In this highly revisionist study, historian Adam H. Petty tracks how veterans and historians of the Civil War created and perpetuated myths about the Wilderness, a forest in Virginia that served as the backdrop for three of the warÆs most interesting campaigns. This forest had a fearsome reputation among soldiers, especially those from Union armies; many believed it to be an exceptional landscape with a menacing mystique that created favorable combat conditions for LeeÆs Army of Northern Virginia. According to Petty, the mythology surrounding the campaigns in the Wilderness began to take shape during the war but truly blossomed in the postwar years, continuing into the present. Those myths, he suggests, confounded accurate understandings of how the physical environment influenced combat and military operations. While the Wilderness did create difficult combat conditions, Petty refutes claims that it was unique and favored the Confederates. Unlike previous studies of the Wilderness, this work does not focus on a single battle or campaign. Instead, Petty explores all the major clashes thereùChancellorsville, Mine Run, and the battle of the Wildernessùwhich allows Petty to observe changes over time, especially regarding the attitudes and actions of generals and soldiers. Yet PettyÆs study is not a narrative history of the campaigns. Instead, he reconsiders traditional interpretations surrounding the nature of the Wilderness and how it affected military operations and combat. His work analyzes not only the interaction between military campaigns and environment but also how the memory of that interaction evolved into the myth we know today.
- | Author: Adam Petty
- | Publisher: Lsu Press
- | Publication Date: Aug 14, 2019
- | Number of Pages: 208 pages
- | Language: English
- | Binding: Hardcover/History
- | ISBN-10: 0807171913
- | ISBN-13: 9780807171912