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Browsing named entities in William Boynton, Sherman's Historical Raid. You can also browse the collection for D. C. Buell or search for D. C. Buell in all documents.
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Chapter 4:
Iuka and Second Corinth
General Rosecrans misrepresented.
Hostile criticism of Generals Buell, Rosecrans, and Thomas, the successive commanders of the Army of the Ohio, forms one of the salient features of the Memoirs.
General Rosecrans particularly distinguished himself in the battles of Iuka and Coriraise, and a few days after his return from a long pursuit of the enemy, he was relieved and promoted to the command of the Army of the Cumberland, in place of General Buell.
In regard to the affair at Corinth the Memoirs say:
Still by the 1st of October, General Grant was satisfied that the enemy was meditating an attack in
General Rosecrans was soon after relieved, and transferred to the Army of the Cumberland in Tennessee, of which he afterward obtained the command in place of General Buell, who was removed.
The effect of the battle of Corinth was very great.
It was, indeed, a decisive blow to the Confederate cause in our quarter, and changed
Chapter 6:
Chattanooga and Chickamauga
injustice to Rosecrans, Thomas, and the Army of the Cumberland.
In a previous chapter it has been seen how coldly, unjustly, and almost contemptuously General Sherman's book treats of Buell and his army at Shiloh—a general and an army that, beyond all room for question, brought salvation to Grant's forces, to which sore disaster had come through a disgraceful surprise, for which Sherman was in person largely responsible.
Following him in his book through his excuses for bloody failure at Chickasaw Bayou, his protest against Grant's plan for capturing Vicksburg from the rear, and his assertion that it might have been taken six months earlier by another route, we find him again misrepresenting and sneering at the Army of the Ohio, under its successive commanders, Rosecrans and Thomas, then operating about Chattanooga under its new title, the Army of the Cumberland.
With the records of the war at his control, and at his very e