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Killer Angels Civil War Book Essay Research

Killer Angels Civil War Book Essay, Research Paper


Chamberlain


Entering Bowdoin College , Chamberlain studied the


traditional classical curriculum and showed particular skill


at languages. But first Chamberlain took his Bowdoin A. B.


degree, in the Class of 1852, and returned north for three


more years of study. Turning down the opportunity to become


a minister or missionary, he accepted a position at Bowdoin


teaching rhetoric. A good scholar, he was also an orthodox


Congregationalist, an important factor to his Bowdoin


colleagues, for the College was embroiled in the


denominational quarrels of the day.


Chamberlain knew little of soldiering despite a short


time as a boy at a military school at Ellsworth. When the


sectional crisis led to civil war in 1861, Chamberlain felt


a strong urge to fight to save the union. Although


sympathetic to the plight of the slaves, he is not known to


have been an abolitionist and showed little interest, after


the war, in the cause of the freedmen. But the college was


reluctant to lose his services. Offered a year’s travel with


pay in Europe in 1862 to study languages, Chamberlain


instead volunteered his military services to Maine’s


governor. He was soon made lieutenant colonel of the 20th


Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment.


He is best remembered for two great events: the action


at Little Round Top, on the second day of Gettysburg (2 July


1863), when then-Colonel Chamberlain and the 20th Maine held


the extreme left flank of the Union line against a fierce


rebel attack, and the surrender of Lee’s Army of Northern


Virginia at Appomattox, when Grant chose Chamberlain to


receive the formal surrender of weapons and colors (12 April


1865). Always a chivalrous man, Chamberlain had his men


salute the defeated Confederates as they marched by,


evidence of his admiration of their valor and of Grant’s


wish to encourage the rebel armies still in the field to


accept the peace.


Although never forgotten in Maine, Chamberlain largely


faded from national view for most of the 20th century. No


statue of him was ever erected at Gettysburg; few historians


studied his campaigns. But amid the surge of interest in the


Civil War in the 1990s he has re-emerged as an exemplary


figure among the Union generals, the very model of the


citizen-soldier.


Longstreet


James Longstreet at age forty-two was the dean of corps


commanders at Gettysburg; he had been in corps command twice


as long as anybody else on either side. It was he who would


command of the Army of Northern Virginia if Lee were


incapacitated. He was a man who studied the averages and


calculated the odds carefully. Never one to force his


chances, he preferred to wait for a situation like the one


at Fredericksburg, where he could prepare his defenses on


advantageous terrain and wait for the enemy to shatter


himself against them. If the odds were not in his favor, he


would wait for the moment when he held the trumps.

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Longstreet approached his business dispassionately. To him,


victory was the result of thoughtful planning, not heroism.


While he supported Lee’s bold strategic offensives, it was


always with an eye to fighting a defensive battle at the


climax of each campaign. His way of evening the odds with


the numerically superior Union army was to conserve his


men’s lives, not gamble them needlessly in costly assaults.


He thus dealt in human life with a conservatism lacking in


many military men, especially in the South. He showed


constant concern for his men’s well-being. At


When the bullets began to fly, Longstreet’s


immovability translated into a magnificent fearlessness.


Longstreet was a native of South Carolina who grew up mostly


in Georgia.


When the Civil War began in 1861 Longstreet joined the


Confederate army with no ambition for glory. Since he was


the ranking officer from Alabama, he was instead made a


brigadier general. On October 7, Longstreet was given


command of the Third Division of the army.


Lee said “Here comes my war horse from the field he has


done so much to save!”


“War Horse” to Lee, “Pete” or “Old Peter” to his men,


“Dutch” to his West Point pals, sometimes “Bull” or


“Bulldog,” Longstreet was a man who attracted nicknames. Few


colorful stories attached themselves to him, however,


because of his phlegmatic personality. Interestingly,


Longstreet in the first year of the war had been a popular


companion; his headquarters had been a center of


socialization where visitors could expect a good time, a


fine meal, plenty of whiskey. General Lee followed the


custom of pitching his tent close to Longstreet’s. Although


the two differed fundamentally in their philosophy of how


the war should be waged, Lee would continue to value


Longstreet even if he was at times presumptuous when he


advanced his recommendations to Lee, did not bother his


superior with unsolved problems. Perhaps this is the trait


which most endeared Lee to Longstreet Lee’s continuing


physical closeness with Longstreet indicated respect for his


opinions.


Fredericksburg, for Longstreet, was the most


instructive battle of the war. His men, stoutly prepared,


repulsed division after division of Federal attackers. This


became the battle he sought to re-fight for the rest of the


war. Perhaps it spoiled him, giving him the notion that if


he got in position and stayed there, impatient Union


generals would crash headlong into his prepared defenses


like Union they did before. When Lee reunited the army for


the Gettysburg Campaign, Longstreet discussed grand strategy


with Lee, and somehow got the impression that Lee was


committed to fighting only defensive battles, the kind


Longstreet liked. Combined with Longstreet’s liabilities his


deliberateness when on the offensive and his habit of


sulking when contradicted. This misunderstanding would have


terrible consequences for the Army of Northern Virginia in


enemy territory.

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