War in the Western Theater: Favorite Stories and Fresh Perspectives from the Historians at Emerging Civil War

Savas Beatie, 2023

Edited by Chris Mackowski and Sarah Kay Bierle

Often relegated to a backseat by action in the Eastern Theater, the Western Theater is actually where the Federal armies won the Civil War.

In the West, General Ulysses S. Grant strung together a series of victories that ultimately led him to oversee Robert E. Lee's surrender at Appomattox Court house and, eventually, two terms in the White House, the fall of Atlanta secured Abraham Lincoln's reelection for his own second term. in the West, Federal armies split the Confederacy in two - and then split it in two again.

In the West, Feleral armies inexorably advanced, gobbling up huge swaths of territory in the face of innefective Confederate opposition. By War's end, General William T. Sherman had marched the "Western Theater" all the way into central North Carolina.

In the Eastern Theater, the principal armies fought largely within a 100-mile corridor between the capitals of Washington D.C., and Richmond, Virginia, with a few ill-fated Confederate invasions north of the Mason-Dixon Line. The Western Theater, in contrast, included the entire area between the Appalachian Mountains and the Mississippi River, from Kentucky in the north to the Gulf of Mexico in the south - a vast geographic expanse that, even today, can be challenging to understand.

The Western Theater of War: Favorite Stories and Fresh Perspectives from the Historians at Emerging Civil War revisits from of the Civil War's most legendary battlefields: Shiloh, Chickamauga, Franklin, the March to the Sea, and more.

Chapters Authored by Neil P. Chatelain

Chapter 7: Persistence of the Mardi Gras Spirit in Civil War New Orleans

Chapter 21: The Purge of the Second Louisiana Native Guards