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Chapter

Marse Robert and the Fevers: A Note on the General as Strategist and on Medical Ideas as a Factor in Civil War Decision Making

Chapter

Marse Robert and the Fevers: A Note on the General as Strategist and on Medical Ideas as a Factor in Civil War Decision Making

DOI link for Marse Robert and the Fevers: A Note on the General as Strategist and on Medical Ideas as a Factor in Civil War Decision Making

Marse Robert and the Fevers: A Note on the General as Strategist and on Medical Ideas as a Factor in Civil War Decision Making book

Marse Robert and the Fevers: A Note on the General as Strategist and on Medical Ideas as a Factor in Civil War Decision Making

DOI link for Marse Robert and the Fevers: A Note on the General as Strategist and on Medical Ideas as a Factor in Civil War Decision Making

Marse Robert and the Fevers: A Note on the General as Strategist and on Medical Ideas as a Factor in Civil War Decision Making book

ByRichard M. McMurry
BookThe American Civil War

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Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2005
Imprint Routledge
Pages 11
eBook ISBN 9781351147804

ABSTRACT

In 1969 Thomas Lawrence Connelly launched an effort to reevaluate Robert E. Lee, his record as a field commander, and his role as a Confederate strategist. Lee always urged the government to take troops from other areas and send them to reinforce his own army in Virginia so that it could take the offensive against the Union Army of the Potomac. The Old Dominion, Lee maintained, was the main seat of war and the place where the Federals would make their greatest effort. Lee's views about the deleterious Deep South summer climate emerged most conspicuously in the spring 1863 debate over strategy. Lee's ideas about the Deep South climate and its possible effect on health and military operations were, in fact, shared by many men—both North and South—in the 1860s. Lee's ideas about the dangers to the health of troops stationed along the coast were widely shared by many Confederates.

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