Read The Confederate Nation: 1861 to 1865 Online
Authors: Emory M. Thomas
Tags: #History, #United States, #American Civil War, #Non-Fiction
Shiloh: James Lee McDonough,
Shiloh—In Hell Before Night
(Knoxville, Tenn., 1976); Wiley Sword,
Shiloh: Bloody April
(New York, 1974); Charles P. Roland, “Albert Sydney Johnston and the Shiloh Campaign,”
Civil War History,
IV (1958), 355–382.
Jackson’s Valley Campaign: Robert G. Tanner,
Stonewall in the Valley
(Garden City, N.Y., 1976).
Seven Days Campaign: Clifford Dowdey,
Seven Days: the Emergence of Lee
(Boston, 1964).
Antietam: Edward J. Stackpole,
From Cedar Mountain to Antiteam
(Harrisburg, Pa., 1959).
Kentucky: Grady McWhiney, “Controversy in Kentucky: Braxton Bragg’s Campaign of 1862,”
Civil War History,
VI (1960), 5–42.
Chancellorsville: John Bigelow, The Campaign of Chancellorsville: A Strategic and Tactical Study (New Haven, Conn., 1910); Edward J. Stackpole, Chancellorsville: Lee’s Greatest Battle (Harrisburg, Pa., 1958).
Vicksburg: Peter F. Walker,
Vicksburg: A People at War, 1860–1865
(Chapel Hill, N.C., 1960); Thomas L. Connelly, “Vicksburg: Strategic Point or Propaganda Device?",
Military Affairs,
XXXIV (1970), 49–53.
Brandy Station: Fairfax Downey, Clash of Cavalry: The Battle of Brandy Station, June 9, 1863 (New York, 1959).
Gettysburg: Edwin B. Coddington, The Gettysburg Campaign: A Study in Command (New York, 1968); Warren W. Hassler, Jr., Crisis at the Crossroads: The First Day at Gettysburg (University, Ala., 1970); Archer Jones, “The Gettysburg Decision Reassessed,” Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, LXXVI (1968), 64–66; Clifford Dowdey, Death of a Nation: The Story of Lee and His Men at Gettysburg (Harrisburg, Pa., 1958); George R. Stewart, Picketts Charge: A Microhistory of the Final Attack at Gettysburg, July 3, 1863 (Boston, 1959); Glenn Tucker, High Tide at Gettysburg: The Campaign in Pennsylvania (Indianapolis, 1958); and William A. Frassanito, Gettysburg: A Journey in Time (New York, 1975).
Chattanooga: Fairfax Downey,
Storming the Gateway: Chattanooga, 1863
(New York, 1960).
Mine Run: Jay Luvaas and Wilbur S. Nye, “The Campaign that History Forgot: Mine Run,”
Civil War Times Illustrated,
VIII (1969), vii, 11–36.
Red River: Ludwell H.Johnson, Red River Campaign Politics and Cotton in the Civil War (Baltimore, 1958).
Grant versus Lee: Edward Steere,
The Wilderness Campaign
(Harrisburg, Pa., 1960); Clifford Dowdey,
Lee’s Last Campaign
(Boston, 1960); Earl Schenck Miers,
The Last Campaign: Grant Saves the Union
(Philadelphia, 1972); Frank E. Vandiver,
Jubal’s Raid
(New York, 1960); Edward J. Stackpole,
Sheridan in the Shenandoah: Jubal Early’s Nemesis
(Harrisburg, Pa., 1961); Rembert W. Patrick,
The Fall of Richmond
(Baton Rouge, La., 1960); William C. Davis,
The Battle of New Market
(Garden City, N.Y., 1975); Philip Van Doren Stern,
An End to Valor: The Last Days of the Civil War
(Boston, 1958); Burke Davis,
To Appomattox: Nine April Days, 1865
(New York, 1959).
Atlanta and After: Richard M. McMurry, “The Atlanta Campaign of 1864: A New Look,”
Civil War History,
XXII (1976), 5–15; Samuel Carter III,
The Siege of Atlanta, 1864
(New York, 1973); Errol MacGregor Clauss, “The Atlanta Campaign 18 July-2 September, 1864,” Ph.D. dissertation (Emory University, 1965); James F. Rhodes, “Sherman’s March to the Sea,”
American Historical Review,
VI (1901), 466–474; N. C. Hughes, Jr., “Hardee’s Defense of Savannah,”
Georgia Historical Quarterly,
XL VII (1963), 43–67; John G. Barrett,
Sherman’s March Through the Carolinas
(Chapel Hill, N.C., 1956); Marion Brunson Lucas,
Sherman and the Burning of Columbia
(College Station, Tex., 1976).
Campaigns in the Far West: Wiley Britton,
The Civil War on the Border,
2 vols. (New York, 1899; Ray C. Colton,
The Civil War in the Western Territories
(Norman, Okla., 1959); Stephen B. Oates,
Confederate Cavalry West of the River
(Austin, Tex., 1961); Jay Monaghan,
Civil War on the Western Border, 1854–1865
(Baton Rouge, La., 1955).
Hood in Tennessee: Thomas R. Hay,
Hood’s Tennessee Campaign
(New York, 1929); Stanley F. Horn,
The Decisive Battle of Nashville
(Baton Rouge, La., 1956); Jacob D. Cox,
The Battle of Franklin, Tennessee, November 30, 1864,
(New York, 1897).
About the Confederates’ Indian allies see: Frank Cunningham,
General Stand Watie’s Confederate Indians
(San Antonio, Tex., 1959); George H. Shirk, “The Place of Indian Territory in the Command Structure of the Civil War,”
Chronicles of Oklahoma,
XLV (1968), 464–471; and LeRoy H. Fischer and Jerry Gill,
Confederate Indian Forces Outside of Indian Territory
(Oklahoma City, Oka., 1969).
On cavalry raids some representative studies are: James Pickett Jones,
Yankee Blitzkrieg: Wilson’s Raid Through Alabama and Georgia
(Athens, Ga., 1976); Dee A. Brown,
The Bold Cavaliers: Morgan ‘s 2nd Kentucky Cavalry Raiders
(Philadelphia, 1959); Dee A. Brown,
Grierson’s Raid
(Urbana, 111., 1954); and Basil W. Duke,
Morgan’s Cavalry
(New York, 1906). See also William David Evans, “McCook’s Raid,” M.A. thesis (University of Georgia, 1976).
The best overview of guerrilla activities is Albert Castel’s issue of
Civil War Times Illustrated,
“The Guerrilla War,” XIII, vi (1974), 3–50. Biographies of Mosby and Quantrill present extremes of the spectrum on irregular combat. See also Michael R. Kirkby, “Partisan and Counter-Partisan Activity in Northern Virginia,” M.A. thesis (University of Georgia, 1977).
On atrocities and alleged atrocities, see Liva Baker, “The Burning of Chambersburg,” American Heritage XXIV, (1973), 36–39, 97; Hartwell T. Bynum, “Sherman’s Expulsion of the Roswell Women in 1864,”
Georgian Historical Quarterly,
LIV (1970), 162–182; Charles R. Mink, “General Orders, No. 11: The Forced Evacuation of Civilians during the Civil War,”
Military Affairs,
XXXIV (1970), 132–136; William C. Davis, “The Massacre at Saltville,”
Civil War Times Illustrated,
IX (1971), X, 4–11, 43–48; Ronald K. Huch, “Fort Pillow Massacre: The Aftermath of Paducah,”
Illinois State Historical Society Journal,
LXVI (1973), 62–70; and John L.Jordan, “Was There a Massacre at Fort Pillow?,”
Tennessee Historical Quarterly,
VI (1947), 99–133.
Finally, some miscellaneous studies merit mention: Warren Ripley,
Artillery and Ammunition of the Civil War
(New York, 1970); John Bakeless,
Spies of the Confederacy
(Philadelphia 1970); Francis A. Lord and Arthur Wise,
Uniforms of the Civil War
(South Brunswick, N.J., 1970); Archie P. McDonald (ed.),
Make Me a Map of the Valley: The Civil War Journal of Stonewall Jackson’s Topographer
(Dallas, 1973); June I. Gow, “Chiefs of Staff in the Army of Tennessee Under Braxton Bragg,”
Tennessee Historical Quarterly,
XXVII (1968), 341–360; and Jennings C. Wise,
The Long Arm of Lee: Or the History of the Artillery of the Army of Northern Virginia,
2 vols. (Lynchburg, Va., 1915).
The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.
Act to Increase the Military Force of the Confederate States (1865), 296
Adams, Charles Francis, 172
Adams, John, on American Revolution, 4
Adams, Sam, 38
“Address to the Slaveholding States,” 46, 47
Adventures of Captain Simon Suggs, The
, (Hooper), 27
agriculture
and food shortages, 1863, 199–200
in prewar economy, 12–13, 15–16
Alabama, secession, 38, 43, 49–51
Alabama,
raider, 182–183
battle with
Kearsage,
278–279
Alabama Platform, 49
Albemarle,
ironclad, 279
Alexandria, ship, 183
Alexandria Light Artillery, 119
Allen, Henry W., 291, 293
Anderson, James Patton, 52
Anderson, Joseph R., and Tredegar Iron Works, 212–213
Anderson, Robert, and defense of Fort Sumter, 68–71, 90–93
Antietam (Sharpsburg), battle of, 164, 180, 181
Appomattox, surrender at, 212, 302–303
architecture, prewar, 26–27
aristocracy, wartime, 233–234
see also
planters
Arkansas, vote on secession, 87, 94
Arkansas,
ironclad, 162
army
beginnings of, 74–76
enlisted forces, 135–136
impressment of private property authorized, 196
vs. Union army, 155
see also
Army of Northern Virginia; Army of Tennessee
Army of Northern Virginia, 254–255, 256
in flight, 300, 302
Lee takes over, 160
at Marye’s Heights, 165
at Petersburg, 269–270, 283
surrender at Appomattox, 212, 302–303
see also
Lee, Robert E.
Army of Tennessee, 256
at Chattanooga, 251, 253–254
moves from Atlanta to Tennessee, 274
at Resaca, 270
under Hood, 281–282
see also
Bragg, Braxton; Johnston, Joseph E.
Army of the Ohio, at Cassville, 271
Army of the Potomac
at Gettysburg, 242–243
at Marye’s Heights, 165
at Wilderness, 267
Atchison, David R., 88
Atlanta, battle of, 272
Bagby, George William, on Davis, 142
Banks, Nathaniel, at Sabine Crossroads and Pleasant Hill, 288
Barney, William L., 33
Barnwell, Robert W., 47, 57, 72
Bass, Uncle Dick, 238
Baylor, John B., 123
Beauregard, Pierre G. T., 75, 266
at Charleston, 215
evacuates Corinth, 162
feud with Davis, 141
at first Manassas, 108, 110–116
at Fort Sumter, 91–92
at Petersburg, 269
at Shiloh, 146–147
at Vicksburg, 218
“Beauregard’s March,” 229
Bee, Bernard E., 114
Bell, John, 48, 49, 55, 87, 88–89
Benét, Stephen Vincent, 12
Benjamin, Judah P., 116–117
and battle of Roanoke Island, 121, 123
becomes secretary of state, 148–149
and changing1 diplomacy, 177–178
ends missions to France and Britain, 256
named attorney general, 78–80
vote of no confidence in, 139
Bentonville, battle of, 289
blacks
in noncombatant military duties, 260
offer to join army, 262
as strikebreakers, 235–236
in Union armies, 237
wartime experience, 221
see also
slavery; slaves
Blackwood’s
magazine, 178
Blair, Francis Preston Sr., and Hampton Roads Conference, 294–295
blockade of Confederate ports, 128–129, 147
and cotton shortage in European mills, 174–175
and shipment of supplies, 1863, 206
blockade running, 289
government regulation of cargo, 265
bonds
to finance government, 73
and treasury notes, 197, 264–265
border states
and Confederate diplomacy, 84–85
decisions on secession, 86–90, 93–95
Bosserman, Alden, 151
Boston Tea Party, 38
Botts, John Minor, 151
Boyce, W. W., on Davis administration, 140–141
Boyd, Belle, 226
Bradford, William F., at Fort Pillow, 275
Bragg, Braxton, 74, 75, 90, 193
assigned to Richmond, 266
at Chattanooga, 216, 250–251, 253–254
at Chickamauga, 252–253
invades Kentucky, 163
at Murfreesboro, 165, 194
at Perryville, 164
and war in the west, 162
Bragg, Thomas, 148
bread riots, 1863, 203–205
Breckinridge, John C., 47–48, 49, 88, 287
Bristoe Station, battle of, 255
Brooke, John M., 129–130, 208, 213, 231
Brooks, Mary, 226–227
Brooks, Preston, caning of Sumner, 17–19, 20
Brooks, Walter, 99
Brown, Joe, 293
and conscription in Georgia, 154
Brown, John, capture and execution at Harpers Ferry, 2–3
Browne, William M., 148
brutality, 247–249, 274–277
Buchanan, Franklin
and ironclad
Virginia,
130, 131
at Mobile Bay, 279
Buchanan, James, 52
and assault on Fort Sumter, 68, 70, 71, 76
Buckner, Simon B., at Fort Donelson, 127
Buell, Don Carlos
and battles for Tennessee, 126
at Perryville, 164
at Shiloh, 146–147
Bulloch, James Dunwoody, 128, 129
and commercial war, 182–183
Bull Run,
see
Manassas (Bull Run)
Burnside, Ambrose E.
at Marye’s Heights, 165
at Roanoke Island, 121–122
bushwhacking, 247–249
Butler, Andrew P., 17
cabinet
Davis sets up, 72–80
position on arming slaves, 293
proposal for Congressional seating, 195
reorganized, 148–149
Calhoun, John C., 29–32, 222
Cameron, Simon, 93
Campbell, John A., 81
Campbell, John A., at Hampton Roads Conference, 295
Cannibals All
(Fitzhugh), 30
Caperton’s Ferry, 251
Carter, Jimmy, 306
Cash, W. J., 19
Castle Goodwin military prison, 151
Castle Pinckney, 70
casualties
at Atlanta, 274
at Fort Pillow, 275
at Franklin, 281
at Gettysburg, 243
at Marye’s Heights, 165
Cavour, Count, 168
Cedar Creek, battle of, 284
Chamberlain, Joshua, on surrender at Appomattox, 303
Chambersburg, burning of, 276
Champion’s Hill, battle of, 218
Chancellorsville, battle of, 216–217
Charleston, Union assault on, 215
Charleston and Savannah Railroad, 157
Charleston
Courier,
293
Charleston
Mercury,
42, 69, 142, 192, 292, 293
Chattanooga, battle of, 216, 250–251, 253–254
Chattanooga
Rebel,
230
Cheat Mountain, battle of, 125
Chesnut, James, 40
and capture of Fort Sumter, 91–93
Chesnut, Mary Boykin, 35, 77, 230
on altered postwar relationships, 240
on food in Montgomery, 40
on Northrup, 135
Chew, Robert, 91
Chickamauga, battle of, 252–253
Chilton, William P., 57
churches and Confederate cause, 245–247
Clausewitz, Karl von, 105
Clay, Henry, 88
Cleburne, Patrick
at Chattanooga, 254
at Franklin, 281
proposal to free slaves, 261–264
Cleburne’s Memorial, 262–263, 292
Cobb, Howell, 27, 52–60 passim, 116
on arming slaves, 292–293
Cobb, T. R. R., 47, 52–53, 54, 59, 62
on Davis, 139
Cold Harbor, battle of, 269
commercial war, 182–183
Commissary Bureau, and impressment of private property, 196
Compromise of 1850, 33, 52
Compulsory Funding Measure, 265
Confederate Patent Office, 190
Congress of Confederacy, 40
discusses limited emancipation, 290–293
and election of 1863, 257–258
final sessions, 286
Great Debate over representation, 65
provisional, 62
and report of military needs, 133–134
session of 1863, 194–198
Congress,
ship, 130–131
conscription act (1862), 152–155
Conscription Act (1864), 260–261
Conscription Bureau, 153, 154, 209–210, 261
abolished, 284
Constitution of Confederacy, 62–65
provisional, 44, 58
text, 307–322
Construction Bureau, 207
Cook and Brother Armory, 209
Cooke, John Esten, 230
Cooper, Samuel, 141
and first Manassas, 111
cooperationists, and secession, 41–42
Corinth, evacuation of, 162
Cornhill
magazine, 178
cotton, shortage in European mills, 174–175
The Cotton Boll
(Timrod), 25
cottonclads, 215
Crawford, Martin J., 81
Crittenden, John J., 88, 89
Cub Run, 119
cultural nationalism
and literature, 24–26, 27–28
and politics, 28–34
and religion, 21–23
culture, in wartime, 229–231
Cumberland,
ship, 130–131
currency, declining faith in, 284
see also
treasury notes
Cushing, E. H., on Shiloh, 156
Dahlgren, Ulric, at Richmond, 274–275
Daniel, John M., 168–169, 230
and opposition to Davis, 142
Davis, Jefferson, 48–49, 266
and capture of Fort Sumter, 90–91
and Confederate strategy, 104–108
and defense of Vicksburg, 218–219
difficulties with cabinet, 191–193
difficulties with Congress, 194–196
dissatisfaction with administration, 139–140
and elections of 1863, 257–258
feud with Beauregard, 141
and final sessions of Congress, 286–287
and first battle of Manassas, 111, 112, 115–116
flight from Richmond, 300, 302, 304–305
and Hampton Roads Conference, 294–295
inauguration, 59–62, 143, 148, 221
last proclamation, 300–301
moves to Richmond, 99, 100, 102–103
names Johnston to head Army of Tennessee, 259–260
newspaper opposition to, 142
and Peninsula campaign, 158–160
perception of Confederacy, 223–224
proposes limited emancipation, 290–293
quarrel with Johnston, 141
relieves Johnston of command, 271–272
reorganizes cabinet, 148–150
report of military needs, 133–134
and Richmond food riot, 204
and runaway slaves, 241–242
sets up government, 71–80
on siege of Vicksburg, 244
Davis, Varina, 117, 160
tiffs with wives of other officials, 141–142
Dayton, William L., 172
“Declaration of the Immediate Causes of Secession,” 46
Delaware, stand on secession, 89–90
DeLeon, Edwin, 178, 179, 256
de Morny, Count, 84
diplomacy, Confederate, 80–85
changing1, 177–178
failure of missions, 256–257
disaffection, 234
Douglas, Stephen A., 48, 49
draft
evasion, and social ferment, 234
exemption, 153
law, 152–155
and war industries, 1863, 209–210
Drewry’s Bluff, battle of, 160
Drouyn de Lhuys, 181
Ducktown copper mines, 257
Duffield Station, mail train raid at, 288
Dupre, Lucius, 156
Early, Jubal
at Chambersburg, 276
at first Manassas, 115
at Fredericksburg, 216
at Shenandoah Valley, 283–284
economic policy, and military performance, 136–137
economy
demands on, 1863, 199–200
industrial, 206–213
prewar, 12–16
elections of 1863, 257–258
Ellis, John W., 86, 93
emancipation
Cleburne’s proposal, 261–264
Davis’s proposal, 290–293
Emancipation Proclamation, 180, 181
Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 19
employment, in war industry, 1863, 209
Erlanger, Emile, 187, 188
Erlanger and Co., loan to Confederacy, 187–188
Evans, Augusta Jane, 230
Ewell, Richard S., at Gettysburg, 243
Ezra Church, battle of, 272
Fairfax Court House, 119
Farragut, David
at Mobile Bay, 279
at New Orleans, 147
financial policies, and economic problems, 1862, 136–138
Fitzhugh, George, 30
on Confederate and American Revolutions, 222–223
Five Forks, battle of, 300
Fleet, Benny, 230
on blockade running, 289
Fleet, Fred, on siege of Petersburg, 283
Florida, secession, 38, 51–52
Floyd, John B., 140
at Fort Donelson, 127
folk culture, prewar South, 9–10
food prices, Richmond, 1862, 137
food riots, 203–205, 233–234
food supply problems, 1863, 199–201
in Richmond, 201–205
Foote, Andrew H., and battles for Tennessee, 126, 127
Foote, Henry S., 195, 286
and vote of no confidence, 139
foraging, and food shortages, 1863, 200
Forrest, Nathan Bedford
at Ford Pillow, 275
at Johnsonville, 288
on war’s end, 304
Forsyth, John, 81
Fort Donelson, capture of, 126–127
Fort Fisher, battle of, 289
Fort Hatteras, 120
Fort Heiman, capture of, 126
Fort Henry, battle of, 126
Fort Jackson, 147
Fort Monroe, 145
Fort Moultrie, and assault on Fort Sumter, 67, 68, 70, 71
Fort Pickens, 75, 76
Fort Pillow Massacre, 275–276
Fort Pulaski, 75
capture of, 147
Fort St. Phillip, 147
Fort Sumter, assault on, 67–71, 90–93