Monday, October 22, 2012

November 2012 Rear Ranks Entry

From the Rear Ranks:  


 
Greetings Members!  It was great to see you all in October and once again I was happy to see some new faces.  Unfortunately I am going to miss the November meeting, due to a family vacation.  However you are in the safe hands of our Secretary Ted Pawlik who will run the meeting in my absence.  In addition I am sorry to miss our presentation this month done by Mike Plunkett who will present Irish music from the Civil War in what he calls “Paddy has gone for Soldier.”  I have included an important 150th milestone below which discusses the removal (finally in the thoughts of many contemporaries) of George McClellan from his command of the Army of the Potomac.  He was told to return home to New Jersey for orders (lucky for us) that never came.  But his replacement, Ambrose Burnside would have deep flaws as well which would be evident in the next great battle in the East at Fredericksburg.  Enjoy November’s meeting and I hope to see you all in December! 


Respectfully,

Chip Crowe
President,
Brandywine Valley Civil War Round Table
 
Note:  The following article appeared in the New York Times on November 10, 1862.

The Removal of Gen. McClellan.
  November 10, 1862

Gen. McCLELLAN has been removed from the command of the Army of the Potomac and Gen. BURNSIDE appointed in his place. The immediate cause of this removal has been Gen. McCLELLAN's refusal to advance against the enemy, even under the most peremptory orders of the General-in-Chief. It will be seen, by a letter from Gen. HALLECK to the Secretary of War, which we publish in another column, that on the 1st of October Gen. MCCLELLAN was urged by Gen. HALLECK to cross the Potomac and give battle to the enemy, -- being at the same time reminded of the disadvantages of delaying until the Potomac should be swollen, and the roads impaired, by the autumnal rains. Finding that this produced no effect, Gen. MCCLELLAN was "peremptorily ordered" by Gen. HALLECK, on the 6th of October, to "cross the Potomac and give battle to the enemy or drive him South." For three weeks this order was not obeyed, and the only excuse given for not obeying it, so far as appears, -- the want of supplies, -- is shown by the letter of Gen. HALLECK to have been utterly without foundation. The disclosures of that letter, concerning Gen. MCCLELLAN's constant and reiterated complaints of lack of supplies, are very remarkable and deserve special attention.

We presume that this particular instance of disobedience of orders, though the immediate occasion, is not the whole cause of Gen. MCCLELLAN's removal. It is pretty generally understood that this is only the culmination of a systematic disregard of orders, of a steady and obstinate tardiness in the conduct of the campaign against the rebels, and of a consequent inefficiency in command, which would long ago have secured his dismissal under any Administration less timid than that which has now possession of power. The fifteen months during which he has had virtual control of the war have been utterly barren of results to the cause he has professed to serve. Few commanders in history have had such splendid opportunities, and fewer still have so ostentatiously thrown them away. With an army capable of the most heroic achievements, powerful in numbers, unrivaled in discipline and equipment, eager always for active and onward movement, he has accomplished absolutely nothing but successful retreats from inferior forces, and the defence of the Capital at Washington, which he should have left no foe capable of menacing. The rebel armies have grown up in his presence, and by his toleration. Through all his long career he has made but one attack and won but a single victory: and that became absolutely fruitless through his failure to follow it up.

We have no theory on which to explain this most extraordinary failure of Gen. MCCLELLAN as a commander, or the still more extraordinary persistence of the President in committing the fortunes of the war to his hands. Gen. MCCLELLAN has shown too many of the qualities of an accomplished soldier to attribute his failure to simple incapacity. That he is absolutely disloyal to the Government we have never permitted ourselves to believe. Yet we think it quite probable that his heart has never been in the war, -- that through it all he has had hopes of a compromise which should end it, and that he has feared the effect upon such a compromise of a stern and relentless prosecution of hostilities. His position and possibly his feelings have been those ascribed by MACAULAY to ESSEX, who commanded the armies of the Parliament at the outbreak of the great civil war. He was an accomplished soldier and a Parliamentarian; but he shrank from civil war, -- he hoped through it all for an accommodation with the King, and "next to a great defeat he dreaded a great victory." Under such a leader the war could never prosper, and it was soon found necessary to replace him by HAMPDEN, who carried into the field the boldness and courage he had shown in politics, and who had the sagacity to see from the outset that "in war of all kinds, moderation is imbecility." As a politician, Gen. MCCLELLAN's sympathies, previous to the rebellion, had always been with the South. He has believed them wronged by Northern sentiment and by Northern action. And beyond all question, he has hoped and believed that a time would come when the war could be arrested, and when the Southern leaders, backed by a powerful party in the Northern States, would listen to terms of accommodation, -- and that nothing would stand in the way of such a compromise more than a victory which should wound their pride by humiliating their arms and crushing their power.

In this view of the case, Gen. MCCLELLAN has been encouraged by the political partisans who, at an early stage in the war, made him their prospective candidate for the Presidency, and came thus to have an interest in putting him in opposition to the Administration which he professed to serve. They defended his errors, and made themselves the special champions of his worst mistakes. They had unquestionable provocation and some excuse for much of this in the intemperate zeal with which he was assailed; but they betrayed him into an undue reliance on the support of a party, and a ruinous subserviency to their wishes and views. We know not how else to account for the steady and systematic disregard he has shown of the wishes and orders of the Government, and for his adherence to a deliberate and methodical inactivity, which has brought the cause of the Union to the very verge of ruin. Unless we have been misinformed, President LINCOLN has on two occasions written to Gen. MCCLELLAN, reviewing in detail his military operations, and demonstrating his failures to respond to the wishes and just expectations of the Government. One of these papers was prepared just after MCCLELLAN had landed onthe Peninsula, at other after the battle of Antietam; and we have heard both spoken of as masterpieces of military criticism. It is a melancholy satisfaction to learn that the President of the United States, who is the Commander-in-Chief of all its armies, and who is responsible, before God and the country, for the behavior of all its Generals, did not keep Gen. MCCLELLAN in command of the Army of the Potomac from any confidence in his capacity or his fitness for the place. Why he did retain him so long after he had satisfied himself that he ought to be removed, it might be curious, though it would be useless to speculate. We trust that the first act of Congress, when it meets next month, will be to call for all the correspondence, and all the documents of every kind, which can throw light upon the extraordinary campaigns of this unfortunate commander.
Gen. BURNSIDE has been three times offered the command of the Army of the Potomac. He declined it twice, partly from a strong feeling of personal affection for Gen. MCCLELLAN, and partly from thorough confidence in his military capacity, and his devotion to the Union cause. This confidence, we suspect, was somewhat shaken during and after the battle of Antietam; while the treatment he has since received for having remonstrated against the General's causeless suspension of the fight, has probably released him from the personal obligations on which he was previously inclined to lay such controlling stress. We presume, therefore, that he will now accept the command. He has shown thus far during the war great military ability, and a thorough, unqualified, unquestioning devotion to the cause he serves. What he will be able to accomplish remains to be seen. It is now certain that, in consequence of the extraordinary delay in the movements of our army, the rebels have completely eluded them, and are now beyond their reach. The autumnal rains have commenced; the rivers and small streams of Virginia are no longer fordable; the roads are becoming muddy and impracticable; and all rapid and effective movement is nearly impossible. If it was any part of Gen. MCCLELLAN's purpose to prevent a decisive battle with the rebel army, he was probably left in command just long enough to accomplish his object.