The 1864 Franklin-Nashville Campaign: The Finishing Stroke
By (Author) Michael Thomas Smith
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
15th July 2014
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Early modern warfare (including gunpowder warfare)
Battles and campaigns
History of the Americas
973.737
Hardback
208
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
510g
This appealing narrative history of one of the Civil War's most pivotal campaigns analyzes how the western Confederate army under John B. Hood suffered a devastating defeat at the hands of George H. Thomas's Union forces. Ideal for general readers interested in military history of the Civil War as well as those concentrating on the western campaigns, The 1864 Franklin-Nashville Campaign: The Finishing Stroke examines how the strategic and tactical decisions by Confederate and Union commanders contributed to the smashing Northern victories in Tennessee in NovemberDecember 1864. The book also considers the conflict through the lens of New Military History, including the manner in which the battles both affected and were affected by civilian individuals, the environment, and common soldiers such as Confederate veteran Sam Watkins. The result of author Michael Thomas Smith's extensive research into the Civil War and his recognition of inadequate coverage of the final western campaigns in the existing literature, this work serves to rectify this oversight. The book also questions the concept of the outcome of the Civil War as being essentially attributable to superior Northern organization and managementthe "organized war to victory" theory as termed by its proponents.
Michael Thomas Smith is associate professor of history at McNeese State University, Lake Charles, LA.