Butchery and Burial (or, Sympathy for McClellan)
I wrote, some time ago, that Grant becomes the hero of Shelby Foote’s Civil War because “he fights, unlike his colleagues on either side, who dilly-dally, blundering into and through battle and prolonging the war, and he fights for the Union.” The war, in this telling, is tragic in the root sense of the word
not [because] it had to be fought at all, but that it continues without an end at hand while terrain, technology, and the incompetence and “honor” of the so-called great-men lead to increasing casualty rolls.
While I haven’t changed my mind about the perspective of Foote’s Narrative on Grant and Sherman compared to their lesser colleagues on both sides of battle, Foote himself presents a condemnation of McClellan (among others) that is too free of context. The Civil War, we’re often told, was fought with modern technology but archaic strategies—leading to its overwhelming bloodiness. This was, as Drew Gilpin Faust notes, not just a challenge to emotions—it was a logistical nightmare for which neither side was prepared.
Meade after Gettysburg and McClellan after Antietam are still criticized for not pouncing on the retreating Lee; instead, they sat to “lick their wounds,” or some such formulation. But these were two of the bloodiest battles of the war—and the victorious generals were suddenly left with a field littered with the dead and wounded of both sides. Faust writes, in This Republic of Suffering:
More often delay [in burial] resulted from the failure to mobilize necessary manpower and resources for the task. The Battle of Antietam, September 17, 1862, the bloodiest single day of combat in American history, left both Union and Confederate armies staggering. Lee slowly limped southward, leaving the field—and the dead of both sides—to the Union army. McClellan appeared to be paralyzed by the magnitude of the engagement and failed to take strategic advantage of his victory by pursuing the Confederate army. A similar paralysis seemed to grip his troops as they confronted the devastation before them. Twenty-three thousand men and untold numbers of horses and mules lay killed or wounded.
And at Gettysburg, Meade faced an even greater task:
By July 4, an estimated six million pounds of human flesh and animal carcasses lay strewn across the field in the summer heat, and a town of 2,400 grappled with 22,000 wounded who remained alive but in desperate condition.
“Responsibility for the dead,” she reminds us, “usually fell to the victor, for it was his army that held the field.” By the time of Gettysburg, generals had begun to delegate that responsibility to the townspeople; Grant, both from a desire to demoralize his enemy and for the sake of timing, refused to take it on at all—even in the midst of a stalemate. The sight of thousands dead does not, of course, absolve a commander of the need to strike a final blow to his enemy if it presents itself—as it did after Antietam and Gettysburg. But there was another responsibility there—the responsibility to the dead, either to be fulfilled or put off for a time. The inability to decisively reconcile or choose between these claims indicates a failure of generalship—but it was a very human failure, and its origins are to be found in something other than mere incompetence.
Twice as many men died of disease than gunshot in the Civil War. The American Civil War grew beyond anyone’s ability to contain it. This seems true of most wars. The technology of mechanized warfare always overwhelms the ability to deal with its consequences but never seems to inhibit its planners. I strongly disagree with those who say the Civil War was fought with antique tactics: it was a thoroughly modern war for its time, planned and executed by educated men with scruples and a working knowledge of history.
The vast ossuary at Douaumont has alcoves where the visitor can see the skeletal remains of over 130,000 unidentified men from both sides of Verdun. To put this in perspective, that’s about half of the 300,000 men who died there in the roughly 300 days and nights of that battle. 26 million artillery rounds were fired, that’s six rounds per square meter of battlefield.
The American Civil War was the warmup exercises for the machine gun and the howitzer and trench warfare. If technology reduced the men who fought it to ciphers, the staggering-about and paralysis were at General Headquarters, not on the battlefield. Grant and Sherman understood the problem implicitly and dealt with it ruthlessly. Read Sherman’s letter to the citizens of Atlanta:
Now that war comes home to you, you feel very different. You depreciate its horrors, but did not feel them when you sent car-loads of soldiers and ammunition, and moulded shells and shot, to carry war into Kentucky and Tennessee, to desolate the homes of hundreds of thousands of good people who only asked to live in peace at their old homes, and under the Government of their inheritance. But these comparisons are idle. I want peace, and believe it can only be reached through union and war, and I will ever conduct war with a view to perfect and early success.
War is said to dehumanize those who fight. I smile grimly to hear such moaning and see such wringing of hands. War is man’s natural state. Peace is the illusion. If war has become the province of the machine, ’twas ever so, from the time of Alexander’s longer sarissa spear to the drones buzzing over today’s battlefield. Technology is first a toy, then a tool, then a weapon.
Report
Close. War is woman’s natural state.
Historically, Men make peace.Report
Given a different South, Meade might have been able to win the war for the Confederacy.
As it was? Gettysburg, the propaganda campaign…Report