This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1886 edition. Excerpt: ... Clearings are few and far between; the roads are bad, and the undergrowth of the woods is penetrated with difficulty. The face of the country is undulating, with, gentle gradients, and abrupt or considerable eminences are seldom met with. The water-courses are numerous, and several attain to the ...
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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1886 edition. Excerpt: ... Clearings are few and far between; the roads are bad, and the undergrowth of the woods is penetrated with difficulty. The face of the country is undulating, with, gentle gradients, and abrupt or considerable eminences are seldom met with. The water-courses are numerous, and several attain to the dignity of rivers, notably the Rappahannock and the Rapidan, the Matapony and the North and South Annas. Their course is, generally speaking, from west to east, crossing at right angles the line of Federal invasion. The State is in many parts exceedingly fertile, but sparsely cultivated and without manufacturing industry or appliances; and at this period neither food nor forage were plentiful. It is still thinly populated, and between Richmond and the Potomac there is no large town or market. The railroads have already been remarked. The Rappahannock is tidal as far as Frederic.ksburg, and two hundred yards wide in the neighbourhood of the town, increasing in width as it flows seaward.. Below Port Eoyal it becomes a formidable obstacle in the path of an hostile army. There are several easy fords above Falmouth; the river-banks, except near Fredericksburg, are clad with timber, and from Falmouth downwards the left commands the right. Burnside's object and plan. Burnside's objective was, as we have seen, Richmond, sixty miles south of Fredericksburg; but between him and the Confederate capital intervened the broad waters of the Rappahannock and the Army of Northern Virginia. Before the city could be captured, Lee's army must be annihilated; before that army could be dealt with, the Rappahannock must be crossed. He had therefore two distinct ends to accomplish: the first, to convey his force across the river; the second, to bring the Confederates...
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Illustrated by Maps. Good with no dust jacket. Ex-Library. 2"peel/tear head, fore edge tears/chips, tone, library stamps/marks/labels. Solid hardcover.; Analysis by English military officer, and later Sandhurst professor. "The campaign of Fredericksburg has been selected, amongst other reasons, as having been fought by two armies largely composed of unprofessional soldiers. The lessons it teaches, the shortcomings it reveals, are likely, therefore, to be of exceptional interest and value to that class of officers to whose consideration I venture to recommend them."-author's preface. Catalogue of the Military Library of John Page Nicholson, p 370; Broadfoot (4th Ed), p 263. The first, and anonymous, edition of this classic work of military strategy and tactics.; Ex-Library; 145 pages.