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The Overland Campaign for Richmond Casemate (9781636243924)

Casemate

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CAS32251
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9781636243924
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The Overland Campaign for Richmond: Grant vs Lee 1864 - (9781636243924)

Features

  • 128 pages
  • Illustrated throughout
  • Softcover
  • Book dimensions are 9.5 x 6.75
A detailed and fully illustrated account of the Richmond Campaign covering the strategies and tactics employed.

In the spring of 1864 many in the North including President Lincoln were growing frustrated. Although Lincoln's armies were achieving success on the battlefields the gruesome toll was becoming increasingly unacceptable. The president needed a general who would finally put an end to the war. He found him in Ulysses S. Grant who would close out the conflict a little more than a year after his appointment. Determined to destroy Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia Grant bulked up the Army of the Potomac with the addition of Burnside's IX Corps swelling the army's numbers to nearly 120000. The campaigns of 1862 and 1863 had inflicted heavy losses on Lee's army including some of his most talented commanders among them Stonewall Jackson. In the spring of 1864 Lee's army was more scattered than Meade's but the Army of Northern Virginia was not only capable but also deeply familiar with the Virginia terrain.

Grant planned several offensives involving attacks against Richmond Atlanta and the Shenandoah Valley. In the north the Army of the Potomac would strike hard at Lee while the Union Army of the James would head inland toward Richmond to cut supply lines and then join with Meade's army. On May 3 1864 the Army of the Potomac headed for the Wilderness to open the Spring Campaign. The next six weeks saw the most brutal fighting of the entire war. Repeatedly Grant brought Lee into battle—notably at the Wilderness Spotsylvania North Anna and Cold Harbor—yet each time Grant was frustrated in his efforts to destroy the Army of Northern Virginia. Finally unable to capture Richmond Grant reached the James River where his forces built a long bridge to facilitate its crossing to attack Petersburg. While Grant had failed to destroy Lee's army or capture Richmond the relentless pressure of the campaign effectively sealed the fate of the Confederacy.