Description
In Bayou Battles for Vicksburg, the latest volume in his five-volume history of the Vicksburg Campaign of the US Civil War, Timothy B. Smith offers the first book-length examination of Ulysses S. Grant's winter waterborne attempts to capture the Confederate stronghold of Vicksburg, Mississippi.
The accepted strategy up to this point in the war was aligned with the principles of the Swiss theorist Antoine-Henri Jomini, whose work was taught at West Point, where commanders on both sides of the conflict had been educated. But Jomini emphasized secure supply lines and a slow, steady, unified approach to a target such as Vicksburg, and never had much to say about creeks, rivers, and bayous in a subtropical swamp environment. Grant threw out conventional wisdom with a bold, and ultimately successful, plan to avoid a direct approach and rather divide his forces to accomplish multiple goals and to confuse the enemy by cutting levies, flooding whole sections of watersheds, and bypassing strongholds by digging canals far around them.
Bayou Battles for Vicksburg details each of the Union attempts to reach high ground east of the Mississippi River and includes fresh research on the Yazoo Pass and Steele's Bayou expeditions, Grant's canal, and the Lake Providence effort. Smith weaves several simultaneous Union initiatives together into a chronological narrative that provides great detail on the Union's successful final attempt to get to good ground east of the Mississippi.
About the Author
Timothy B. Smith teaches history at the University of Tennessee at Martin. His many books include, most recently, Early Struggles for Vicksburg: The Mississippi Central Campaign and Chickasaw Bayou, October 25-December 31, 1862; The Siege of Vicksburg: Climax of the Campaign to Open the Mississippi River, May 23-July 4, 1863; and The Union Assaults at Vicksburg: Grant Attacks Pemberton, May 17-22, 1863, all published by Kansas.
Reviews
Bayou Battles for Vicksburg continues the exhaustive research and clear analysis that marks Timothy Smith's impressive catalog. This chronicle of battles against man and nature fittingly takes its place in Smith's masterful multivolume study of the campaign to conquer the Gibraltar of the Mississippi." - Jonathan M. Steplyk, author of Fighting Means Killing: Civil War Soldiers and the Nature of Combat
Book Information
ISBN 9780700635665
Author Timothy B. Smith
Format Hardback
Page Count 552
Imprint University Press of Kansas
Publisher University Press of Kansas
Weight(grams) 363g