Hancock The Superb

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Pickle Partners Publishing, 6 lis 2015 - 366
This is the life story of a great fighting general of the Civil War, Winfield Scott Hancock.

In the early fighting on the Peninsula, when the Confederates were flanked out of Fort Magruder, McClellan reported, “Hancock was superb.” Before long people were referring to him as Hancock the Superb, and for the next three years he re-earned the sobriquet in battle after battle. He was able to distinguish himself equally in disastrous defeat, as at Chancellorsville, and m victory, as at Gettysburg. Tucker feels personally that some of Hancock’s work with Grant—in the Wilderness and at Spotsylvania—was the most fascinating of his career, and he makes a good case for this view.

Glenn Tucker chose to write about Hancock primarily because of his interesting personality and remarkable career. These are reason enough.

He also had another reason. For more than three years, while a succession of commanding generals came and went, Hancock was a growing power in the Army of the Potomac. Along with his study of Hancock, Tucker also presents a graphic picture of the Army of the Potomac.

It was a much maligned army. Because of its inept, bumbling commanders, it took some crushing and much publicized defeats. But in spite of Pope, Burnside, Hooker and others not much better, it weathered the worst blows Lee could inflict on it, preserved a bloody stalemate and at last wore down the enemy.

Hancock and the Army of the Potomac fought together right up to the end. Never seeking top command, Hancock was the best and most trusted of the subordinate generals. Under good commanders and bad, his steadiness, unfailing courage and incisive military judgment many times helped to preserve the Army of the Potomac as an efficient fighting force.

Glenn Tucker’s reporting skill puts you right in the action. You are at Hancock’s elbow in a score of battles in Virginia and you are there for three cataclysmic days at Gettysburg.

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Spis treści

Contents
19
2
Buell Reappears to Some Purpose 36
Some Benefits Gained from the Garrison Years 44
Parting with Old Friends 48
Hancock Whispering to His Brigade 58
McClellan Gives Lavish Approval 73
The Flames Are Allies of the Enemy 170
Spotsylvania Breakthrough 174
Lee Has the Guns Withdrawn 178
Hancocks Men Crash Through the Lines 182
General Lee Shouted to the Rear 185
The Federals Inflict the Heavier Loss 189
9
Grant Neglects to Tell His Orders 208

Holding the Center at Antietam 76
Storming Maryes Heights 82
Hancocks Attack Launched like a Catapult 87
The Irish Brigade Outdoes Fontenoy 90
Hooker Loses the Required Number 94
Hooker Challenges God to Deliver Lee 99
I Became a Hero by That Mans Influence 102
Hays Adds a Rejuvenated Brigade 106
Hancock Likes the Gettysburg Position 119
10
The Corps Was Never Surprised 154
Sleeping with the Chancellorsville Ghosts 159
Hays Is Carried Out of the Woods 162
Gibbon Falters When Victory Is Promised 165
Defeat Has Bitter Dregs 220
Sharp Words over the Defeat 224
Parting with the Second Corps 227
Mosby and Mrs Surratt 231
Hancocks Consideration for Mrs Surratt 234
A Trial in Statesmanship 239
A Novel Order Electrifies the Country 244
Even Acrimonious Talk Is Legal 248
Grant Incensed by a Cool Hancock 251
Parade and Taps 255
REQUEST FROM THE PUBLISHER 273
Bibliographical Note and Acknowledgments 282
Front Matter THE SUPERB 285
17

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