Under Two Flags: The American Navy in the Civil War (book review)

Under Two Flags: The American Navy in the Civil War (book review)

the navies were second priority…

 

 

Book review:

Under Two Flags:

The American Navy in the Civil War

 

by William M. Fowler Jr.

New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1990

352 pp.

 

I imagine most Civil War buffs will learn something by reading Under Two Flags.

Most standard histories don’t emphasize the naval elements of the Civil War fighting. Both Northern and Southern leaders thought the navies were important, and so they were.

Stephen Mallory, naval secretary of the Confederate States, had a job no one would have wanted in 1860. He came up short in most respects, because the Confederacy just couldn’t afford to build and maintain a potent navy.

Gideon Welles, his Northern counterpart, had only a somewhat easier job.

The naval commanders never managed to convince their respective commanders-in-chief that the navies were as vital as the armies in the Civil War conflict.

The sailors on both sides were brave men, but Fowler gives them second billing.

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Book review. Copyright © Richard Carl Subber 2022 All rights reserved.

 

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