Synopses & Reviews
A new and unique type of historical guide, this book features more than one hundred photographs and illustrations of thirty key sites in and around the Chickamauga battlefield.
The September 1863 Battle of Chickamauga, in which Confederate forces under Braxton Bragg defeated Union troops commanded by William Rosecrans, was the bloodiest engagement in the western theater of the Civil War. Chartered in 1890 and dedicated in 1895, the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park is the first and largest of our country's memorial Civil War battlefields. In 2002 alone more than eight hundred thousand people visited the park, which is located in northwest Georgia near the Tennessee border.
Chickamauga: A Battlefield History in Images is arranged for use during a driving tour of the park but also serves as an attractive and unique keepsake. Book in hand, visitors will appreciate as never before the experiences of the battle's actual participants. Civil War scholars and enthusiasts will find a valuable new source for pondering tactical moves and unraveling historic controversies.
Readers will find:
- historical photographs, many of which have had limited circulation in recent times
- modern photographs, including low-altitude aerial views that clarify
- the spatial relationship of sites across the battlefield---sites that were isolated by heavy forest during the actual battle
- period illustrations of selected sites by such renowned artists as Thomas Nast and Alfred R. Waud
- informative, detailed text and captions that clarify any changes to the landscape and topography since 1863, such as structures no longer in existence that were factors during the fighting
Review
"This book offers fascinating and seldom-seen views of one of the Civil War's most important battlefields."--Steven Woodworth, author of Chickamauga: A Battlefield Guide
Review
"Linton's sharp focus on the battlefield, many illustrations, and succinct text should appeal to academics and Civil War enthusiasts alike."--Kenneth W. Noe, author of Perryville: This Grand Havoc of Battle
Review
"He has provided an interesting approach to visualizing this particular battlefield as it was in 1863."--Huntsville Times
Synopsis
A new and unique type of historical guide, this book features more than one hundred photographs and illustrations of thirty key sites in and around the Chickamauga battlefield.
The September 1863 Battle of Chickamauga, in which Confederate forces under Braxton Bragg defeated Union troops commanded by William Rosecrans, was the bloodiest engagement in the western theater of the Civil War. Chartered in 1890 and dedicated in 1895, the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park is the first and largest of our country's memorial Civil War battlefields. In 2002 alone more than eight hundred thousand people visited the park, which is located in northwest Georgia near the Tennessee border.
Chickamauga: A Battlefield History in Images is arranged for use during a driving tour of the park but also serves as an attractive and unique keepsake. Book in hand, visitors will appreciate as never before the experiences of the battle's actual participants. Civil War scholars and enthusiasts will find a valuable new source for pondering tactical moves and unraveling historic controversies.
Readers will find: historical photographs, many of which have had limited circulation in recent timesmodern photographs, including low-altitude aerial views that clarifythe spatial relationship of sites across the battlefield---sites that were isolated by heavy forest during the actual battleperiod illustrations of selected sites by such renowned artists as Thomas Nast and Alfred R. Waudinformative, detailed text and captions that clarify any changes to the landscape and topography since 1863, such as structures no longer in existence that were factors during the fighting
About the Author
Roger C. Linton is an active member of the Friends of the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park. He is the primary author of the audiotape tour that has been used in the park since 1979.