A U.S. Navy veteran, Jay Luvaas graduated from Allegheny College, and received a Ph.D. in history from Duke University. He served as the Director of the Flowers Collection of Southern Americana at Duke University Library, and as a long-time professor of history at Allegheny College in Meadville, Pennsylvania. He was the first civilian to be appointed as Visiting Professor of Military History at the United States Military Academy. He also taught at the U.S. Army War College in Carlisle, PA, where he served as Professor of Military History from 1982 to 1995. Following his retirement, he was honored in 1997 as a Distinguished Fellow of the Army War College. He twice received the Outstanding Civilian Service Medal from the Department of the Army for his many contributions to the educational mission of the U.S. Army.
Good overall look at the three days in July 1863, when the United States of America became a nation.
It is a combination of tour guide of the battlefield with notes of the combatants to guide you, to give you into the eye view of the participants. At the end it gives you a look at overall methods of fire and maneuver, and the order of battle of the two armies.
I’ve owned this for over 30 years, but I’m finally gotten off my ass and read it. I’m visiting the battlefield soon,and I will have this book with me. It’s a quick read, can kill it in a day. But it’s a good reference for anyone going to the military park.
I have been to the Gettysburg battlefield twice; once in in 1995 and again in 2003, and will bring this book with me the next time I go. The volume is one of a series in official US Army War College guides to Civil War Battles, and is based on the old practice of staff rides for Army officers. The book gives twenty five different destinations on the battlefield, has excellent maps, and has excerpts from veterans descriptions of the battle. This was required reading for a course on the American Civil War that I took at Temple University-Ambler in the Fall of 2009.;
Good book and great for touring the battlefield. I wish the maps were color so the terrain and units would stand out better but the information and directions are first rate.
Solid guidebook that focuses on driving to different spots within the battlefield and walking around. Book contains many first hand accounts of the battle from letters written (by both Union and Confederate soldiers and commanders) during and after the 1863 skirmish.