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The Capture Of New Orleans, 1862
Chester G. Hearn

The Capture Of New Orleans, 1862

Louisiana State University Press (Jun 1995)
9780807119457
| Hardcover
292 pages | 160 x 236 mm | English
Dewey 973.731
LC Classification E472.88 .H43 1995
LC Control No. 94039214

Genre

  • C.W. Battles

Subject

  • History / Military / General
  • History / United States / Civil War Period (1850-1877)
  • History / United States / State & Local / South
  • New Orleans (La.)

Plot

On April 24, 1862, Federal gunboats made their way past two Confederate forts to ascend the Mississippi, and the Union navy captured the city of New Orleans. How did the South lose its most important city? In this exhaustively researched, authoritative, well-argued study, Chester Hearn examines the decisions, actions, individuals, and events that brought about the capture of New Orleans - and forever weakened the Confederate war machine.Hearn directs his inquiry to the heart of government, both Union and Confederate, and takes a hard look at the selection of military and naval leaders, the use of natural and financial resources, and the performances of all personnel involved. The decisions of Jefferson Davis, Stephen R. Mallory, and three Confederate secretaries of war, he holds, were as much to blame for the fall of New Orleans as David Farragut's warships. Hearn also scrutinizes the role of Major General Mansfield Lovell and evaluates the investigation that ended his career.Hearn's explorations bring us into a flourishing New Orleans and introduce Louisiana leaders Thomas O. Moore and the debilitated old men sent to prepare the state for war: Major General David E. Twiggs and Commodore Lawrence Rousseau. We follow their trifling efforts to defend the lower Mississippi and General Lovell's frustrations in attempting to arm forts and obtain cooperation from the navy, and we come to understand the dismay of such leaders as P. G. T. Beauregard and Braxton Bragg as they witnessed this bungling. Hearn traces the building of the ironclads Manassas, Louisiana, and Mississippi, and investigates the reason for their failure to defend New Orleans.

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Added Date Feb 22, 2017 20:11:20
Modified Date Sep 17, 2018 18:09:42