A Bohemian Brigade: The Civil War Correspondents, Mostly Rough, Sometimes Ready Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

A Bohemian Brigade: The Civil War Correspondents, Mostly Rough, Sometimes Ready Book

A familiar figure on the modern battlefield is the combat correspondent, that hard-bitten, cynical journalist who chews on cigars and bullets and brings the smoke and gore back home. So the stereotype goes--and with basis in fact, as historian James Perry shows in this vigorous history of reporters on the front lines of the American Civil War. Perry begins his narrative with the Crimean War, when the remarkable William Howard Russell sent dispatches of bungling and destruction to eager readers in London. When Russell, a larger-than-life character, strapped on his pistols and set sail from England to cover the outbreak of the American Civil War, he found that his fame had preceded him--and that he'd spawned many imitators. Newspapers North and South raced to scoop each other for the big stories of the day, fielding reporters who sought to outdo Russell at his own game. Perry centers his narrative on a comparative handful of these homegrown journalists, whose work entailed constant danger on both sides of the line--bullets from the front, suspicious generals ever ready to charge the reporters with espionage on the rear. Most of the journalists acquitted themselves well in their work, although some were inclined to florid prose and not particularly troubled with questions of accuracy. Quoting extensively from the dispatches of those battlefield writers, good and bad, Perry examines their role in shaping American journalism--after the Civil War, the reading public demanded eyewitness accounts instead of canned official releases--and public opinion throughout an era of cataclysm. With A Bohemian Brigade, Perry adds a useful, and highly readable, footnote to our understanding of the era. --Gregory McNamee Read More

from£23.58 | RRP: £18.95
* Excludes Voucher Code Discount Also available Used from £12.40
  • Product Description

    Much of our understanding of the American Civil War is based upon newspaper dispatches written under horrific battlefield conditions, and journalists memoirs penned under more reflective moments after the wars end. A Bohemian Brigade is the masterful account of the true nature of combat correspondence its probable accuracy and ultimate accountability during the Civil War years. In this even-handed survey, James M. Perry examines a civil war, a free press, and the inevitable impact each had on the other. Focusing on the self-proclaimed "bohemian brigade" whom General William Sherman vilified as "the buzzards of the press" Perry assesses the performance of a ragtag band whose professional descendants remain controversial to this day.

    The tales Perry tells are entertaining, sometimes hard to believe, but always historically accurate. Competition led reporters to file stories prematurely as they raced to be the first to get their accounts on "the lightning" their name for the telegraph. The headline of the New York Herald on July 22, 1861, erroneously proclaimed the Union Armys rout at the first battle of Bull Run a "BRILLIANT UNION VICTORY!"

    Army commanders on both sides distrusted a free press they could not control. Thomas Knoxs critical accounts of Union campaigning at Vicksburg so provoked General Sherman that he ordered a court-martial to prosecute this civilian reporter as a spy!

    Yet the press also made invaluable contributions to each sides cause. For instance, neither army had any procedure for publishing casualty lists. After a battle, reporters would collect the names of the dead and wounded. At times, their efforts became heroic.

    Bradley Osbon, an experienced seaman, covered the Unions capture of New Orleans by signing aboard fleet officer David G. Farraguts flagship, the Hartford, as a clerk. Upon learning of Osbons maritime exploits in the Far East from Osbon himself, Farragut promoted the reporter to the rank of fleet signal officer.

    And in reporting General Ulysses S. Grants engagement against General Robert E. Lee at the battle of the Wilderness, reporter Henry Wing also delivered a personal message from Grant to his commander in chief, President Abraham Lincoln: "Whatever happens, there is to be no turning back." Lincoln kissed the reporter on the forehead for relaying these stirring words of hope.

    With a dry wit and keen eye for detail honed by his four decades of journalistic experiences, Perry provides a fresh understanding of how the reporting of a war can affect the trajectory of war itself.

    Advance Praise for A Bohemian Brigade

    "In this masterfully crafted book, A Bohemian Brigade, Perry takes us behind the lines and behind the scenes to meet reporters from Americas most difficult war who risked imprisonment and often their lives to get the story straight and get it in the paper. With his usual skill, Perry makes you feel like you are there with them."â??Ken Bode, Dean of the Medill School of Journalism, Northwestern University

    "Civil War reporters were a colorful breed: rough, rowdy, courageous, competitiveÂ?occasionally even accurate. Jim Perry, a great reporter himself, recognizes these bohemian adventurers and brings them vividly to life in this entertaining and eye-opening look at the men who crafted the rough draft of our history."â??Tony Horwitz, author of Confederates in the Attic: Dispatches from the Unfinished Civil War

    "They were rowdy, biased, took themselves too seriously, got it dead wrong a lot of the time, yet often showed real courage under fire. Sound familiar? No, not todays reporters. The ones who covered the Civil War. This is their story and its a good one, told as only a working reporter could tell it."â??Bob Schieffer, Chief Washington Correspondent, CBS News

    "A Bohemian Brigade is a joyous account of a time when reporters did not take themselves seriouslyÂ?nor did anyone else written by one of the great reporters of his generation."â??Sander Vanocur, The History Channel

    "Jim Perry has written a fast-moving book about some of the most colorful and irrepressibleÂ?and most neglected& #150;players in our great national conflict. His tales of how muleback, quill-pen reporters got the news and then got the news to their newspapers are full of bold ingenuity, chance-taking, defiance of authority, and not a little hell-raising. Perry is an old hand at the business, and he makes clear the historical importance of their work without bogging down a wonderfully readable narrative."â??Ernest F. Furgurson, author ofChancellorsville 1863 and Ashes of Glory: Richmond at War

  • 0471320099
  • 9780471320098
  • James M. Perry
  • 10 April 2000
  • John Wiley & Sons
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 320
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases. If you click through any of the links below and make a purchase we may earn a small commission (at no extra cost to you). Click here to learn more.

Would you like your name to appear with the review?

We will post your book review within a day or so as long as it meets our guidelines and terms and conditions. All reviews submitted become the licensed property of www.find-book.co.uk as written in our terms and conditions. None of your personal details will be passed on to any other third party.

All form fields are required.