Echoes of the Republic: War, Command, and Consequence
James Longstreet was Robert E. Lee’s most dependable corps commander — steady under fire, deliberate in preparation, and devastating in execution. At Second Manassas, at Fredericksburg, and at Chickamauga, he demonstrated a disciplined form of aggression that made him one of the Confederacy’s most formidable battlefield leaders. And yet his name is forever tied to controversy. At Gettysburg, Longstreet counseled caution where others demanded attack. He questioned timing. He challenged assumptions. He hesitated when the Confederacy’s high command expected momentum. History would remember that hesitation. In this episode of Echoes of the Republic, we walk through Longstreet’s rise from West Point officer to Lee’s trusted subordinate, examine his battlefield philosophy, and confront the enduring debate over Gettysburg. Was Longstreet a loyal general constrained by flawed strategy — or a commander who failed to act decisively at the war’s turning point? More than any other Confederate general, Longstreet forces us to examine the tension between obedience and judgment. What is a subordinate’s duty when he believes the plan is wrong? This is the story of a commander who combined patience with power, loyalty with independence — and who would spend the rest of his life defending decisions made in three terrible days in Pennsylvania. Echoes of the Republic is a narrative history podcast exploring leadership, conflict, and consequence in America’s defining moments. New full-length episodes every two weeks. Dispatch field reports released weekly.
8 episodios
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