John Crawford Vaughn was one of the most famous men in Tennessee in the mid-nineteenth century. He was the first man to raise an infantry regiment in the state--and one of the very last Confederate generals to surrender. History has not been kind to Vaughn; who finally emerges from the shadows in this absorbing assessment of his life and military career. Making use of recent research and new information; Larry Gordon’s biography follows Vaughn to Manassas; Vicksburg and other crucial battles; it shows him as a close friend of Jefferson Davis; and Davis’s escort during the final month of the war. And it considers his importance as one of the few Confederate generals to return to Tennessee after Reconstruction; where he became President of the State Senate. Gordon examines Vaughn’s (hitherto unknown) location on the field of crucial battles; his multiple wounds; the fact that his wife and family; captured by Union soldiers; were the only family members of a Confederate general incarcerated as hostages during the Civil War; and the effect of this knowledge on his performance as a military commander. Finally; the book is as valuable for its view of this little understood figure as it is for the light it casts on the culture of his day.
#2181564 in Books Carolyn L White 2005-08-26Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 10.94 x .41 x 8.46l; 1.12 #File Name: 0759105898160 pagesAmerican Artifacts Of Personal Adornment 1680 1820
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