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  • Published: 25 November 2008
  • ISBN: 9780307346001
  • Imprint: Christian/Forum
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 352
  • RRP: $39.99
Categories:

How the South Could Have Won the Civil War

The Fatal Errors That Led to Confederate Defeat





For readers of Civil War histories, e.g. James McPherson's Hallowed Ground and Crossroads of Freedom, Jay Winik's April 1865, H. W. Crocker III's Robert E. Lee on Leadership, and Ernest B. Furgurson's Not War but Murder; for readers of Alexander's How Hitler Could Have Won World War II and How Wars Are Won, and other military histories.

Destroying conventional historical wisdom, acclaimed military historian Bevin Alexander reveals how the South most definitely could have defeated the North-and how close a Confederate victory came to happening. Alexander shows:

•How the Confederacy had its greatest chance to win the war just three months into the fighting-but blew it
• How the Confederacy’s three most important leaders- President Jefferson Davis and Generals Robert E. Lee and Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson– clashed over how to fight the war
• How the Confederate army devised–but never fully exploited–a way to negate the Union’s huge advantages in manpower and weaponry
• How Abraham Lincoln and other Northern leaders understood the Union’s vulnerability better than the Confederacy’s leaders did

How the South Could Have Won the Civil War provides a startling account of how a relatively small number of tactical and strategic mistakes cost the South the war and changed the course of history.

  • Published: 25 November 2008
  • ISBN: 9780307346001
  • Imprint: Christian/Forum
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 352
  • RRP: $39.99
Categories:

About the author

Bevin Alexander

Bevin Alexander is the author of eight books of military history, including How Wars Are WonHow Hitler Could Have Won World War II, and Lost Victories, which was named by the Civil War Book Review as one of the seventeen books that have most transformed Civil War scholarship. He was an adviser to the Rand Corporation for a recent study on future warfare and a participant in a recent war game simulation run by the Training and Doctrine Command of the U.S. Army. His battle studies of the Korean War, written during his decorated service as a combat historian, are stored in the National Archives in Washington, D.C. He lives in Bremo Bluff, Virginia.

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