In the last year of the American Civil War, Horace Porter served as aide-de-camp to General Ulysses S. Grant, then commander of all the armies of the North. This lively 1897 memoir was written from the extensive notes he took during that time. It is highly regarded by later historians. Porter continued in that position with Grant to 1869. From 1869 to 1872 he served Grant as personal secretary in the White House. He was U.S. ambassador to France from 1897-1905. ( David Wales)
PrefaceMy First Meeting With General Grant, etcA Higher Grade Created For Grant, etcPreparations For A General Advance, etcGrant’s Preparations For The Second Day In The Wilderness, etcGrant’s Third Day In The Wilderness, etcCommunicating With Burnside, etcGrant and Meade, etcAttempt To Turn The Union Right, etcGrant Crosses The North Anna, etcGrant Crosses The Pamunkey, etcStrength Of Lee’s Position At Cold Harbor, etcGrant Decides To Cross The James, etcThe Start For The James, etcPetersburg, etcLincoln’s First Visit To Grant’s Camp, etcA Disappointed Band-Master, etcPreparing The Petersburg Mine, etcThe Storming Of New Market heights, etcGrant Visits Sherman, etcGrant’s Narrow Escape At Hatcher’s Run, etcGrant Suggests A Plan For Voting In The Field, etcPlanning The First Fort Fisher Expedition, etcSenator Nesmith Visits Grant, etcCapture Of Fort Fisher, etcGrant Plans The Spring Campaigns, etcGrant Draws The Net Tighter Around The Enemy, etcMeeting Of Grant And Sherman At City Point, etcThe Movement Against Five Forks, etcGrant Enters Petersburg, etcGrant’s Ride To Appomattox, etcAfter The Surrender, etcSherman’s Terms To Joseph E. Johnston, etc
Campaigning With Grant - Horace PORTER - Description and brief content, listen free online on the e-library site at Knigi-Audio.com/en/