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Hell Itself: The Battle of the Wilderness, May 5-7, 1864 (Emerging Civil War Series)

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Description

Soldiers referred to as it one of the most “waste places of nature” and “a region of gloom”—the Wilderness of Virginia, seventy square miles of dense, second-growth forest referred to as “the dark, close wood.”

“A more unpromising theatre of war used to be never seen,” said another.

Yet here, in the spring of 1864, the Civil War escalated to a new level of horror.

Ulysses S. Grant, commanding all Federal armies, opened the campaign with a vow to never turn back. Robert E. Lee, commanding the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia, moved into the Wilderness to block Grant’s advance. Immovable object intercepted impossible to resist force—and the Wilderness burst into flame.

With the forest itself burning around them, men died by the thousands. The armies bloodied each and every other without mercy and, at times, without any semblance of order. The brush grew so dense, and the smoke hung so thick, men could not see who stood next to them—or in front of them. “This, viewed as a battleground, used to be simply infernal,” a Union soldier later said.

It used to be, said another, “hell itself.”

Driven by desperation, duty, confusion, and fire, soldiers on both sides marveled that any one might make it out alive.

For more than a decade, Chris Mackowski has guided visitors across the battlefields of the Overland Campaign. Now in Hell Itself he invites readers of the Emerging Civil War Series to sign up for him in the Wilderness—one of the storied battlefields of all of the Civil War.

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