The Campaigns Of General Nathan Bedford Forrest And Of Forrest's Cavalry
By (Author) Thomas Jordan
By (author) J. Pryor
Hachette Books
Da Capo Press Inc
22nd August 1996
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Biography: general
B
Paperback
736
Width 140mm, Height 210mm
In June 1861, practically unschooled, without military training or experience, Nathan Bedford Forrest (18211877) enlisted in the Confederate Army as a private. Yet by the Civil War's end he was a lieutenant general whose dazzling exploits and bloody victories caused him to be regarded by his Northern opponents as a "devil," by Southerners as a living legend, and by historians as the greatest cavalry commander and one of the few authentic military geniuses produced by the war. His spectacular, unparalleled career has intrigued generations of Civil War scholars and enthusiasts. Subsequent biographies or studies of him have never totally superseded The Campaigns of General Nathan Bedford Forrest (1868) by General Thomas Jordan (West Pointer and chief of staff to Generals Beauregard, Albert Sidney Johnston, and Braxton Bragg) and the professional journalist J. P. Pryor. Forrest himself gave them complete access to his military papers, spent many hours in interviews with them, and closely supervised their writing. Hence, this work is not just a flat campaign study of Forrestin effect, it is his military memoir and as such remains the most valuable source on Forrest and his cavalry.
General Thomas Jordan,West Pointer, was the chief of staff to Generals Beauregard, Albert Sidney Johnston, and Braxton Bragg. J. P. Pryor was a professional journalist