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Authors: Bruce Catton

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11.
Army Life: a Private's Reminiscences,
p. 251.

 

12.
Humphreys, pp. 322-25;
Official Records,
Vol. XLVI,
Part 1, pp. 50-51.

  1. The Passing of the Armies,
    p. 34.
  2. The Story of the Regiment,
    p. 381.
  1. Annals of the 6th Pennsylvania Cavalry,
    p. 330;
    Last Hours of Sheridan's Cavalry,
    by Henry Edwin Tremain, pp. 19-24.
  2. Grant's
    Personal Memoirs,
    Vol. II, p. 439;
    Battles and Leaders,
    Vol. IV, p. 709; Moore's
    Rebellion Record,
    Vol. XI, p. 644;
    The Life of John A. Rawlins,
    pp. 309-10.
  3. Horace Porter describes the meeting between Grant and Sheridan in
    Battles and Leaders,
    Vol. IV, p. 710. See also
    The Passing of the Armies,
    p. 62; Grant's
    Personal Memoirs,
    Vol. II, p. 437.
  4. There is an engaging description of Devin's movements, with particular reference to the difficulties of the horse holders on the retreat to Dinwiddie Courthouse, in
    Last Hours of Sheridan's Cavalry,
    pp. 37-45.
  5. Ibid.,
    pp. 50-55; Sheridan's report, Moore's
    Rebellion Record,
    Vol. XI, p. 644;
    Battles and Leaders,
    Vol. IV, p. 711.
  6. Grant's
    Personal Memoirs,
    Vol. II, p. 442;
    Battles and Leaders,
    Vol. IV, p. 711;
    Official Records,
    Vol. XLVI, Part
    1,
    p. 380.

21.
Last Hours of Sheridan's Cavalry,
p. 56o

  1. The Passing of the Armies,
    pp. 65-78;
    The Fifth Army Corps,
    pp. 781-83; Humphreys, pp. 330-34;
    Official Records,
    Vol. XLVI, Part 1, pp. 337, 817-18.
  2. Campaigns of the 146th Regiment New York State Volunteers,
    p. 292;
    History of the Corn Exchange Regiment,
    p. 574; Humphreys, pp. 337-40;
    The Passing of the Armies,
    pp. 90-96;
    Official Records,
    Vol. XLVI, Part 1, pp. 820, 822. In his report on Five Forks Warren explained that since his troops were so close to the enemy it was impossible to summon them out by drum or bugle; verbal orders had to pass down a long chain which began at corps headquarters and ended with non-coms arousing individual soldiers by shaking them. For the confusing series of orders Warren got that night, see the volume just cited, pp. 365-67, 410, 419-20.
  1. The Passing of the Armies,
    pp. 104, 121.
  2. Humphreys, p. 356;
    Battles and Leaders,
    Vol. IV, p. 723.
  3. The Passing of the Armies,
    introduction, pp. xii-xiv.
  4. Grant's
    Personal Memoirs,
    Vol. II, p. 445.
  1. In the Ranks from the Wilderness to Appomattox Courthouse,
    pp. 193-94.
  2. The Fifth Army Corps,
    pp. 800-4; Humphreys, pp. 346-48; M.H.S.M.
    Papers,
    Vol. VI, pp. 249-52.

     

    9.
    The Passing of the Armies,
    pp. 129-30.
    1. Battles and Leaders,
      Vol. IV, p. 714.
    2. Ibid.,
      p. 713;
      The Passing of the Armies,
      pp. 133-34.
    3. Very loyal to Warren but impressed by Sheridan in spite of himself, General Chamberlain describes all of these exchanges in
      The Passing of the Armies,
      p. 142. There are very extended descriptions of the battle of Five Forks, with particular reference to the movements of the V Corps, and with strong defense of Warren's actions, by Captain Charles H. Porter and Brevet Lieutenant Colonel William W. Swan, in
      M.H.S.M. Papers,
      Vol. VI, pp. 211-34, 237-55, 259-408.
    4. Chamberlain,
      op. ext.,
      pp. 143-44, 151.
    5. Ibid.,
      pp. 152-53.
    6. Battles and Leaders,
      Vol. IV, pp. 714-15.
  1. Following the Greek Cross,
    pp. 249-50; Humphreys, p. 364; "The Storming of the Lines at Petersburg," by Brevet Brigadier General Hazard Stevens, in Vol. VI, M.H.S.M.
    Papers,
    pp. 412-13, 418. The latter work has an exceptionally good description of the formidable Confederate defenses.
  2. General Stevens,
    M.H.S.M. Papers,
    Vol. VI, p. 422;
    Red, White and Blue Badge,
    by Penrose G. Mark, p. 321.
  3. Following the Greek Cross,
    p. 252;
    History of Dur
    rell's Battery in the Civil War,
    pp. 241-42; manuscript letters of Lewis Bissell;
    History of the Corn Exchange Regiment,
    pp. 282-83.

     

    19.
    M.H.S.M. Papers,
    Vol. VI, p. 423.
  1. Ibid.,
    pp. 426-28;
    History of the 5th Regiment Maine Volunteers,
    p. 344; General Wright's report,
    Official Records,
    Vol. XLVI, Part 1, pp. 902-4.
  2. Following the Greek Cross,
    p. 253;
    History of the 5th Regiment Maine Volunteers,
    p. 345;
    Battles and Leaders,
    Vol. IV, p. 717.
  3. History of the 2nd Connecticut Volunteer Heavy Artillery,
    pp. 159-60. The break-through of the VI Corps was by no means inexpensive, the corps losing 1,100 men in fifteen minutes. The Confederate works at Petersburg were all but literally invulnerable, despite the extreme attenuation of Confederate manpower, and General Wright said later that the spot his corps attacked, which was the weakest place in the entire Confederate line, was the only place where an assault could possibly have succeeded. See Humphreys, p. 365.

the enormous silence

 

1.
Letters of a War Correspondent,
pp. 308-10;
Days and
Events,
pp. 439-40.

  1. Music on the March,
    p. 227.
  2. History of the 198th Pennsylvania Volunteers,
    p. 53.

4.
The Story of the Regiment,
p. 394;
Last Hours of Sheri-
dan's Cavalry,
p. 115;
Official Records,
Vol. XLVI, Part
1,
p. 510.

5.
Army Life: a Private's Reminiscences,
pp. 247-48;
His-
tory of the Corn Exchange Regiment,
p. 583; Gibbon's
Per-
sonal Recollections,
p. 302;
The Story of the Regiment,
p. 395.

  1. Last Hours of Sheridan's Cavalry,
    pp. 97-101.
  2. Meade's Headquarters,
    pp. 345-46.
  1. Battles and Leaders,
    Vol. IV, pp. 719-20;
    The Generalship of Ulysses
    S.
    Grant,
    p. 351.
  2. "A Recruit Before Petersburg," by George B. Peck, Jr., from
    Rhode Island Soldiers and Sailors Society, Personal Narratives,
    Second Series, p. 52;
    History of the 2nd Connecticut Volunteer Heavy Artillery,
    p. 160.
  1. Last Hours of Sheridan's Cavalry,
    pp. 133, 149-52.
  2. Four Years in the Army of the Potomac,
    p. 199.
  3. Following the Greek Cross,
    pp. 262-63. There is an unforgettable glimpse of what Lee himself saw of this disaster in R.
    E. Lee,
    Vol. IV, pp. 84-86. For Meade's anger at what he considered Sheridan's attempt to assume sole credit for this victory, see
    Meade's Headquarters,
    p. 351.
  4. Days and Events,
    p. 449; manuscript letters of Lewis Bissell.
  5. Battles and Leaders,
    Vol. IV, pp. 729-30;
    History of the Second Army Corps,
    pp. 681-83.
  6. Army Life: a Private's Reminiscences,
    pp. 251-52;
    In the Ranks from the Wilderness to Appomattox Courthouse,
    p. 212;
    History of the Corn Exchange Regiment,
    p. 587. Looking back from his old age, Grant wrote glowingly that "straggling had entirely ceased"
    (Personal Memoirs,
    Vol. II, p. 481), but the men who did the marching made no such claim.
  7. Army Life: a Private's Reminiscences,
    p. 253. This unpretentious book has a very good description of the march to Appomattox, the final scene there, and the surrender ceremonies. The artillery-infantry fight on the dark road is also depicted in
    History of the Corn Exchange Regiment,
    p. 587.
  8. Last Hours of Sheridan's Cavalry,
    pp. 214-18, 228 #.;
    History of the 17th Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteer Cavalry,
    p. 315.

18.
Army Life: a Private's Reminiscences,
p. 254;
The

 

Fifth Army Corps,
p. 849;
In the Ranks from the Wilderness to Appomattox Courthouse,
p. 213.

  1. The Sunset of the Confederacy,
    by Morris Schaff, p. 214; Gibbon's
    Personal Recollections,
    p. 315.
    1. Ibid.,
      pp. 31&-17;
      Sabres and Spurs,
      p. 456.
    2. Army Life; a Private's Reminiscences,
      pp. 255
      -56o
    3. The Sunset of the Confederacy,
      p. 215.
    4. Army Life: a Private's Reminiscences,
      p. 257. The author of
      Last Hours of Sheridan's Cavalry
      says (p. 427): "We were too sleepy to move rapidly. We were too cross to be shoved by bullets."
    5. The Sunset of the Confederacy,
      pp. 219-20;
      History of the 198th Pennsylvania Volunteers,
      p. 57;
      Last Hours of Sheridan's Cavalry,
      pp. 252-53.
    6. Thirteenth Regiment of New Hampshire Volunteer In-fantry in the War of the Rebellion,
      p. 587; manuscript letter of Sergeant George S. Hampton, of the 91st Pennsylvania. For an interesting account of the presentation of the flag of truce, and a postwar letter from the Confederate officer who carried it, see
      History of the Corn Exchange Regiment,
      pp. 589-91.
    7. Thrilling Days in Army Life,
      p. 187. The reference to the playing of "Auld Lang Syne" is from
      History of the 198th Pennsylvania Volunteers,
      p. 58.

 

 

Index

 

Abatis constructed before trenches, 228

Abolitionists, 236-37

Amelia Court House, 412-13

Amnesty proclamation of 1864, 5-6, 11, 18

Andersonville, Confederate prison camp at, 311-12

Appomattox Court House, 419-25

Army of James, 66, 150, 171, 209, 232, 384, 401-2, 405, 408, 418, 420, 423

Army of Northern Virginia.
See
Confederate Army of Northern Virginia

Army of Potomac, character of, in last year of war, 24-41; at Cold Harbor, 169-205; condition of, after two months of Wilderness campaign, 239-46; Grant made Federal commander in chief, 41-60; march to Appomattox, 407-25; in Petersburg campaign, 209-33, 246-55, 265-86, 357-406; in southward advance after Spotsylvania, 155-68; at Spotsylvania Court House, 107-15, 122-47; in Wilderness battle, 63-106. For individual units
see
under corps numbers and state names

Army of Shenandoah, 314-24,

 

332-56 Artillery, heavy, 53-54

 

Atlanta, Ga., captured by Sherman, 331-32 Averell, Gen. William W., 201 Ayres, Gen. Romeyn, 165, 281, 395-99

BOOK: A Stillness at Appomattox
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