OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

This new stand alone release based on the legendary War in the Pacific from 2 by 3 Games adds significant improvements and changes to enhance game play, improve realism, and increase historical accuracy. With dozens of new features, new art, and engine improvements, War in the Pacific: Admiral's Edition brings you the most realistic and immersive WWII Pacific Theater wargame ever!

Moderators: wdolson, MOD_War-in-the-Pacific-Admirals-Edition

User avatar
Wirraway_Ace
Posts: 1509
Joined: Mon Oct 08, 2007 2:28 pm
Location: Austin / Brisbane

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by Wirraway_Ace »

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

I hope you won't consider me contrarian or disagreeable in saying that I really don't like that movie.  The book is sublime; the movie...I give it very low marks.
The book may be the finest of its genre in the english language. Losing a conflict helps with introspection I suspect. I think the expectations set by the book would have been nearly impossible to meet, thus leading to disappointment.
Mike
User avatar
Wirraway_Ace
Posts: 1509
Joined: Mon Oct 08, 2007 2:28 pm
Location: Austin / Brisbane

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by Wirraway_Ace »

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

That's easy!  This Terrible Sound by Peter Cozzens is the second finest piece of non fiction that I have read.  Just a stunning piece of writing, especially for those who have visited Chickamauga battlefield. 
Reading about Chickamauga always made me wonder how Bragg and Hood got the two largest bases in the U.S. Army (in terms of troops) named after them :-)
User avatar
Canoerebel
Posts: 21099
Joined: Fri Dec 13, 2002 11:21 pm
Location: Northwestern Georgia, USA
Contact:

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by Canoerebel »

Hood did fine there, so I'm not sure what you mean.  Hood was an very good brigade and division commander.  His trouble came after he suffered grevious wounds to an arm and a leg two months apart (July 1863 at Gettsburg and September 1863 at Chickamauga).  Given command of an army in mid 1864, he was expected to attack and he did with disastrous results.  There is some speculation that his decison-making was impaired by laudanum used in the aftermath of his wounds.  But Hood served bravely and capably for most of the war and is man worthy of honor.

Bragg sincerlely served the South and he served honorably, but he was a complete and utter disaster.
"Rats set fire to Mr. Cooper’s store in Fort Valley. No damage done." Columbus (Ga) Enquirer-Sun, October 2, 1880.
danlongman
Posts: 584
Joined: Tue Mar 27, 2012 8:36 pm
Location: Over the hills and far away

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by danlongman »

Although I have long admired the military skills of some of the Confederate leaders when i think of Chickamauga I think
of George Thomas, himself a Southerner by birth, and the piece of work he put in there. A "Rock" indeed.
Sometimes when I ponder such things I question the responsibility of the Confederate military leadership.
When it became evident that the war was lost and the territorial integrity of the Confederacy could no longer be preserved
I wonder if they fought on as so many did before and after for reasons of pride alone.
The suffering visited upon their countrymen and their country on both sides was at its worst after the chance of Southern victory
had clearly passed. The fighting continued when some people with foresight might have packed it in for the greater good.
As happened in so many conflicts in the past and has simply been glossed over because it doesn't make for excitement
is the fact that a very large minority on both sides were emotionally uncommitted to either side and just wanted the war to be over.
"Patriotism: Your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." - George Bernard Shaw
User avatar
Skyros
Posts: 1550
Joined: Fri Sep 29, 2000 8:00 am
Location: Columbia SC

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by Skyros »

Antietem is a well preserved site that just needs a little more work. Especially on the battlefield signage. Very compact battlefield.
ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

Gettysburg, Sharpsburg, Chckamauga, Shiloh, Bull Run and Appomattox Courthouse are peaceful and spectacular.
User avatar
Wirraway_Ace
Posts: 1509
Joined: Mon Oct 08, 2007 2:28 pm
Location: Austin / Brisbane

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by Wirraway_Ace »

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

Hood did fine there, so I'm not sure what you mean.  Hood was an very good brigade and division commander.  His trouble came after he suffered grevious wounds to an arm and a leg two months apart (July 1863 at Gettsburg and September 1863 at Chickamauga).  Given command of an army in mid 1864, he was expected to attack and he did with disastrous results.  There is some speculation that his decison-making was impaired by laudanum used in the aftermath of his wounds.  But Hood served bravely and capably for most of the war and is man worthy of honor.

Bragg sincerlely served the South and he served honorably, but he was a complete and utter disaster.
I was really just joking about Hood. He was, as you note, a superb bridade and division commander during the first two years of the war, and his late war performance was probably compromised for a variety of reasons. But Bragg? I also find it amusing how the leadership of the two bases both tell me they are the largest when I visit.
User avatar
Reg
Posts: 2790
Joined: Fri May 26, 2000 8:00 am
Location: NSW, Australia

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by Reg »

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

That's easy!  This Terrible Sound by Peter Cozzens is the second finest piece of non fiction that I have read.  Just a stunning piece of writing, especially for those who have visited Chickamauga battlefield. 

The Maps of Chickamauga: An Atlas of the Chickamauga Campaign, Including the Tullahoma Operations, June 22 - September 23, 1863 by David Powell is supposed to be an excellent reference as well.

David is also a regular on the ACW sections of the ConSimWorld forums.

Cheers,
Reg.

(One day I will learn to spell - or check before posting....)
Uh oh, Firefox has a spell checker!! What excuse can I use now!!!
User avatar
treespider
Posts: 5781
Joined: Sun Jan 30, 2005 7:34 am
Location: Edgewater, MD

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by treespider »

ORIGINAL: Reg

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

That's easy!  This Terrible Sound by Peter Cozzens is the second finest piece of non fiction that I have read.  Just a stunning piece of writing, especially for those who have visited Chickamauga battlefield. 

The Maps of Chickamauga: An Atlas of the Chickamauga Campaign, Including the Tullahoma Operations, June 22 - September 23, 1863 by David Powell is supposed to be an excellent reference as well.

David is also a regular on the ACW sections of the ConSimWorld forums.



IIRC Powell was also one of the designers of The Gamers Civil War Brigade Series and the Regimental Sub Series.
Here's a link to:
Treespider's Grand Campaign of DBB

"It is not the critic who counts, .... The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena..." T. Roosevelt, Paris, 1910
User avatar
Reg
Posts: 2790
Joined: Fri May 26, 2000 8:00 am
Location: NSW, Australia

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by Reg »

ORIGINAL: treespider

IIRC Powell was also one of the designers of The Gamers Civil War Brigade Series and the Regimental Sub Series.

Indeed he is. [:)]

There is nothing like designing a simulation (computer, game, etc) to build up a very indepth knowledge of a topic.

Simulations have a very disconcerting habit of exposing deficiencies in your knowledge/assumptions (as they are intended to do) by producing unrealistic outputs. Books on the other hand merely have to withstand review by others who may or may not have greater knowledge and prejudices that are otherwise untested.



Cheers,
Reg.

(One day I will learn to spell - or check before posting....)
Uh oh, Firefox has a spell checker!! What excuse can I use now!!!
cplprice
Posts: 99
Joined: Fri Jul 08, 2011 11:13 am
Location: Chickamauga GA

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by cplprice »

ORIGINAL: Reg

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

That's easy!  This Terrible Sound by Peter Cozzens is the second finest piece of non fiction that I have read.  Just a stunning piece of writing, especially for those who have visited Chickamauga battlefield. 

The Maps of Chickamauga: An Atlas of the Chickamauga Campaign, Including the Tullahoma Operations, June 22 - September 23, 1863 by David Powell is supposed to be an excellent reference as well.

David is also a regular on the ACW sections of the ConSimWorld forums.


Actually Hood's wounding at Chickamauga probably cost Bragg's army a stunning victory. Hood was coordinating the breakthrough and the Union Army was being systematically routed. On the ridge facing where Hood was shot, the confederates captured more Federal guns in a single action than in any other Civil War engagement. Sheridan had been driven from the field and didn't manage to rally until he was several miles from the battle. During this crucial moment Longstreet stops and picnics on sweet potatoes, but Hood's doing a fine job. Hood is wounded and goes down. The Confederate assaults then become piecemeal instead of coordinated. Thomas is trying to form a defensive line from the fragments of units on the Snodgrass Hill/Horseshoe Ridge area. If the confederates strike him with a coordinated assault it's over. There is no confederate General to coordinate it because Longstreet is MIA. They do launch a number of vicious assaults but with different brigades at different points, at different times, and they come very close to
finishing the job. When Longstreet returns to the action, Thomas has assembled sufficient strength that the window of opportunity has passed and now driving him from his position is a much tougher proposition.
As to overall victory for the south, if the Army of the Cumberland had been destroyed here, as very nearly happened, the North would have lost at least a years worth of gains. Sherman's Atlanta campaign would have been unfeasible and Sherman's capture of Atlanta insured Lincoln's re-election. If Lincoln had not been re-elected a negotiated peace is a real possibility.

The reason southern Generals continued to fight long after it was obvious that the war was lost is because of the United States long history of the military being subservient to the political leadership. Until the political leaders decide to cease hostilities it is an officers duty and obligation to continue to fight so long as they have the means to resist. Had the tables been turned the Union Generals would have done the same, it is what their duty requires.
User avatar
Canoerebel
Posts: 21099
Joined: Fri Dec 13, 2002 11:21 pm
Location: Northwestern Georgia, USA
Contact:

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by Canoerebel »

Drats!  Your post requires thought.  Now that you mention it, Longstreet didn't seem to be too active during the breakthrough against the Union right on the battle's second day.  My first thought is this: Hood had immediate command of the divisions slated for the attack that broke through.  But didn't Longstreet command the entire left wing of the Confederate Army, which included not only Hood's spearhead, but also troops further to the left, which would have (I think) included Buckner's and some other diviions?  IE, wasn't it Longstreet's responsibility to hang further back and attend to the entire situation?  Had he gone forward to be in position to attend to Hood's attack, he might not have been in position to deal with his full responsibiility on the battlefield.  That's my first guess, but I'll have to look into it.
 
P.S.  The right wing was commanded by D.H. Hill. 
"Rats set fire to Mr. Cooper’s store in Fort Valley. No damage done." Columbus (Ga) Enquirer-Sun, October 2, 1880.
User avatar
John 3rd
Posts: 17648
Joined: Thu Sep 08, 2005 5:03 pm
Location: La Salle, Colorado

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by John 3rd »

He had the Wing.

Dan hooked me up to Cozzen's superb work. I heartily recommend the very balanced and illuminating Valley Campaign book he wrote recently. SUPERB!

Bragg was horrific. Wonder what Beauregard might have been able to do?
Image

Member: Treaty, Reluctant Admiral and Between the Storms Mod Team.
danlongman
Posts: 584
Joined: Tue Mar 27, 2012 8:36 pm
Location: Over the hills and far away

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by danlongman »

I do not doubt the United States military has a long tradition of subservience to the political leadership. I do not know just how
well it was established in the mid 19th century. The leadership on the Confederate side had very recently made some personal
political decisions as can be indicated by which side Thomas was on. They kinda abandoned the US Army for the Army of the Confederacy.
I was wondering along the lines of Lee's comment at Fredricksberg about enjoying war too much. At the end of the war some
fostered the lost cause sentiment while others were quite vocal about never having had a chance. Upon studying some of the history
a person may have cause to wonder just whose side Bragg or McClelland were really on....
cheers
"Patriotism: Your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." - George Bernard Shaw
User avatar
John 3rd
Posts: 17648
Joined: Thu Sep 08, 2005 5:03 pm
Location: La Salle, Colorado

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by John 3rd »

If not for RE Lee's heroic decision to take a Loyalty Oath directly after the war who knows what might have happened with a form of guerilla Southern resistance.
Image

Member: Treaty, Reluctant Admiral and Between the Storms Mod Team.
User avatar
Canoerebel
Posts: 21099
Joined: Fri Dec 13, 2002 11:21 pm
Location: Northwestern Georgia, USA
Contact:

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by Canoerebel »

ORIGINAL: cplprice
...During this crucial moment Longstreet stops and picnics on sweet potatoes, but Hood's doing a fine job. Hood is wounded and goes down. The Confederate assaults then become piecemeal instead of coordinated....


I've been following up on this line of thought, reading various accounts of the battle's second day. From what I've seen thus far, Longstreet performed well.

As we noted, Longstreet had command of the left wing of the Confederate army on Sept. 20. The right flank of his wing was the massive attack against the Union position at the Brotherton farm. In addition to his responsibilities there, Longstreet also had under his command Buckner's Corps further to the left.

After the Confederate attack pierced the Union MLR and wrought havoc on the Union center and right, Longstreet continued to command near the front lines. I read an account last night by an officer in an Alabama regiment that was in the Army of Tennessee, not Army of Northern Virginia, and he came across Longstreet near the front lines in conference with Buckner. The Alabamian noted that Longstreet didn't even seem to flinch as bullets and shells whizzed by.

I'm still looking into where Longstreet was on the 20th during the route of the Union right and the subsequent "last stand by Thomas" at Snodgrass Hill, but thus far it doesn't seem that Longstreet merited criticixm for his performance that day.
"Rats set fire to Mr. Cooper’s store in Fort Valley. No damage done." Columbus (Ga) Enquirer-Sun, October 2, 1880.
User avatar
Canoerebel
Posts: 21099
Joined: Fri Dec 13, 2002 11:21 pm
Location: Northwestern Georgia, USA
Contact:

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by Canoerebel »

On a separate note, have you ever thought of it from this perspective:  On July 3, 1863, Longstreet was (most reluctantly) in overall command of Pickett's Charge at Gettysburg.  Just ten weeks later he's in command of a charge almost as massive at Chickamauga.  I've never read or heard that Longstreet exhibited any reluctance at Chickamauga, but I wonder exactly how he felt?*

*I suspect he was gung ho. He had lobbied hard to reinforce the "west" with troops from the "east," so I think Longstreet would have been anxious to attack Rosecrans that day. Still, he must've cringed at how many men would die, not knowing that Rosecrans had just pulled a division out of the line right where Longstreet's Chrage was going.
"Rats set fire to Mr. Cooper’s store in Fort Valley. No damage done." Columbus (Ga) Enquirer-Sun, October 2, 1880.
US87891
Posts: 422
Joined: Sun Jan 02, 2011 1:31 pm

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by US87891 »

-
User avatar
Canoerebel
Posts: 21099
Joined: Fri Dec 13, 2002 11:21 pm
Location: Northwestern Georgia, USA
Contact:

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by Canoerebel »

Gents,

In the next three frames, I want to share with you three poems I've been working on about the Battle of Chickamauga. I'd appreciate your comments, but first a few notes of my own.

Until a few weeks ago, I was of the opinion that I was not born with the gift of poetry. (To me, poetry is the highest level of writing and, with some exceptions, cannot be learned. Ya either has it or ya don't.) During a remarkable tour of the battlefield in the company of an elderly poet, though, something prodded me to try my hand at writing some poems.

I think the poems are decent, but that may due to a case of myopia all of us AE players can relate to ("Hey, my plan to invade the Kuriles is magnificent. I'm going to blow the socks off my opponent. This is awesome....oops, what just went wrong?") It is possible that my best efforts are bad, insipid or (perhaps most damning) filled with trite phrases.

Before I go forth touting myself as a budding Civil War poet, I need some honest feedback from learned readers. So, with some apprehension, I herewith unrobe and reveal my works publicly.

Sincerely,

Canoerebel
"Rats set fire to Mr. Cooper’s store in Fort Valley. No damage done." Columbus (Ga) Enquirer-Sun, October 2, 1880.
User avatar
Canoerebel
Posts: 21099
Joined: Fri Dec 13, 2002 11:21 pm
Location: Northwestern Georgia, USA
Contact:

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by Canoerebel »

[font="times new roman"](By Dan Roper)[/font]
 
Home Again
[font="times new roman"] [/font]
[font="times new roman"]A galling fire echoes long[/font]
[font="times new roman"]through glade of oak and hickory.[/font]
[font="times new roman"]A field of corn stands withered brown.[/font]
[font="times new roman"]The home-place door and windows yawn.[/font]
[font="times new roman"] [/font]
[font="times new roman"]When two years past he cast aside[/font]
[font="times new roman"]a calling to his native soil [/font]
[font="times new roman"]and with his comrades joined then,[/font]
[font="times new roman"]to staunch as one the martial tide.[/font]
[font="times new roman"] [/font]
[font="times new roman"]Then by chance he returns[/font]
[font="times new roman"]to farm and field he calls home.[/font]
[font="times new roman"]None step forth to welcome him,[/font]
[font="times new roman"]except a foe by whom he falls.[/font]
[font="times new roman"] [/font]
[font="times new roman"]He rests there in the shadows dim,[/font]
[font="times new roman"]where even wren dares not sing;[/font]
[font="times new roman"]‘Til battle’s end and silence falls[/font]
[font="times new roman"]and comrades find and bury him.[/font]
[font="times new roman"] [/font]
[font="times new roman"] [/font]
The only known grave remaining on the Chickamauga battlefield is that of Confederate private John Ingraham.  After Ingraham was killed in action on the evening of 19 September 1863, his friends buried his remains where he fell.  (The other corpses were recovered and moved to various cemeteries.)  Ingraham served in the First Confederate Regiment, Georgia Reserves, and was a native of the Chickamauga area.  
"Rats set fire to Mr. Cooper’s store in Fort Valley. No damage done." Columbus (Ga) Enquirer-Sun, October 2, 1880.
User avatar
Canoerebel
Posts: 21099
Joined: Fri Dec 13, 2002 11:21 pm
Location: Northwestern Georgia, USA
Contact:

RE: OT: Chickamauga Soujourn

Post by Canoerebel »

[font="times new roman"](By Dan Roper)[/font]

The Fatal Order of the Day
[font="times new roman"] [/font]
[font="times new roman"]A line unbroken, long and grim[/font]
[font="times new roman"]In blue upon a ridge crest strong[/font]
[font="times new roman"]None could break the tri-cord strand[/font]
[font="times new roman"]Until a fatal order penned[/font]
[font="times new roman"] [/font]
[font="times new roman"]Leave the line and move along[/font]
[font="times new roman"]To plug a gap (that wasn’t there)[/font]
[font="times new roman"]So the errant missive read[/font]
[font="times new roman"]The fatal order of the day[/font]
[font="times new roman"] [/font]
[font="times new roman"]An officer in disbelief[/font]
[font="times new roman"]Gripped the paper in his hand[/font]
[font="times new roman"]He dared not leave to carry forth[/font]
[font="times new roman"]This fateful order of the day.[/font]
[font="times new roman"] [/font]
[font="times new roman"]Then bowing to obedience[/font]
[font="times new roman"]He drew 3,000 from the line[/font]
[font="times new roman"]And doom by chance found the place[/font]
[font="times new roman"]The order fatal had bequeathed  [/font]
[font="times new roman"] [/font]
[font="times new roman"]None stepped in to fill the breach[/font]
[font="times new roman"]Before the gray came surging through[/font]
[font="times new roman"]Fall back then route occasioned by[/font]
[font="times new roman"]The fatal order of the day[/font]
[font="times new roman"] [/font]
[font="times new roman"][/font] 
Before noon, 20 September 1863, Brigadier General Thomas J. Wood received an order to pull his division from the Union line of battle.  Wood knew the move was ill advised as it would create a gaping, undefended hole in proximity to the Confederate line.  When handed the order to remove his division, Wood digested its significance and said, “I hold the fatal order of the day in my hand.” Despite his misgivings, he elected to carry out the order, in part because just that morning he had received a humiliating rebuke for failing to punctually comply with another order.
 
As fate would have it a massed Confederate assault hit that very point in the Union line right after most of Wood’s division vacated the line.  The Union position shattered.  In the ensuing route, only the determined stand at Snodgrass Hill by part of the Union army prevented complete disaster. 
 
"Rats set fire to Mr. Cooper’s store in Fort Valley. No damage done." Columbus (Ga) Enquirer-Sun, October 2, 1880.
Post Reply

Return to “War in the Pacific: Admiral's Edition”