Who were the Union generals? Many were political appointees. Less than half were West Point graduates. One out of three had had no previous military experience. But out of this army came Grant and Sherman and Sheridan - and three destined for later fame as Presidents.The Union generals outnumbered their Confederate counterparts 583 to 425. In addition, there were another 1,367 who never held full rank. Mr. Warner gives a complete alphabetical list of these in one of his appendixesAn indispensable reference work, Generals in Blue is also a book that can be enjoyed by the general reader. Mr. Warner has given the pertinent information on the Federal commanders. At the same time, he has kept his eye out for the obscure detail, the fascinating bit of color that distinguishes a readable work such as this from the stock encyclopedia.Here are the young men (for the Civil War was a young man's war) like George Custer, who became a general at twenty-three and a legend at thirty-six, in the battle of Little Big Horn. And the veterans, like Winfield Scott, who was seventy-four when the Civil War began.Here also are the generals lost in obscurity: the other Scott (Robert K.), whom Mr. Warner calls "as unique a mixture of hero and rogue as ever wore a United States uniform"; the controversial Daniel Sickles, who shot his wife's paramour in the shadow of the White House; John Basil Turchin, the "Russian Thunderbolt" who was court-martialed for, among other things, allowing his wife to accompany him in the field; and Thomas Alfred Smyth, another of the foreign-born generals, an Irishman, who died of his wounds on the day Lee surrendered at Appomattox. Generals in Blue is more than the companion volume to Generals in Gray. It is a first-rate work of scholarship that will be read and referred to again and again.
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