Ebook: Braxton Bragg and Confederate Defeat: Volume 1
Author: Dr. Grady McWhiney
- Tags: Biographies & Memoirs, Arts & Literature, Ethnic & National, Historical, Leaders & Notable People, Memoirs, Professionals & Academics, Reference & Collections, Regional Canada, Regional U.S., Specific Groups, Sports & Outdoors, Travelers & Explorers, True Crime, Military, Afghan War, Aviation, Canada, Intelligence & Espionage, Iraq War, Korean War, Life & Institutions, Napoleonic Wars, Naval, Pictorials, Prisoners of War, Regiments, Strategy, Uniforms, United States, Vehicles, Vietnam War, Weapons & Warfare, World War I, World W
- Year: 2017
- Publisher: University Alabama Press
- Edition: 1
- Language: English
- pdf
A Civil War history classic, now back in print.
Braxton Bragg and Confederate Defeat, Volume I, examines General Braxton Bragg’s military prowess beginning with his enlistment in the Confederate Army in 1862 to the spring of 1863. First published in 1969, this is the first of two volumes covering the life of the Confederacy’s most problematic general. It is now back in print and available in paperback for the first time.
A West Point graduate, Mexican War hero, and retired army lieutenant colonel, Bragg was one of the most distinguished soldiers to join the Confederacy, and for a time one of the most impressive. Grady McWhiney’s research shows that Bragg was neither as outstanding nor as incompetent as scholars and contemporaries suggest, but held positions of high responsibility throughout the war.
Not an overwhelming success as commander of the Confederacy’s principal western army, Bragg nevertheless directed the Army of Tennessee longer than any other general, and, after being relieved of army command, he served as President Davis’s military adviser. Of all the Confederacy’s generals, only Robert E. Lee exercised more authority over such an extended period as Bragg. Yet less than two years later Bragg was the South’s most discredited commander. Much of this criticism was justified, for he had done as much as any Confederate general to lose the war. The army’s failures were Bragg’s failures, and after his defeat at Chattanooga in November 1863 Bragg was relieved of field command.