ChiTownScion
Call Me a Cab
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Exceeded only by his commanding officer at the Siege of the Anacostia Flats.
I wasn't even considering Dugout Doug, but he was a pompous gasbag with more show than go... although his father Arthur was a legitimate hero at Missionary Ridge.
No. 1 in my book for overrated American generals would have to be Thomas Jonathan Jackson.
One of my most passionate convictions concerning the Late Unpleasantness is not the North vs. South argument, but that of East vs. West. The history of the Confederacy after the war from the view of the former Confederates was largely recorded through the efforts of the Southern Historical Society, influenced mainly by Jubal Early and other Army of Northern Virginia veterans. They laid the foundation for later Lost Cause historians such as Douglas Southall Freeman, and the result was the deification of the trinity of Lee, Jackson, and Stuart. Not to dismiss the effectiveness and formidability of the ANV, but my opinion is that the greatest asset of that army was its middle level commanders- the regimental majors, lt. colonels, and colonels--- not the top brass.
Lost in all of this were the Confederate armies of the west. They had to fight a lot harder, with far less logistical support, over a far greater area, over a far more difficult terrain, with far less maintained interior lines, than Jackson ever experienced in the Shenandoah Valley in 1862. It galls me to no end that a truly stellar division commander like Patrick Ronayne Cleburne was never given the support and recognition that he deserved from his own government in Richmond, but his lack of recognition in most history texts is even more shameful.
I suppose that the moral of all of this is that how we perceive history is largely determined by those we rely upon as its recorders. And that applies to the Era as much as what transpired in the United States 1861-1865.