© 1980 by Mark Nesbitt (concept by Paul S. Witt – whose signature is in the copy of the used book I bought)
This is a neat little book I bought down in Hilton
Head last August on vacation, purely based on the cover artwork:
How could I resist a book such as this!
Anyway, it’s a short read – 197 pages, the last 26 being
appendices: tactics, technology, the Confederate Constitution, army corps
organization charts, and an index. I read it over two nights. In fact, I
couldn’t put it down, really, and that’s always a bonus for a guy like me who
has a thousand books on deck to read. It makes reading fun. Yes, this was a fun
book.
According to his bio, Nesbitt first read about
Gettysburg when he was eight. He eventually worked as a ranger at the
battlefield for four years and has been passionate about it ever since. It
shows. This little book is probably the best moment-by-moment play-by-play of
the battle I’ve read. In short vignettes of half-a-page to a page-and-a-half,
he clearly explains the lead-up to the Pennsylvanian invasion, the thinking of
the generals, war councils, troop movements, and the actual combat. It was so
simple to follow along I was actually amazed.
The best thing, though, is that it’s a mix of fact and
speculation. And the demarcation line between the two is seamlessly crossed. I
didn’t notice it, though, truth be told, it’s probably been five years since I
read anything about Gettysburg, so the details of the battle have been lost to
the mists of memory. That rusty creaky file cabinet between my ears. Perhaps I
should have read up on the battle before reading If the South Won Gettysburg, but it didn’t take away from my
enjoyment of it. Actually it was kind of challenging: where, exactly, in the
battle does Nesbitt move from fact to fiction?
My guess is the final day. There’s no Pickett’s
Charge, the cliché-tagged “high watermark of the South”, Lee’s failed attempt
at smashing the Union line on Cemetery Ridge and the Round Tops using 18th-century
tactics in a war quickly moving into the early 20th-century. So it must’ve
occurred before then. There’s mention of Longstreet’s pincer plan, much like
the movement used by Stonewall Jackson to win at Chancellorsville, being
approved (I think) by Lee instead of declined, thus setting up the South’s
killing blow – Jeb Stuart’s unimpeded cavalry ride south to assault, and
ultimately take, the capital city of Washington.
Then the speculation flows. Lincoln and his cabinet
flee the city, but no other northern city will take him. He winds up in Canada.
Britain recognizes the Confederacy. But what interested me more was what could have happened further down the
timestream. For instance, the authors believe slavery would have died out
fifteen or so years after Southern independence for economic reasons which they
explain. Also, due to big-E economics, the South would not suffer the morass of
depression that an FDR-led North muddled in (due in large part that it was led
by FDR – my conclusion, not the book’s). The continental United States would fracture
into five nations: the USA, the CSA, the Republic of Texas, the Rocky Mountain
States, and the Republic of California.
However, we don’t see the North supporting the Central
Powers in the Great War (and possibly Nazi Germany) that I’ve read speculated elsewhere, nor do we see a Southern astronaut plant the Stars
and Bars in the Sea of Tranquility.
But to me the best part of the book is the five short
pages on Civil War tactics in the Appendix. How were battles fought? Strange,
but in the two dozen or so books I’ve read on the subject, battlefield tactics
were never straightforward explained to me. And now, care of If the South Won Gettysburg –
1) Gain the high ground. If the enemy attacks, he’ll
be tired climbing up after you. Also, easier to hide your reserve forces while
he must show all his.
2) Remember when gaining the high ground not to
silhouette yourself against the skyline.
3) Clear a field of fire in front of your position so
the enemy must advance over open ground.
4) Create obstacles before your position to break the
enemy’s formation while not giving him a chance of seek cover from your fire.
5) A position with a stream or river running before it
is a bonus, as the enemy must advance through it and may be unable to return
fire while doing so.
6) Secure your flanks – the “ends” of your line of
firing. If you have a company of a hundred men in two lines, they have an
alternating 50 weapons to fire with straight ahead. But if the enemy can attack
the flank (the “side” of your line), you will only have at first two weapons to
turn and fire upon him until and unless you reform the line. Securing the flank
meant placing it against a hill or in the woods or at a river or water source
where the enemy can’t get at it easily.
So, lots of interesting stuff packed into a small book
you can read in two quick nights. Definitely worth seeking out.
Grade: solid A.
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