Portland Public Library

The bonfire, the siege and burning of Atlanta, Marc Wortman

Label
The bonfire, the siege and burning of Atlanta, Marc Wortman
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 363-414) and index
Illustrations
plansplatesillustrationsmaps
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The bonfire
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
191926309
Responsibility statement
Marc Wortman
Sub title
the siege and burning of Atlanta
Summary
In following the quiet struggles of James Calhoun, Atlanta's Unionist mayor, who was forced to accommodate determined Confederates, and Robert Yancey, a black merchant who built a personal fortune despite his legal status as property, the author evokes a "great, growing, and all-welcoming Gate City, made by war, [that] now belonged to the war." Atlanta became a symbol of Confederate gumption, destined to be destroyed before it could be born again. Those benumbed by military jargon may wish to skim Wortman's descriptions of flanking maneuvers, bivouacking and artillery-shell sizes. But the presence of scorched-earth advocate Gen. William Sherman -- "Let us destroy Atlanta and make it a desolation" ranks among his gentler declarations -- prevents the narrative from slipping into the History Channel battle-tech ghetto
Table Of Contents
Frontier. Flags -- Virginians -- Removal -- Sherman in the swamp -- Another passage -- The compromise -- Gate City. The cornerstone -- Earthquake -- Never! Never!! Never!!! -- Speculation -- Street Theater -- Clamorous town. The dead house -- Enemies within -- River of death -- A day's outing -- The hundred day's battle. Railroad war -- Candle ends -- Fighting, fighting, fighting -- Roman runagees -- Prayers -- The thief in the gloaming. A perfect shell -- The Battle of Atlanta -- War is cruelty, and you cannot refine it. Goodbye, Johnny -- The first bonfire -- The second bonfire -- The new South -- Epilogue : Sherman's return
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