Cindy Vallar's Blog - Posts Tagged "union"
James D. Nealon's Confederacy of Fenians (a review)

My rating: 3 of 5 stars
The South’s victory at Gettysburg in 1863, brings a new ally to their side when the British invade from Canada. General John Fox Burgoyne is determined to restore family honor and stop the United States’ expansion and economic dominance. President Jefferson Davis sees the invasion as key to maintaining the Southern cause’s viability, but General Lee won’t abide taking orders from Burgoyne. Upon Lee’s resignation, Longstreet assumes command, but his strength is defense, rather than high-risk tactics.
The invasion provides George McClellan with choices, either of which will allow him to fulfill his destiny: accept command of the Union Army again, or run for president in the next election. Can he do both? He and the army head north to engage the British, leaving only a small force behind to defend Washington.
For John Patrick Lane, Britain’s entry into the war sparks a revolutionary idea. His fellow Irishmen in the Union army are soldiers gaining invaluable experience for when they return to Ireland to throw off the English yoke after the war. What if there is a way to gain freedom without firing a shot? What if the Fenian Irish abandon the Union and fight for the South? First, he must convince Burgoyne and gain the queen’s pledge of Home Rule for Ireland. Such a move goes against everything Viola fights so hard for, freedom for all Blacks. John is a stranger to her, but they form an uneasy alliance as she feeds the British army, gathers information for the Union, and helps runaway slaves.
Actions always have consequences, and sometimes these are unintended as this story deftly shows. The epilogue stretches believability in one regard: Would Viola truly stay apart from her children for nearly a year to stay with John? In spite of this weakness, the characters are well-defined and vividly drawn, and the stakes are high in this riveting tale of what-ifs based on credible possible outcomes of the Civil War.
This review originally appeared in Historical Novels Review (Issue 102, November 2022) at https://historicalnovelsociety.org/re...
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Published on February 19, 2023 05:59
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Tags:
burgoyne, george-mcclellan, gettysburg, home-rule, ireland, irish, jefferson-davis, south, union
Review of Alexander Rose's The Lion and the Fox

My rating: 4 of 5 stars
When civil war comes to the United States, the Union possesses forty-two warships of various sizes. The Confederate States of America have one. Their attorney general, Judah Benjamin, wants to change this and he knows just the man to accomplish this, James Bulloch is not your run-of-the-mill sea captain; in addition to the usual skills of an officer, he is knowledgeable about the latest nautical technology (steam) and has helped to build ships. More importantly, he is least likely to be seen as someone the Union should be leery of. He works for a Northern steam company. He’s a civilian. He has no land in the South. He seems innocuous, because he keeps personal opinions to himself. In reality, he is Southern born and bred and he possesses just the right traits to make him the right man for the job: guile, cunning, restraint, and obscurity.
Late in 1861, Thomas Dudley and his family arrive in Liverpool, England. It is a city with a vicious and volcanic reputation, teeming with people of ill repute. It is the last place the devout Quaker wants to be, but he has little choice. He is the new American counsel and is determined to do whatever he can to abolish slavery. One of his tasks is to doggedly pursue Bulloch and prevent him from carrying out his mission for the Confederacy.
Lacking the necessities to build their own navy, the Confederacy must go overseas to gain a fleet of modern, deadly vessels. To that end, Bulloch and Benjamin devise a three-point plan. Bulloch’s first objective is to purchase blockade-runners that will smuggle in needed weaponry and ammunition. Then he will acquire commerce-raiders capable of harassing Union merchant ships to such an extent that President Lincoln will have to reassign vessels currently on blockade duty to hunt down enemy ships. Finally, Bulloch will design and have built two ironclad warships capable of causing untold damage and confusion to the United States Navy. The ultimate goal is to gain British support as a Confederate ally. He and Benjamin think these are highly achievable outcomes. There is just one flaw: the Union knows the who and what. They just don’t know where Bulloch is. But Dudley is determined to thwart them no matter what.
This book contains a few pictures of key people and ships, as well as a double-page spread showing 1860s’ Liverpool. Notes, a bibliography, and an index are also included. Readers get to see how Bulloch operated and how Dudley finally pierced his “wall of secrecy.” The final chapter explains what happened to each principal player.
Readers familiar with the history of the Confederate navy may know about some of the ships that Bulloch acquires. After all, one of them is the most famous and successful commerce raider CSS Alabama, captained by Rafael Semmes. What may be both new and illuminating are the behind-the-scenes sly scheming and artful trickery, or the Union’s diligent pursuit of Bulloch. Rose deftly weaves together characters and elements to craft a true account of espionage and counterespionage: a quintessential maverick, a lace-and-chandelier front man, a private investigator, a mole in the Foreign Office, a drunk captain who runs into a coal brig, a rooster that crows at a critical moment, legal manipulation, arms trafficking, racism, phantom ships, mutiny, a sea duel, bigamy, and betrayal.
(This review originally appeared at Pirates and Privateers: http://www.cindyvallar.com/adultpirat...)
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Published on June 22, 2023 13:31
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Tags:
civil-war, confederate, england, james-bulloch, spies, thomas-dudley, union