Unconditional Surrender: U. S. Grant and the Civil War by Albert Marrin

Unconditional Surrender: U. S. Grant and the Civil War

Albert Marrin
208 pages
Atheneum
Apr 1994
Hardcover
WSBN
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When the small, stoop-shouldered man in a rumpled uniform and scuffed boots, accompanied by a thirteen-year-old boy, asked for a room at Willard's Hotel in Washington, D.C., he was offered a small room on the top floor. But when the clerk saw the man's signature, suddenly a suite was found for him. The man was Ulysses S. Grant, and President Lincoln recently had appointed him commander in chief of the Union forces. Noted historian Albert Marrin tells how this reluctant soldier became the leader who was able to bring final victory to the Union after years of bloody, wrenching civil war. Along the way he describes how soldiers lived in army camps: their food, their recreation, their thoughts, taken from diaries and letters home, and brings to the reader the experience of war: the fear, the deadly mistakes, the early medical services to the wounded, and always the heroism.
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About this book
Pages 208
Publisher Atheneum
Published 1994
Readers 0