Review: The Army of the Potomac Trilogy Brings Together Bruce Catton's 3 Civil War Chronicles
These superb books recount events from the viewpoints of both soldier and statesman, providing a greater understanding of the why and how of the Civil War.

Civil War historian Bruce Catton (1899–1978) was both a brilliant scholar and a gifted writer. His three greatest books chronicle the shifting military and political fortunes of the Army of the Potomac, the Union force that repeatedly clashed with Confederate General Robert E. Lee's formidable Army of Northern Virginia. Their battles included famous encounters at Antietam, Gettysburg, and Cold Harbor. Those books had sadly fallen out of print in recent years.
Enter the Library of America, a nonprofit publisher "dedicated to preserving America's best and most significant writing," which recently released The Army of the Potomac Trilogy. This handsome single-volume edition brings together Catton's Mr. Lincoln's Army (1951), Glory Road (1952), and A Stillness at Appomattox (1953). That last won both a Pulitzer Prize and a National Book Award. The books are accompanied in this omnibus edition by a number of detailed battle maps plus an illuminating new introduction by Civil War expert Gary W. Gallagher. For U.S. history buffs, it was one of the biggest publishing events of the year.
Americans are still arguing about the meaning of the Civil War. Reading these three superb books, which chronicle events from the viewpoints of both soldier and statesman, would go a long way toward providing a greater understanding of why and how it all happened.
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The US Civil War was about transgender kids fighting for the right to have the government fund their surgery and the school system accept them using a bathroom different than their biological gender, no?
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I'll be interested to read Gary Gallagher's introduction to a book first written in 1951 to see what Catton got right and may have gotten wrong. Current scholars have largely abandoned the "Lost Cause" viewpoint, so eloquently stated by pro-Confederate authors such as Douglas S. Freeman, and much of that abandonment was started by Catton. The 1962 edition is on my bookshelf so I may have to re-read it again. Catton's preface is particularly moving as he actually knew Union Army veterans when he was a boy.
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Fredrick Douglas met with John Brown who briefed him of his intent to attack the Federal Arsenal and start a civil war. He declined to join and and fled to Canada after Brown was caught less be arrested for not reporting him. Douglas was in a tough spot but if he ratted in on Brown and the raid never occured one could make the argument that there wasn't succession. Slavery would have continued for some time eventually either a war later on or economic solution like other countries in the western hemisphere (less Haiti).