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Captains of the Civil War; a chronicle of the blue

William Charles Henry Wood

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Book Excerpt: 
. . .Confederate Government, the State governments, the army, the navy, and the Mississippi skippers. A typical result may be seen in the fate of the fourteen "rams" which were absurdly mishandled by fourteen independent civilian skippers with two civilian commodores. This "River Defense Fleet" was "backed by the whole Missouri delegation" at Richmond, and blessed by the Confederate Secretary of War, Judah P. Benjamin, that very clever lawyer-politician and ever-smiling Jew. Six of the fourteen "rams" were lost, with sheer futility, at New Orleans in April, '62; the rest at Memphis the following June.

As a matter of fact the Confederate navy never had but one real man-of-war, the famous Merrimac; and she was a mere razee, cut down for a special purpose, and too feebly engined to keep the sea. Even the equally famous Alabama was only a raider, never meant for action with a fleet. Over three hundred officers left the United States Navy for the South; b. . . Read More

Community Reviews

Captains of the Civil War contends that although war is a horrible thing, sometimes it is needed to resolve conflict. The book is written as a work of non-fiction. The author acts as the main character and narrates his point of view for most of the book by using actual statements from the personal p