Banks6060 wrote:This is an issue which many have voiced I think. The idea of progressive leadership ability instead of established. But I'm afraid there just isn't any other way to do it.
Banks6060 wrote:This is an issue which many have voiced I think. The idea of progressive leadership ability instead of established. But I'm afraid there just isn't any other way to do it.
Hancock was a great general. Had he not been injured, he probably would have rivaled Grant. Sedgewick was also another star of the late war North. Meade is overrated in the game IMHO. He was pretty cautious, just like the many of the rest of the Union Generals. His inability to crush Lee following Gettysburg was a hard pill to swallow for many. He had 2 fresh Corps to fight with (6th and 12th underrr....Slocum and Sedgewick?) and a well rested 1st, 3rd, and 5th. In fact....after the 3rd day of action....only Hancock's 2nd Corps was not in fighting shape....and perhaps Howard's 11th (although I don't count the action on Culp's Hill as anything to deterr Howard's Corps as their position was well in hand through most of the fighting).
I believe criticism against Meade after Gettysburg is quite justified. His army was demorilized yes....but so was Lee's. Perhaps more so. He could have ended the war right there.
Hooker, was in my mind, other than Grant....the best General for the yanks in the east. Hooker had all the tools....he just got cocky....then he got drastically humbled....so much so that it cost him victory. After getting trounced at Chancellorsville....had he realized that he STILL outnumbered Lee 2-1, he could have destroyed Lee's army right then and there.
Sorry to digress![]()
Banks6060 wrote:Meade is overrated in the game IMHO. He was pretty cautious, just like the many of the rest of the Union Generals. His inability to crush Lee following Gettysburg was a hard pill to swallow for many. He had 2 fresh Corps to fight with (6th and 12th underrr....Slocum and Sedgewick?) and a well rested 1st, 3rd, and 5th. In fact....after the 3rd day of action....only Hancock's 2nd Corps was not in fighting shape....and perhaps Howard's 11th (although I don't count the action on Culp's Hill as anything to deterr Howard's Corps as their position was well in hand through most of the fighting).
I believe criticism against Meade after Gettysburg is quite justified. His army was demorilized yes....but so was Lee's. Perhaps more so. He could have ended the war right there.
Banks6060 wrote:. Meade is overrated in the game IMHO. He was pretty cautious, just like the many of the rest of the Union Generals. His inability to crush Lee following Gettysburg was a hard pill to swallow for many. He had 2 fresh Corps to fight with (6th and 12th underrr....Slocum and Sedgewick?) and a well rested 1st, 3rd, and 5th. In fact....after the 3rd day of action....only Hancock's 2nd Corps was not in fighting shape....and perhaps Howard's 11th (although I don't count the action on Culp's Hill as anything to deterr Howard's Corps as their position was well in hand through most of the fighting).
elxaime wrote:As noted, the south may have initially had an advantage due to the larger percentage of West Point graduates in their ranks and the strength of the militia tradition across the south.
Straight Arrow wrote:elxaime wrote:As noted, the south may have initially had an advantage due to the larger percentage of West Point graduates in their ranks and the strength of the militia tradition across the south.
Maybe not such an advantage at all; I believe Maj. Gen. George Pickett said, "The Yankees got all the smart ones and see where it got them."
The Federal performance, in the early war years, sure backs this idea up. Engineers are not always the best leaders of men.
Sarkus wrote:You can't forget the reality of the difficulties attackers faced in the Civil War when trying to measure the "quality" of the troops. Many CSA victories happened when they sat back and let the Union attack first, then counterattacked a demoralized and weakened foe. Some of the biggest Union victories of the early war period were the rare occurences when they were defending, such as at Shiloh and Gettysburg. Meanwhile Lee's legendary skill didn't save him from high casualties in the rare battles he took the tactical initiative in, such as Seven Days and Gettysburg. So I tend to think the CSA quality advantage at the average soldier level is overrated, even though I agree they had better generals at the beginning of the war, for various reasons.
hanny1 wrote:Try using maths to answer who had a qualitive advantge in a battle or campaign, easier to argue about then.
hanny1 wrote:How to meausure superiority of combatents. one way is to compare what a commander has in resources, and what he removes from the enemies resources compared with the cost of his own rersources. Or in buissines, if it cost me 2 to produce an item and it can only sell for 2 im breaking even, if it sells for 4 im running 100% profit. the same is true for generalship, give a general manpower what he does with it can be adduced as a cost benifit ratio. This is done by taking the amount of manpower he has, the manpower of the opoistion force he removes as killed/wounded/captured, which is divided into his starting mapower, this yeilds his infliction rate, ditto for the opoenet, then his own losses as a percent of his own starting force yields his cost to in flict rate. Taking his cost to inflict and infliction rate gives you a cost benifit value. As does his oposite number. You now have a number value of what a commander achieves with the resources given to him, all the force multipliers like defensive posture in advantage terrain ect, are not really required as whatever they are the generals chose to give and acept battle.
Example, in the eastern theatre in 62, the AoP ( Mac) and ANV (Lee) from Aug 27 to Sept 17th saw engements at 2nd Bull run, South Mtn, Harpers ferry and Antietam. A total of 201,000 US and 137,000 CS forces were used in this campaign, 44,900 USW and 28,000 CS became casulties.( we could add in losses from sickness as this is also a measure of effiecency of the two forces, for instance in ww2 more time was lost to treating sexual disease in ETO, 14 days per case a man was lost to service, than to treating gunshot wounds).So Mac inflicting rate is 13.9% and cost to so is 22% so a total value of -8.1%. if normalized for ease of understanding, for every 100 men he has, he will lose 8% more than he inflicts. Lee otoh, inflicts 32.7% at a cost of doing so of 20.3% so his effiecency is +12.4%, is for every 100 men he has he will inflict 12% more than he losses, the superiority of the CS is therfore 20% over the US in the period. What does mean?, well, it means 100 CS effectivly fight as 120 US when the US hasa superiority of numbers of 68% more manpower. This is a value of superiority for a campaign season, if we take just the value of Antietam we find Mac inflict 18.2% at a cost of 16.4%, a +1.8%, while Lee inflicts 23.6% while suffering a loss of 26.3% a value of -2.7%.
Captain_Orso wrote:No, he basically put statistics together comparing the number of troops lead by a leader compared to the losses suffered by his force, and concluded that the leader with fewer losses per capita was the better leader. However he did not take into account whether the leader was acting in an offensive or defensive role, nor whether he achieved his goal, nor the importance and effects the battle had on a larger scale, because that is far more difficult to put into a spreadsheet, if not impossible.
czert2 wrote:hanny1 wrote:Try using maths to answer who had a qualitive advantge in a battle or campaign, easier to argue about then.
math, math,math....hmmm..how can you use it for anything so compes like battle ?
if by math you meaned sheer numbers of troops, weapons, etc, it isnt that simple, you need to consider terrain, quality of troops, leadership..etc.
What math moddifier will get excelent commander, and how big poor one ?
how your math will work in very famous meeting of spartans and persians at some not much known place that time (now exist with very different shape).
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