Fitz Lee

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Fitz Lee

A Military Biography of Major General Fitzhugh Lee, C.S.A.

Edward G. Longacre

304 pages
27 illustrations, 10 maps

Paperback

July 2010

978-0-8032-3008-8

$24.95 Add to Cart
eBook (EPUB)
Ebook purchases delivered via Leaf e-Reader

January 2015

978-0-8032-7455-6

$24.95 Add to Cart

About the Book

As the grandson of Henry “Light-Horse Harry” Lee and the nephew of Robert E. Lee, Fitzhugh Lee—nicknamed “Fitz”—was born into one of Virginia’s most distinguished families.
 
Upon graduation from West Point, Fitz Lee served in the U.S. Army until the outbreak of the Civil War, when he joined the Confederate cavalry forces. After participating in the Peninsula Campaign, he rapidly rose in rank, promoted first to brigadier general in July 1862, then to major general in the fall of 1863. Only twenty-seven years old, he commanded with distinction at Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, and Gettysburg. Severely wounded in 1864, he subsequently returned to service and was promoted to commander of the cavalry of the Army of Northern Virginia, which he led during the final campaigns of the war.
 
After the war Fitz Lee served as governor of Virginia, commander of the U.S. Volunteers in the Spanish-American War, and postwar occupation commander in Cuba. He also wrote many popular works of military history and biography; his biography of Robert E. Lee is still in print.
 
Acclaimed Civil War author Edward G. Longacre has combed family records, West Point cadet files, and the National Archives to produce a lively biography of one of the South’s youngest and ablest cavalry commanders—a man who later became one of America’s most distinguished military leaders.

Author Bio

Edward G. Longacre has written twenty-four books on the Civil War, including Gentleman and Soldier: A Biography of Wade Hampton III and The Cavalry at Gettysburg, winner the Fletcher Pratt Award as the best book of Civil War nonfiction. Both are available in Bison Books editions.

Praise

“A solid biography of a renowned Civil War horse soldier.”—Civil War News

“An interesting, well-written, and important biography of one of the more fascinating members of Virginia's most distinguished family.”—Virginia Quarterly Review

“Both Civil War scholars and casual readers will enjoy this latest contribution.”—Journal of Southern History

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Preface
ONE - A Son of Old Virginia
TWO - The Rough Service of the Horse
THREE - An Officer of Rare Merit
FOUR - Raiding and Reconnoitering
FIVE - Brigade Command
SIX - "I Cannot Spare Genl Fitz Lee"
SEVEN - A Sack of Coffee Beans
EIGHT - What a Sight Presented Itself!
NINE - Armageddon and After
TEN - Division Command
ELEVEN - Life after Stuart
TWELVE - Corps Command
THIRTEEN - From Model Farmer to Second Redeemer
FOURTEEN - "Our Peerless 'Old Fitz'"
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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