Covered with Glory : The 26th North Carolina Infantry at the Battle of Gettysburg» نوشتهٔ Rod Gragg، منتشرشده توسط نشر The University of North Carolina Press در سال 2010. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
the Battle Of Gettysburg Was The Largest Engagement Of The Civil War, And--with More Than 51,000 Casualties--also The Deadliest. The Highest Regimental Casualty Rate At Gettysburg, An Estimated 85 Percent, Was Incurred By The 26th North Carolina Infantry. Gragg Chronicles The 26th's Remarkable Odyssey From Muster Near Raleigh To Surrender At Appomattox. The Central Focus Of The Book, However, Is The Regiment's Critical, Tragic Role At Gettysburg, Where Its Standoff With The Heralded 24th Michigan Infantry On The First Day Of Fighting Became One Of The Battle's Most Unforgettable Stories.
publishers Weekly
on July 1, 1863, The 26th North Carolina Infantry Marched Toward Gettysburg With A Strength Of 843 Officers And Troops. Two Days Later, The Regiment Could Muster Only 156 Soldiers--a Staggering Loss Of 81.5%, Perhaps The Highest Casualty Rate Of Any Civil War Regiment, North Or South. Gettysburg Is One Of The Most Written-about Battles In History, But Gragg (confederate Goliath, Etc.) Has Mined A Host Of Primary Sources For This Engrossing Study And Paints A Detailed, Vivid Picture Of The Destruction Of One Of Robert E. Lee's Largest Units. Following A Brief History Of The 26th, Gragg Follows The Tarheels North From Fredericksburg Into Pennsylvania, Then Moves With The Regiment To Herr's Ridge West Of Gettysburg. From This Vantage Point, 21-year-old Colonel Henry K. Burgwyn Jr. Led His Superbly Trained Unit Into The Teeth Of Enemy Fire From Two Union Iron Brigade Regiments. Although The 26th Forced The Yankees Back, Burgwyn Was Killed And The Regiment Was Decimated As Bearer After Bearer Of The Unit's Flag Went Down Like Chaff. After Resting On July 2, The Regiment Took Part In Pickett's Charge. Gragg's Prose Is At Its Best As He Describes The Time It Took For The Gray-clad Battle Line To Cross The Mile From Seminary Ridge To The Federal Line On Cemetery Ridge, Suffering Casualties All The While. This Exemplary Book Puts A Human Face On The 26th North Carolina's Tragic Loss At Gettysburg And Is One Of The Most Original Titles On The Battle To Appear In The Past Few Years. Maps Not Seen By Pw. (aug.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|
CONTENTS......Page 8 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS......Page 10 INTRODUCTION: “I WAS ONCE A SOLDIER”......Page 16 1 GOOD, HONEST AMERICAN STOCK......Page 18 2 INTO THE JAWS OF CERTAIN DEATH......Page 34 3 WE ARE ON OUR WAY......Page 54 4 “MAY THE GOOD LORD TAKE CARE OF THE PORE SOLDIERS”......Page 69 5 “SUMMER IS ENDED”......Page 90 6 “LIKE WHEAT BEFORE THE SICKLE”......Page 118 7 COVERED WITH GLORY......Page 134 8 “THE SICKENING HORRORS OF WAR”......Page 154 9 “ALL WERE WILLING TO DIE”......Page 170 10 “TERRIBLE AS AN ARMY WITH BANNERS”......Page 192 11 “UNCONQUERED IN SPIRIT”......Page 219 EPILOGUE: “STEADFAST TO THE LAST”......Page 238 NOTES......Page 263 BIBLIOGRAPHY......Page 296 B......Page 311 C......Page 312 F......Page 313 H......Page 314 K......Page 315 M......Page 316 O......Page 317 P......Page 318 S......Page 319 T......Page 320 Z......Page 321 "Here, fully told for the first time, is the story of the 26th North Carolina Infantry at the Battle of Gettysburg. In July 1863 the regiment's eight-hundred-plus troops - young men from North Carolina's mountains, farmlands, and hamlets - were thrust into the firestorm of Gettysburg, the greatest battle ever fought in North America. By the time the fighting ended, the 26th North Carolina had suffered what some authorities would calculate to be the highest casualties of any regiment in the Civil War."--BOOK JACKET.