Civil War Novels
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"Duty Accomplished"

A Civil War novel by Michael J. Deeb

Praise for Michael Deeb’s “The Drieborg Chronicles” “…an enjoyable, easy read.” —The Civil War Chronicle

”…a stimulating series with strong character development that holds the reader’s attention throughout.” —Robert Lockwood Mills, author and historian

Michael Deeb returns to the turbulent years of the American Civil War in this second installment of his acclaimed Civil War trilogy, “The Drieborg Chronicles.”

December, 1864. Having escaped the dreaded Confederate prison Andersonville four months earlier, Union Major Michael Drieborg has been recuperating at his parents’ home in Michigan.

But duty calls and he makes his way back to Washington for reassignment, eager to start working with Congressman Kellogg’s Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War.

Once in Washington, President Lincoln sends Michael south to assist Union war prisoners recently liberated at Savannah, Ga., by Sherman’s army.

But things grow complicated when Michael arrives and discovers the enormous task in front of him. Worse, while he is gone, old enemies threaten his family back in Michigan, and there is little he can do to help.

With the war drawing to a close, Michael must adjust to new challenges, ones that will take him from the hallowed halls of Washington to the Indian country of the Dakota Territory—and into the very depths of his own soul.

Duty Accomplished

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Duty Accomplished - prologue

Duty AccomplishedBy December of 1864, over five hundred thousand military personnel had died in the Civil War. Begun in April of 1861, the American Civil War was a conflict that most believed would be settled after one or two battles.

But by December of 1864, the conflict had caused the death of over five hundred thousand military personnel; with no end in sight.

By the end of 1864 most people North and South longed for the war to end.

Despite this, Abraham Lincoln, the war candidate of the Republican Party defeated the peace candidate of the Democratic Party in the November elections; so the war continued.

The Federal Navy had blockaded Southern ports so that cotton and tobacco rotted in Southern warehouses and the Confederacy was cut off from Europe’s consumer goods and war material. The Southern railroad and river systems were controlled by the North’s forces, too antiquated to be efficient or destroyed. Thus, food and supplies needed in the Confederate war effort seldom reached those in need. By the end of 1864, the source of replacement soldiers for the Confederate armies were primarily old men and boys. But it wasn't’t until the spring of 1865 that the Confederate Congress authorized the recruitment of black men for their army; too late to even be implemented.

In the winter of 1865, a serious effort to begin formal talks for peace failed. Evan a meeting of representatives from the two sides failed to materialize because President Lincoln would not accept the demand of the Confederate President Davis that the independence of the Confederate States be recognized as a precondition to such talks.

So it remained for the opposing armies to continue the fight until one or the other was destroyed. It appeared that forces of the United States government would be the victor in that death struggle.

General Grant’s much larger Union army had trapped Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia at Petersburg, a rail center just south of the Confederate capital of Richmond. Atlanta, Georgia had fallen to General Sherman in the fall.

Then, his forces fought its way to the sea and captured Savannah, Georgia in December. By January he was ready to move his Union army into the Carolinas against a much smaller Confederate force.

Duty Accomplished

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