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ForewordLong considered one of the most important eyewitness accounts of the American Civil War, James Longstreet's From Manassas to Appomattox remains an indispensable primary source for scholars and students interested in the Confederacy's high command and generalship in the Army of Northern Virginia (ANV). First published in 1896 and reprinted numerous times since, the book still possesses the power to transport readers into Robert E. Lee's inner circle and the momentous decisions made within it that charted the course of much of the war in the Eastern Theater. Its plainly written but powerful narrative, frank observations of contextual realities, and even several moments of humor bring to life the world of 160 years ago when, for several years, the Southern nation struggled to achieve independence from the United States. This handsome new edition by Indiana UniversityPress not only befits the historical significance of the work but also makes it available to a new generation of readers, who, it is hoped, will benefit from it as much as those in the past.
Longstreet, who served as Lee's de facto second-in-command for much of the war (only sharing that distinction, for a time, with Stonewall Jackson), was uniquely positioned to offer insights that no other high-ranking Confederate in the ANV could offer. As a general officer, he participated in every major campaign in Virginia from the beginning of the war to its end, and enjoyed a remarkable longevity vis-à-vis his peers. Lee passed away in 1870, leaving a vacuum for other would-be writers to fill. Yet among the corps commanders and those of equivalent standing in the commanding general's estimation, Jackson died in 1863, J.E.B. Stuart in 1864, A. P. Hill in 1865, Richard S. Ewell in 1872, Richard H. Anderson in 1879, and Jubal Early in 1894. Only John B. Gordon rivalled Longstreet's endurance, dying the same year as he (1904). Thus the native South Carolinian and adopted Alabaman, nicknamed "Old Pete," outlived nearly everyone else who was in a position to comment authoritatively about the inner workings of the South's most significant field army. More importantly, however, Longstreet had an eye for detail that, although embellished by three decades of postwar hindsight and a well-documented penchant for self-justification, still provides the modern reader with a comprehensive understanding of why and how events occurred the way they did. Certainly, those seeking objective clarification about Pickett's Charge at Gettysburg, or how the East Tennessee Campaign of 1863 ended, for instance, should consult more period sources than simply this book, as Longstreet clearly wrote about these episodes—and others—with an exculpatory eye. Several excellent biographies of the general and numerous articles, some published soon after From Manassas to Appomattox was itself first released, have illuminated the biases that infiltrate his recollections of events. Yet the same could easily be said of the writings of Early, Gordon, Fitzhugh Lee (all of whom criticized Longstreet), and a host of other former Confederate and Union authors, so Longstreet was far from alone in evaluating his experiences in the war through a personal lens. Such is the privilege of the eyewitness chronicler, putting the burden of careful analysis on the contemporary reader.
Nonetheless, this general officer, whom Lee termed "my old warhorse," has been reconsidered over the past four decades and, if anything, his account of events defended if not unilaterally upheld. Michael Shaara based much of his famous, prize-winning book, The Killer Angels, on Longstreet's narrative of the Gettysburg Campaign as exposited in this volume.1 Scholars such as Thomas L. Connelly, Barbara L. Bellows, William G. Piston, and Jeffry D. Wert, seeking a historical rebalancing of the "Lost Cause" narrative of rebel defeat in which Lee traditionally could do no wrong and the Federals "overwhelmed" rather than defeated the Confederates, have examined the book more closely.2 Students of Civil War strategy, too, such as Gary W. Gallagher and Donald Stoker, have recently looked again at From Manassas to Appomattox in an attempt to understand, on a national level, why the South lost the war.3 Longstreet was gifted with an ability to see the big picture as the conflict progressed, scan the operational and theater environment correctly, and grasp the significance of contingency events. These themes emerge repeatedly throughout the work and are particularly valuable. Among the great postwar memoirs, only Ulysses S. Grant's and possibly William Tecumseh Sherman's possess a similar quality. In scope, insight, candor, and comprehensiveness, Longstreet's account has few equals.
Christian B. KellerUS Army War College
Michael Shaara, The Killer Angels (New York: Random House, 1974).2 Thomas L. Connelly and Barbara L. Bellows, God and General Longstreet: The Lost Cause and the Southern Mind (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State UniversityPress, 1982); William Garrett Piston, James Longstreet and His Place in Southern History (Athens: Universityof Georgia Press, 1987); Jeffry D. Wert, General James Longstreet: The Confederacy's Most Controversial Soldier (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1993).3 Gary W. Gallagher, The Myth of the Lost Cause and Civil War History (Bloomington: Indiana UniversityPress, 2000); Gary W. Gallagher, Lee andHis Generals in War and Memory (Baton Rouge: Louisiana UniversityPress, 1998); Donald Stoker, The Grand Design: Strategy and the U.S. Civil War(New York: Oxford UniversityPress, 2010).