Showing posts with label military history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label military history. Show all posts

Civil War in the Southwest: Recollections of the Sibley Brigade (Canseco-Keck History Series) Review

Civil War in the Southwest: Recollections of the Sibley Brigade (Canseco-Keck History Series)
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Civil War In The Southwest: Recollections Of The Sibley Brigade by Civil War scholar and historian Jerry Thompson presents eighteen distinctive episodes written by members of General Henry Hopkins Sibley's command who fought and traveled more than eight thousand miles through snake-infested bayous to snow-capped mountains to fight and die in more than sixteen major battles of the American Civil War. The brigade consisted of young, zealous Texans who sought to invade New Mexico Territory as a step toward the Confederate conquest of Colorado and California in order to seize their resources (including the gold fields) in support of the South. This compendium of eye witness accounts is positively riveting and is enthusiastically recommended as a unique, invaluable contribution to Civil War Studies supplemental reading lists and reference collections.

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Phase Line Green Review

Phase Line Green
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I have read more than a hundred books on the Vietnam war. I found this one to be the best. I'm astonished how any one could give less than five stars. I found his honesty refreshing. His integrity as top notch. The book is a must read for anyone who wants the dirty truth of how political correctness can be more important than mens lives. The micromanagement that lead to the the failure of the entire Vietnam war is made plain and clear by Mr Warr. I can understand how Mr Warr received a carthsis effect by writing this book. He does us all an honor by sharing the truth with us. I beleive he deserves a silver star for telling the truth. I shall read this book again and again.

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To Hell with Honor: Custer and the Little Bighorn Review

To Hell with Honor: Custer and the Little Bighorn
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Larry Sklenar's "To Hell with Honor: Custer and the Little Bighorn" is a boldly presented picture of the most famous battle of America's Indian Wars. As might be expected after more than 35 years of study of the subject myself, I have more than a few ideas about the battle. I concur with much of what Sklenar writes, but disagree with other parts. He has come up with some definitely new twists on the old story, and for this reason his book should be read by anyone seriously interested in the Little Bighorn.
Sklenar's basic stance can be characterized as strongly pro-Custer, and he sharply criticizes Custer's two principal subordinates, Major Marcus Reno and Captain Frederick Benteen. And I personally won't disagree with that view. His analyses of Reno's and Benteen's actions (or inactions) are arguably the strongest portions of the entire book.
Sklenar has reached some quite startling conclusions regarding Custer's initial battle plan and the position occupied by the rest of the regiment during their abortive effort to locate Custer late in the day. Frankly, I do not think that the primary evidence supports Sklenar's deductions about these points, but I would encourage Little Bighorn students to read what he has to say, then evaluate the questions for themselves. His reconstruction of the fight by Custer's battalion, on the other hand, does not break much new ground, and is in good agreement with a number of books in recent years.
All in all, it is a Little Bighorn analysis worth adding to the bookshelf, but I would urge the reader to go beyond the book to read the actual evidence before deciding whether all of Sklenar's conclusions are valid. People have been writing about this battle for nearly 125 years, and no one ever has the last word.

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Fort Robinson and the American Century, 1900-1948 Review

Fort Robinson and the American Century, 1900-1948
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The book was bought as a gift for my friend who lived at Fort Robinson at a young age. His father's position at the fort was to purchase horses and mules for training. The details in the book gives great insight as to the function of the fort and the people involved. There was a great buildup of calvary officers prior to WWI and WWII and the horses and mules who were an integral part of warfare of that time period. My friend was thrilled by receiving the book and actually recognized some of names of men who were mentioned. As a civilian who loves history, I found the book interesting. The book covers little known facts regarding the history of the clavary and training done at the fort.

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Jeff Davis's Own: Cavalry, Comanches, and the Battle for the Texas Frontier Review

Jeff Davis's Own: Cavalry, Comanches, and the Battle for the Texas Frontier
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Arnold has a gift for military history that while informative of facts is also a good read. He makes history interesting even to the casual reader. This book fills what is usually a gap in US military history and a blank in most accounts of R.E. Lees life. Who knew that Lee was an Indian fighter as well as hero of the Mexican American war and great American strategist. His account of Lee's personnel hand to hand fight with an Apache warrior reveals his personnel determination, courage, and humor is an insightful read. This is the second of many American military experience with insurgent, unconventional, gorilla warfare, others being the Seminole war in Florida, for that fact all the Indian wars, the War in the Philippines {part of the Spanish American war} Vietnam war, and now Iraq/Afghanistan. We win as long as we have the political will to do so. Enough of that. This is a really good book, I highly recommend it. A lot of info for a little known period in American Military History.

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Excitingly told and meticulously researched, this is an intriguing and colorful saga of the commanders who united to fight an enemy on its native ground, then divided again to face each other across the battlefields of their own homeland.

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Napoleonic Artillery Review

Napoleonic Artillery
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This volume is full of promise, packed with photographs of period artillery pieces, secondary drawings of artillery pieces and ancillary vehicles and equipment, but in the end is a disappointment. Napoleonic Artillery is a survey work attempting to be all things to all people, and while profusely and well-illustrated, the book needed the editorial direction to be either an illustrated history of the artillery of the Napoleonic Wars or a scholarly history of the artillery of the period. The book is trying very hard to be both, and unfortunately, it is neither.
This is a herculean attempt to shoulder the entire gamut of the European artillery systems of the period, from field artillery to siege, garrison, and fortress artillery, but what has been accomplished is the assembly of a wide range of material with little or no depth to it. Like the Powder River, the book is a mile wide and an inch deep.
In this flawed endeavor, the book fails in two areas: it is not well-sourced (or on the surface appears not to be) and there are too many errors in fact in the text to be a reliable source of information for researchers.
First, and most important, while there are over four hundred reference notes in the volume, about forty percent of these have no page numbers for the cited works. Because of this omission, the book's text cannot be used as a reliable source. This is a shame for there is good and useful information in the text.
There is material that needs to be sourced, and is not. An example is on pages 246-247 where canister, an anti-personnel round, is described as bursting on impact with the ground instead upon leaving the gun tube when the round was fired. This is incorrect. A diagram made for the book supposedly demonstrates this phenomenon, but there is no contemporary artillery manual that supports this theory. This demonstrates a lack of understanding of the artillery and ammunition of the period. And this is not the only place in the text where this takes place.
Jean-Baptiste de Gribeauval was one of the great artillerymen of the 18th century. The artillery system he created was arguably the epitome of 18th century artillery development, but that opinion is not shared in this volume. That is acceptable as historic argument. However, incorrect information has been given about Gribeauval, such as stating he was an engineer; that his `fundamental profession was the building and attacking of fortresses;' and that he was `a specialist in the attack and defense of fortified places.' Further it is stated that Gribeauval was `exchanged into the Austrian service' during the Seven Years' War.
Gribeauval was a school trained French artilleryman, and was commissioned into the artillery as a lieutenant-he was not an engineer. He gained a reputation for innovation and artillery design before 1750. He was a specialist in siege operations because that was part of the training of French artillery officers during the period.
His `fundamental profession' was artillery. He was seconded to the Austrian Army, as the Austrian Army was short of qualified artillerymen. There he distinguished himself among the Austrians, who considered him a gifted colleague, and was promoted to general officer rank and decorated in the Austrian service. This material can be found in the biographies of Gribeauval by Hennebert and Nardin, which are not in the book's bibliography.
On page 262 it reads that `The Gribeauval System was not an all-encompassing and radical change.' Evidence from French artillery manuals of the period and such credible secondary works as Nardin's biography of Gribeauval and Ken Alder's Engineering the Revolution state, and largely prove, otherwise.
There are other questions on the material, such as giving credit to both the Prussians (in 1722) and the Austrians in the 1750s of developing the bricole, an artillery tool used to move a field piece by manpower. It's either one or the other. In one reenactor photograph (not a good practice in an historical study), it reads that bricoles are illustrated. What is shown is not a bricole, at least not a French one, merely looped rope.
On pages 128-129 diagrams name French corps commanders in November 1806 and May 1807. Andoche Junot is listed for the VIII Corps when the commander was Marshal Mortier. Marshal Lannes is named for the V Corps in May 1807, when V Corps was commanded by Marshal Massena. On page 128 it states that the Sailors of the Imperial Guard manned floating batteries in the Danube for the Battle of Wagram. They were not at Wagram; the actual sailors being the Battalion of the Danube and the 44th Bataillon de Flotille commanded by Pierre Baste.
The book's strengths are the photographs of period artillery pieces and equipment and the line drawings done for the book (why were originals not used?). The chapter on the British artillery is excellent, and the authors included most of the belligerents of the period.
The flow charts in the text are confusing and do not facilitate understanding the subject. Errors in the horse artillery section, the tactics section (regarding French artillery command and control), about particular artillery equipment and practices as well as errors in describing certain sources (Louis de Tousard's US artillery manual in particular), stating that certain field pieces, such as the French 8-pounder, were unsuitable, not being specific about what constituted the field artillery of the period, and other such errors detract from the usefulness of this volume.
Errors notwithstanding, this book should be read by anyone interested in the subject, bearing in mind that there are better artillery references available. This book was a great opportunity to educate and enlighten, but the opportunity was missed. Because of the myriad factual errors, this book cannot be used as a reliable reference. However, the book is recommended if used with great care.

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The Napoleonic Wars gripped Europe, and beyond, for over ten years at the beginning of the Nineteenth century. Hundreds of battles were fought between the armies of France (and its allies) and all those powers that wished to see Napoleon Bonaparte stopped in his tracks and an end to the French Empire. The battles and sieges of the Napoleonic Wars, which cost the lives of between 3 and 6 million men, made unprecedented use of large guns, and every participating army possessed a range of artillery. With the wars covering such a long period of time, and with so many armies involved, the subject of Napoleonic artillery is a complicated one, and no work has attempted to examine all the weapons involved in a single, detailed volume. Until now. The product of years of research, this book presents most of what is known about the artillery pieces of the Napoleonic Wars. Including numerous drawings, contemporary illustrations and modern photographs of surviving guns, it will be an invaluable addition to the library of historians, modellers, wargamers and re-enactors.

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Bloody Angle: Hancock's Assault On The Mule Shoe Salient, May 12, 1864 (Battleground America Guides) Review

Bloody Angle: Hancock's Assault On The Mule Shoe Salient, May 12, 1864 (Battleground America Guides)
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This is a great, great little book. One of the better ones in the Battleground America Series. The narrative is compelling and exciting, and gives a good detailed overview of the battle without being too technical and boring and reading like a textbook. This is a good account of the Bloody Angle battle, without having to read about the entire Spotsylvania campaign. The suggested reading chapter at the end also lists a valuable resource of references for further reading and learning and more technical volumes. Gettysburg perhaps steals a lot of the thunder of the other Civil War battles as compared to exposure and popularity, but the Spotsylvania battle, specifically the Bloody Angle fight, deserves a lot more attention and exposure than it gets. The Bloody Angle is important to Civil War history in that it ushered in a level of ferocity and brutality in Civil War combat that had never been seen prior to the Spotsylvania Campaign. It remains a unique and very exciting battle and hopefully there will be more written about it in the future.

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