Bloody Valverde
by Taylor, John McLellan
Edition statement:1st ed. Published by : University of New Mexico Press, (Albuquerque) Physical details: xii, 185 p. ill., maps ; 27 cm. ISBN:0826316328.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
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900 - 999 | 973.731 Tay (Browse shelf) | Available | In Memory of : Frank Cunico | 68559 |
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973.730924 Cat Grant takes command. | 973.730924 Cle Rock of Chickamauga: | 973.731 Pet Rebels on the Rio Grande | 973.731 Tay Bloody Valverde | 973.731 Wad Incident at San Augustine Springs | 973.7311 Swa First Blood; | 973.734 Cat Glory Road |
"Published in cooperation with the Historical Society of New Mexico."
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Origins -- Prelude to a fight -- Opening gambits -- The battle is joined -- Apparent victory -- Change of command -- The tide turns -- The field is lost -- Pyrrhic victory -- Retrospective.
When Jefferson Davis commissioned Henry H. Sibley a brigadier general in the Confederate army in the summer of 1861, he gave him a daring mission: to capture the gold fields of Colorado and California for the South. Their grand scheme, premised on crushing the Union forces in New Mexico and then moving unimpeded north and west, began to unravel along the sandy banks of the Rio Grande late in the winter of 1862.; At Valverde ford, in a day-long battle between about 2,600 Texan Confederates and some 3,800 Union troops stationed at Fort Craig, the Confederates barely prevailed. However, the cost exacted in men and materiel doomed them as they moved into northern New Mexico.; Carefully reconstructed in this book is the first full account of what happened on both sides of the line before, during, and after the battle. On the Confederate side, a drunken Sibley turned over command to Colonel Tom Green early in the afternoon. Battlefield maneuvers included a disastrous lancer charge by cavalry - the only one during the entire Civil War. The Union army, under the cautious Colonel Edward R.S.; Canby, fielded a superior number of troops, the majority of whom were Hispanic New Mexican volunteers.
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