Description

Book Synopsis
A sweeping study of the operations on land and sea, From the Mountains to the Bay is the only modern scholarly work that looks at the operations that took place in Virginia in early 1862 as a single, comprehensive campaign.

Trade Review

"Rafuse supplies his readers with excellent summaries of the Romney Expedition, the battles of Kernstown and McDowell, siege operations along the Yorktown-Warwick River line, the large clash at Williamsburg, and everything in between. The military and political factors involved in the high command decision-making of both sides is expertly chronicled, and the strong emphasis placed on their interconnectivity is elucidated to great satisfaction."—Civil War Books and Authors

"Prodigiously researched, eloquently crafted, and engaging, historian Ethan Rafuse’s From the Mountains to the Bay offers a fresh perspective and cogent analysis of operations throughout the Old Dominion during 1862’s first five months. For anyone seeking a comprehensive understanding of the fighting in Virginia during this period, Rafuse’s study is essential."—Jonathan A. Noyalas, author of Slavery and Freedom in the Shenandoah Valley during the Civil War Era

"Remarkably, there is no other modern work of scholarship that weaves all the operations in Virginia together. Rafuse provides a comprehensive view, with strong attention to politics, the media, African Americans, civilian perspectives, and effects on civilians. His detailed military analysis emphasizes the delays imposed by weather and logistics, with critical but nuanced assessments of the commanders on both sides. A model holistic campaign study."—Samuel J. Watson, professor of history at the United States Military Academy and author of Peacekeepers and Conquerors: The Army Officer Corps on the American Frontier, 1821–1846

"In this sweeping survey of what was happening in Virginia during the spring of 1862, Ethan Rafuse ties together several major campaigns as they related to each other and to the course of the Civil War itself. These were, as he points out, the largest connected series of campaigns attempted by Federal commanders thus far in the conflict, and they affected civilian populations in the region nearly as much as they affected the officers and enlisted men. Union and Confederate operations in western Virginia, the Shenandoah Valley, and on the Peninsula from January to May 1862 are discussed as a unit, and for the first time we can see the whole picture thanks to this sharply written, well organized, and enlightening book."—Earl J. Hess, author of Civil War Supply and Strategy: Feeding Men and Moving Armies



Table of Contents
  • List of Photographs
  • List of Maps
  • Preface and Acknowledgments
  • 1. “The Romance of the Thing Is Entirely Worn”: A New Year and a Winter Campaign
  • 2. “A General Conviction That Somebody Must Be Hurt”: Councils of War, the Retreat from Manassas Junction, and the Fall of Winchester
  • 3. “Wondering What Would Happen Nex”: Planning Operations, Commanders and Capitals, and the Flight of the Ironclads
  • 4. “We Shall Have Lively Times”: Kernstown, a Pathfinder, and the Move to the Peninsula
  • 5. “The Grass Will Not Grown under My Feet” The Grand Campaign on the Peninsula Begins
  • 6. “Sunny South Indeed!” Blenker’ March to the Mountains and Problems and Yorktown
  • 7. “Matters Are Progressing” Maneuvers in the Valley, Fredericksburg, the Fight at Dam No. 1, and the Siege of Yorktown
  • 8. “:Let the Boys Yell!” Harrisonburg, the Fall of Yorktown, and the Fight at Williamsburg
  • 9. “We Have . . . Met the Enemy”: Eltham’ Landing, Sitlington’s Hill, a Presidential Campaign, and Drewry’s Bluff
  • 10. “Affairs Have about Come to A Crisis”: McDowell Prepares the Advance to the Chickahominy, and Jackson Returns to the Valley
  • Epilogue—“If You Will Write the Decline and Fall of This Rebellion”
  • Appendix A—Union Order of Battle
  • Appendix B—Confederate Order of Battle
  • Notes
  • Works Cited
  • Index

From the Mountains to the Bay The War in

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    A Hardback by Ethan S. Rafuse

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      Publisher: MP-KAN Uni Press of Kansas
      Publication Date: 12/15/2022 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780700633531, 978-0700633531
      ISBN10: 0700633537

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A sweeping study of the operations on land and sea, From the Mountains to the Bay is the only modern scholarly work that looks at the operations that took place in Virginia in early 1862 as a single, comprehensive campaign.

      Trade Review

      "Rafuse supplies his readers with excellent summaries of the Romney Expedition, the battles of Kernstown and McDowell, siege operations along the Yorktown-Warwick River line, the large clash at Williamsburg, and everything in between. The military and political factors involved in the high command decision-making of both sides is expertly chronicled, and the strong emphasis placed on their interconnectivity is elucidated to great satisfaction."—Civil War Books and Authors

      "Prodigiously researched, eloquently crafted, and engaging, historian Ethan Rafuse’s From the Mountains to the Bay offers a fresh perspective and cogent analysis of operations throughout the Old Dominion during 1862’s first five months. For anyone seeking a comprehensive understanding of the fighting in Virginia during this period, Rafuse’s study is essential."—Jonathan A. Noyalas, author of Slavery and Freedom in the Shenandoah Valley during the Civil War Era

      "Remarkably, there is no other modern work of scholarship that weaves all the operations in Virginia together. Rafuse provides a comprehensive view, with strong attention to politics, the media, African Americans, civilian perspectives, and effects on civilians. His detailed military analysis emphasizes the delays imposed by weather and logistics, with critical but nuanced assessments of the commanders on both sides. A model holistic campaign study."—Samuel J. Watson, professor of history at the United States Military Academy and author of Peacekeepers and Conquerors: The Army Officer Corps on the American Frontier, 1821–1846

      "In this sweeping survey of what was happening in Virginia during the spring of 1862, Ethan Rafuse ties together several major campaigns as they related to each other and to the course of the Civil War itself. These were, as he points out, the largest connected series of campaigns attempted by Federal commanders thus far in the conflict, and they affected civilian populations in the region nearly as much as they affected the officers and enlisted men. Union and Confederate operations in western Virginia, the Shenandoah Valley, and on the Peninsula from January to May 1862 are discussed as a unit, and for the first time we can see the whole picture thanks to this sharply written, well organized, and enlightening book."—Earl J. Hess, author of Civil War Supply and Strategy: Feeding Men and Moving Armies



      Table of Contents
      • List of Photographs
      • List of Maps
      • Preface and Acknowledgments
      • 1. “The Romance of the Thing Is Entirely Worn”: A New Year and a Winter Campaign
      • 2. “A General Conviction That Somebody Must Be Hurt”: Councils of War, the Retreat from Manassas Junction, and the Fall of Winchester
      • 3. “Wondering What Would Happen Nex”: Planning Operations, Commanders and Capitals, and the Flight of the Ironclads
      • 4. “We Shall Have Lively Times”: Kernstown, a Pathfinder, and the Move to the Peninsula
      • 5. “The Grass Will Not Grown under My Feet” The Grand Campaign on the Peninsula Begins
      • 6. “Sunny South Indeed!” Blenker’ March to the Mountains and Problems and Yorktown
      • 7. “Matters Are Progressing” Maneuvers in the Valley, Fredericksburg, the Fight at Dam No. 1, and the Siege of Yorktown
      • 8. “:Let the Boys Yell!” Harrisonburg, the Fall of Yorktown, and the Fight at Williamsburg
      • 9. “We Have . . . Met the Enemy”: Eltham’ Landing, Sitlington’s Hill, a Presidential Campaign, and Drewry’s Bluff
      • 10. “Affairs Have about Come to A Crisis”: McDowell Prepares the Advance to the Chickahominy, and Jackson Returns to the Valley
      • Epilogue—“If You Will Write the Decline and Fall of This Rebellion”
      • Appendix A—Union Order of Battle
      • Appendix B—Confederate Order of Battle
      • Notes
      • Works Cited
      • Index

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