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Full Description
Frank Bartlett was an indifferent student at Harvard when the Civil War began in 1861, but after he joined the Union army he quickly found that he had an aptitude for leadership and rose from captain to brevet major general by 1865. Over the course of the war he was wounded three times (one injury resulted in the loss of a leg), but he remained on active duty until he was captured in 1864. His political stance gained him some national fame after the war, but he struggled with repeated business stress until tuberculosis and other illnesses led to his early death at age 36.
Contents
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Preface
Introduction
1. "He Was Not a Close Student": Prelude to War
2. "Captain Bartlett Is One of the Noblest Fellows": The Harvard Regiment
3. "One of the Most Complete Slaughter Pens Ever Devised": The Battle of Ball's Bluff
4. "Our Regiment Met with the Greatest Loss": The Road to Yorktown
5. "We Are Learning Subordination Without Complaining": The 49th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry
6. "Oh, How Good Berkshire Water Would Sell Here": The Department of the Gulf
7. "We Thought Him Too Brave a Man to Be Killed": Port Hudson
8. "I Must Do the Best I Can": Into the Wilderness with the 57th Massachusetts
9. "Danger of Being Hit Any Minute": The Siege of Petersburg
10. "It Was Pandemonium Let Loose": The Crater
11. "A Horrible Dream Which I Can Never Forget": Prisoner of War
12. "I Think It Would Be Hard to Find Two Happier People": War's End
13. "United We Are Invincible": The Postwar Years
14. "No Greater or Purer Hero": Frank Bartlett's Legacy
Chapter Notes
Bibliography
Index