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Stars and Stripes In Peril sas-2

Page 34

by Harry Harrison


  General Robert E. Lee

  General Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson

  General James Longstreet

  General Joseph E. Johnston

  General Thomas Francis Meagher Commander of the Irish Brigade

  Surgeon Francis Reynolds

  General Bragg Commander of the Texas Brigade

  UNITED STATES NAVY

  Commodore Goldsborough Captain of USS Avenger

  Rear Admiral David Dickson Porter

  Admiral David Glasgow Farragut

  Captain Green Captain of USS Hartford

  Captain Johns Captain of USS Dictator

  Captain Raphael Semmes Captain of USS Virginia

  Captain Weaver Captain USS Pawatuck

  Captain Eveshaw Captain USS Stalwart

  MEXICO

  Benito Juarez President of Mexico

  Don Ambrosio O’Higgins Revolutionary

  General Porfirio Diáz Oaxaca guerrillero chief

  General Escobeda Monterrey guerrillero chief

  Archduke Maximilian French puppet emperor

  GREAT BRITAIN

  Victoria Regina Queen of Great Britain and Ireland

  Lord Palmerston Prime Minister

  Lord John Russell Foreign Secretary

  William Gladstone Chancellor of the Exchequer

  BRITISH ARMY

  Duke of Cambridge Commander-in-Chief

  Brigadier Somerville the Duke’s aide

  General Arthur Tarbet commander Belfast forces

  BRITISH NAVY

  Admiral Napier

  Vice-Admiral Sawyer

  Captain Frederick Durnford Captain HMS Conqueror

  Captain Fosbery Captain HMS Valiant

  Captain Cockham Captain HMS Intrepid

  AFTERWORD

  It has been often said that history is written by the victors. True enough. Therefore the student of history must always be aware of not taking sides. But there are certain facts that cannot be juggled by the victors. Numerical records are one of them.

  It is a matter of record that, during the two-day Battle of Shiloh, the first conflict of the Civil War where large units clashed face to face, that the North and the South, between them lost 22,000 men. To no avail — since their positions were roughly the same at the end of the battle as they had been before they began. And there was worse to come. By the time the war had ended 200,000 soldiers had been killed in battle. Another 400,000 had died of disease or hardship. The population of the United Sates at the time was around 32,000,000. Which means that around two percent of the total population died in the war.

  This was indeed the first modern war, where large formations of soldiers clashed with one another, using advanced technology to achieve these disastrous ends. Modern rifles and cannon in great numbers, railroad trains to supply the armies, telegraph and observation balloons to direct the conflict, ironclad steam-driven ships at sea. 600,000 dead. The Civil War was the first mechanized conflict and the terrible price paid was only a shadow of what was to come.

  Of course as the technology of warfare improved so did the death toll. By the time of the First World War the improvements of machine-guns, rapid firing rifles, smokeless gun powder, breech-loading cannon and improved transport had made modern warfare that much more deadly. The Germans had 400,000 casualties on the battle of the Somme; the French lost 500,000 at Verdun. The British lost 20,000 men in a single day in the battle of the Somme — the same number that had been killed during the entire Boer War. Machines were changing the deadly face of warfare.

  Not that the generals noticed it. Never known for their imagination, they never quite knew what to do with their new weapons. They were always prepared to fight a new war with the tactics of the previous one.

  In the blood-bath of the Civil War the Americans learned by experience how to utilize new tactics and new weapons. Since both sides in the First World War threw away their soldiers’ lives in frontal attacks on entrenched machine-gun positions, I feel completely justified in having them do the same thing in this book, in 1863. It is hard to forget that in 1939 Polish cavalry charged against German tanks. The deeply entrenched attitudes of the martial mind are almost immune to novelty, logic or reason.

  The irreducible facts of history speak for themselves. If I appear to be prejudiced about the British in Ireland in the nineteenth century, I do apologize. I have attempted to be as even-handed as I can. Putting historical quotes into my characters’ mouths whenever possible. Avoiding inflammatory facts when I could. Such as the historical fact that Catholics were not allowed to buy land, or raise a mortgage on it — or even inherit it in the normal fashion. At the turn of the 18th century Catholics owned barely 15 percent of the total land in the country, most of that bog and mountain. This was because, by British law, they could not keep their lands intact. When the owner died the land had to be shared equally among all the sons of the owner. However — should any son of the family turn Protestant — everything became his. Therefore by the end of the mid-18th century Catholics, who made up about 90% of the population, owned only 7% of the land. Is it any wonder that they died during the famine on their miserable tiny plots of land — or later rose in revolt?

  Lightning war — or blitzkrieg as the Germans called it — was a natural outgrowth of the use of machines of war. When the Allies first introduced tanks to the battlefield during the First World War they had little idea what to do with them. So they came to the battlefield piecemeal and were duly destroyed. By the time of the Spanish Civil War there were self-propelled guns and armored troop carriers. As well as aerial support. The Germans experimented with their joint use and the art of the blitzkrieg was invented. Neither France nor Britain took heed of these developments until it was too late. My Americans in 1863 did what the Germans did in 1936. They applied all the lessons of combat that they had learned the hard way, through he death of soldiers, to invent a new and more successful kind of warfare.

  Notes

  1

  A National Hymn

  Mexicans, hear the battle cry

  Mount for battle, win or die,

  The earth is trembling to its core

  At the might of the cannon’s roar.

  If a foreign enemy be found

  Who dares profane our sacred ground,

  Heaven hears and sends your sons

  To victory against their guns.

  By Francisco González Bocanegra, 1824-1861. (Translation by Gay Haldeman.)

  Bocanegra, and Guillermio Prieto, were the patriotic poets of the Mexican revolution. Their inspiring poems were much loved by the fighting men.

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