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Battle Tactics of the American Civil War
 
 
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Battle Tactics of the American Civil War [Paperback]

Paddy Griffith
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 240 pages
  • Publisher: The Crowood Press Ltd; New edition edition (26 Mar 2001)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1861264607
  • ISBN-13: 978-1861264602
  • Product Dimensions: 19.4 x 12.6 x 1.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 185,935 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

"Provides a fresh and provocative appraisal of the [Civil] War... An essential read for anyone interested in the subject." Military Illustrated; "A prize. One gets a real feeling of how nineteenth-century battle worked." Paul A. Koch The Courier."

Product Description

This volume reappraises the events, the weapons used, the men of the novice armies, their leaders and the strategies employed in the Civil War - which was fought with a new generation of weapons and trench systems similar to those of World War I. The author argues that the conditions of combat were little changed from those of earlier times and far from being the birthplace of modern battlefield tactics, the Civil War was in reality the last Napoleonic-style war.

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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Simply put, If you are wanting a deeper understanding of how troops behaved on the Civil War battlefields, why troops in defensive wooded positions took massive casulties, and when tactics changed to a truly spade powered "digging in" war then this book will both surprise and inform.

The broader question is of if the ACW was the last "Napoleonic" war - fought with the tactics of 1792 - 1815 informed from early post war translations of french manuals of arms, or truly a revolution in war and a new tactical precursor of the horrors that would be the great war. The book has a number of questions raised in each chapter, and from selected but extensive sources he crafts an answer on each point.

The improvement of Equipment, Rifles, Changes to Drill and the comparison of Battlefields in the old world and the new, all feature in answering the question. There are a number of "quoted facts" taken from an extensive bibliography. For what could be a dry informative read becomes a light read (in as much as a book about many thousands of deaths can be)

This book will untangle a number of knotty problems about how the man on the ground saw the tactical issues, and fix in some small way the mindset of the reader to the difficulties of the day. If you are wargaming this war, then this is likely to have you wanting to re write (or throw away) your current rules set as unrealistic!

A fine addition to any military bookshelf, and essential reading for anyone wanting to get to an understanding of the tactics of the day!
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Format:Paperback
Well this book was a real joy to me because it attempts to dispel all the cliches about the Civil War and the modernity of its weapons and tactics.

As a Great War buff I always thought that siege warfare, trenches and the dominance of the defensive in the Civil war were a foretaste of things to come.

In reality it appears that the american battlefields of the 1860's are better seen as a throw back to the era of Wellington and Napoleon than that of the 20th Century.

Essential reading for those who want to go a little deeper than just scratching the surface.
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Amazon.com:  2 reviews
12 of 16 people found the following review helpful
More Lies and Nonsense From Paddy Griffith 6 April 2004
By Stephen M. St Onge - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Paddy Griffith likes to write books in which he claims his research shows that what everyone thought about a given war was wrong. Only he has found the truth, that the Civil War was really the 'last Napoleonic War.' Unfortunately, the evidence shows precisely the opposite.

Griffith gets the simplest things wrong. Example: on page 147, G. has a table of "Ranges of musketry fire." Do the math yourself, and you find that he can't divide or even add correctly. The tables of p 76 and 77 are even worse.

Griffith distorts his sources. On page 146, he claims "British experts" figured that 200 yards was "the battle range of the Brown Bess smoothbore musket." Turn to the footnotes, and you find a reference to p. 32 of Hew Strachan's FROM WATERLOO TO BALACLAVA. I have the page before me as I type. Nowhere on p. 32 is anyone mentioned as being an expert, nor is it even implied that anyone in the British Army was an expert in the performance of the Brown Bess. Quite the contrary.

What Strachan actually says is that the ability to hit a target with the Brown Bess "dwindled" as the range increased from 100 to 200 yards; that "most manuals" (written by unknown people of unknown knowledge) set the "maximum effective range" of the smoothbore as 200 yards; that "It was only just as the Brown Bess was nearing the end of its long life in the British army that any definite idea of the weapon's performance was secured"; that knowledge of "the range and power of the musket" was "very limited" as late as 1846; that at ranges over 116-126 yards, a considerable number of musket balls hit the dirt before reaching the target; and finally that the British concluded "as a General Rule musketry should not be opened at a distance exceeding 150, and certainly not exceeding 200 yards, as at and beyond that distance it would be a mere wast of ammunition to do so."

Griffith ignores evidence he doesn't like. Strachan's book goes on to say on p. 47 that the rifled musket resulted in "whole regiments 'melting' before British fire" at Inkerman; that penetration was much greater than with the musket (very significant when people fought in closely packed groups); that "At 150 yards the Minie was twice as accurate as the smoothbore musket," and "Furthermore this superiority of practice was not confined to a few marksmen."

Another: in ATTACK AND DIE: CIVIL WAR TACTICS AND THE SOUTHERN HERITAGE, Grady McWhiney & Perry D. Jamieson points out that in the War With Mexico of 1846-47, the U.S. Army fought with Napoleonic war tactics and weapons, and almost every Civil War general on both sides participated. The tactics used worked, even though they were carried out by amateurs. When they were attempted in the Civil War, they didn't work. Griffith blames the failure of Napoleonic tactics in the Civil War on the troops being amateurs and the generals not knowing how to fight.

Griffith misunderstands what's in front of him. G. mentions Jack Coggins's books ARMS AND EQUIPMENT OF THE CIVIL WAR, and calls your attention to an illustration on page 38-39 of Coggins, showing that in order to hit a target at 300 yards range, the bullet traveled 43 inches above line of sight at 150 yards. Griffith fails to realize that if the shooter is standing or kneeling, the bullet will be so high in the air it won't hit people at most ranges, but if the shooter fires from ground level (prone, or from a trench), it will NEVER get too high. Therefore, the effectiveness of rifle fire increased as entrenchments became more common.

Griffith just makes up bullsh*t. E.g., by mid 1863, soldiers were reluctant to attack entrenchments frontally. G. believes they were 'dispirited,' a bunch of 'old lags' who'd lost their nerve. This nonsense is an insult to the brave men on both sides in the last two years of the war. During this period, the Army of the Potomac and the Army of Northern Virginia both took about 45% casualties in only 40 days, while in Tennessee and Georgia Hood's Army was destroyed in combat when repeatedly attacking Sherman's troops.

Enough. The bottom line is that this book is so unreliable in every detail, you can't trust a single sentence written by Griffith. The only things of value are the direct quotations and the bibliography. Don't buy it.

3 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Rejects the conventional wisdom about the Civil War 21 Sep 2006
By R. H OAKLEY - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Paddy Griffith's study of tactics in the Civil War undoubtedly upsets some because he demonstrates that much of what is written about the Civil War is incorrect. First, he shows that the casualty rates for the major battles were not excessively high when measured against those suffered during Napoleonic battles. American commentators tend to concentrate on casualty rates from the battles of the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812, where the numbers of soldiers engaged were far fewer. Second, the widespread adoption of rifles by the Union and Confederate armies, with the increase in effective range, had less impact than previously believed. There was little or no training given to the troops to improve marksmanship (indeed, all armies tended to ignore the need for serious training until the British Army began to encourage it near the end of the 19th Century). The need for this training was significant, as hitting at target at long ranges required an accurate estimation of the distance as the bullets fired had a lower velocity than do more modern firearms.

Griffth's book is well researched, and has been cited by numerous modern historians. While I cannot vouch for every detail, the small errors cited by the other reviewer (if in fact they are errors) do not detract from the overall significance of this book.
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