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Full Description
This biography of General Edwin Vose Sumner emphasizes his role in developing the mounted arm of the U.S. Army. Born in Boston in 1797 he abandoned a merchant's career and entered the U.S. Infantry in 1819. Transferring to the Dragoons in the 1830s, Sumner established the Cavalry School of Practice at Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania. Among his students was the future Confederate General Richard S. Ewell. Sumner served with distinction throughout the Mexican War and maintained a balance between the warring factions in Kansas in the mid-1850s (his efforts earning him the displeasure of the Pierce administration). He led an expedition against the Cheyennes with subordinates that included future Civil War generals John Sedgwick and Samuel Sturgis as well as the capable but headstrong Lieutenant Jeb Stuart. Replacing Albert Sidney Johnston in California in 1861, Sumner kept the state in the Union. Returning east, he commanded the Second Corps throughout 1862 and died of pneumonia in March 1863.
Contents
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part One: The Making of a Soldier
1. The Road Not Taken
2. The Black Hawk War and Captain of Dragoons
3. Carlisle Barracks
4. The Mexican War
Part Two: The Commander
5. The Southwest
6. Kansas and Popular Sovereignty
7. The Cavalry
8. The Cheyenne Expedition
9. The Campaign Begins
10. Trouble Along the Way
11. Sumner and Sedgwick Meet
12. The Utah Expedition and Further Trouble with Native Americans
Part Three: Civil
13. Politics
14. Sumner Comes East
15. Fair Oaks and Seven Days
16. Antietam
17. Fredericksburg
Epilogue
Appendix
Chapter Notes
Bibliography
Index