Synopses & Reviews
The last major battle of the Civil War at Fort Blakely, Alabama, on April 9, 1865, was quickly overshadowed by the concurrent surrender of Robert E. Lee's army at Appomattox, and is largely forgotten today. And yet the Federal campaign against Mobile, the last important Southern city that remained in Rebel hands, was a significant military operation involving 45,000 Union soldiers and 9,000 Confederates. Faced with overwhelming odds, diehard Rebels refused to surrender, and--even with the end of the war clearly at hand--Federal soldiers remained willing to fight and die to capture the last enemy stronghold. O'Brien explores the battle and the driving forces behind it in the first comprehensive treatment of the campaign in over 130 years.
The Mobile campaign sheds light on the workings of unit cohesion in the closing days of the war--a bond of loyalty forged by four years of hardships, with soldiers no longer fighting just for country or cause but for their own band of comrades. Black solders (ten percent of the Federal army in the Mobile campaign) were further motivated by another factor: to end slavery and to prove African Americans worthy of equality. Soldiers in this campaign faced the full fury of America's war-making science, with innovations like trench warfare, rifled artillery, land and naval mines, army-navy amphibious operations, submarines, and minesweeping operations--all new technologies to be perfected by a later generation in World War I.
Review
[a] highly reliable, deeply detailed story of the Battle of Mobile.The Alabama Review
Review
[O]'Brien has created a sourcebook on final military action in and around Mobile in 1865. Surprisingly, and perhaps refreshingly to some historians, he has done so with minimal citations from the Official Records. Instead, he relies heavily on other published primary sources and a generous helping of secondary works. The book is an entertaining read.Journal of Southern History
Review
An account of the last major operation of our great national epic merits a pen capable of rising to the occasion. Sean Michael O'Brien's pen rises to that occasion...and more. Sometimes horrifying, sometimes heartbreaking, Mobile, 1865 is a riveting, blow-by-blow narrative of a dramatic event in American history.Thomas Goodrich, author of The Day Dixie Died: Southern Occupation, 1865-1866
Synopsis
The first comprehensive treatment in over 130 years of the 1865 land campaign for Mobile, the last Rebel stronghold.
Synopsis
On April 9, 1865, while Robert E. Lee's army surrendered at Appomattox, the last major battle of the Civil War was being waged in Alabama. The Federal campaign against Mobile, the last important Southern city still in Rebel hands, involved 45,000 Union soldiers and 9,000 Confederates. Even with the end of the war clearly at hand, Federal soldiers remained willing to fight, and the Rebels unwilling to surrender. O'Brien provides the first comprehensive treatment of the campaign in over 130 years.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [251]-259) and index.
Table of Contents
"I Have Never Seen Such Suffering"
"No Longer An Army"
"The Best Fortified Place in the Confederacy"
"Every Thing Wet and Not Enough to Eat"
"Mutilated and Sacrificed"
"The Worst Roads I Ever Saw"
"It Looked Like Refined Cruelty"
"Burning With an Impulse to Do Honor"
"All That Men Could Do"
"Smith's Guerrillas"
"Digging All Night and Fighting All Day"
"Not One of Them is Even American"
"A Splendid Defense and They Knew It"
"The Spirit of Killin"
"A Good Run Instead of a Bad Stand"
"No Longer an Army"
"We Knew That the War Was Over"
Bibliography
Index