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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
AN UNLIKELY HERO,
By
This review is from: Carrying The Flag: The Story Of Private Charles Whilden, The Confederacy's Most Unlikely Hero (Hardcover)
The author, Gordon Rhea, notes in the INTRODUCTION that "....books about privates are rare" and continues "None tell a story half as fascinating as that of Charles Whilden...." The text is a brief account of Whilden's life stating that his first forty years were characterized by mediocrity and failure. However, Whilden's brief fifteen minutes of glory came at the Bloody Angle at Spotsylvania Court House where he vividly demonstrated the capacity of an insignificant player "to alter the course of history."Chapter 1 gives a short review of the 1864 strategic conditions in central Virginia which "By most estimates, 1864 loomed as the war's decisive year." In March 1864 President Lincoln made Grant commander-in-chief whose aim was the destruction of the Confederate armies, not to capture territory. The author observed "Thus the stage set for the Civil War's decisive campaign....The campaign would be a duel to the death between Grant and Lee, the best generals either side could field. The prize was the fate of two nations." Chapter 2 presents a concise account of pre-Civil War Charleston, S.C. stating the source of Charleston's wealth was rice and that the city's affluence "rested on the back of slaves." The author gives an interesting review of the area's concern about a slave rebellion and continues "As the Carolina Low country's slave population grew so grew the white minority's unease about servile insurrection." After a unsuccessful brief career as a lawyer, Charles moved to Detroit where his lack of success continued to plague him.He left Detroit in 1855 and accompanied Colonel Grayson to Santa Fe, New Mexico as the colonel's personal secretary. In Santa Fe his mediocre success continued. When the Civil War commenced, Charles began the long trip home to Charleston. The ship he was on heading for the Carolina coast was badly damaged; and his health was compromised; for the rest of his life he suffered from epileptic seizures. In Charleston he tried to enlist a number of times; but due to his epilepsy he was unsuccessful in enlisting. By January 1864, Confederate manpower shortages were critical; and at age 39 Whilden was at last able to enlist as a private in Company I of the 1st Carolina at Orange Court House in February 1864. Author Rhea uses Whilden and the 1st Carolina as the narrative vehicle for an interesting account of the battles of The Wilderness and at Spotsylvania. Whilden's unit was "destined to the worst of the campaign's carnage." Whilden received his baptism-under-fire on May 5 in the Battle of the Wilderness, had not run and was appointed as flag barrier when the flag barrier was wounded. Rhea observes "The post of flag bearer was important, not only for sentimental reasons but for practical ones as well." Charles career as a color barrier was off to a bad start as Union General Hancock troops overran Charles's unit. Only the last minute arrival of Confederate General Longstreet on May 6th saved the day. On the night of May 7-8 Grant's and Lee's armies moved south to the vicinity of Spotsylvania Court House where Lee erected sophisticated earthworks. The text briefly narrates Grant's fruitless efforts over the next three days to break through Lee's battlements. Lee had erected a salient, nicknamed The Mule Shoe, and Grant had selected it for a massive attack by Union General Hancock on May 12. Union troops soon overran the pickets and the outer earthworks including the high ground, referred to as "the angle", to the Confederate left. The author gives a chilling account of the gruesome, bloody chaotic fighting as the Confederates fought to regain the angle and survive. Lee ordered General McGowan's brigade into the Mule Shoe. Charles, "still wracked by seizures" clearly understood the situation and fixing his eyes on the angle, carried the flag never expecting to reach the angle alive. When the flag was shot from its pole, Whilden wrapped the flag around his body. Behind him followed a "motley band of rebels." By ten o'clock in the morning Charles led his fellow Southerners to take over the Bloody Angle thus saving the battle for the Confederates. The butchery of May 12 was horrendous with the two armies suffering approximately seventeen thousand causalities. While Lee had won another battle, "the war in Virginia settled into a siege that would last ten months....but Grant had won the campaign, destroying the Army of Northern Virginia's offensive capacity." His epilepsy making him unfit for service Charles returned to Charleston in August 1864 and was discharged after only eight months of duty. On September 25, 1866, during an epileptic seizure he fell facedown in a mud puddle, and drowned. While there are no monuments to Charles Whilden, his heroic action on May 12, 1864 at the Bloody Angle lives on as a tribute to the potential of an insignificant player who altered the course of Civil War history. Gordon Rhea has done considerable research on the campaigns of 1864, having previously written several books on these campaigns. This is an easy book to read. Civil War buffs who want a brief/limited account of the battles of the Wilderness and Spotsylvania Court and a private who won his fifteen minutes of fame in 1864 at the Bloody Angle, will find this book interesting.
13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A truly excellent read!,
By
This review is from: Carrying The Flag: The Story Of Private Charles Whilden, The Confederacy's Most Unlikely Hero (Hardcover)
Author Gordon Rhea produced a non fiction book that reads like a historical novel. The reader follows the life of an unlikely soldier that became a true hero for the Confederacy, while also being taken through the Civil War battles of the Wilderness and Spotsylvania Court House in 1864. Mr. Rhea accomplishes a personal interest story along with a definitive work of historical reference. I have traveled to the places described in the book on many occasions, but Mr. Rhea's descriptions of Civil War sites has me planning my next vacation for further Civil War tours. It takes quite a bit to mesh battle descriptions with the ability to generate page turning exitement, but Mr. Rhea accomplishes it in this work.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Delightful and Informative,
By Paul A. Jones (Neenah, WI USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Carrying The Flag: The Story Of Private Charles Whilden, The Confederacy's Most Unlikely Hero (Hardcover)
"Carrying the Flag" is a gem of a little book telling the story of an otherwise anonymous Confederate Private who found 15 minutes of fame in 15 hours of improbable glory. While Private Whilden's exploits at Spotsylvania's Bloody Angle were unique in their specifics, one can only imagine hundreds, if not thousands, of equally heroic deeds over the course of the war by similarly obscure infantrymen.Private Whilden's battle experience was limited to the Wilderness and Spotsylvania. Accordingly, much of author Rhea's book details just how unexceptional Private Whilden was. The material, which seemingly holds little promise, in fact makes for an appealing window on the "middle class" antebellum South. In the end, if you can't applaud Private Whilden's take on the world and his place in it, you can surely understand it and, perhaps even applaud the depth of his commitment to it. One of the most attractive features of the book, for me, is the compelling way in which Private Whilden's two battles unfold. There is the usual blood and gore, but more important, the narrative, complemented by just one map of each of the battlefields, is as clear as any I've read. The tactical story is the focus, but the operational and strategic context is cogently sketched in as well. Indeed, I would recommend the two battle sequences as among the best, most comprehensible short summaries of the Wilderness and Spotsylvania that I have read. A very nice, very readable addition to the literature; highly recommended.
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Enthusiastically recommended reading for Civil War buffs,
By Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Carrying The Flag: The Story Of Private Charles Whilden, The Confederacy's Most Unlikely Hero (Hardcover)
Carrying The Flag by civil war historian and expert Gordon C. Rhea is the true story of Private Charles Whilden, an ordinary solider who served the Confederacy during the Civil War and whose courage was so great it would affect the tide of one of the war's greatest battles. An attention compelling, superbly detailed, informed and informative narrative that goes into especial detail concerning the bloody and deadly fights, as well as an intrinsically exciting read, Carrying The Flag is enthusiastically recommended reading for Civil War buffs and a welcome contribution to the growing library of American Civil War literature.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A private changes the course of an entire war,
This review is from: Carrying The Flag: The Story Of Private Charles Whilden, The Confederacy's Most Unlikely Hero (Hardcover)
A General or a Colonel certainly has the ability to alter the course ofhistory or make his name well-known to his countrymen through actions. But does a common private lost within the ranks have the same ability? Gordon Rhea answers this question brilliantly in this book about a middle-aged Confederate private set amongst two of the bloodiest battles of the Civil War. Charles Whilden went from obscurity to fame at a place called the Bloody Angle, a key position on the battlefield of Spotsylvania Courthouse, where he carried a tattered battle flag in front of a desperate charge that eventually led to a Confederate victory and prolonged an already endless war. Without Whilden's heroics, the Confederates wouldn't have rallied for victory and would likely have been crushed, along with the Confederacy itself. Does this make Whilden a hero or a villain? After all, the 'victory' that he initiated was only short-lived, and only led to more death and destruction. This is one of the questions that may come across a reader's mind amidst the awe and respect for the common infantryman that develops over the course of this book.Another question is this: How many other Private Whilden's are there scattered about America's short, yet war-ridden, past? Was there a Private Whilden at San Juan Hill, or Iwo Jima, or Saratoga? Rhea's ability to shrink something as grand as war into something as familiar as a common man fighting for a cause has a way of reminding us that wars are not fought by generals. Not only that, but his descriptions of the two brutal campaigns of The Wilderness and Spotsylvania Courthouse would make any Civil War buff foam at the mouth. One man can change the course of history. This book will teach you that if nothing else. But, more important, it also teaches that the common soldier, no matter what side he fights for, is driven by a courage that should at the very least be honored and always respected.
10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best Rhea book yet,
By A Customer
This review is from: Carrying The Flag: The Story Of Private Charles Whilden, The Confederacy's Most Unlikely Hero (Hardcover)
I have enjoyed Mr. Rhea's previous books, but this is by far his best work yet. This book follows the fortunes of a remarkable soldier from South Carolina who ends up as the unsung hero of the battles that Mr. Rhea knows so well. The book reads like a modern novel and pulls you into the action. I can't wait for the movie!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great book, however...,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Carrying the Flag: The Story of Private Charles Whilden, the Confederacy's Most Unlikely Hero (Paperback)
The lack of maps showing the actions Whilden was involved in makes it hard to follow the battles. The only two maps after the contents page are listed as THE WILDERNESS and SPOTSYLVANIA COURT HOUSE. They show roads,streams/ rivers, railroads, and well known landmarks like the Widow Tapp's Field and the Mule Shoe among others. Unless you are well versed in these battles and know the area it makes for confusing reading. A few maps showing the positions of both armies at critical moments would have made the situations they were in clearer and easier to visualize. ~G
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent,
By
This review is from: Carrying The Flag: The Story Of Private Charles Whilden, The Confederacy's Most Unlikely Hero (Hardcover)
Rhea - his trilogy was excellent but this book is exquisite and is highly recommended.
2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great for buffs, and raises questions...,
By chavacano "moloko_plus1" (alexandria, va) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Carrying the Flag: The Story of Private Charles Whilden, the Confederacy's Most Unlikely Hero (Paperback)
For anyone wanting to learn the specifics of two major battles between Grant and Lee, this book is excellent. I am always glad to see books that resist glorification by detailing the horrendous conditions of some of the most brutal fighting of the war, which is saying a lot. SPOILER--But the author couldn't resist talking about Whilden's actions as heroic and how the day was won for the Confederacy as if it were a truly noble outcome. Now look at it another way: if Whildon were shot down and the Rebels didn't have a rallying point to successfully rienforce the earthworks, then Grant would've plowed through, cutting Lee's army in half and most likely defeat them. With this outcome, you would not have had the endless series of massacres throughout central Virginia, no siege of Petersburg, no Cold Harbor. With the war over, you probably wouldn't have Atlanta and Colombia in ashes and the atrocity of Sherman's March. Just food for thought-Discuss...
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Civil War,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Carrying the Flag: The Story of Private Charles Whilden, the Confederacy's Most Unlikely Hero (Paperback)
The story is about an individual and his role, but this was not elevated much above basic info and not personal. It was generally a recap of several majorbattles of the War of Northern Aggresion.
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Carrying The Flag: The Story Of Private Charles Whilden, The Confederacy's Most Unlikely Hero by Gordon C. Rhea (Hardcover - December 24, 2003)
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