When asked, what sort of man is Grant, Lincoln replied that Ulysses S. Grant was “the quietest little fellow you ever saw. The only evidence you have that he’s in any place is that he makes things git! Wherever he is, things move."
Lincoln explained that every other general briefing him before a battle told him that he was short some crucial resource to ensure victory, but, if ordered, they would proceed anyway. This essential resource was almost always cavalry. Lincoln claimed their real purpose was to shift responsibility to him. When Grant took charge, he immediately recommended reassigning twenty thousand horseless cavalrymen to the infantry. Since there was no way to acquire horses for every man designated as cavalry, these idle soldiers were only held in reserve as a handy excuse. Grant recognized the duplicity and removed the excuse before his first battle.
In this biography, Bruce Catton does an excellent
job describing the man and his military philosophy. Grant reminded me of
General Patton, a warrior through and through. Both believed that to decrease
casualties in war, you don’t minimize the fallen in a specific battle, you win
the war to stop the killing.
Catton relates a story about a grizzled sergeant leaning against
a fence post when a comrade came up. The
sergeant jerked a thumb at a man in the distance and remarked: “That’s Grant. I
hate to see that old cuss around. When that old cuss is around there’s sure to
be a big fight on hand.”
No comments:
Post a Comment