
Great Maps of the Civil War: Pivotal Battles and Campaigns Featuring
Condition: SECONDHAND
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When Union General George McClellan marched toward the Confederate capital of Richmond in 1862, he encountered the Warwick River -where it wasn't supposed to be.- McClellan was following a map created by an esteemed topographer, but the map was wrong! -The Cram Map- that McClellan was using is one of the removable maps in Great Maps of the Civil War . So is the map Union Gen. James B. McPherson was carrying when he was killed on July 22, 1864, just east of Atlanta. -Commanders moving their armies . . . often had to advance slowly, groping their way blindly, - says William Miller. -They used what maps they could find, but most contained serious errors. . . . Studies of Civil War maps usually focus on handsome, postbattle maps of battlefields. . . . While these maps explain how a battle was fought, they do nothing to help us answer the questions about why a battle or campaign was conducted as it was.- The maps in Great Maps of the Civil War are the ones the commanders actually used or were likely to have been available to them.
Author: William J Miller
Format: Hardback, 76 pages, 315mm x 259mm, 1474 g
Published: 2004, Quarto Publishing Group USA Inc, United States
Genre: Military History
When Union General George McClellan marched toward the Confederate capital of Richmond in 1862, he encountered the Warwick River -where it wasn't supposed to be.- McClellan was following a map created by an esteemed topographer, but the map was wrong! -The Cram Map- that McClellan was using is one of the removable maps in Great Maps of the Civil War . So is the map Union Gen. James B. McPherson was carrying when he was killed on July 22, 1864, just east of Atlanta. -Commanders moving their armies . . . often had to advance slowly, groping their way blindly, - says William Miller. -They used what maps they could find, but most contained serious errors. . . . Studies of Civil War maps usually focus on handsome, postbattle maps of battlefields. . . . While these maps explain how a battle was fought, they do nothing to help us answer the questions about why a battle or campaign was conducted as it was.- The maps in Great Maps of the Civil War are the ones the commanders actually used or were likely to have been available to them.
