400
700
900
Curmudgeons, Drunkards, And Outright Fools: The Courts-Martial Of Civil War Union Colonels
Thomas P. Lowry

Curmudgeons, Drunkards, And Outright Fools: The Courts-Martial Of Civil War Union Colonels

courts-martial of Civil War Union colonels

Bison Books (Sep 01, 2003)
9780803280243
| Paperback
258 pages | 152 x 231 mm | English
Dewey 343.730143
LC Classification KF7641 .L69 2003
LC Control No. 2003044799

Genre

  • C.W. Prisons

Subject

  • Courts-martial And Courts Of Inquiry
  • Courts-martial And Courts Of Inquiry/ United States/ History/ 19th Century
  • History / United States / General
  • Trials (Military Offenses)
  • Trials (Military Offenses)/ United States/ History/ 19th Century

Plot

During the Civil War, a Union colonel was five times more likely to be court-martialed than a private. Worse, courts-martial of all ranks increased by 400 percent in the winter months. Among the court-martialed transgressors presented in this volume are an officer nicknamed ?Stumpy? because he tended to hide behind tree stumps during combat and a man tried for calling his superior a ?miserable reptile.? The gallery of offenders also includes a Vermont colonel who became a chloroform addict and a New York colonel who rode his horse into a barroom, ordered a brandy for himself and one for his horse, then fired his pistol through the ceiling. The stories of fifty misdeeds, along with a statistical exploration of twenty-two thousand other courts-martial, provide a pioneering study of the little-known world of Civil War misbehavior and clarify the often-bewildering dynamics between volunteer soldiers and their professional superiors.

Personal

Read
Index 1045
Added Date Feb 23, 2017 18:59:17
Modified Date Feb 23, 2017 18:59:17