Audiobook: The Memoirs of Colonel John S. Mosby
- Download 00 – Introduction by Charles Russell audio
- Download 01 – Early Life audio
- Download 02 – The War Begins audio
- Download 03 – A Private in the Cavalry audio
- Download 04 – Johnston’s Retreat audio
- Download 05 – Recollections of Manassas audio
- Download 06 – The Strategy of Manassas audio
- Download 07 – About Fairfax Court House audio
- Download 08 – Campaigning With Stuart audio
- Download 09 – The Campaign Against Pope audio
- Download 10 – First Exploits As a Partisan audio
- Download 11 – The Raid on Fairfax audio
- Download 12a – Stuart and the Gettysburg Campaign, Part 1 audio
- Download 12b – Stuart and the Gettysburg Campaign, Part 2 audio
- Download 13 – The Year After Gettysburg audio
- Download 14 – The Campaign Against Sheridan audio
- Download 15 – The Greenback Raid audio
- Download 16 – Last Days in the Valley audio
- Download 17 – Final Scenes audio
- Download 18 – In Retrospect audio
- Download 19 – My Recollections of General Lee audio
- Download 20 – My Recollections of General Grant audio
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Description
This is not a work of fiction! These are the actual memoirs of a legendary leader of partisans who bedeviled the Union army for years, almost within sight of the capitol. With only a few local men under command, John Singleton Mosby’s ability to strike fast and then melt away before an effective pursuit could be organized kept the Yankee forces awake and often snarled in knots. With daring feats like capturing a Yankee general out of his bed within his defended headquarters, Mosby made his name a synonym for guerrilla warfare. Even today you can purchase in Middleburg, Virginia, a map showing “Mosby’s Confederacy.”
The mettle of the man may be judged by the enemies he kept. Said General Joseph Hooker, “I may here state that while at Fairfax Court House my cavalry was reinforced by that of Major-General Stahel. The latter numbered 6,100 sabres. . . . The force opposed to them was Mosby’s guerrillas, numbering about 200, and, if the reports of the newspapers were to be believed, this whole party was killed two or three times during the winter. From the time I took command of the army of the Potomac, there was no evidence that any force of the enemy, other than the above-named, was within 100 miles of Washington City; and yet the planks on the chain bridge were taken up at night the greater part of the winter and spring.”
Mosby outraged many of his Southern admirers after the war when he publicly endorsed General U.S. Grant for President. After an appointment as U.S. Consul to Hong Kong and a 16-year career with the Southern Pacific Railroad, he came to Washington as an assistant attorney in the Department of Justice. Loyal to the end to his commander, J.E.B. Stuart, Mosby also answered accusations that Stuart’s grandstanding cost Lee the battle of Gettysburg.
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