GENERAL
JOSEPH E. JOHNSTON, CSA DEFENSE OF RICHMOND CIVIL WAR *NEW* HBDJ
HARDBOUND BOOK with DUSTJACKET
(wrapped in Mylar) by STEVEN H. NEWTON
Most often viewed as a prelude
to Robert E. Lee's Civil War victories of 1862, Joseph E. Johnston's campaign
in Virginia early that year has been considered uninspired at best,
catastrophic at worst. Steven Newton now offers a revisionist account of Johnston's
operations between the York and James Rivers to show how his performance in the
"Peninsular War" contributed to a crucial strategic victory for the
Confederacy.
Newton acknowledges the
limitations usually attributed to Johnston by other historians but suggests
that assessments of the general's performance in Virginia have been colored by
later controversies. He argues that contemporary sources portray Johnston as
conducting his operations competently and within the strategic framework laid
down in Richmond, even when he personally disagreed with those decisions. By
holding his outnumbered army together and delaying the advance of Union forces,
the general bought critical time for the Confederacy to recruit, organize, and
arm the expanded army that would drive the Federals away from Richmond soon
after Johnston himself was wounded at Seven Pines.
Focusing on the period between
mid-February and late May 1862, Newton examines in detail the high-level
conferences in Richmond to set strategy and the relationship of the Peninsula
campaign to operations in the Shenandoah Valley and the western Confederacy.
What emerges is a portrait of a general who was much more complex in thought
and action than even his advocates have argued. By examining what Johnston
actually accomplished rather than speculating on what he might have done,
Newton shows that his overall conduct of the campaign holds up well under
scrutiny.
Marked by painstaking research
and analysis, Newton's reconsideration of Johnston is a key account of
Confederate operations in the pivotal eastern Virginia theater in 1862. It
provides an important new look at an episode in the war that until now has received
little attention and helps rescue an unduly maligned leader from the shadow of
Lee.
Internet Book Reviews
"In this well-written and
engrossing revisionist interpretation of Johnston’s command in the Army of
Northern Virginia from February to May 1862, Newton presents Johnston as an
able administrator and strategist who conducted operations in conformity with
the directives of Jefferson Davis."—Journal of Military History
"What gives Newton’s book a
special niche is his exhaustive research and blend of narrative
historiography."—The Virginia Magazine
"This treatment of Johnston
is a work whose time has come."—Southern Historian
"A well-researched,
well-argued, and well-written book that challenges the long-held view that
Johnston was a failure as commanding general in Virginia. Newton’s analysis of
Joseph E. Johnston during the peninsular campaign is excellent history."—Journal
of American History
"Students of the
intricacies of Civil War strategy and the Byzantine world of the Confederate
high command will welcome Newton’s assessment of the war in Virginia in the
first five months of 1862."—Journal of Southern History
"A challenging new
assessment of Joe Johnston’s conduct of the defense of Richmond and an
important contribution to the scholarly debate about Civil War military
leadership. No serious student of the war can overlook Newton’s careful
research and provocative conclusions."—Craig L. Symonds, author of
Stonewall of the West
"This is by far the best
thing I know of on the war in Virginia in the first five months of 1862. I have
learned a lot from Newton’s work and I recommend it very
strongly."—Richard M. McMurry, author of Two Great Rebel Armies
"An impressive, invaluable,
and bracingly revisionist account of Johnston’s service in
Virginia."—Steven E. Woodworth, author of Davis and Lee at War