One Damn Blunder from Beginning to End: The Red River Campaign of 1864

One Damn Blunder from Beginning to End: The Red River Campaign of 1864

by Gary Dillard Joiner
One Damn Blunder from Beginning to End: The Red River Campaign of 1864

One Damn Blunder from Beginning to End: The Red River Campaign of 1864

by Gary Dillard Joiner

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Overview

In the spring of 1864, as the armies of Grant and Lee waged a highly scrutinized and celebrated battle for the state of Virginia, a no- less important, but historically obscured engagement was being conducted in the pine barrens of northern Louisiana. In a year of stellar triumphs by Union armies across the South, the Red River Campaign stands out as a colossal failure. General William Tecumseh Sherman's scathing summation describes it best, "One damn blunder from beginning to end."

Taking its title from Sherman's blunt description, One Damn Blunder from Beginning to End: The Red River Campaign of 1864 is a fresh inspection of what was the Civil War's largest operation between the Union Army and Navy west of the Mississippi River. In a bold, but poorly managed effort to wrest Louisiana and Texas from Confederate control, a combined force of 40,000 Union troops and 60 naval vessels traveled up the twisting Red River in an attempt to capture the capital city of Shreveport.

Gary D. Joiner provides not a recycled telling of the campaign, but a strategic and tactical overview based on a stunning new array of facts gleaned from recently discovered documents. This never-before-published information reveals that the Confederate army had laid a clever trap by engineering a drop in the water level of the Red River to try to maroon the Union naval flotilla. Only the equally amazing ingenuity of the Union troops saved the fleet from certain destruction, despite a humiliating defeat at the Battle of Mansfield.

The Red River campaign had lasting implications. One Damn Blunder from Beginning to End magnifies just how devastating the diversion of so many men and so much material to this failed campaign was to the Union effort in the pivotal year of 1864. Because of the Union Army's failures, Northern plans to capture Mobile were scrapped. Military careers were made and lost. And at time when the Confederacy was teetering on the brink of oblivion, Southern morale was bolstered.

Joiner puts together

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781461639756
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 01/01/2003
Series: The American Crisis Series: Books on the Civil War Era
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 198
File size: 26 MB
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About the Author

Gary Dillard Joiner is instructor of history and director of the Red River Regional Studies Center at Louisiana State University.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Strategic Positions prior to the Campaign
Chapter 2 Confederate Defenses on the Red River, 1863-64
Chapter 3 Preparations
Chapter 4 Anabasis
Chapter 5 Through the Howling Wilderness
Chapter 6 I Will Fight Banks If He Has a Million Men
Chapter 7 The Safety of Our Whole Country Depends upon It
Chapter 8 Steele's Dilemma
Chapter 9 Katabasis
Chapter 10 Colonel Bailey's Dam
Chapter 11 Requiem for a Blunder

What People are Saying About This

David Madden

Historians have seldom taken on the complex history of the unique and relatively unknown Red River campaign, perhaps because it is such a sprawling, swampy tangle of blunders on both sides. Writing in a clear and unembellished style, Gary Dillard Joiner scouts readers into that tangle and brings them out again not only illuminated, but exhilarated.
— Founding Director, United States Civil War Center, Louisiana State University

Edwin Bearss

Historian and avid researcher Gary Dillard Joiner possesses a keen regional familiarity that enabled him to author a masterful narrative history of the 1864 Red River Campaign. This is one of the Civil War's major amphibious operations, and Joiner's appreciation of the river's vagaries, and his deep knowledge of naval vessels, river boats, and personnel provide a special dimension.
— Chief Historian Emeritus, National Park Service

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