
From a book review
by Mark Grotelueschen in the October issue of The Journal of Military History:
Although the
infantry assault was conducted by just one reinforced regiment, the attack was
supported by the rest of the 1st Division (itself nearly half the size of Lee's
entire army at Antietam), thirty French aircraft, a squadron of French heavy
tanks, a section of French flamethrower troops, a wide variety of
communications technologies, and over 250 pieces of French and American artillery (about a hundred more than Lee used to support Pickett's Charge at
Gettysburg), Cantigny truly was the U.S. Army's baptism into modern battle."
I'd never thought of
it that way, partly because it is hard to judge by reading first-person
accounts, which is mainly what I read when, as research for my book The Generals, I was looking at George
Marshall's experience in World War I.
Published on December 04, 2013 07:27