General Quarters
Posts: 1059
Joined: 12/3/2006 Status: offline
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I don't know of the 4 traits are considered more or less equally important but, assuming they are, I looked at the overall results, simply adding the 4 ratings: Lee, Grant, Jackson 31 each; Forrest, Stuart, Cleburne 28; Sherman, Sheridan 27; Longstreet 26; Thomas, Buford 25; Wheeler 24, Hood, AP Hill, Reynolds, Chamberlain 23; AS Johnson, Armistead, Meade, Hancock 22, Hardee, Hampton, Rosecrans, Doubleday, Morgan, Anderson, Pender, Rodes 21; JE Johnston, Beauregard, DH Hill, Pickett, Custer 20, and so forth. I think it is important to have the total rankings make sense, not just to get the right tactical for one general and the right initiative for another. A specific concern: Some generals that never had high command (Chamberlain, Armistead, etc.) are ranked above some generals that performed somewhat well at the top. Yet we all know that some great corps commanders (Hood, and even Longstreet) performed less well at a higher level. And some who flunked as army commanders (Hooker, Pope) did well at a lower level. As the ratings stand now, it would be better to have Chamberlain commanding the Union army than Meade, and Hood, Armistead, Anderson, Pender, or Rodes instead of Johnston. To take another example: if Bragg (who receives a 15) had been a division commander, he might well have been better than Rodes, and if Rodes had commanded the Army of Tenn, he might well have been worse than Bragg. In short, some kind of credit should be added for generals who did show the ability to actually manage large masses of men, even if not always faultlessly.
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