April '65: Confederate Covert Action in the American Civil War

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Kent State University Press, 1995 - 264 páginas

William A. Tidwell establishes the existence of a Confederate Secret Service and clarifies the Confederate decision making process to show the role played by Jefferson Davis in clandestine operations. While the book focuses on the Confederate Secret Service's involvement with the Lincoln assassination, the information presented has implications for various other aspects of the Civil War.

The most thorough description of the Confederate Secret Service to date, April '65 provides previously unknown records and traces the development of Confederate doctrine for the conduct of irregular warfare. In addition it describes Confederate motives and activities associated with the development of a major covert effort to promote the creation of a peace party in the North. It shows in detail how the Confederates planned to attack the military command and control in Washington and how they responded to the situation when the wartime attack evolved into a peacetime assassination. One of the most significant pieces of new information is how the Confederates were successful in influencing the history of the assassination.

 

Contenido

COME RETRIBUTION REVISITED
1
CONFEDERATE GOLD
14
THE ORGANIZATION OF SECRET SERVICE
30
THE GREENHOW ORGANIZATION
57
SAGE AND THE DESTRUCTIONISTS
77
THE CONFEDERATE SECRET SERVICE IN CANADA
107
APRIL 65
160
TABLE OF REQUESTS FOR TREASURY WARRANTS FOR SECRET SERVICE MONEY
197
ORGANIZATION OF PRIVATE WARFARE BY BJ SAGE
205
BILL TO ESTABLISH A BUREAU FOR SPECIAL AND SECRET SERVICE
213
NOTES
223
BIBLIOGRAPHY
243
INDEX
250
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