
Lost Triumph
Lee's Real Plan at Gettysburg And Why It Failed
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Narrated by:
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Michael Prichard
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By:
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Tom Carhart
The Battle of Gettysburg is the pivotal moment when the Union forces repelled perhaps America's greatest commander, the brilliant Robert E. Lee, who had already thrashed a long line of Federal opponents, just as he was poised at the back door of Washington, D.C. It is the moment in which the fortunes of Lee, Lincoln, the Confederacy, and the Union hung precariously in the balance.
Conventional wisdom has held to date, almost without exception, that on the third day of the battle, Lee made one profoundly wrong decision. But how do we reconcile Lee the high-risk warrior with Lee the general who launched "Pickett's Charge", employing only a fifth of his total forces, across an open field, up a hill, against the heart of the Union defenses? Most history books have reported that Lee just had one very bad day. But there is much more to the story, which Tom Carhart addresses for the first time.
With meticulous detail and startling clarity, Carhart revisits the historic battles Lee taught at West Point and believed were the essential lessons in the art of war: the victories of Napoleon at Austerlitz, Frederick the Great at Leuthen, and Hannibal at Cannae, and reveals what they can tell us about Lee's real strategy. What Carhart finds will thrill all students of history: Lee's plan for an electrifying rear assault by Jeb Stuart that, combined with the frontal assault, could have broken the Union forces in half. Only in the final hours of the battle was the attack reversed through the daring of an unproven young general: George Armstrong Custer.
©2005 Tom Carhart (P)2005 Tantor Media, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...




















A MUST READ
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Anyway the history is never written by the vanquished. Great book and I do believe He is correct.
Finally
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But, while not an captivating written or narration this book IS vitally important to finally understand Day #3 of the battle.
It always puzzled me why a brilliant tactician as Lee would launch a desperate, almost suicidal charge on the union center on that day.
Finally, Carhart lays out his theory that places Pickett’s assault in the framework of a grander plan that might have resulted in Lee’s greatest victory ever.
This book belongs on the civil war historian’s bookshelf.
It is absolutely worth the somewhat methodical and sometimes disjointed narrative Carhart chooses to use.
But in the end you have a very well supported thesis that finally makes sense of what seemed like a senseless slaughter. Glad to have read it.
Now I want to go back to Gettyburg and spend more time on the East Cavalry Battlefield.
This just makes sense…
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Having studied Gettysburg somewhat has an armature for more than 30 years, there is nothing in the book in the way of facts that I didn’t know. He takes the same facts and convincingly argues for a different conclusion. One that is at once simpler and more logical. It left me wondering why everyone doesn’t reach this conclusion (i.e., without help).
Best book I’ve read in 3.1415 years
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Great Book
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Another Look At The Gettysburg Battle
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One of the best!
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Terrific theory. Very Plausible.
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the application of logic to the facts available
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You don't understand the 3rd day of Gettysburg
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