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Rebel: The Life And Times Of John Singleton Mosby [Paperback]

Kevin H. Siepel (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 21, 1997
John Singleton Mosby (1833–1916) was the Confederacy's best-known practitioner of guerrilla warfare. At heart a Unionist, he nonetheless joined the Southern cause when his homestate of Virginia seceded. He served first in the cavalry and later as commander of a partisan unit in Northern Virginia, where his operations tied up such large numbers of Federal troops that sufficient force could not be gathered to break Robert E. Lee's army till April 1865. Mosby's narrow escapes and impossible exploits (including the capture of a Union general from his bed) earned him a status as a cavalry commander equal to Stuart and Forrest, and a preeminence among the partisan leaders of history. Mosby was only thirty-one when the war ended. Rebel fully explores his long and eventful postwar career: his political battles; his close friendships with former enemies; his association with presidents from Ulysses S. Grant to Theodore Roosevelt; his service as U.S. consul in Hong Kong; and his involvement in the West's range-fencing crisis. In the process this book reveals the fierce independence and eccentric vision of one of America's most controversial, uncompromising figures.


Editorial Reviews

Review

A welcome addition to the long shelf of Civil War biographies, . . . Rebel gallops along with a vigorous prose style. -- Dallas Morning News, April 22, 1984

As lively in its own way as Mosby's Civil War raids themselves. . . . A skillful example of popular biography. -- Choice, February 1984

Engrossing, well written, hoofbeat-sounding biography. -- The Buffalo News, Feb. 19, 1984

Rebel yields solid insights into the warrior Mosby. . . . A definite contribution to Civil War and Reconstruction history. -- Grand Rapids Press, Dec, 4, 1983

Siepel's research is impressive. His coverage of the war years is fast-paced and colorful, befitting the subject. . . . High marks. -- Richmond News Leader, Nov. 2, 1983

This sympathetic, brightly told account . . . recreates Mosby's Civil War years nicely. -- Publishers Weekly, Aug. 19, 1983

From the Back Cover

John Singleton Mosby (1833-1916) was the Confederacy's best-known practitioner of guerrilla warfare. At heart a Unionist, he nonetheless joined the Southern cause when his home state of Virginia seceded. He served first in the cavalry and later as commander of a partisan unit in Northern Virginia, an area he so thoroughly dominated militarily that it became known on both sides as "Mosby's Confederacy."

He and his small band routed Federal cavalry, appropriated supplies, and destroyed communications and supply lines. His operations tied up such large numbers of Federal troops that sufficient force could not be gathered to break Robert E. Lee's army till April 1965. No other Confederate officer received as many commendations from Lee as did Mosby. His narrow escapes and impossible exploits (including the capture of a Union general from his bed) earned him status as a cavalry commander equal to Stuart and Forrest, and a preeminence among the partisan leaders of history.

Mosby was only 31 when the war ended. Rebel fully explores his long and eventful career: his political battles; his close friendships with former enemies; his association with presidents from Ulysses S. Grant to Theodore Roosevelt; his service as U.S. consul in Hong Kong; and his involvement in the West's range-fencing crisis. In the process this book reveals the fierce independence and eccentric vision of one of America's most controversial, uncompromising figures.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Da Capo Press (March 21, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0306807750
  • ISBN-13: 978-0306807756
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.4 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,232,279 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Kevin H. Siepel is the author of the benchmark biography of Confederate cavalry officer John S. Mosby, Rebel: The Life and Times of John Singleton Mosby, and the local history, Joseph Bennett of Evans and the Growing of New York's Niagara Frontier. His personal essays and historical articles have been published widely. Currently writing a book on the Spanish conquest of the Americas, he also works as a journal editor in marine biology. He lives in western New York state.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Story of a True Confederate Hero!, July 14, 2000
By 
M. Smith (Staffordshire, England) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Had John Singleton Mosby fought on the winning side in the American Civil War then I'm sure his exploits would now be the stuff of legend, committed a long time ago to celluloid. As it is he fought on the wrong side and was branded a "bandit" for his disruptive activities in Northern Virginia.

This book is a marvellous account of the life of a great man. Small in physical stature, he was nevertheless a giant of a man in all other respects and was both feared and respected by those who fought against him in the war between the States. Kevin Siepel's book tells the story of the man behind the myths; his childhood, wartime exploits and controversial post-war views which saw him shunned by the same 'South' who had worshipped during the conflict.

I enjoyed every last page and was almost sad to get to the end. There was so much to Mosby that I feel the book could have been double the size it actually is - and that's where I draw my only criticism. I felt there should have been more details of his war time exploits. There's plenty there but I feel there could and should have been more.

Overall though I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I was always inclined to like it because Mosby is a hero of mine, but it does do justice to the telling of the story of his incredible life. Kevin Siepel is to be congratulated for his magnificent efforts and I would heartily recommend this book not only to any American Civil War enthusiasts but to anybody who would like to read about an extraordinary man and his equally extraordinary life.

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Maybe not so hard to understand, July 16, 2008
By 
V. Protopapas "ghost chaser" (Huntington Station, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Author Siepel, like all of those who cover Mosby's post-war career, seems to find the fact that the former Confederate became a Republican something so unusual as to be indicative of his natural proclivity for rebellion. The fact is, however, that it was anything but an unusual manifestation of Mosby's political philosophy.

Very few of those who have written about the man give much ink to Mosby's PRE-war politics save only in passing. If they had, they would have made considerably less of his POST-war politics. For John Singleton Mosby was NEVER a Democrat. He had very little use for that party and still less use for it after the war. Mosby was a "Henry Clay Whig", a member of the political party that gave rise to the Republicans. Among other prominent "Northern" policies, Mosby believed in public education. Indeed, after the war he stated that slavery would never have lasted as an institution had education been available to the average Southerner instead of just those with enough money to afford it. As well, Mosby saw the internecine fighting in the Democrat party as the reason for Lincoln's election (it was) and at the time of secession, backed the Democrat-Unionist candidate rather than the Democrat-secessionist.

After the war, it is true that Mosby supported Democrats, but that was locally for to do otherwise was to support the Radicals and their party of occupation. He was a conservative white Southerner, a man who wished to see Southern whites back in charge of their local and state governments and blacks back in their place. But it is well to remember that the concept of white supremacy was universal those days. Even the most vocal white supporter of emancipation did not believe that the Negro was his equal or deserved to govern (except, of course, in the South as a means of punishing former rebels). Lincoln was very clear on this matter and advocated relocating freed slaves either to Africa or to colonies in the Caribbean.

Mosby first went from supporting Democrats both locally and nationally to supporting Democrats locally and Republicans nationally in the presidential election of 1872 when the Democrats ran a sort of "fusion" candidate, the well known, newspaper editor Horace Greeley. Greeley had been an outspoken enemy of the South for years although he did reject any attempt to keep the region in the Union by force. Mosby stated that he preferred Grant, then running for his second term, whom the South only fought for four years to Greeley whom it had fought for forty and that the man to whom Lee had surrendered his sword was the "lesser of two evils". Of course, Mosby's support of Grant was also personal for he felt that he was indebted to Grant for removing his status as an outlaw and granting him a parole, thus saving him from the penitentiary or the gallows. But it wasn't until the election of 1876 that Mosby decided to "cross the Rubicon" and actually register as a Republican, thus beginning his odyssey from hero to pariah.

But that journey though years long had actually been a short one both ideologically and politically for as a former Henry Clay Whig, John Singleton Mosby had never strayed very far from the Party he eventually adopted as his own to the horror and rage of his former compatriots and the apparent surprise of his biographers.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More than military, September 20, 2008
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This review is from: Rebel: The Life And Times Of John Singleton Mosby (Paperback)
Mosby's Memoirs was the first book I read on John S Mosby, at least in my adult life. I grew up in northern Virginia at a place where his exploits took place and he was a legend and my idol as we played boys games of war. I was always Mosby. About that time there was a black and white TV show called the "Gray Ghost." This fueled my fire for Mosby. But boys become men and I forgot about my hero till many years later, now in my 60s.

Only now as a veteran Army Infantry Captain and Vietnam war helicopter pilot do I realize what a great impact the life of this man has had on me and so much I have done.

Siepel's book gives us a look at much more than just the exploits, if you can say the words, "just the exploits" about Mosby. For as a student of history and military history it is hard to find a comparison to what this man did. I carefully studied to try to find the key. How do you routinely route and defeat 200 of the best equipped and trained cavalry the Union army has to offer with 30 men? And this is not just a single incident, this was routine! What was the key? In Siebel's book I thought I could find it in Mosby's later life. As he bloomed in years perhaps the flowers essence would at last reveal itself. And, subtly it does. I don't want to spoil the book for you, but in it you will find the story of a man who shoots a bully in college and goes to jail, starts Confederate army life as a private and ends it as a Lt. Colonel, and is commended by none other than Robert E. Lee more than any other officer. (For those who do not know, generals do not often take notice of Lt. Colonels, must less commend them).

After the war this "god" of war has a checkered and interesting career. Just as in army life, he never puts himself or his gain first. Just as in the Army when he allowed his me to pillage captured military stock and equipment for themselves but scrupulously avoids doing so himself, the same mannerism occur, much to his fiscal harm, in his many government jobs where he has opportunity to reap the illegal profits all around him seem to enjoy.

Simple, black and white, right and wrong, the best friend you could ever have and the most skilled advisary, as Union General Stoughton finds out when Mosby kidnaps him from his bed in the middle of his sleeping army. The equal of Alexander the Great on miniature or the young biblical David fighting the Philistines, such are the verified exploits of this one in a thousand years warrior.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
IT WAS APRIL. In Abingdon, Virginia, kitchen gardens were bristling with new lettuce and spinach, doorsteps were bright with daffodils, and the cheerful sounds of courting birds rose upon warm breezes. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
unnamed newspaper, partisan life, new consul, partisan rangers
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Hong Kong, New York, White House, San Francisco, Harpers Ferry, State Department, Shenandoah Valley, Colonel Mosby, South Carolina, University of Virginia, Secretary of War, Assistant Secretary, Bartlett Richards, Secretary of State, John Mosby, Loudoun County, Southern Pacific, Bull Run, Fitz Lee, General Lee, Land Office, Mosby Campbell, William Chapman, Front Royal, Grumble Jones
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