Battle at Bull Run: A History of the First Major Campaign of the Civil War

by William C. Davis

Paperback, 1981

Rating

½ (29 ratings; 3.7)

Library's rating

User reviews

LibraryThing member ksmyth
This is a very servicable account of the Battle of Bull Run. Nothing amazing. All the usual suspects are there. At the end of the book the Confederates still win, and the Yankees still run away.
LibraryThing member MacDad
As a longtime historian of the Civil War, William C. Davis has written extensively about the conflict. This is one of his earliest works, a study of the campaign fought in northeastern Virginia in the summer of 1861. Davis's skills as a writer are on full display, as he provides an entertaining
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narrative that details the events of the battle as best he can. The book suffers, though, from a paucity of maps; those provided are only for the battle itself, and these are of inferior quality. This is the only serious criticism of the book, however, which remains the best single-volume study of the first major clash between the Union and the Confederacy.
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Publication

Louisiana State University Press (1981), Paperback

Description

The first major history ever written on the first battle of the Civil War, this narrative describes the chaotic fighting by courageous amateurs that nearly resulted in Confederate independence.

Original publication date

1977

Physical description

298 p.; 8.49 inches

Pages

298

ISBN

0807108677 / 9780807108673

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