It was the largest campaign ever attempted in the Civil War: the Peninsula campaign of 1862. General George McClellan planned to advance from Yorktown up the Virginia Peninsula and destroy the Rebel army in its own capital. But with Robert E. Lee delivering blows to the Union army, McClellan's plan fell through at the gates of Richmond. Now, in a study of the great Civil War engagement that weaves together narrative, military analysis, and eyewitness accounts drawn from the diaries and letters of soldiers, historian Stephen W. Sears showcases all the reasons why Ken Burns, the producer of the PBS series The Civil War, calls Sears "one of our best Civil War historians."
World War II: Desert War
Stephen W. Sears
audiobookWorld War II: Carrier War
Stephen W. Sears
audiobookLandscape Turned Red
Stephen W. Sears
audiobookLincoln's Lieutenants : The High Command of the Army of the Potomac
Stephen W. Sears
audiobookLincoln's Lieutenants
Stephen W. Sears
audiobookThe British Empire
Stephen W. Sears
audiobookWorld War II: Air War
Stephen W. Sears
audiobookControversies and Commanders
Stephen W. Sears
audiobook
The Home Guard : A Novel of the Civil War
John Warley
audiobookRaiding with Morgan
Jim R. Woolard
audiobookThe Slaves' War
Andrew Ward
audiobookNPR American Chronicles: The Civil War
NPR NPR
audiobookA People’s History of the Civil War
David Williams
audiobookMosby's Men
John Alexander
audiobookService With the Sixth Wisconsin Volunteers Four Years with the Iron Brigade
Rufus Dawes
audiobookThe Three-Cornered War : The Union, the Confederacy, and Native Peoples in the Fight for the West
Megan Kate Nelson
audiobookLast of the Blue and Gray
Richard A. Serrano
audiobookDarkness at Chancellorsville
Ralph Peters
audiobookThe Heart of Hell
Jeffry D. Wert
audiobookThe Unvanquished : The Untold Story of Lincoln's Special Forces, the Manhunt for Mosby's Rangers, and the Shadow War That Forged America's Special Operations
Patrick K. O'Donnell
audiobook