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Lincoln's Generals' Wives: Four Women Who Influenced the Civil War--For Better and for Worse, Hardcover

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The story of the American Civil War is not complete without examining the extraordinary and influential lives of Jessie Fremont, Nelly Mc Clellan, Ellen Sherman, and Julia Grant, the wives of Abraham Lincoln's top generals. They were their husban...
Cod: 561592c6-247f-40ce-8db0-1fcc60af78b9 / 137421
Disponibilitate: In stoc
Producator: Kent State University Press
Expediere prin: Colete.ro

145.19 RON


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The story of the American Civil War is not complete without examining the extraordinary and influential lives of Jessie Fremont, Nelly Mc Clellan, Ellen Sherman, and Julia Grant, the wives of Abraham Lincoln's top generals. They were their husbands' closest confidantes and had a profound impact on the generals' ambitions and actions. Most important, the women's own attitudes toward and relation- ships with Lincoln had major historical significance. Candice Shy Hooper's lively account covers the early lives of her subjects, as well as their families, their education, their political attitudes, and their personal beliefs. Once shots were fired on Fort Sumter, the women were launched out of their private spheres into a wholly different universe, where their relationships with their husbands and their personal opinions of the president of the United States had national and historical consequences. The approaches and styles of Fremont and Mc Clellan contrast with those of Sherman and Grant, and there is equal symmetry in their wives' stories. Jessie Fremont and Nelly Mc Clellan both encouraged their husbands to persist in their arrogance and delusion and to reject the advice and friendship of their commander in chief. In the end, Jessie and Nelly contributed most to the Union war effort by accelerating their husbands' removal from active command. Conversely, while Ellen Sherman's and Julia Grant's belief in their husbands' character and potential was ardent, it was not unbounded. Ellen and Julia did not hesitate to take issue with their spouses when they believed their actions were wrong or their judgments ill-advised. They intelligently supported their husbands' best instincts--including trust in and admiration for Lincoln--and re-buffed their worst. They were the source of strength that Sherman and Grant used to win the Civil War. Relying on a close reading of letters, memoirs, and other primary sources--and, for the first time, mapping the women's wartime travels--Hooper ex
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