"Strong Men of the Regiment Sobbed Like Children": The Defeat of John Reynolds’ I Corps at Gettysburg, July 1, 1863

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Author:
John Michael Priest
Pub Date:
December 2023
ISBN:
978-1-61121-689-9
eISBN:
978-1-954547-61-2
Binding:
3-Piece Cloth
Specs:
Photos, original maps, ribbon, sewn, 336 pp.

Release Date: Late 2023

This limited edition will not be available on Amazon or elsewhere. We are your sole provider. 

All 700 will be hand-numbered; the first 200 might be signed by the publisher. We shall see.

SPECIFICATIONS: 3-piece high quality cloth case, with vol. # of series stamped on the spine / Series name stamped on front / 80# Rainbow hemp end sheets / sewn binding / 70-lb. matte white art paper / bound-in silk ribbon / matching head and foot bands / 428 pp.

The spine cloth is the same for each book, and the front and back silver cloth will be slightly different denoting different books in the same series.

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The fighting on the first day at Gettysburg, July 1, 1863, was heavy, confusing, and decisive. Much of it consisted of short and often separate simultaneous engagements or “firefights,” a term the soldiers themselves often used to describe the close, vicious, and bloody combat. Several books have studied this important inaugural day of Gettysburg, but none have done so from the perspective of the rank and file of both armies. John Michael Priest’s “Strong Men of the Regiment Sobbed Like Children”: The Defeat of John Reynolds’s I Corps at Gettysburg, July 1, 1863, rectifies this oversight.

When dawn broke on July 1, no one on either side could have conceived what was about to take place. Anticipating a fight and with a keen appreciation for terrain, Gen. John Buford deployed his Union cavalry in a giant arc north and west of Gettysburg to slow down any Confederate advance until Gen. John Reynolds could bring up his I Corps infantry. By the time the foot soldiers arrived, A. P. Hill’s heavy Confederate formations had pushed back the troopers from the west, and Dick Ewell’s Corps would soon arrive from the north, threatening the town and its key road network. Reynolds, who would die early in the fighting, poured his troops in as they arrived. The road system and undulating ground broke up command control, and the various ridges, tall ground cover, and powder smoke made target recognition difficult. Brigades and regiments often engaged on their own initiatives without the direction of a division or corps commander. The men of both armies fought with determination born of desperation, valor, and fear. By the time the fighting ended, the I Corps was in shambles and in pell-mell retreat for Cemetery Hill.

Priest, who the legendary Edwin Bearss hailed as “the Ernie Pyle of the Civil War,” spent nine years researching this new study and walking the ground of the first day’s fight to immerse readers into the uncertain world of the rank-and-file experience. He consulted more than 300 primary sources, including letters, diaries, memoirs, newspaper account, recollections, casualty lists, and drill manuals, to present the battle from the ground up. Nineteen detailed regimental maps illustrate the ebb and flow of the battle. The result is a fast-paced narrative with some event not always in agreement with conventional views, something Priest thoroughly explains in the footnotes.

Readers will close the book fully understanding why a veteran New Yorker spoke for the survivors of both armies when he wrote, “Strong men of the regiment sobbed like children.”

 

A retired high school history teacher, John Michael Priest has been interested in Civil War history since an early age. He is a graduate of Loyola College in Baltimore and Hood College in Frederick, Maryland, and has written extensively about the Civil War. His many books include "Antietam: The Soldiers’ Battle" (1989); "Before Antietam: The Battle for South Mountain" (1992); "Nowhere to Run: The Wilderness, May 4th & 5th, 1864" (1995); "Victory Without Triumph: The Wilderness, May 6th & 7th, 1864" (1996); and "Into the Fight: Pickett’s Charge at Gettysburg" (1998). Praised by legendary historian Edwin C. Bearss as the “Ernie Pyle” of the Civil War soldier, Priest appeared on the Discovery Channel’s Unsolved History: Pickett’s Charge (2002) and is one of the historical consultants for the miniseries "To Appomattox." He and his wife live in Clear Spring, Maryland.