Longshanks wrote:Lord Roberts, commander-in-chief of the British armies in the early twentieth century, said, "In my opinion, Stonewall Jackson was one of the greatest natural military geniuses the world ever saw. I will go even further than that--as a campaigner in the field, he never had a superior. In some respects, I doubt whether he ever had an equal." However, Jackson never applied his skills toward Grand Strategy.
As a strategist, it's hard to beat Grant who understood his advantages vs the South's. Yes, he bludgeoned his way to victory, but he won. Would he have won if the roles were reversed? No, Lee would have, and probably more quickly. So there's a case for Lee.
As for me, the one guy I would not want to have in my theatre of operations would be Nathan B. Forrest. Native genius. He went where he wanted, when he wanted. The highest praise for him came from the primary participants: Grant, who said this was the cavalryman he most feared, and from Lee and Jeff Davis who said after the war that NBF was the most under-utilized.
Longshanks wrote:"Jackson - undoubtedly a general of the first rank, but, as Grant wrote in his Memoirs, he was against Banks, McDowell and Fremont in the Valley - if he been opposed by Sheridan or some others, it could well have been a different story."
and if Ruth and Williams had faced Gibson, Koufax, R.Johnson and N Ryan whose knows what they would have done. He played against the team they brung. Ain't his fault they were the jv.
As for MacArthur.....I can't believe he's on the list. He was nearly as pokey and pig-headed as the other Mac. Moral: keep generals named Mac out of command.
Luv ya' G-S.He's a good opponent too!
jason_r wrote:Just wonderin who people think was the best general in the war ?
GraniteStater wrote:* I rate Grant a notch above Lee. As for the rest, Sherman and Thomas stand out for the North; Hancock wasn't called "the Superb" for nothing; Sheridan was very good, if not excellent. Forrest is no doubt an untutored genius - if he'd gone to the Point and been given an army, there's no telling wht could have happened. I find it interesting that more than one Union general thought Joe Johnston was better than Lee, at least on defense.
Ol' Choctaw wrote:I found this yesterday.
It is an interesting address, delivered some two years after Forrest’s death.
Much of it was fought over in country I have seen first hand.
I think it is a good read.
http://www.civilwarhome.com/forrestcampaigns.htm
RELee wrote:Have you ever wondered how the war would have actually turned out if Jackson had been at Gettysburg?
I've often wondered about it. The question for me revolves around the team of Lee and Jackson, rather than an individual general. Lee grieved over losing Jackson, referring to him as his "right arm", which I've always thought a significant admission.
Jackson was his sword. Longstreet was his shield. I've always seen them this way under Lee's guidance. Gettysburg was a disaster because Lee was forced to try and use his shield as a sword.
Just a thought.
wsatterwhite wrote:I don't think it should be a question of Jackson versus Longstreet at Gettysburg but rather Jackson instead of either Ewell or A.P. Hill. Longstreet accomplished all that could have been hoped for on his sector of the battlefield. Any hope the Confederates had of winning Gettysburg occurred came and went on July 1st when they should have established control of the high ground on either Union flank. By the 2nd, the Army of the Potomac was too strongly positioned to have any real hope of dislodging it- remember, if Sickles is where he was supposed to be, their line should have extended down to the Round Tops with the 5th Corps in reserve to guard against any daring flanks attacks on that front.
Something else to consider at Gettysburg- this wasn't a Yankee army in the middle of Virginia or Tennessee where a retreat just meant giving back a block of the enemy's own territory, they were on Northern soil and I believe would have defended any attack with the ferocity that the rebels defended on their soil. For that reason, I have never believed that Gettysburg could have ever ended up as anything other than a Confederate defeat outside of following Longstreet's advice and turning it into a defensive battle.
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