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The Dahlgren Affair: Terror and Conspiracy in the Civil War

by Duane P. Schultz

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1064271,690 (3.75)2
March 5, 1864, was the day on which the Civil War changed to what the Richmond Examiner called "a war of extermination, of indiscriminate slaughter and plunder." It changed because of a few sheets of paper found on a muddy trail outside Richmond. Their legacy was a new and terrible style of warfare. In a daring but failed cavalry raid to free thousands of Union prisoners, the Union commander-twenty-one-year-old Ulric Dahlgren-was killed; on his body were found orders purportedly instructing his men to find and execute Jefferson Davis and the rest of the Confederate cabinet. There was an immediate outpouring of horrified, indignant rage throughout the South, and after the Union disclaimed any knowledge of the papers or the order they contained, Jefferson Davis authorized the use of terrorism against civilians in the North in the form of guerrilla raids, bank robberies, arson, and sabotage. This compelling narrative is the first full-length analysis of the link between Dahlgren's failed raid and the Confederate campaign of terror. "[A] wonderfully vivid portrait of Confederate attempts to stir up rebellion in the North during the war's waning days. . . . Schultz handles all of this melodramatic material with vigor and clarity, a first-rate addition to the bulging shelves of Civil War Studies."-Kirkus Reviews… (more)
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Showing 4 of 4
More interesting than I had imagined when I first looked at the title. learned alot about Richmond at the end of the war, the ridiculous raid to try and free prisons from Libbey and Belle Isle, the infamous supposed papers recovered from the body of Col. Dahlgren after his death. Also some chapters on the so-called "Northwest Conspiracy" to disrupt midwest Northern cities, using prisoners and Copperheads. It came to nothing of course, as did any objective which counted on Copperheads for support. All talk, no action. No anseres of course, but a surprisingly balanced treatment of the last year diplomatically. ( )
  SamMelfi | Oct 21, 2023 |
Col. Ulrich Dahlgren lead a portion of a Federal cavalry raid on Richmond designed to free POWs from Belle Island and Libby Prison. The raid didn't go so well for the Yankees and Dahlgren was killed. Papers were recovered from his body which indicated that in addition to freeing POWs the purpose of the raid had also been the assassination of President Davis and his cabinet. Debate about the authenticity of the papers began immediately and has continued until today. Schultz comes down on the side of forgery. Other noted Civil War historians, Stephen Sears comes to mind, believe the papers were genuine. As the papers disappered shortly after the war, we will probably never know.

This was the first book length examination of the raid since the 1950s. Schultz does a good job documenting the raid. He also discusses Confederate attempts to conduct irregular warfare against civilian _targets in the North. Well worth reading. ( )
1 vote sgtbigg | May 27, 2011 |
I liked the writing style and felt that this book was informative, however I was a bit upset in the fact that I didn't feel as if this book delivered what it promised. ( )
  CarlaR | Feb 11, 2007 |
DEN
  Earl_Dunn | Aug 23, 2006 |
Showing 4 of 4
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March 5, 1864, was the day on which the Civil War changed to what the Richmond Examiner called "a war of extermination, of indiscriminate slaughter and plunder." It changed because of a few sheets of paper found on a muddy trail outside Richmond. Their legacy was a new and terrible style of warfare. In a daring but failed cavalry raid to free thousands of Union prisoners, the Union commander-twenty-one-year-old Ulric Dahlgren-was killed; on his body were found orders purportedly instructing his men to find and execute Jefferson Davis and the rest of the Confederate cabinet. There was an immediate outpouring of horrified, indignant rage throughout the South, and after the Union disclaimed any knowledge of the papers or the order they contained, Jefferson Davis authorized the use of terrorism against civilians in the North in the form of guerrilla raids, bank robberies, arson, and sabotage. This compelling narrative is the first full-length analysis of the link between Dahlgren's failed raid and the Confederate campaign of terror. "[A] wonderfully vivid portrait of Confederate attempts to stir up rebellion in the North during the war's waning days. . . . Schultz handles all of this melodramatic material with vigor and clarity, a first-rate addition to the bulging shelves of Civil War Studies."-Kirkus Reviews

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