The North American Review, Volume 149O. Everett, 1889 - North American review Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Page 30
... ARMY . THE second volume of the " Battles and Leaders " is , in my judgment , even more interesting than the first volume . It intro- duces us to the period when General McClellan transformed the armed masses which had fought at the ...
... ARMY . THE second volume of the " Battles and Leaders " is , in my judgment , even more interesting than the first volume . It intro- duces us to the period when General McClellan transformed the armed masses which had fought at the ...
Page 31
... army , split the Confederacy in two and severed the East from the West , must always , therefore , have for him a profound interest and importance . The great strate- gical results obtained by this concentration of military and naval ...
... army , split the Confederacy in two and severed the East from the West , must always , therefore , have for him a profound interest and importance . The great strate- gical results obtained by this concentration of military and naval ...
Page 33
... army officers . " Certainly no one will dispute that statement , but both naval and army officers must be judged by a reasonable examination of the results of their action and of the alternatives open to them . On the ques- tion whether ...
... army officers . " Certainly no one will dispute that statement , but both naval and army officers must be judged by a reasonable examination of the results of their action and of the alternatives open to them . On the ques- tion whether ...
Page 35
... army " of the United States . He had to create out of purely raw materials an army of which the part he proposed to employ in the Peninsula alone was 156,000 strong . The more one studies the nature of this force as it manoeuvred and ...
... army " of the United States . He had to create out of purely raw materials an army of which the part he proposed to employ in the Peninsula alone was 156,000 strong . The more one studies the nature of this force as it manoeuvred and ...
Page 37
... army marched upon Richmond , it was necessary to protect the force allotted for the defence of Wash- ington from a counter - stroke by Lee or by his lieutenant , Stone- wall Jackson . To effect this it was desirable to keep it close to ...
... army marched upon Richmond , it was necessary to protect the force allotted for the defence of Wash- ington from a counter - stroke by Lee or by his lieutenant , Stone- wall Jackson . To effect this it was desirable to keep it close to ...
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