Brian Matthew Jordan is associate professor of Civil War history and chair of the History Department at Sam Houston State University. He lives in southeast Texas. He is the author of Unholy Sabbath: The Battle of South Mountain in History and Memory (Savas Beatie, 2011). His book Marching Home: Union Veterans and Their Unending Civil War (2015) was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.
"Brian Jordan has done a masterful job recounting the largely
ignored seminal fight for South Mountain on September 14, 1862.
Unholy Sabbath is an admirable achievement, authoritative in its
command of the facts and sources and a pleasure to read. Readers
will come away with a much better understanding of just how
important this battle was to the entire campaign, and just how
close General Lee's Confederate army came to disaster. Jordan's
Unholy Sabbath is a 'must-have' book."--Bradley M. Gottfried,
author of The Maps of Gettysburg and The Maps of Antietam
"Brian Jordan's first book is, without question, the best and most
tactically detailed account of the critical Battle of South
Mountain, fought on September 14, 1862. The bloodletting at
Sharpsburg three days later has always overshadowed South Mountain,
and Unholy Sabbath is a big first step toward equalizing that
disparity. But for the Union victory at South Mountain, there never
would have been an Antietam, and Jordan makes that fact perfectly
clear. This is essential reading for anyone interested in the 1862
Maryland Campaign, and I recommend it highly."--Eric J. Wittenberg,
award-winning author of Gettysburg's Forgotten Cavalry Actions and
Plenty of Blame to Go Around: Jeb Stuart's Controversial Ride to
Gettysburg
"Had there not been a battle at Antietam four days later, the
battle of South Mountain would today be hailed as George
McClellan's tactical masterpiece, and one of the greatest battles
in American history. And with McClellan as the clear-cut victor,
there might not have been an Emancipation Proclamation or a second
Lincoln presidential term. All this, and much more, is exhumed by
Brian Jordan from the historical forgetfulness that has enveloped
South Mountain. Unholy Sabbath is at once a painstakingly-detailed
battle history, a great campaign study, and a provocatively novel
way of treating how our national memory of the Civil War has been
created."--Dr. Allen C. Guelzo, Director, Civil War Era Studies
Program, Gettysburg College
"Jordan's research is excellent, his judgments mature and reasoned,
and his writing crisp and engaging. All serve his aim to restore
South Mountain to its deserved stature in 'History and Memory' as
the place where the Yankee soldier gained the self-respect and
confidence to begin the long turn of the tide in the Eastern
Theater of the Civil War."--William C. "Jack" Davis, award-winning
author of Jefferson Davis: The Man and His Hour and A Government of
Our Own: The Making of the Confederacy
"The intense fighting along Antietam Creek has long obscured the
historical vision of Americans who tend to see September 17, 1862,
as an isolated event of unparalleled historical importance. Brian
Jordan assumes a different approach. He broadens our perspective by
restoring to prominence the South Mountain battles, and in so doing
offers readers a panoramic view of the entire Maryland Campaign
that is rarely found in most studies. Unholy Sabbath is an engaging
and revealing read, one that explores overlooked and uncharted
dimensions of Robert E. Lee's first raid across the Potomac
River."--Peter S. Carmichael, Robert C. Fluhrer Professor of
History at Gettysburg College and Director of the Civil War
Institute
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