ID | 135009 |
Title Proper | Rewards of risk-taking |
Other Title Information | two civil war admirals |
Language | ENG |
Author | McPherson, James M |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The willingness to take risks made Rear Admiral David Glasgow Farragut, victor at New Orleans in 1862 and Mobile Bay in 1864, the Union’s leading naval commander in the Civil War. Farragut’s boldness contrasted strongly with the lack of decisiveness shown in the failure in April 1863 to seize the port of Charleston, South Carolina, by Rear Admiral Samuel Francis Du Pont, whose capture of Port Royal Sound in South Carolina in November of 1861 had made him the North’s first naval hero of the war. Du Pont’s indecisiveness at Charleston led to his removal from command and a blighted career, while the risk-taking Farragut went on to become, along with generals U.S. Grant and William T. Sherman, one of the principal architects of Union victory. |
`In' analytical Note | Journal of Military History Vol.78, No.4; Oct.2014: p.1225-1237 |
Journal Source | Journal of Military History 2014-12 78, 4 |
Standard Number | Civil Wars |