Scarecrow Press
Pages: 408
Trim: 7 x 10
978-0-8108-4996-9 • Paperback • February 2005 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
Richard H. Groves served in the U.S. Army for forty years and is a graduate of the Harvard Graduate School of Engineering and George Washington University. He has served as advisor to the Secretary of Defense for NATO Affairs and as U.S. Chief of Staff in Europe from 1976 to 1979. In the past twenty years, Groves has served as a consultant to government and industry on issues such as European stationing initiatives and Panama Canal upgrades.
Part 1 Preface
Chapter 2 1 Positive Defiance
Chapter 3 2 Called to Arms
Chapter 4 3 Camp Utley
Chapter 5 4 Cincinnati
Chapter 6 5 Contrabands
Chapter 7 6 The Abolition Regiment
Chapter 8 7 A Bully Regiment
Chapter 9 8 To the Front
Chapter 10 9 Thompson's Station
Chapter 11 10 Forrest Returns
Chapter 12 11 Brentwood
Chapter 13 12 Prisoners of War
Chapter 14 13 Redemption and Release
Chapter 15 14 Back to Duty
Chapter 16 15 The Petition
Chapter 17 16 Watchful Waiting
Chapter 18 17 The Trial
Chapter 19 18 In Limbo
Chapter 20 19 The Purge
Chapter 21 20 Opportunity Knocks Again
Chapter 22 21 Moving to Contact
Chapter 23 22 Redeemed by Fire at Resaca
Chapter 24 23 The Yoke Is Lifted
Chapter 25 24 Epilogue
Part 26 Appendix A: The Booth Case
Part 27 Appendix B: Wisconsin's Governors
Part 28 Appendix C: Kentucky, Kentuckians, and "Kentucky Generals"
Part 29 Appendix D: National Policy and the 22d Wisconsin
Part 30 Appendix E: Copperheads - as Viewed by Wisconsin Soldiers
Part 31 Appendix F: Exchanges of Officer Prisoners
Part 32 Appendix G: Where Did the Arrested Officers Go?
Part 33 Appendix H: Griffith and Burgess
Part 34 Appendix I: Analysis of a Few of Resaca's Imponderables
Part 35 Appendix J: How Owen Griffith Was Brevetted Major
Part 36 Appendix K: Cast of Characters
Part 37 Resources
Part 38 Index
Part 39 About the Author
Groves traces the evolution of the 22nd Wisconsin Voluntary Infantry Regiment from a group of men beset by infighting and politicking and eventual capture by Confederate forces to a successful unit at the Battle of Resaca. Groves draws on a range of sources, including military records and the soldiers' private letters as well as his 40 years experience in the US Army and his unique position as a descendant of a regiment member. His extensive research allows him to create a vivid portrait of what life was like for the soldiers at each stage of their journey.
— Reference and Research Book News