Heldenkaiser wrote:I am sure he said that. But I believe he meant the best Union general for HIM (Lee).![]()
Stonewall63 wrote: (...) he came really the closest to ending the war (...).
Heldenkaiser wrote:Yes--nowhere closer than on 17 September 1862. Even after he had completely mismanaged the battle by sending in his corps piecemeal, it still needed just one word from him to commit Porter and destroy the ANV for good. But he was taking council from his fears, and hence he simply didn't have what a good strategist (that he was, and btw so was Halleck, another one of those thoroughly competent generals whose bad reputation in nationalist legend leads to their complete misrepresentation in the game as utter losers) needed to turn into a good general--the instinct that tells somebody when to trust his luck.
Colonel Dreux wrote:One last comment about McClellan though. I've been reading David G. Martin's book, "Gettysburg July 1" book, which is considered the most comprehensive book on the first day's battle at Gettysburg. Martin writes that apparently in the I. Corps a rumor was spread that McClellan was back in charge of the AoP. They knew Hooker had just been replaced, but some how word spread that McClellan not Meade was in charge (this was amongst the soldiers themselves). So when the first two brigades of the I. Corps deployed on July 1 they actually cheered for McClellan being back in charge and went into battle thinking he was leading them, and they were very happy about this. Both those brigades ending up sticking it to the Confederates for most of the day until finally having to retreat do to the XI. Corps collapsing and Confederate reinforcements finally breaking the I. Corps line.
McClellan was loved and they considered Antietam a great victory, in part thanks to McClellan. Interesting stuff.
Sarkus wrote:Of course, but it's similar to Montgomery (UK) during WW2. He was loved by his British troops because they knew he wouldn't sacrifcie them. The same was true of Union troops under McClellan - they knew he valued them too much so of course they loved him. But that isn't always the best approach to winning a war, as Montgomery's controversial reputation (and McClellan's) prove. Patton argued that it was better to be more agressive because even if it means more deaths in the short-term, a shorter war means fewer deaths in the long-term. Grant's approach was along the same lines.
McClellan had many useful traits and I think history has been generally fair with him in giving him credit for building the AoP into something from nothing. He was a brilliant organizer, which is no surprise since that's what he was doing before the war in civilian life. But you can't ignore his ridiculous belief in huge Confederate forces or his lack of action as a result. Nor can you ignore some of the "savior of the Republic" stuff he seems to have believed about himself.
Colonel Dreux wrote:That isn't entirely why the soldiers of the I Corps cheered for McClellan on July 1, 1863... they huzza'd him because they saw him as the victor of South Mountain and Antietam. It wasn't that he just cared for them, but Antietam was considered a great victory by the North, i.e., McClellan kicked Lee back into Virginia.
Nobody ignores McClellan's foolish estimation of Confederate troops. He clearly didn't know how to count. That alone doesn't mean he wasn't a decent general though.
Grant also didn't shorten the war arguably by being "aggressive". He didn't even defeat Lee in the 1864 campaign season. He did murder a lot of his soldiers though. That's definitely the truth.
Sarkus wrote:We're roaming off topic here, but the reality of the Civil War was that the attacker almost always had higher casualties then the defender as a result of the technology and tactics used. Blaming Grant for that broader truth is a bit unfair. Plus, of the 10 costliest battles of the war, only two happened in 1864.
Le Ricain wrote:You are correct that only two of the ten happened in 1864. However, four of the ten involved Grant; which I think was the point Colonel Dreux was trying to make.
Gray_Lensman wrote:Lincoln wanted a general that understood the "math", that being that the south absolutely could NOT keep up with a casualty exchange rate of 2 to 1. Also, those same men that you refer to as being murdered, (the Army of the Potomac) cheered when they realized that Grant was continuing to take the fight to the enemy after the Wilderness fiasco. They finally realized they might die but they were going to die accomplishing something instead of restreating as had always previously been the case. Had Grant retreated like all the other northern generals previous to him instead of maintaining his "aggressive" stance, the south would not have had such a horrible final 1864 winter (literally being under siege and quite close to starvation) and might well have survived quite easily thru 1865.
Now I don't credit Grant for conducting anything approaching a "brilliant" tactical campaign in 1864, but his continuing "aggressiveness" definitely contributed to shortening the war by stymieing the mobile "offensive" power of the Army of Northern Virginia and prevented Lee from being able to accomplish what he had previously been able to accomplish at will and that in itself brought the end of the war much sooner than it would have been had Grant retreated like all the previous northern (Army of the Potomac) generals.
Sarkus wrote:I was specifically responding to Dreux's focus on 1864 and Grant. I'm not arguing that there weren't some bloody battles involving the guy, but the two that weren't in 1864 were Shiloh (where he was defending) and and Fort Donelson (which makes the top 10 list because of all the CSA casualties and where there weren't that many Union losses.)
Besides, do we refer to Lee as a "bloody butcher" even though he commanded the army that lost the most men of any battle in the entire Civil War (at Gettysburg)? No. So simply pointing to casualty figures clearly doesn't tell the whole story.
Again, though, this is turning into a debate about Grant and not one about McClellan.
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