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- From: jsanders@phys.ksu.edu (Justin M. Sanders)
- Newsgroups: alt.war.civil.usa,soc.history,alt.answers,soc.answers,news.answers
- Subject: U.S. Civil War Reading List
- Followup-To: alt.war.civil.usa
- Date: 19 Mar 1994 18:14:25 GMT
- Organization: Department of Physics, Kansas State University, Manhattan KS, USA
- Lines: 424
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Message-ID: <2mffe1$c38@newserv.ksu.ksu.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: bohr.phys.ksu.edu
- Summary: This article contains a list of books about the Civil War in
- the United States (1861-1865) which have been recommended by
- the members of alt.war.civil.usa.
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu alt.war.civil.usa:7723 soc.history:19588 alt.answers:2142 soc.answers:987 news.answers:16566
-
- Archive-name: civil-war-usa/reading-list
- Last-modified: 1993/10/20
- Version: 1.0
-
- This reading list is a supplement to the alt.war.civil.usa FAQ
- and will be posted on or about the 20th of each month.
-
- The Suggested Civil War Reading List was compiled in the newsgroup
- alt.war.civil.usa in the summer of 1993. It lists 61 books, several
- of them with multiple volumes, as well as an 11 hour documentary film
- and a CD of Civil War era songs.
-
- This reading list was compiled by Stephen Schmidt
- (whale@leland.Stanford.EDU) to whom additions and corrections should
- be addressed.
-
- The material is sorted into 11 general categories as follows:
-
- 1. General Histories of the War
- 2. Causes of the War and History to 1861
- 3. Slavery and Southern Society
- 4. Reconstruction
- 5. Biographies and Autobiographies
- 6. Source Documents and Official Records
- 7. Unit Histories and Soldier's Reminisences
- 8. Fiction
- 9. Specific Battles and Campaigns
- 10. Strategies and Tactics
- 11. The Experience of Soldiers
-
-
- General Histories of the War
-
- James McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom. 1988. A comprehensive history of
- the United States from about 1845 until Appomattox. About 40% of the book
- is on the prewar years, the rest on the war. This book is up to date,
- reflects most (though not all) of the historical research on the war, and
- is a single volume which is well written, easy to read, and accessible to
- the non-historian. If you read only one book on the war, this one should
- probably be it.
-
- Shelby Foote, The Civil War: A Narrative. New York, 1958. 3 volumes.
- Published seperately as Fort Sumter to Perryville, Fredricksburg to
- Meridian, and Red River to Appomattox. A history of the War, focusing
- on the history of the Confederacy more than on Union operations. Until
- McPherson's book, the most popularly read history of the War.
-
- Bruce Catton, The Centennial History of the Civil War. New York, Doubleday
- Books, 1963. Three volumes: published seperately as The Coming Fury,
- Terrible Swift Sword, and Never Call Retreat. The Union counterpoint
- to Foote: focuses primarily on the war as the Union saw it. First volume
- covers prewar material through First Bull Run, second volume Bull Run to
- Antietam, third volume the rest of the war.
-
- Robert Johnson and Clarence Buel, editors. Battles and Leaders of the
- Civil War. 4 volumes. 1887. A series of articles on the various battles
- of the Civil War, written by generals from both sides who had fought
- in the battles. A troublesome book: like most firsthand sources, it
- tends to be inaccurate on the details, especially of the opponent's
- actions, and also tends to reflect the author's needs to justify himself
- more than what actually happened. However, an excellent, and fairly
- comprehensive, collection of first-hand descriptions of the battles
- by the men who fought them.
-
- Jeremy Barnes, Pictoral History of the American Civil War. 1988. This
- book gives one of the best short synopsis of the causes of the war,
- the importance of various battles, and a sense of overall strategy.
- Plus an excellent collection of drawings, paintings, and photographs.
-
- Allan Nevins, The Ordeal of the Union. 8 volumes. 1971. Also published
- as three shorter series: volumes 1-2 as The Ordeal for the Union,
- volumes 3-4 as The Emergence of Lincoln, volumes 5-8 as The War for
- the Union. Covers much the same ground as McPherson but in much more
- detail. Focuses at least as much on the political, strategic, and
- logistical side of the fighting as on the battles and tactics. Covers
- the Union in more detail than the Confederacy but both sides are
- described.
-
- Ken Burns, The Civil War. An 11 hour motion picture documenting
- the war. First shown on PBS and highly acclaimed, now available
- from Time Life Video on 9 VHS tapes. There is also a companion
- book, The Civil War: An Illustrated History which you can get.
-
-
- Causes of the War and History to 1861
-
- William Freehling, Road to Disunion: The Secessionists at Bay 1787-1854.
- 1990. A good, though idiosyncratic, one volume treatment of the South's
- development of the secessionist mindset.
-
- Richard N. Current, Lincoln and the First Shot. 1963. A vivid narrative and
- scholarly analysis of the decision to resupply, and not to surrender, Fort
- Sumter. Regards Lincoln's second inaugural as containing a succinct and
- true characterization of the crisis - that both sides preferred war to
- compromise - and that Lincoln felt that to compromise on Fort Sumter without
- the Southern states promising to dissolve their secession conventions was
- futile appeasement.
-
- Bruce and William Catton, Two Roads To Sumter. 1963. Compares the lives of
- Lincoln and Davis starting with their births close together in time and space.
- It then uses their two diverging lives as a microcosm of the national drift
- to war.
-
- David M Potter, Lincoln and His Party in the Secession Crisis. 1942.
- A professional historian's treatise. Not light reading, but a quite
- compelling account of the blunders and circumstances that led to the
- outbreak of war.
-
-
- Slavery and Southern Society
-
- Eugene Genovese, Roll Jordan Roll: The World the Slaves Made. 1974.
- * this book still needs a description *
-
- Fogel and Engerman, Time on the Cross. 1974. A comprehensive and HIGHLY
- controversial study of slavery in the Old South. Though the authors are
- not apologists for slavery, they do conclude that slavery was not as
- bad as it had been made out to be and had a number of positive redeeming
- features. A long literature has followed this book which has largely,
- though not entirely, repudiated it. It is probably unwise to read this
- book unless you also intend to start in on the following discussion,
- some of which is also summarized below.
-
- Paul David, et al, Reckoning with Slavery. A straightforward, point
- by point rebuttal of Time on the Cross by a number of respected
- historians and economists. If you read Time on the Cross, you should
- really read this one also so as to get both sides of the issue at
- once.
-
- Gavin Wright, Old South New South. 1988. A comparison of the Southern
- economy before and after the war, with emphasis on the effects of
- slavery and its abolition.
-
- Kenneth M. Stampp, The Peculiar Institution. 1956. Another broad
- treatment of Southern slavery, but somewhat more accepted and more
- traditional than Fogel and Engerman's.
-
-
- Reconstruction
-
- Eric Foner, Reconstruction: America's Unifinished Revolution. 1990. A
- comprehensive history of the Reconstruction period, and the effects
- of the abolition of slavery on the Southern economy and Southern
- society. Tends towards the belief that slavery was the cause of
- the war, and emphasizes that.
-
-
- Biographies and Autobiographies
-
- Stephen Oates, With Malice Towards None. 1977. Biography of Abraham
- Lincoln.
-
- William Davis, Jefferson Davis: The Man and the Hour. 1990.
- Evenhanded account of Davis that examines primary sources critically.
- Well written. Humanizes Davis. Illustrates his strengths and weaknesses.
- Definitive work on Davis and why and how he ran the Confederacy.
-
- Stephen Oates, To Purge This Land With Blood. 1970. Biography of
- John Brown.
-
- Ulysses S. Grant, Personal Memoirs of US Grant. 2 volumes. 1885. Basically an
- autobiography, though concentrating on his ACW career.
-
- Horace Porter, Campaining with Grant. 1896. Recollections of one of
- Grants aides de camp on the history of the war. One of the most
- widely cited primary sources in subsequent literature, this book
- has had a large impact on Grant's historical reputation, probably
- larger than Grant's memoirs have had.
-
- William T. Sherman, Memoirs of W.T. Sherman. 2 volumes. 1887. Sherman's
- autobiography.
-
- Phil Sheridan, Personal Memoirs of Philip Sheridan. 1888. Sheridan's
- autobiography.
-
- Douglas S. Freeman, Robert E. Lee: A Biography. 4 volumes. 1935. The
- definitive biography of Lee, who never wrote his own memoirs.
-
- James Longstreet, From Manassas to Appomattox. 1893. Longstreet's
- autobiography. Take this book with a large grain of salt: Longstreet had
- been unjustly attacked by many former Confederate generals (notably Jubal
- Early) and this book is his reply.
-
- William Piston, Lee's Tarnished Lieutenant. 1988. Reviews Longstreet's
- military record, the attacks against him by the Virginia clique, and
- Longstreet's replies. The best and most accurate review of Longstreet's
- controversial career, it largely though not completely supports the
- pro-Longstreet camp. An interesting book, not only in its coverage of
- Longstreet, but as a reflection on how history is made, and how it can
- become inaccurate when personal vendettas and political pressure come
- into play.
-
- GFR Henderson, Stonewall Jackson and the American Civil War. 2 volumes.
- 1898. Biography of Stonewall Jackson, who also never wrote his own
- memoirs, because dead people don't.
-
- John Gordon, Reminiscences of the Civil War. 1903. Autobiography of
- Gordon, who after the Big Three of Longstreet, Jackson, and Stuart, is
- probably the most distinguished of Lee's generals. Another book that
- has to be read carefully, it is largely accurate but has a number of
- scenes that were completely made up by Gordon to vindicate himself
- after the other eyewitnesses to events had died.
-
- Ezra Warner, Generals in Blue. 1964. Quick biographies of all the men
- ranked brigadier general or higher in the Union army. Good for a quick
- background or for looking up particular biographic details.
-
- Ezra Warner, Generals in Gray. 1964. Same as above for the Confederates.
-
-
- Source Documents and Official Records
-
- The books on this section of the list are here as valuable references,
- and are not something that you would actually sit down and read. However,
- if you want to look something up first-hand, these are the books in
- which to do it.
-
- War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union
- and Confederate Armies. 1903. A 128 volume publication, containing all of
- the official reports, orders and dispatches of the generals of both
- sides that survived the war. The definitive first-hand source for all
- aspects of the military side of the war. Not for beginners or for the
- faint-hearted. Usually abbreviated to OR.
-
- The Official Records of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War
- of the Rebellion. 1927. A 31 volume publication covering the naval
- documents in the same manner as OR covers the army documents.
-
- The Official Civil War Atlas. 1895. A compendium of maps designed to
- accompany OR, prepared by the War Department in the 1880s and 1890s.
- Detailed tactical maps, though not particularly well labelled. Also
- contains a few pages on corps badges, uniforms, sword patterns, unit
- flags, etc. Doesn't contain much in the way of larger maps of states
- or regions.
-
- Frederic Dyer, A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion. 3 volumes.
- 1959. A summary of the Official Records: contains much of the interesting
- information and numerical data without the dross and kipple of the
- complete Records. Useful if you want to find something that is in OR
- but don't have the time to hunt through it.
-
- William Fox, Regimental Losses in the American Civil War. 1985. Regiment
- by regiment, lists all the losses suffered in the various battles of
- he war. Also contains synopsis histories of each corps in the Union
- Army, and a fair amount of other very interesting information.
-
- Mark Boatner, The Civil War Dictionary. A dictionary of Civil War names,
- places, battles, and terms, with one paragraph descriptions of each.
- Designed as a quick and easy reference to let you get a quick grasp
- of a subject starting from only a name or place. * date? *
-
- Military Bibliography of the Civil War. 4 vols, 1987. A listing of
- books published in Union and Confederate regiments, and personal
- narratives. 1987 is the latest update. An ideal way to track down
- the wartime experiences of a relative whose unit is known.
-
-
- Unit Histories and Soldier's Reminisences
-
- Sam Watkins, Company "Aytch". 1885 or so. Reminisences of Sam Watkins,
- private in Company H of the First Tennessee Volunteer Infantry. Very down
- to earth story of what it was like to be a Confederate private. Does not
- discuss miltary history or issues at all - purely one soldier's impression
- of the war.
-
- Rice Bull, The Civil War Diary of Rice Bull. The personal reminiscences
- of one of Sherman's bummers who marched through Georgia.
-
- Nolan, The Iron Brigade. 1975. A unit history of the brigade composed
- of the 2nd, 6th, and 7th Wisconsin and the 19th Indiana, later the
- 24th Michigan, probably the best brigade in the Army of the Potomac.
-
- William C Davis, The Orphan Brigade. A unit history of the Kentucky
- brigade of the Confederate Army of Tennessee. Particulary poignant
- in describing the emotions of men whose states, and often families,
- were fighting on the other side of the firing line.
-
- Joshua L. Chamberlain, The Passing of the Armies. Contains two equal
- parts: a history of the Appomattox campaign and of the Grand Review of
- the Army of the Potomac in Washington, by a man who was a major general
- commanding a division in the V corps, who received the official Confederate
- surrender at Appomattox.
-
- Elisha Hunt Rhodes, All For The Union. 1985. The diary and letters of Colonel
- EH Rhodes, Second Rhode Island Volunteers. Rhodes enlisted as a private
- and worked his up through the ranks, reaching Colonel of the regiment
- in 1865. His firsthand impressions of the war in the East.
-
-
- Fiction
-
- Michael Shaara, Killer Angels. 1974. A novelized version of the Gettysburg
- campaign, told from the viewpoints of Lee, Longstreet, and Joshua L.
- Chamberlain, colonel of the 20th Maine. A must-read for those who
- want to know what it was like to be there.
-
- Stephen Crane, The Red Badge of Courage. 1891. The most literary novel to
- emerge from the Civil War. It is a loose description of the battle of
- Chancellorsville, although it doesn't say so. It's about three Union
- enlisted men, and their motivations for fighting the war.
-
- Ambrose Bierce, In the Midst Of Life. A collection of short stories:
- the first half of the book is stories of soldiers in the War. His themes
- are (1) the nature of courage; (2) the ghastliness of war; (3) fighting
- between family members. Sort of "All Quiet on the Western Front" for
- the ACW.
-
- Specific Battles and Campaigns
-
- Robert Hendrickson, Sumter: The First Day of the Civil War. 1990.
- Describes activities associated with events in Charlston Harbor roughly
- from before the election of 1860 until Lincoln's call for troops.
- Includes several appendicies, one with the text of the "South Carolina
- Declaration of Causes". Has a strong Northern bias.
-
- Stephen Sears, Landscape Turned Red. 1983. An exceptionally good treatment of
- Antietam/Sharpsburg; Works equally well as a guide to the battlefield and
- to the politics and personalities of the moment.
-
- Stephen Sears, To the Gates of Richmond. 1992. The same for the Peninsula
- campaign and the Seven Day's Battles.
-
- Harry Pfanz, Gettysburg: The Second Day. 1989. A regiment by regiment, volley
- by volley accounting of the battles of July 2 at Gettysburg on the
- Union left. Probably the most detailed battle account ever written,
- good for those who want to understand the tactical details of how
- units maneuvered in combat.
-
- Robert Kerby, Kirby Smith's Confederacy. 1972. The definitive account of
- the war west of the Mississippi. Discusses the generals and campaigns,
- the irregular warfare in Missouri, the home front in the West, and
- the relationship of the Western theater to the whole war in about
- equal parts.
-
- Glenn Tucker, Chickamauga, Bloody Battle in the West. 1964? A fairly
- detailed tactical history of Chickamauga, with some comments though
- not many on the preceeding campaign and on the general history of
- the Western Offensive plan that Longstreet and Johnston, among
- others, had been advocating for some time.
-
- Noah Trudeau, Bloody Roads South. 1989. History of the Grant's 1864
- campaign from the Wilderness to Cold Harbor. Contains an excellent
- description of Grant's strategy, tactics, and the problems therewith
- as they manifested themselves in operations against Lee.
-
- Ludwell Johnson, The Red River Campaign. 1958. The history of the
- Red River campaign of 1864. Provides about an equal mix of battle
- tactical details, and the political maneuvering over Southern cotton
- that led to the campaign in the first place.
-
- Wiley Sword, Embrace An Angry Wind. 1991. The Franklin/Nashville campaign.
-
- Richard Wheeler, The Siege of Vicksburg. 1978. A history of the
- siege of Vicksburg and the campaign leading up to it. Wheeler tends
- to use eyewitness accounts heavily, tracing the broad outlines in his
- own words but letting the participants speak for themselves on the
- details of what happened. Wheeler has written many more books in the
- same style, if you like this one you might want to read his other books.
-
-
- Strategies and Tactics
-
- Kenneth P Williams, Lincoln Finds a General. 5 volumes. 1959. A study
- of the command problems of the Union army.
-
- T. Harry Williams, Lincoln and his Generals. 1952. A shorter version
- of the same material.
-
- Douglas Freeman, Lee's Lieutenants. 1944. A study of the generals of the
- Army of Northern Virginia who served under Lee. Primarily intended as
- a study in the makings of commanders, it also gives a solid history of
- Lee's strategy for the war in the East as well as providing a good working
- biography of nearly all the important Confederate generals in the Eastern
- theatre.
-
- Hattaway and Jones, How the North Won. 1983. An excellent introduction
- to 19th century strategy, logistics and grand tactics. Essential for
- an understanding of why and how battles came to be fought where and as
- they did. Concerns itself less with battle accounts than with operations
- and command organization.
-
- Paddy Griffith, Battle Tactics of the American Civil War. Presents
- the thesis that the Civil War tactics were dominated by Napoleonic
- thinking that was never really supplanted until after the war. A
- somewhat controversial book.
-
- The Experience of Soldiers
-
- Gerald Linderman, Embattled Courage: the Experience of Combat in the
- American Civil War. 1987. Looks at the 1861 volunteers of both sides
- and traces the emotional and psychological changes which their war
- experiences inflicted upon them over time.
-
- John Bell Wiley, Johnny Reb. A collection and study of the collected
- reminiscences of a number of Southern soldiers, providing a detailed
- look at the life of enlisted men in the Confederate army.
-
- John Bell Wiley, Billy Yank. Same as Johhny Reb for the Northern
- side.
-
- Tennessee Williams Sings Songs of the Civil War. Capitol Records.
- Compact disc. A collection of Civil War songs sung by Tennessee
- Williams. <gasp>
-
-
- ***********************************************
-
- The Civil War Reading list was compiled by Stephen Schmidt. Suggestions
- for the list were made by: Justin Sanders, James Miller, Charles Ten Brink,
- Brent Chambers, Kerry Webb, Blake Wood, Phil Feller, Michael Kochin,
- Wilson Clements, Ron Skroboda, Michael Dubost, David Turrell, Paul Cowan,
- Coty Pinckney, David Spencer, Robert Ligon, Michael Neiburg, Dallace Unger,
- Gary Charbonneau, Jerry Drake, and Michael McCarthy. Requests for suggestions
- were originally posted on alt.war.civil.usa, and two previous drafts were
- posted there for comments and further suggestions.
-
- Steve Schmidt <>< whale@leland.stanford.edu
-
- **** End of Reading List ****
- --
- Justin M. Sanders "Nothing is more unfamiliar or
- Research Associate uncongenial to the human mind than
- Physics Division, ORNL thinking correctly about probabilities."
- jsanders@orph01.phy.ornl.gov --S.J. Gould, "Eight Little Piggies"
-