The Last Full
Measure: The Life and Death of the First
by Richard
Moe (Author)
From Publishers Weekly-----Moe, president of the National Trust for Historic
Preservation, expertly chronicles a company of Union soldiers who led the
charge on
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
- W. Walter Wicker, Louisiana Tech Univ., Ruston
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc. -
From Kirkus Reviews------One of the few first-rate small-unit histories of the Civil War, expertly conceived and gracefully written by the president of the National Trust for Historic Preservation. The rule in modern Civil War studies seems to be that the more ``micro'' the focus, the duller the book. Moe's tale of one of the first volunteer regiments to enlist after the fall of Fort Sumter is a happy exception, a worthy companion to John Pullen's The Twentieth Maine (1980) and Warren Wilkinson's Mother, May You Never See the Sights I Have Seen (1991). Fresh from the farms, small settlements, and logging camps of a western frontier unknown to most of the Army of the Potomac, most of the Minnesotans who responded to the federal government's initial attempt to augment its small regular army had never seen a big city or a black American: The war proved a profound learning experience--and not merely in the school of combat. At first, the Minnesotans were afraid that they would have to sit out the war on Indian patrol, but then--even before they received regular uniforms--they were brought east to add to the Union corpses at First Bull Run. During that disastrous reversal, they stood as long as any federal troops, and their toughness was exhibited again and again on the Peninsula and at Antietam, Fredericksburg, and, finally, Gettysburg (where one of the two brothers Moe follows through the book was killed). In addition to battle history, we learn how enlisted men felt about long months on picket duty; what they ate (when they did eat); and how they related to the civilian population. Moe makes judicious use of the period's ubiquitous diaries and letters, as well as fascinating columns sent home to local newspapers by soldier- correspondents writing under pen names like ``Raisins'' and ``Shingles.'' A seamless narrative of Civil War sights, sounds, and emotions that deserves the warmest reception. (Photographs--not seen) -- Copyright ©1993, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
Publishers Weekly
Regimental history at its best.
Booklist
Highly recommended. . . . The best volume of Civil War historiography to appear
in some time.
Eloquent . . . a powerful account.
Book Description-----Since its publication, Richard Moe’s THE LAST
FULL MEASURE has garnered a reputation as one of a handful of classic
regimental histories of the Civil War and the definitive history of the First
Minnesota Regiment. Moe’s chronicle of the First Minnesota has received wide
acclaim from reviewers and historians alike. As James MacGregor Burns notes in
his foreword to the book, "Like Tolstoy’s 'War and Peace,' this work
sticks close to the men in battle, and hence, like Tolstoy, the author keeps
close to the human size of war." Ken Burns, co-producer of the acclaimed
PBS documentary "The Civil War" notes that "Richard Moe, in this
wonderfully told regimental history, manages to rescue that which Civil War
studies so often neglects: the people."
From the Publisher---"This is Civil War combat history as it should
be written. . . . The story of one of the war's best fighting regiments is told
from the viewpoint of the men who did the fighting. . . . Both they and the
author are eloquent without being orotund. The chapter on the First Minnesota's
moment of supreme sacrifice at
From the Inside Flap----As the first troops offered to President Abraham
Lincoln after the fall of Fort Sumter, the brave men of the First Minnesota
Volunteer Infantry Regiment fought in virtually every major battle of the
eastern theater during the first three years of the Civil War. From Bull Run to
Antietam to
About the Author
Richard Moe, born in