TeMagic wrote:industrialisation as the south is a majorexploit in the game imo. read the economics of war thread for more info
Nial wrote:Having only played the Demo, I can only speak with limited knowledge. But the thing that bugs me the most is the randomness of the whole industrialization process. Logicaly speaking. If I am the leader of a nation at war? I am going to have a good idea what I / my armies are most in need of.
So, if I know they are in desperate need of ammo? Thats what I am going to -try- to up prodution of. Im not just going to hand out money to a state and say "Build whatever you want" Im going to say " I need an ammo manufacturing plant in this state."
I assume the randomness is a way to limit what you can build up. To stop the south from just producing war supplies, for example. But in my opinion it is too random. I should be able to somewhat control what industries I build.
As it is. I can build industry in every state to max, and there is still a possiblity that I wont get any increased war supplies. JMHO
Nial
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Nial wrote: Im not just going to hand out money to a state and say "Build whatever you want" Im going to say " I need an ammo manufacturing plant in this state." Nial
blackbellamy wrote:Yeah, that's what you will say, but because you're only the President it's kind of out of your hands. You told your industrialist buddies you need ammo, you gave them a bunch of money, hands were shaken in a smoke-filled room, and everyone walked off thinking they won. However, once home, the manufacturing baron decided he would make more profit building saddles and your urgent letters urging him to make ammo get lost in the mail. And there's nothing you can do, except give him some money later and hope this time he listens. The government doesn't control the means of production, so you can only encourage and hope. Just like today.
Nial wrote:Maybe thats how it works in the game? But in RL procurement does NOT work that way. Not in this or any other reasonably well-run government. It may be late. And people do make mistakes. But I get what I want or that contractor doesn't get paid. End of story. And yes I do work for state gov.
Nial
enderv wrote:The first suggestion for partial emancipation (I think in late 1863) was turned down very quickly, exactly because of the argument that (paraphrasing, I can find the author and exact quote later) "if some slaves were given weapons and let to fight for south, and proven good fighters, it would invalidate our whole premise of why slavery is good".
PBBoeye wrote:Sorry - the 'blahblahblah' was probably rude.
I don't disagree with you entirely. I've said there should probably be some way to be a bit more specific in determining and meeting production needs. It's likely that we all have varying concepts of what is best or not.
Reality is, the devs are heavy on VGN, so I am not sure this area will get advanced much, if at all.
The ordanance bureau was the one bright spot of confederate supply. Josiah Gorgas accepted appointment as chief of ordnance in april 1861... The South already grew plenty of food, and the capacity to produce wagons, harness, shoes, and clothing seemed easier to develop than the industrial base to manufacture gunpowder, cannon, and rifles. No foundry in the South except the Tedegar Iron Works had the capability to manufacture heavy ordnance... The du Pont plants in Delaware had produced most of the country's gunpowder; the South had manufactured none, and this heavy, bulky product would be difficult to smuggle thorough the [] blockade....
But Gorgas proved to be a genius at organization and improvization....He sent Caleb Huse to Europe to purchase all available arms and ammunition. Huse was as good at this job as James Bulloch was at his task of building Confederate warships in England.... Meanwhile Gorgas began to establish armories and foundries in several states to manufacture small arms and artillary.... He created a Mining and Niter Bureau headed by Isaac ST. John, who located limestone caves containing saltpeter in souther Appalachians, and appealed to southern women to save the contents of chamber pots to be leached for niter. The Ordnance Bureau also built a huge gunpowder mill at Augusta, georgia, which under[] George W. Raines began production in 1862. Ordnance officers roamed the South buying [] stills for their copper to make rifle percussion caps; they melted down church and plantation bells for bronze to build cannon; they gleaned southern battlefields for lead to remold into bullets and for damaged weapons for repair...
The South suffered from deficiencies of everything else, but after the summer of 1862 it did not suffer seriously for want of ordnance-though the quality of confederate artillery and shells was always a problem. Gorgas could write proudly in his diary on the third anniversary of his appointment: "Where three years ago we were not making a gun, a pistol nor a saber, no shot nor shell [] we now make all these in quantities to meet the demands of our large armies."
James M. McPherson. BATTLE CRY OF FREEDOM. pgs.319-320
Which was mainly because the South went to great length to gather alternative sources of saltpetre once the northern blockade kicked in.Le Ricain wrote:It is worth remembering that even near the end of war, when the Southern armies were short of just about everything, there was never any problem with availability of small arms ammunition.
John Harrolson! John Harrelson! by Thomas Wetmore
(Melody: "Maryland, my Maryland"/"O Tannenbaum")
John Harrolson! John Harrolson!
You are a wretched creature,
You've added to this bloody war
a new and awful feature.
You'd have us think while every man
Is bound to be a fighter,
That ladies, bless the pretty dears,
should save their pee for nitre.
John Harrolson! John Harrolson!
Where did you get the notion,
To send your barrel 'round the town
to gather up the lotion?
We thought the girls had work enough
with making shirts and kissing,
But you have put the pretty dears
to patriotic pissing.
John Harrolson! John Harrolson!
Do pray invent a neater;
And somewhat more modest mode
of making your saltpetre;
But 'tis an awful idea, John,
gunpowdery and cranky,
That when a lady lifts her skirts
she's killing off a Yankee!
Le Ricain wrote:Henry D,
There is a 4th verse to "John Harrolson John Harrolson"
John Harrolson! John Harrolson!
What're was your intention,
You've made another contraband
Of things we hate to mention.
What good will all our fighting do,
If Yanks search Venus' mountains,
And confiscate and carry off
These Southern nitre fountains!
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