After Lee defeated McClellan on the Peninsula, he headed north to deal with the new Army of Virginia under a man who really seemed to irritate the Rebels: John Pope. Lee dominated the befuddled Pope for two days, and McClellan, possibly jealous that Pope was going to take command of the united armies, was slow in sending reinforcements. Longstreet's tremendous attack on the battle's second day sent Pope's men fleeing across the Stone Bridge and back to Washington for the second time in a little over a year.
Book Name |
Author |
Definitive Study? |
Pages |
Maps |
OOB? |
|
1 |
John
J. Hennessy |
Yes |
607 |
15 |
Yes |
|
2 |
John
J. Hennessy |
Yes |
504 |
16 |
Yes |
|
3 |
David
G. Martin |
No |
299 |
14 |
Yes |
|
4 |
David A. Welker |
No |
279 |
11 |
Yes |
|
5 |
Paul
Taylor |
No |
179 |
8 |
Yes |
|
6 |
John
Langellier |
No |
96 |
8 |
Yes |
|
7 |
Robert K. Krick |
Yes |
472 |
16 |
Yes |
|
8 |
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