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(More customer reviews)This is perfect for the reader looking for an off-the-beaten-path subject from the American Civil War. This book takes you well past the familiar commanding generals, and gives you insight into one of the more colorful characters who excelled at the tactical level during the War Between the States.
Commander Will Cushing was a dashing young officer who specialized in unconventional warfare. Four times given commendations from the Secretary of the Navy, he was more frequently chastised by superiors for his reckless actions that contributed little to the overall war effort. Like the Doolittle raid on Tokyo, his missions made a far greater psychological impact on the Confederacy, than the military damage caused by his pin-prick raids. This book highlights his stunning successes, and illustrates how difficult it was for the young officer to get the approval necessary to carry out his bold plans.
"Potomac's Military Profiles" series (formerly "Brassey's Military Profiles") is known for biographies focusing on aspects of an individual's life. This particular book focuses on the greatest accomplishments of Commander Will Cushing, including the destruction of the CSS Albemarle. I found the book to be both readable and enlightening, without the onerous prose normally associated with historical biographies.
This book was my first experience relating to the exploits of Commander Cushing. Robert Schneller used original source material such as personal letters and the published memoirs of Cushing for the basis of his book. I complement Schneller for recognizing the more thorough biographies in existence, but I found his book to be the perfect length for my desired level of knowledge regarding Cushing.
This book would be a welcome complement to any avid Civil War reader's library.
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Dismissed from the U.S. Naval Academy in early 1861, William Barker Cushing nonetheless emerged from the Civil War as one of the Navy's greatest heroes. Cushing transformed his reputation from a rabblerouser into a living legend, because he embodied the special qualities that the Navy demands of the men in whom it entrusts its most hazardous and secret tasks: a readiness to volunteer for dangerous assignments, an unflagging devotion to duty, and more than a fair share of good fortune. As Robert J. Schneller observes, "He was patriotic, aggressive, tough, and recklessly bold." Before embarking on his most daring mission-his celebrated destruction of the Confederate ironclad Albemarle-he bragged that he would "come out victorious or ‘toes up.'" By the end of the war he had amassed four commendations from the Navy Department and the thanks of Congress and President Lincoln. "All this for a man," Schneller writes, "who was only twenty-two years old when Lee surrendered at Appomattox." Employing his customary readable and entertaining style, Schneller focuses on Cushing's naval career and those aspects of his personality that affected it.
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