Why the South Lost the Civil War

Why the South Lost the Civil War
Richard E. Beringer, Archer Jones, William N. Still, Jr., Herman Hattaway
About this book
A very readable (though lengthy) analysis of what caused the South to surrender to the North in 1865 -- when, per the authors, the south had not been militarily defeated (i.e., it had the means to continue military operations in a variety of ways) and was unlikely to be defeated and "conquered" militarily. At the end, they contrast the South's war against the North with Paraguay's war against the Triple Alliance of Brazil, Uruguay and Argentina to demonstrate a nation's absolute will to resist to the end -- demonstrating that the surrender was a decision. The book, then, discusses the many factors that have been addressed by scholars for the last hundred plus years concerning the South's decision to not continue the fight. Very interesting, very well researched, and written in a way that holds the interest of the layman (these folks are very good writers IMHO). For those wishing a greater understanding of the end of the Civil War, this is a very good choice.
Details
- OL Work ID
- OL18327944W
Subjects
HistoriographyHistoryHistory--historiographyE487 .w48 1986United states, history, civil war, 1861-1865New York Times reviewedUnited states historiographyConfederate states of america - general & miscellaneousUnited states civil war - reference & pictorialSouthern region - history - general & miscellaneous