katarn wrote:California wrote:It is the bad kind of revisionist history to name it anything but the Civil War no matter how many good reasons there are for doing so.
And at the end of the day, it was still Americans fighting Americans.
True.
If this is a thread for the civil war and not just the name, how do you guys think Lee would have done at Gettysburg if Longstreet and Jackson had swapped places, (Longstreet dies, Jackson is at Gettysburg). The rest of the war with that scenario?
I don't know if Jackson would have been in favour of Pickett's Charge anymore than Longstreet was, but the thing is, influential as he might have been, I don't think Jackson could have got Marse Robert to let go of the bone, once he got his blood up, anymore than Longstreet did. Lee respected Jackson's prowess, but Lee was still the boss and Jackson was still one to salute and say "yessir" once the boss had made his decision.
The real problem was Stuart, without any recce to give the AONV a picture of what was coming up the road on them, with time to do something about it, there really wasn't much Jackson, as an infantry corps commander could do about it, and once Meade is on the high ground, what can Jackson really do about that?
He wasn't a miracle worker, he just exploited speed, mobility and surprise, but since the AOTP had achieved surprise, Jackson's specialty was pretty much neutralized, and quite frankly, when Jackson did get into head to head battles, he basically just fired the troops downrange same as Lee did as Gettysburg, so operationally, I can't really see what Jackson could have done to alter the situation, once the AOTP caught the AONV by surprise.
It's not like the troops faltered, they went hard into the breach, what difference would it make if Jackson had been leading the 2nd corps into that breach? They would have got hammered just as hard, Jackson could have layed into them with the crop, but how much harder could they have really gone?
It's entirely plausible that Jackson could have sided with Lee against Longstreet, Jackson could have got his blood up and started invoking the Battle of Armageddon and how it was God's will that they take this hill and the angels will part the sea of Yankees before them, or some such shit like that. I mean, he was a batshit nutwing after all. Jackson didn't always stick and weave, there were plenty of times where he just fed troops into the meatgrinder singing "Allahoo ackbar" as he went.
At the same time, the year before at Sharpsburg, Jackson pretty much just let his subordinates do their thing while he hung out on Hauser's Ridge, so the idea that Jackson always took the bull by horns and charged into the breach come hell or high water, not actually the case neither.