Selected Product: | The 1863 U.S. Infantry Tactics: Infantry of the Line, Light Infantry, and Riflemen Hardcover Edition: 2nd Publisher: Stackpole Books Release Date: 2002-09-10 ISBN-10: 0811700216 ISBN-13: 9780811700214 List Price: $22.95 Average Customer Rating: | | The 1862 Army Officer's Pocket Companion: A Manual for Staff Officers in the Field ISBN-10: 0811700208 ISBN-13: 0011557000207 List Price:$19.95 The 1862 U S Cavalry Tactics (Stackpole Military Classic) ISBN-10: 081170114X ISBN-13: 9780811701143 List Price:$19.95 The 1864 Field Artillery Tactics: Instruction for Field Artillery ISBN-10: 081170131X ISBN-13: 9780811701310 List Price:$21.95 The 1862 Army Officer's Pocket Companion: A Manual for Staff Officers in the Field ISBN-10: 0811700208 ISBN-13: 9780811700207 List Price:$19.95 The 1863 Laws Of War: Articles of War, General Orders 100, General Orders 49 and Extracts of Revised Army Regulations of 1861 (Military Classics (Stackpole Hardcover)) ISBN-10: 0811701336 ISBN-13: 9780811701334 List Price:$19.95 Camp and Outpost Duty: With Standing Orders, Extracts from the Revised Regulations for the Army, Rules for Health, Maxims for Soldiers, and Duties of Officers (Stackpole Military Classics) ISBN-10: 0811700674 ISBN-13: 9780811700672 List Price:$11.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The 1863 U.S. Infantry Tactics: Infantry of the Line, Light Infantry, and Riflemen by 0 (ISBN-10: 0811700216, ISBN-13: 9780811700214). At this time we have not yet written a review for The 1863 U.S. Infantry Tactics: Infantry of the Line, Light Infantry, and Riflemen by 0 (ISBN-10: 0811700216, ISBN-13: 9780811700214). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Written in 1861 at the direction of the War Department and copiously illustrated, this was the book used to train, lead, and maneuver U.S. Infantry units on Civil War battlefields. It contains the school of the soldier, the company, and battalion or fielded regiment, along with all-important instructions for skirmishers. Over 15 pages of field music, the articles of war in use at the time, and a dictionary of Civil War military terminology completes this extensive work. The work was authorized and adopted by the Secretary of War on May 1, 1861. This is the second edition issued in 1863. Excellent CW information, Excellent writing. | Customer Rating: | This book defines the ideal training and practice for Civil War infantry. Read carefully and you can almost see the instuctors and the recruits on the training field. Those regiments that were rushed into battle with only a few weeks between formation and combat obviously did not receive the benefit of all that is in this book. Those soldiers that did have the full benefit probably lived much longer and received fewer wounds than those who didn't. The demands on instructors and trainees placed by this book and the excellent results that were surely achieved probably explain why many in the 20th Maine hated Adelbert Ames, their original regimental commander and then revered and praised him for the rest of their lives. The catharsis came at Gettysburg on Little Roundtop. Anyone who reads the fine descriptions of that battle can understand the benefits that must have been brought by Ames insistence on rigid and complete training.
I've seen 19th century writing sytle described as difficult for the modern reader of period memoirs. I have not found it to be so difficult. And this book provides an example of what must be the epitome of mid-century instructional style. A picture might be worth a thousand words but the writer(s) of this book were able to describe complex actions in many fewer than a thousand words. The descriptions are so clear and unburdened that pictures just jump into the mind. No, you can't speed read this book and fully appreciate it, but a careful reading brings many rewards to the Civil War buff. |
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