Stonewall Jackson and the Midcourse Correction to Second Manassas: New Evidence On How Stonewall Jackson Eluded the Union Army Twice: First to Carry Out His Raid to Manassas Junction and Later to Avoid John Pope's Converging Union Forces

This book unveils new evidence on how Stonewall Jackson eluded the Union army to execute his Manassas Junction raid and avoid General John Pope's forces, bringing fresh insights into the Second Manassas Campaign. It challenges the image of Union General John Pope as a second-rate leader, revealing a misunderstood strategist outmaneuvered by Lee and Jackson's military prowess. This account repositions the Second Manassas victory, highlighting Lee and Jackson's strategic genius and altering the narrative of Pope's legacy, offering a more nuanced understanding of this pivotal Civil War campaign.

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About the Author: Steven E. Condon
Steven E. Condon holds a BS in physics from Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut and an MS in physics from Northern Illinois University. He worked many years in the software development industry. Some of his work was as a contractor performing software engineering research at the NASA Goddard Spaceflight Center's Software Engineering Laboratory. There and later elsewhere he was involved in the collection and analysis of software development metrics. He is currently a senior data analyst at a major hospital in Boston.

Mr. Condon has had a longtime interest in the American Civil War, mainly the Virginia Theater, 1862: primarily Jackson's Valley Campaign, McClellan's Peninsula Campaign, Lee's Seven Days' Campaign, and the Second Manassas Campaign—the campaign that brought Pope, McClellan, Porter, Jackson, and Lee together. His research into the military reputation of Union General John Pope goes back to 1992. Mr. Condon lives with his wife in Manchester, New Hampshire.
This book presents new evidence revealing how Stonewall Jackson was able to elude the Union army twice: first to carry out his raid to Manassas Junction and later to avoid General John Pope's converging Union forces. It is an account full of surprises including a mistaken mountain, a warning that never was, and Union General John Pope's real plan for entrapping Jackson. It is all part of the untold story of the important Second Manassas Campaign (a.k.a. Second Bull Run). Second Manassas was the second of two consecutive campaigns orchestrated by Robert E. Lee by means of which he shifted the center of conflict in the Eastern Theater from the gates of Richmond, Virginia to the threshold of Washington, D.C., opening the way for Lee's first invasion of the North. This double-barreled achievement formed perhaps Lee's greatest accomplishment of the war and one with few parallels in military history.

The Second Manassas Campaign did much to enhance the reputations of Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson. It also created the legend of Union General John Pope, the man whom they defeated. According to this legend John Pope was an army commander who was prone to make one boneheaded mistake after another, a general who was totally outclassed by his renowned opponents, and a general who afterwards lied to cover up his own incompetence. One can't discuss the magnitude of Lee and Jackson's achievement in winning the Second Manassas Campaign without addressing the competence of the man whom they defeated. Because of the fact that their victory was achieved by beating a man who for all intents and purposes demonstrated himself to be a second-rate general, Lee and Jackson's achievement—despite its far reaching consequences—has always attracted less attention than have Lee's campaigns that immediately preceded and followed it, The Seven Days and Antietam, respectively.

Recent research, however, reveals that John Pope was much more than a second-rate general, as is evidenced by a proper understanding of how he performed in the days immediately preceding the Second Battle of Manassas, days in which Stonewall Jackson's abilities shone brightly. This new and surprising research achieves two ends. First it provides the real explanation of how the great Stonewall Jackson accomplished one of his greatest feats. And secondly it demonstrates that Lee and Jackson defeated much more than a second-rate general, thus placing Lee and Jackson's victory in the Second Manassas Campaign in its true perspective and revealing it to be one of the greatest accomplishments achieved by this remarkable military duo.

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