Strength of both armies

From the creators of Crown of Glory come an epic tale of North Vs. South. By combining area movement on the grand scale with optional hex based tactical battles when they occur, Forge of Freedom provides something for every strategy gamer. Control economic development, political development with governers and foreign nations, and use your military to win the bloodiest war in US history.

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chris0827
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Strength of both armies

Post by chris0827 »

I found some confederate figures so I'll put them together for comparison.

Union army
1/1/1861 14,663,present 1,704 absent 16,367 total
7/1/1861 183,588 present 3,163 absent 186,751 total
1/1/1862 527,204 present 48,713 absent 575,917 total
3/31/1862 533,984 present 103,142 absent 637,126 total
1/1/1863 698,802 present 219,389 absent 918,191 total
1/1/1864 611,250 present 249,487 absent 860,737 total
3/31/1865 657,747 present 322,339 absent 980,086 total
5/1/1865 797,807 present 202,709 absent 1,000,516 total

Confederate army
12/31/1861 258,680 present 68,088 absent 326,768 total
6/30/1862 224,146 present 103,903 absent 328,049 total
12/31/1862 304,015 present 145,424 absent 449,439 total
12/31/1863 277,970 present 186,676 absent 464,646 total
6/30/1864 194,764 present 121,083 absent 315,847 total
12/31/1864 196,016 present 204,771 absent 400,787 total
1865(unk date) 160,198 present 198,494 absent 358,692 total

These numbers do not include navies or militia
chris0827
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by chris0827 »

It's annoying but I haven't been able to find much info on naval forces.
 
Union navy
 
4/19/1861   7,600 men
12/31/1861 22,000 men
1864(unk date) 51,000 men
 
Haven't found any estimates of the number of men in the confederate navy.
Joram
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by Joram »

That's an amazing number of "absent".  Is that AWOL or is that some kind of casualty figure?
chris0827
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by chris0827 »

ORIGINAL: Joram

That's an amazing number of "absent".  Is that AWOL or is that some kind of casualty figure?

It would include AWOL, deserters, men too sick or wounded to stay with their units and possibly men detached temporarily for duty such as moving supplies or guarding prisoners. I'm still looking for exact definitions for the different categories.
Ironclad
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by Ironclad »

According to Tucker the CSA naval manpower peaked in the spring 1864 at 753 officers, 4450 enlisted and 749 marines. He gives USA 1865 numbers as 6759 officers, 51357 sailors and 3850 marines.
chris0827
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by chris0827 »

ORIGINAL: Ironclad

According to Tucker the CSA naval manpower peaked in the spring 1864 at 753 officers, 4450 enlisted and 749 marines. He gives USA 1865 numbers as 6759 officers, 51357 sailors and 3850 marines.

That's good to know. What's Tucker's full name? I don't think I've seen anything from him.
Ironclad
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by Ironclad »

Spencer C Tucker author of the newly published - "The Blue and Gray Navies: The Civil War Afloat". Good and authoritative account.
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Queeg
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by Queeg »

The amazing number, to me, is the fact that the CSA had roughly 12% of its white, male population in arms by early 1861, while the Union never exceeded 9% at any time in the war. Indeed, in mid-1861, the Union had less than 2% of its manpower under arms. (I'm assuming half of the South's 5.4m white population and of the North's 22m population were men.)
Berkut
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by Berkut »

ORIGINAL: Queeg

The amazing number, to me, is the fact that the CSA had roughly 12% of its white, male population in arms by early 1861, while the Union never exceeded 9% at any time in the war. Indeed, in mid-1861, the Union had less than 2% of its manpower under arms. (I'm assuming half of the South's 5.4m white population and of the North's 22m population were men.)


Difference between the War of Northern Agression and the War for reuinification.

The South saw this as a war against an agressive, outside invading army.

What is the quote from the Virginia soldier who is captured, and asked why he was fighting?

"I reckon it is because you are here..."
chris0827
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by chris0827 »

ORIGINAL: Queeg

The amazing number, to me, is the fact that the CSA had roughly 12% of its white, male population in arms by early 1861, while the Union never exceeded 9% at any time in the war. Indeed, in mid-1861, the Union had less than 2% of its manpower under arms. (I'm assuming half of the South's 5.4m white population and of the North's 22m population were men.)

I made a typo. The second line in the confederate section should be 6/30/1862 instead of 6/30/1861
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Queeg
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by Queeg »

So the ratios in mid-1862 were roughly 12% CSA vs. 5.5% Union? Still a pretty significant difference in commitment.
chris0827
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by chris0827 »

ORIGINAL: Queeg

So the ratios in mid-1862 were roughly 12% CSA vs. 5.5% Union? Still a pretty significant difference in commitment.

And still a 2 to 1 advantage in troops. Men are much more likely to sign up when their homes are threatened. Had the south conquered parts of the north for an extended period of time the ratios woul've changed. The North also needed men for both a large navy and a huge industrial machine, They could've easily raised more troops but at the cost of having them less well equiped.
Berkut
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by Berkut »

I recall reading that the South mobilized considerably more men, but often more than they really wanted to - some men would ahve been better off staying behind and working. 
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Queeg
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by Queeg »

ORIGINAL: chris0827

ORIGINAL: Queeg

So the ratios in mid-1862 were roughly 12% CSA vs. 5.5% Union? Still a pretty significant difference in commitment.

And still a 2 to 1 advantage in troops.

Agreed. But if one just looks to the numbers for his version of "history," then the North should be more like 4 to 1. My point simply is that under any reasonable attempt to model history, the Union should reflect enormous potential largely unrealized. Yes, the North ultimately won through superior numbers, both economic and manpower. But it never, ever, throughout the entire war, brought its full weight to bear. Modeling anything else is fantasy.
chris0827
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by chris0827 »

ORIGINAL: Queeg
ORIGINAL: chris0827

ORIGINAL: Queeg

So the ratios in mid-1862 were roughly 12% CSA vs. 5.5% Union? Still a pretty significant difference in commitment.

And still a 2 to 1 advantage in troops.

Agreed. But if one just looks to the numbers for his version of "history," then the North should be more like 4 to 1. My point simply is that under any reasonable attempt to model history, the Union should reflect enormous potential largely unrealized. Yes, the North ultimately won through superior numbers, both economic and manpower. But it never, ever, throughout the entire war, brought its full weight to bear. Modeling anything else is fantasy.

There's nothing wrong with going by the numbers if you use the right numbers. A historically accurate game would not give the north a 4 to 1 advantage in troops because population does not equal troops. The north had about a 2.75 to 1 advantage. The north also had to man a large navy and garrison large conquered areas cutting into their advantage so that on the battlefield the advantage falls to well under 2 to 1.
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Queeg
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by Queeg »

ORIGINAL: chris0827

The north also had to man a large navy and garrison large conquered areas cutting into their advantage so that on the battlefield the advantage falls to well under 2 to 1.

I agree with you. So the game actually comes pretty close to matching the historical battlefield ratios.
chris0827
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by chris0827 »

ORIGINAL: Queeg

ORIGINAL: chris0827

The north also had to man a large navy and garrison large conquered areas cutting into their advantage so that on the battlefield the advantage falls to well under 2 to 1.

I agree with you. So the game actually comes pretty close to matching the historical battlefield ratios.

No it doesn't. Not even close. The union gets a 1.17 to 1 advantage at the start. The main confederate army in virginia gets 103,000 men. The real one had less than half that.
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Queeg
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by Queeg »

ORIGINAL: chris0827

The main confederate army in virginia gets 103,000 men. The real one had less than half that.

True. But what is the situation out West? The first thing many (most?) CSA players do in the game is send one of the ANV Corps out West to create a credible force there. So the imbalance seems to me to be one of geography as much as relative numbers.
chris0827
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by chris0827 »

ORIGINAL: Queeg

ORIGINAL: chris0827

The main confederate army in virginia gets 103,000 men. The real one had less than half that.

True. But what is the situation out West? The first thing many (most?) CSA players do in the game is send one of the ANV Corps out West to create a credible force there. So the imbalance seems to me to be one of geography as much as relative numbers.

What does the situation out west have to do with it?
regularbird
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RE: Strength of both armies

Post by regularbird »

I guess since most CSA players move a corp out west early in the game the numbers are only wildly inaccurate in the west? 
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