Conhugeco
Posts: 19
Joined: 11/14/2006 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: ColinWright ... Shiloh, Grant ... almost lost the battle. In other words, Grant won the battle, and had stopped the Confederate attack cold before Buell's reinforcements arrived. quote:
Initiative. I can never quite get over the spectacle of Grant sitting in front of Richmond for nine months, completely flummoxed by the presence of a force half the size of his own. There must have been some move to make -- but Grant never made it. Grant did not sit in front of Petersburg and Richmond for nine months doing nothing. The siege of Petersburg was a very active campaign, with Grant continually extending his lines to the left to cut off the railroads that fed Petersburg and Richmond. Lee often countered nicely, but the Union continually made progress, and the campaign included some rather large engagements, including a bone-headed attack by Lee against Fort Stedman. Here's a good link to check if you actually want to learn something about the campaign: The Siege of Petersburg. quote:
Tactics: check out the damage done by the attacking Union brigades at Cold Harbor. Yes, Cold Harbor is the only battle in the campaign ever worth mentioning by the Lee fanboys. Rhea's book on this part of the campaign does a nice job of describing the events leading up to the main assault, and why Grant thought that it might have a chance of success. It didn't turn out that way, but his reasoning was at least as sound as Lee's for thinking that Pickett's charge might succeed. That didn't turn out too well either, did it? Did you know that Union forces temporarily broke through part of Lee's lines during the main assault? Few people do. Rhea also demonstrates that the 6,000 casualties in 20 minutes (or 12,000, or 100,000, take your pick from any fanboy site), is pure bunk, and based upon sources that reported casualties for a much longer period than the main assault. quote:
Now I'm getting sucked into calling Grant an idiot and incompetent. I don't want to do that; I'm merely trying to resist the notion that he was a 'great general' -- in any sense the equivalent of Lee, Jackson, Forrest, or even Sherman. Grant was better than all of them combined. DickH
< Message edited by Conhugeco -- 12/9/2006 6:04:50 PM >
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In response to a critic: "General Lee surrendered to me. He did not surrender to any other Union General, although I believe there were several efforts made in that direction before I assumed command of the armies in Virginia."
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