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OverviewHow Grant’s humble beginnings shaped his unique military genius Renowned for his military skill, courage, and indomitability during the Civil War, Ulysses S. Grant is considered the savior of the Union and a model for American generalship. However, unlike most of his fellow officers, Grant came from humble beginnings and experienced a number of professional failures before rising to military prominence. Grant grew up on a farm on the Ohio frontier and reluctantly attended West Point, where he finished in the middle of his class. In his early career, he was often underestimated by his peers despite valiant service. Between the Mexican War and the Civil War, Grant’s “Hardscrabble” farm failed, and when he decided to rejoin the U. S. army, he was given the unenviable command of a rowdy regiment, the 21st Illinois. How did Grant—an average student, failed farmer, and common man—become such a successful general? In America's Hardscrabble General, historian Jack Hurst argues that Grant’s military genius stemmed not from his West Point education but rather from his roots in America’s middle class and its commonsense values. Hurst’s revolutionary approach follows Grant’s early life and career, from boyhood through the Battle of Shiloh, examining how his modest upbringing and first years in combat shaped his military brilliance. Hurst shows how Grant’s background ultimately led him to abandon the traditional military practice of his time, which relied upon military maneuver, and instead focus on fighting. His strategy to always move forward, win or lose, turned even his losses into essential elements of victory and characterized his aggressive, relentless approach. Grant’s experiences in the Mexican War prefigured his greatest military triumphs, from Vicksburg to the dogged fight against Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia. Going beyond mere strategy, Hurst reveals how Grant’s upbringing undergirded his military skill. Hurst argues that Grant’s prewar underdog status helped him develop an innate humility, sense of justice, and ability to focus, leading him to form a close relationship with his men and eventually become the first president to actively oppose white supremacist groups. This new window into the early life and military mindset of Ulysses S. Grant provides fascinating insights for anyone hoping to understand this American hero. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jack HurstPublisher: Southern Illinois University Press Imprint: Southern Illinois University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.30cm , Height: 2.90cm , Length: 23.00cm Weight: 0.431kg ISBN: 9780809338856ISBN 10: 0809338858 Pages: 244 Publication Date: 14 November 2022 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Introduction: Getting General Grant 1. FARM BOY 2. MEXICO 3. PEACETIME: LIMBO OF HORRORS 4. 1861-1863: LAST LESSONS Conclusion. THE GUTS OF GRANT'SGENERALSHIP Notes Bibliography Acknowledgments IndexReviews"""Jack Hurst writes brilliantly, with a bold, energetic style that is highly engaging. His analysis is thought-provoking and enlightening. Readers will enjoy this book and come away from it with deeper understandings of Grant, the Civil War, nineteenth-century America, and military history.""--Steven E. Woodworth, coeditor of The Shiloh Campaign ""In this new, unorthodox biography of Grant, Jack Hurst explores Grant's origins and early military service to uncover what separated Grant's generalship from that of so many of his peers, positing that it was Grant's experience as a 'common man' in the antebellum United States that created his no-nonsense, practical approach to warfare. Amid a raft of recent Grant biographies, Hurst's take on Grant raises points well worth considering.""--David A. Powell, author of The Impulse of Victory: Ulysses S. Grant at Chattanooga ""In Hardscrabble General, [Hurst] provides a fine portrait of a leader who never sought wealth or notoriety, who cared much more for the men he commanded and the nation that had educated him than he did for the headlines he made. A man whose life lessons taught him the humility with which he approached his job and the clarity of purpose needed to see a thing through to its conclusion. To win.""--Chris Scott, Chapter 16 ""Nothing ever came easy to Ulysses S. Grant. From a childhood dominated by an irascible, overbearing father and an equally reticent mother [to] experiencing all the horrors and devastation of war at the ripe young age of twenty-four to the humiliation in front of an increasingly conscious and critical public eye as he desperately tried to support his family, a humbled Grant understood the meaning of true deprivation. . . . Yet rather than let these circumstances defeat him, Grant endured these hardships, learned valuable life lessons from them, and, combined with his formative background, used these lessons to his advantage to become the greatest and most successful battle commander in American military history. So argues Jack Hurst in his compelling and highly engaging America's Hardscrabble General, Ulysses S. Grant: From Farm Boy to Shiloh.""--Richard G. Mannion, Civil War Book Review ""Hurst contrasts Grant with other Civil War generals, both North and South, and finds that his protagonist shines by comparison, not just in his accomplishments, but in his character. Hurst finds that some officers of a supposed better class than Grant lacked his persistence in achieving goals or his community with the common soldier.""--Russell K. Brown, The Journal of America's Military Past" Author InformationJack Hurst is a Civil War historian and retired newspaperman. He is the author of four books, most recently Men of Fire: Grant, Forrest, and the Campaign That Decided the Civil War and Born to Battle: Grant and Forrest--Shiloh, Vicksburg, and Chattanooga. Jack, who served as an army journalist, wrote for the Chicago Tribune, the Philadelphia Inquirer, and the Nashville Tennessean. 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