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The annals of Texan bravery hold few better examples of bold determination and sheer audacity under impossible circumstances than the Battle of Franklin, Tennessee, on November 30, 1864. On this one afternoon, a few thousand sons of the Lone Star State stood shoulder to shoulder and stepped off neatly in line of battle, their bands playing while Hardee Pattern blue battle flags filled out in a crisp autumn breeze. Within a few minutes, hundreds would be dead and dying, as would their beloved leaders, Hiram Granbury and Pat Cleburne. Virginians have Picketts Charge as an example of unflinching nerve; for Texans, the field at Franklin became an immortal monument to courage in the face of long odds.The opening volley of the eagerly anticipated Military History of Texas Series is The Finishing Stroke. The book chronicles the actions of Texas troops in the Army of Tennessee from September 1, 1864, the Fall of Atlanta; until January 1, 1865, when the last of the Army of Tennessee recrossed the Tennessee River following the defeat at Nashville. It follows them through the lull following the end of the Atlanta Campaign, the advance into Tennessee, and the battles of Allatoona Pass, Spring Hill, Franklin, and Nashville, as well as the retreat from Nashville.The Finishing Stroke covers an area largely ignored in works on the American Civil War. In the literature of Texas history, Texans serving in the Army of Tennessee have lived in the shadows of Hoods Brigade in Robert E. Lees army. Among histories of the Western Theater, the 1864 Tennessee Campaign is often given short shrift because of the generally held premise that following the loss of Atlanta in September the Confederacy wasdoomed. This study moves the battles and sacrifices of this band of Texas heroes from the periphery of the Civil War to center stage.The Finishing Stroke shows Texas warriors at their best, from Sul Rosss Texas Brigade at the head of Forrests cavalry to Matt Ectors Texans
About the author
JOHN LUNDBERG is a student at the University of Texas at Austin, where he also works as an archives aide at the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library. A long-time member of the Austin Civil War Round Table, Lundberg has also developed living history demonstrations, representing the life of a Confederate soldier, for middle and elementary schools throughout the Austin area.