Free US delivery on orders $35 or over
This product is usually dispatched within 3 days
Free US delivery on orders $35 or over
You must sign in to add this item to your wishlist. Please sign in or create an account
In the late summer of 1864, Confederate General Sterling Price led a last ditch attempt to liberate Missouri from Union occupation and brutal guerrilla warfare. Price’s invading army was like few others seen during the Civil War. It was an army of cavalry that lacked men, horses, weapons, and discipline. Its success depended entirely upon a native uprising of pro-Confederate Missourians. When that uprising never occurred, Price’s rag-tag army marched through the state seeking revenge, supplies and conscripts. It was a march that took too long and ultimately allowed Union forces to converge on Price and badly defeat him in a series of battles that ran from Kansas City to the Arkansas border. Three months and 1,400 miles after it had started, the longest sustained cavalry operation of the war had ended in disaster. The Last Hurrah is the story of Price’s invasion from its politically charged planning to its starving retreat. The Last Hurrah is also the story of what happened after the shooting stopped. Even as hundreds of Missourians followed Price out of the state and tried desperately to join his army, elements of the Union army visited retribution upon Confederate sympathizers while still others showed little regard for the lives of the prisoners they had captured. Many more would have to suffer and die long after Sterling Price had fled Missouri.
Published | Jan 20 2020 |
---|---|
Format | Paperback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 468 |
ISBN | 9781538141519 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Illustrations | 33 b/w illustrations; 21 maps |
Dimensions | 9 x 6 inches |
Series | The American Crisis Series: Books on the Civil War Era |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
The Last Hurrah effectively recounts the campaign from inception to end. Near the end of summer 1864, Sterling Price would finally get his grand opportunity to try to wrest control of his home state from federal forces. . . .Covering such a vast campaign in a single volume of reasonable size is a difficult proposition but Sinisi's efforts toward maximizing available space succeed admirably. His description and analysis of the Missouri Expedition in all three major military dimensions — strategic, operational and tactical — are appropriately weighted and balanced. For a work of this scale the amount of tactical detail provided for the many battles and skirmishes fought is more than satisfactory. The roughly one hundred pages devoted to the October 19-23 series of battles fought just east and south of Kansas City comprise the best treatment yet of what one might consider collectively as the Battle of Westport. In support of the narrative is a very useful set of 21 maps created by Larry Hoffman. In general terms, the cartography of the Missouri Expedition is scant and woeful in the collective literature and The Last Hurrah goes a long way toward rectifying this deficiency. The somewhat complex movements and side-movements of Price's army are clearly traced on the book's operational scale maps and the many tactical maps correlate well with the text descriptions of the unit and landscape battlefield tableau associated with each one. . . .For students of the Civil War in Missouri, The Last Hurrah: Sterling Price's Missouri Expedition of 1864 has been well worth the considerable wait. The first thorough military treatment of the campaign, this deeply researched and skillfully composed study also holds the added distinction of ranking among the finer examples of Civil War operational military history regardless of subject. Highly recommended.
Civil War Books and Authors
Save the Red River Campaign of the same year, no other operation conducted west of the Mississippi river in 1864 can match the numbers involved and geographic sweep of Sterling Price's expedition in Missouri, yet no full-length military treatment of it has been published until now. Kyle S. Sinisi's The Last Hurrah: Sterling Price's Missouri Expedition of 1864 is noteworthy not only for bridging this long-standing gap in the Trans-Mississippi Civil War historiography but also for being by any estimation a first-rate operational history. The author persuasively rejects or revises a large number of traditional campaign interpretations while advancing fresh ones of his own.
The Civil War Monitor
In The Last Hurrah, Kyle S. Sinisi provides the long-needed modern one-volume account of Price’s campaign, one that will appeal to anyone interested in the war in Missouri in general and the events of the fall of 1864 in particular. He skillfully describes the various engagements that Price’s men fought over the course of the campaign and the fierce fighting that determined their outcome. He is likewise adept at describing the high-command maneuvering that shaped the campaign both on and off the battlefield. In the process, Sinisi provides compelling illustrations of the inextricable relationship between war and politics and how Civil War military operations were influenced as much by the ability of commanders to work together as by their competence as battlefield tacticians. . . .Sinisi also does a fine job describing the experiences of those lower down the chain of command, providing an especially effective account of the ordeal they experienced as Price fled south in the aftermath of his defeat at Westport and the Big Blue with the federals in pursuit. He does all of this in a study whose depth of research, readability, and thoroughness make it a work that readers will find valuable and future students of the campaign will be hard pressed to supersede.
Missouri Historical Review
Sinisi traces the expedition from its conception to its disastrous results for the Confederacy. He offers a well-written, informative, and complete view that will well serve readers who have little knowledge of these events. The book is so much more than the standard blow-by-blow account that gives military history a bad name among scholars. Sinisi not only show the broader political, social, and military aspects of Price's 1864 operations but also successfully argues that writers who have dealt with the subject before have done it a great disservice. . . .For students and scholars of Arkansas's place in American history, Sinisi's The Last Hurrah is essential.
Arkansas Historical Quarterly
Kyle Sinisi has offered a masterful and definitive study . . . Consulting a wide array of military records, memoirs, newspapers and letters, as well as a comprehensive assessment of relevant secondary works, Sinisi has created a more coherent and masterful account of Price’s Raid than any other work that precedes it.
Civil War Book Review
[W]ith Kyle Sinisi’s The Last Hurrah: Sterling Price's Missouri Expedition of 1864, we have a richly textured narrative that weaves together traditional and new military history to produce what will likely remain the definitive study on a pivotal western campaign for many years to come.... [The book is] recommend ... for students of Kansas history.... Building upon previous studies which are now dated or deal with only isolated parts of the campaign, Sinisi’s masterful, book-length treatment is a model of military history and deserves a wide audience. Beyond Fort Davidson, Boonville, Lexington, Newtonia, and the other engagements recounted in vivid detail, readers will find incisive attention paid to the treatment of deserters, prisoners, and civilians; in-fighting among the other officer corps of each side; the environmental challenges faced across a trek of nearly 1,500 miles; the suspected capture of free African Americans; and simmering postwar feuds over which parties most deserved credit or blame for the expedition’s failure. It must also be noted that this book includes splendid battlefield maps. Having set out to craft a comprehensive history of Price’s expedition and the political and social contexts from which it sprang and ultimately failed, Sinisi fulfills his purpose admirably.
Kansas History: A Journal of the Central Plains
Your School account is not valid for the United States site. You have been logged out of your account.
You are on the United States site. Would you like to go to the United States site?
Error message.