
Grant at Vicksburg: The General and the Siege
Author(s): Michael Ballard (Author)
- Publisher: Southern Illinois University Pr
- Publication Date: 30 April 2013
- Edition: Illustrated
- Language: English
- Print length: 240 pages
- ISBN-10: 080933240X
- ISBN-13: 9780809332403
Book Description
After an overview of Grant’s early Civil War career from his first battle through the early stages of the attacks on Vicksburg, Ballard describes in detail how Grant conducted the siege, examining his military decisions, placement of troops, strategy and tactics, engineering objectives, and relationships with other officers. Grant’s worried obsession with a perceived danger of a rear attack by Joseph Johnston’s Confederate army, Ballard shows, affected his decision making, and shows how threats of Confederate action occupied more of Grant’s time than did the siege itself.
In addition, Ballard soundly dispels a false story about Grant’s alleged drinking binge early in the siege that has been taken as truthful by many historians, examines how racism in Grant’s army impacted the lives of freed black people and slaves in the Vicksburg area, and explores Grant’s strained relationship with John McClernand, a politically appointed general from Illinois. The book concludes with the surrender of Vicksburg on July 4, 1863, the expulsion of Johnston and his army from the region, and demonstrates the impact of the siege on the outcome on the short and long-terms of Grant’s military career.
By analyzing Grant’s personality during the siege and how he dealt with myriad issues as both a general and an administrator, Grant at Vicksburg offers a revealing rendering of the legendary general.
Editorial Reviews
Review
“In Grant at Vicksburg, Michael Ballard argues convincingly that the siege of Vicksburg became the essential stepping stone that molded Ulysses S. Grant militarily, administratively, and politically. These traits would ultimately lead him to success against Robert E. Lee in Virginia. Quite simply, Ballard has established himself as America’s leading authority on the Civil War in Mississippi.”–Larry J. Daniel, author of Days of Glory: The Army of the Cumberland, 1861–1865
“Ballard’s enjoyable new book illuminates the missing gap in the story of the crucial Vicksburg Campaign in the Western Theater. A distinguished historian of Civil War Mississippi and Vicksburg, Ballard turns his expertise to a searching examination of the forty-seven-day siege that preceded the surrender of the ‘Gibraltar of the Confederacy’ from the perspective of Major General U. S. Grant. In this highly readable, superbly researched account, the reader learns of the challenges, pitfalls, and mistakes made by the Union commander directing the massive operation of June and July 1863. Grant at Vicksburg is an essential volume to add to any Civil War bookshelf.”–Joan Waugh, author of U.S. Grant, American Hero, American Myth
“No one knows more about the titanic struggle for Vicksburg than Ballard, and no one has ever penned a better account of U. S. Grant’s role in that struggle. Perceptive, balanced, and thoroughly researched, this is a model ‘campaign biography’ of an emerging military leader.”–William L. Shea, coauthor of Vicksburg Is the Key
About the Author
Michael B. Ballard is coordinator for the Congressional and Political Research Center and the associate editor in the U. S. Grant Presidential Library and University Archivist at Mississippi State University. He has written or edited eleven books, including Civil War in Mississippi: Major Campaigns and Battles, Vicksburg: The Campaign that Opened the Mississippi, and U. S. Grant: The Making of a General, 1861-1863.
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