Monday, October 30, 2017

Book Review: Pickett's Charge: A microhistory



Pickett’s Charge: A microhistory of the final attack at Gettysburg, July 3, 1863




© 1959 by George R. Stewart (1895-1980)


First off, I like that term: microhistory. I’ve read history off and on for over twenty years now, and I don’t think I’ve ever read a “microhistory.” It appeals to me. Think of it: to know so much about a certain, limited period of time – an event suspended in the amber of time – to be an expert. That is what the author of this book, George Stewart, was. An expert. An authority.

The book chronicles “Pickett’s Charge,” the final assault on the union line on Day Three of the battle at Gettysburg. Robert E. Lee, aggressively invading the North for a second time in nine months, is seeking to destroy the Army of the Potomac, newly led by George Meade for all of three days. A victory for the South could very well lead to independence via foreign recognition or, not an unreasonable possibility, the utter destruction of Northern forces in the northeast. Harrisburg, Philadelphia – even Washington – would lay open undefended and at the rebels’ mercy.

On days one and two of the surprise confrontation, Lee attacked either flank of the Northern army. Picture two ridges, each running north-south, with about a mile between them, and a diagonal road running southwest to northeast within this plain. That’s the Gettysburg battlefield. The Union, holed up on the eastern ridge, is anchored at the north by Culp’s Hill, and in the south by Round Top and Little Round Top. Prior rebel attacks on both positions failed. Normally unpredictable, Lee now decides to attack the middle.

10,500 men in three divisions formed in several lines will march across the mile-long open plain for a timeless 20 minutes, braving artillery and rifle fire, to assault the Northern position. Though it was not distinctly Pickett’s to command (he was one of three commanders), history has labeled it “Pickett’s Charge.” It is the “high-water mark” of the South, for ultimately it failed, and the Rebellion was forced to fight a long, drawn-out, losing battle over the next 21 months.

Stewart divides the book into several large chapters:


Early Morning – Mostly Confederate

Later Morning – Mostly Union

Noon-day Lull

Between the Signal-shots

Cannonade

Second Lull

Advance

High-Water Mark

Repulse

Afterwards


Each takes a segment of the day and details, in short digestible bites, who was where with what: Generals, colonels, regiments, artillery batteries, defenses, headquarters. Then we enter the minds of the men, the leaders and the grunts behind the two-foot-high stone walls, those selected to “charge” into fire with fixed bayonets, the war councils, the dispatches between Longstreet (who had misgivings about the attack) and his various underlings. Meade’s correct guess where Lee’d attack. There’s lots of humor (a hog steals bread earmarked for the general’s lunch), lots of interesting tidbits and factoids (there was a Private George Stewart, no relation to the author, in the heat of the action). I found it page-turning, immensely intriguing, and the “microhistory” truly brings the battle to life in ways that larger works, for me, failed to do.

This book will stay on the shelf for a re-reading in the future. I may check out Stewart’s other diverse works as well. For instance, he wrote a post-apocalyptic novel in 1949 (before post-apocalyptic everything was done to death) that won the first International Fantasy Award. The novel, Earth Abides, was said by Stephen King to be an inspiration for The Stand.

Much as my previous Civil War read, If the South Won at Gettysburg, had something of substance to learn in its appendix, so does Pickett’s Charge. In the first, it was Civil War battlefield tactics, which I summarized in my review of that work. In Stewart’s microhistory, in the last chapter he details the grim “butcher’s bill,” which answers the question that had commonly popped into my mind, how do historians and the military quantify battlefield casualties?

Well, Stewart informs us of the following:


* Wounded should equal about four times the dead

* Killed / Total Casualties is approximately 17 percent (for the Civil War)

* In close fighting, the killed-to-total-casualty ratio is closer to 20 percent

* About 1 wounded man in 7 died later of his wounds

* Rule of thumb: 1 casualty in 12 credited to artillery fire


and not quite a statistical item, but one I found interesting due to other stuff I’ve read regarding the Civil War – at Gettysburg, there was not a single recorded instance of a man killed or wounded by a bayonet.


Grade: A-plus.



N.B. Numbered among the Confederate dead on the evening of July 3, 1863, was Private George Stewart of the 1st Tennessee.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

big fan of your civil war reviews. Always wanted to visit Gettysburg. Let me know. Me you and Andrew will make the trip.

Uncle

LE said...

Absolutely! Never thought I'd be reading all these books but the Civil War is endlessly fascinating, from geopolitics and Lincoln and the question of slavery to the military strategies and battlefield tactics to all the personalities involved. Still have 5 or 6 books on deck.

Plus I've read fairly reputable sources that the battlefield's haunted ....

Anonymous said...

We used to drive 15 miles to the west driving I81S to I70 when we went to visit andrew in school down in WV. Prob 4 - 4.5 hour drive. We should plan an overnight in teh spring