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Lee

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Douglas Southall Freeman's Pulitzer-Prize-winning biography of Robert E. Lee was greeted with critical acclaim when it was first published in 1935. Stephen Vincent Benet said, "There is a monument - and a fine one - to Robert E. Lee at Lexington. But this one, I think, will last as long." This reissue of Richard Harwell's abridgement fulfills Benet's prophecy, chronicling all the major aspects and highlights of the general's military career, from his stunning accomplishments in the Mexican War to the humbling surrender to Appomattox.

More than just a military leader, Lee embodied all the conflicts of his time. The son of a Revolutionary War hero and related by marriage to George Washington, he was the product of young America's elite. When Abraham Lincoln offered him command of the United States Army, however, he chose to lead the Confederate ranks, convinced that his first loyalty lay with his native Virginia. Although a member of the planter class, he felt that slavery was "a moral and political evil." Aloof and somber, he nevertheless continually inspired his men by his deep concern for their personal welfare.

Freeman's achievement is the full portrait of a great American - a distinguished, scholarly, yet eminently readable classic that has linked Freeman to Lee as irrevocably as Boswell to Dr. Johnson.

656 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1935

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About the author

Douglas Southall Freeman

220Ìýbooks86Ìýfollowers
The son of a Confederate veteran, Douglas Southall Freeman was long interested in the Civil War. A man of intense work ethic, he earned his PhD at 22, then balanced a journalist's demanding schedule with a historian's, as he churned out Lee's Dispatches (1915), the Pulitzer-Prize-winning four-volume R. E. Lee: A Biography (1934-35), Lee's Lieutenants: A Study in Command (1942-44), and finally, the multi-volume George Washington (1948-54). A respected historian, renown for his research, he garnered fame in his native Virginia and the friendship of major military figures.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 60 reviews
Profile Image for Jerome Otte.
1,891 reviews
July 26, 2016
Let us not put too fine a point on it...Douglas Southall Freeman simply LOVES Robert E. Lee. If you have also read Freeman's equally exhaustive biography of Washington, you can debate which man Freeman loves more. At times the prose, though beautifully written, can get positively gushy. There is no way the reader can consider this an objective biography.

No doubt D.S. Freeman was a great writer. No doubt that Freeman was even a good historian. However, every Civil War historian worth his salt knows that while Freeman's biography of Lee may be the place to start to read about the General, it is not the place to finish. While there probably isn't still a definitive biography of Lee, one should be wary of just reading Freeman's work. While Freeman did spend almost his entire life researching Lee, his idol worship of Lee gets in the way of serious scholarship. Surely Lee is not quite the imperfect person that later biographers set out to prove, nor was he the perfect person that Freeman wrote about. He was a person, with great things about him, faults, and all the rest. While Lee does not deserve to be run through the mud just to tarnish his image, one should probably read Freeman's bio, T.L. Connelly's The Marble Man, and Emory Thomas' bio of Lee to get a fuller picture. Freeman's work is exhaustively researched and is very well written, but reads more like idolatry than biography.

It is not unbiased. Lee is practically shown as infallible, the Yankees are portrayed as malignant, vile creatures that cheerfully trample the Constitution underfoot, and Lee's mistakes are written off to the bumbling incompetence of his subordinates. While the biography abounds with detail (which makes it an indispensable part of any good bibliography), there is definitely an agenda at work here. This is work which needs to read in concert with more recent scholarship.

One thing I found unsettling is the erroneous descriptions of Lee's relationship with Montgomery Meigs, the army engineer who worked for Lee on the Mississippi River projects when they were both young officers. Meigs ultimately grew to become a force in the founding of Arlington National Cemetery, on the property where Lee's mansion was located. It is well known that although Lee and Meigs worked well together on the early project, and parted friends at the time, they developed a very hostile relationship later when Lee decided to cast his lot with the South. Meigs even advocated that Lee should be sentenced to death if caught. Having been made Quartermaster General of the Federal army, Meigs led the way to appropriation of the Lee estate, its conversion to a cemetery for Union dead, and ultimately the establishment of the Arlington National Cemetery on the site. After the war, Meigs advocated the deportation of Lee, and fought the Lee family's effort to regain title to the Arlington property. The Lees regained the property nevertheless, and sold it back to the government which could not at that stage abandon the well established burial place.

In contrast to these facts, Freeman states that after leaving the Mississippi projects, "Lee parted from Meigs when they reached Washington and was not again fortunate enough to have him as an assistant, but he was always affectionately remembered by the younger man, even when war divided them". This conclusion doesn't result from lack of information, because the facts were known in 1934 when Freeman wrote the book, and it leads you to wonder what else is incorrect in the book.

This biography of General Robert E. Lee would have you believe that he was the ultimate Southern gentleman: dutiful, handsome, brave, pious, generous, and nearly faultless practically from the day he was born. It may be so. There's no doubt that he exhibited all of these qualities, but many of the observations no longer ring true. For instance, the author's assertion that because Lee spent very little time in Virginia after going off to West Point, he saw only the "good" side of slavery is a hollow argument in my opinion. Likewise, Lee's own statement that slavery was not only good for the negro (his term) race, but also God's will (and one dare not defy the will of God) is spurious at best. God's will must have mellowed late in the war because Lee himself forwarded a plan to Jefferson Davis to offer emancipation to slaves who would fight for the Confederacy. The apparent contradiction in these views goes unquestioned. His care for the common soldier (even captured Federals) is oft quoted; the state of Union prisoners in the South goes unmentioned (I am being a bit unfair here, as Lee had nothing to do with the administration of POW camps, but you get the point).

Lee was most emphatically not a brilliant field marshal, all the Southern mysticism surrounding the man notwithstanding. Lee was an utter fool on the battlefield, whose feckless leadership very nearly single-handedly destroyed the Confederate Army at Gettysburg.

Pickett’s Charge, the frontal assault on the heart of Union defenses arrayed on Cemetery Ridge at Gettysburg could not have been a more militarily foolhardy undertaking. The Confederates were outnumbered and the Union was defending the high ground which it had held and fortified for the two previous days. Every military strategist knows full well that defending a perimeter requires fewer troops than attacking; even more so when the defensive perimeter enjoys some geographical advantage, such as elevation. The general rule is that it takes 3-4 times as much offensive man- and firepower to successfully attack a fortified defensive position, and perhaps double that multiple when attacking a position that also enjoys some geographic advantage. Yet Lee, thinking not with his head, but with his heart, ordered the assault anyway, sending thousands to their immediate deaths, and ultimately, the Confederacy to its military demise.

Yet Southerners romantically mythologize and revere Lee for the assault, thinking it to be one of the finest expressions of the Southern ideal that no folly is too great in the service of intensely-felt emotion. For the antebellum Southerner, suicide in the service of holding back modern impulses pushing against traditional ways of life, which is a more or less apt description of Pickett’s charge in particular and of secession in its entirety, expressed the depth of feeling one had for the cause, which in turn, sanctified the cause and the emotion felt for it, as worthy and just .

Likewise the common soldier of the Army of Northern Virginia is second only to Lee in valor and duty. In fact, 40% of all Southern armies had gone AWOL by 1863. There is hardly any mention of them ever being taken prisoner. Lee had strict standing orders against looting by his soldiers while in the North. Strictly true, but they still took what they wanted and "paid" for it with worthless Confederate currency.

Also, contrary to popular belief, Lee did, in fact own slaves, and he wasn't very humane or gentle with them.

Lee's lieutenants get more even treatment, but even here their rougher edges are polished off. For instance Dick Ewell is said to use "quaint" language; a better description would be "blisteringly profane."

The real treasure of these books is to the planning, maps, movements, and thought processes behind the conduct of the War by the Army of Northern Virginia. I know of no better source for information of the engagements of Lee's Army. Great care is taken to present only the information that Lee had available at the time of each, which makes his victories all the more remarkable. His ability to balance chance and reward in the face of long odds is equally remarkable. The book is also relentlessly footnoted and provides insight into the author's conclusions on topics that are not universally accepted.
Profile Image for Gerry.
246 reviews37 followers
September 1, 2017
On 22 January 1861 Colonel Robert E. Lee wrote: “I wish to live under no other government, and there is no sacrifice I am not ready to make for the preservation of the Union save that of honour. If a disruption takes place, I shall go back in sorrow to my people and share the misery of my native State, and save in her defense there will be one soldier less in the world than now. I wish for no other flag than the ‘Star Spangled Banner� and no other air than ‘Hail Columbia� I still hope that the wisdom and patriotism of the nation will save it.� On 19 April 1861, the Commonwealth of Virginia seceded from the Union, he stated previously that “I am one of those dull creatures that cannot see the good of secession.� Later, following the surrender at Appomattox, General Lee would state that “General Grant has acted with magnanimity� to the terms that were offered and accepted.

“First in War, First in Peace, First in the hearts of his Countrymen� would be the last effective effort that General Lee’s Father would have on the impact of his country as stated at the funeral of President Washington by Henry Lee III (aka “Light Horse Harry Lee�), 9th Governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia, strong Federalist, and man of perpetual bad luck following this last national public appearance 18 December 1799. Later, when two year old Robert was forced to move with his family to Alexandria Virginia it was a financially difficult time for the Lee family. His mother would be the force behind his being raised in a Christian home based on frugality of want and lack of financial resources as a result of Henry Lee III having to have left the family for a period of time, and not just once. Later, the young man with no resources would discover an opportunity to attend the Military Academy at West Point; it was here that he discovered his talents and the beginnings of a strong character would begin to evolve.

The newly minted U.S. Army Engineer was of sound mind, strong spirit, determined will, and a professionally focused United States Army Officer. His work in the Western Frontier in Missouri and Texas would prove his metal and challenge his capabilities but he never gave in, and always continued to find a “better way� to attempt to solve problems of both Engineering calculations and/or of Courts Martials he had to conduct out west. During the Mexican-American War General Winfield Scott would provide written words of commendation for a then Captain Lee to the War Department on his after action report.

Dr. Freeman provided a detail account of the life of General Lee and his writing style didn’t always work with my own ability of ebbed weave and reading flow. For example, the use of exclamation points I could not “feel� as the contextual text led to the crescendo intended within the framework. This by no means takes away from the prose of the author, nor the subject � it is merely one small iota of discovery I made on myself and is likely my own inability to “read� in a more critical form. Still, I would chuckle at myself during those few moments where the point attempted to be made by the author had relatively no impact on my sense of “feeling� during those specific passages.

The Battles of the War Between the States are well covered in this abridged version, but this is a book (again) about General Robert E. Lee and not the individual soldier. Following the conclusion of this war General Lee did encourage those surviving soldiers to write their own stories of experiences for the sake of History. Some of them did as we know, as did individual soldiers of the Union. The most important parts of this work in my opinion are the ante-bellum and post-bellum periods of the time. While serving as President of Washington College, former General Lee was out riding with Professor White and in a quiet manner and the only known time he spoke of Gettysburg he stated, “If I had had Stonewall Jackson with me, so far as man can see, I should have won the Battle of Gettysburg.� One can surmise that the darkest days of Gettysburg had fallen by fate on the picket lines of Chancellorsville in this matter of speaking.

Lastly, this abridged version of the four-volume set by Dr. D.S. Freeman in my opinion is a work of historical significance to the most beloved General in the History of the United States of America. Robert E. Lee was born an American and died as an American. Following the conclusion of the American War Between the States, General Lee used his notoriety (what we today would call “celebrity�) to bring people together and encouraged all Americans to work toward a more perfect union of the nation. He didn’t fight for a cause; he fought for the choice that his beloved Commonwealth of Virginia had decided upon without his specific input. His fame was without vanity and even his property that was confiscated in a tax scheme by the U.S. Government was not something he held against the Government after the war. If anything was proven during the final 5 years of his life it was that General Lee kept the tragedy of war from becoming a national calamity. The retribution placed against the Southern States after this war as reported to President Roosevelt on 25 July 1938 were damning to say the least.() Regardless of what schools teach in American History, the truth be told that Reconstruction ended on 7 December 1941 and not as taught in 1877. Modern American History begins in 1941 as much as modern European History begins in 1914. Arlington National Cemetery is consecrated with the War Dead of American Service Members, to include the sanctity of the Confederate War Dead. History cannot be changed and should always be taught to the time to which it occurred free of modern day opinions and emotions.

Author William Manchester once wrote “Americans are experts at everything� and in this he was correct � this was stated by him in the fact finding and commissioned work by Jackie Kennedy and Robert Kennedy in “Death of a President� � it remains as much a fact to History as does Dr. Freeman’s work on “Lee� or “Washington.� History cannot be changed.
Profile Image for Golden.
169 reviews3 followers
February 1, 2008
Loved it. They don't come better than Robert Lee.
Profile Image for David Elkin.
292 reviews
July 10, 2018
Read a long time ago. It was a good book but is now somewhat dated. The deification of Robert E. Lee after the Civil War covered up mistakes. He remains one of the greatest generals in US history but he did have flaws, in spite of what Jubal Early said. See this;
Profile Image for Colin Darby.
78 reviews4 followers
September 16, 2014
My four-star rating of this book is not due to a perfection of scholarship; this is absent. Other reviewers have commented on Freeman's ability to excuse Lee's mistakes, such as Pickett's charge or Grant slipping away after Spotsylvania, as the result of his subordinates' mistakes. They are correct to point this out. Lee made a number of strategic and tactical blunders, from his obsession with the Virginia front even as the Confederates lost the Mississippi and the Atlantic coastlines, to his relentless obsession with the offensive in 1862-1863, to his absolutely confounding inability either to control Longstreet on July 2, 1863, or to make a sensible decision on July 3 with Pickett's charge. Freeman neglects all of this.

The reason it rates four stars is because there are passages that reach the sublime: the description of Gettysburg, for instance, even when it ignores Lee's mistakes, is absolutely magnificent for its treatment of the men who went in in that last terrible charge under George Pickett. Lew Armistead comes closer to life here than he does in Shaara's "The Killer Angels," and Armistead's death was one of the most moving parts of that book.

It would be easy enough to tear Freeman apart for writing in a "fog of war" style that reveals information to the reader as Lee himself knew it, yet not applying that same fog of war, say, to Grant at Spotsylvania; Grant ordered a surprise predawn attack that, through the bumbling and dilatory action of staff officers and subordinates, turned into the slaughter at the Bloody Angle, but to Freeman, it was a clear indicator that Grant was nothing but a butcher who bragged about how he never maneuvered. Granting one side the excuse of not having absolute control, but expecting the other to do so, is a fairly basic piece of bias, and the book echoes with this kind of thing. What saves it from being complete garbage is first, abridgment, and second, Freeman's occasionally soaring prose.
Profile Image for Evi Routoula.
AuthorÌý9 books72 followers
November 13, 2015
A truly wonderful book for the great general of the Confederates. A lot of details of all the famous battles and a lot of things about his personal life as well. A must read for all the friends of the American civil war or the admirers of this great personality. I am not American, but i love history and this is a piece of history everybody owns to know.
Profile Image for Howard.
21 reviews11 followers
April 7, 2012

One of the best histories of the civil war I've read. Emphasizes the importance of the disparity between the strength of north and south, and its effect on strategy.

Outstanding portrait of R.E. Lee's character, especially in the section after the war and conclusion.

Five star rating!
Profile Image for Jeff Williams.
9 reviews1 follower
April 16, 2016
An excellent single volume about Lee. Written with a very pro-Southern slant but that is to be expected from a book that was published in 1935 by an author from Richmond. This book does not touch on slavery but is more focused on Lee's performance as the greatest Southern General in the Civil War.
15 reviews
December 3, 2019
Before I found this particular book, I was only confined to the small amount of knowledge I had about Robert E. Lee. I knew him as a Confederate general who must have been racist towards the African-American people and eventually ended up in the losing column of the American Civil War. After the book though, I now know the true R.E. Lee. A man of great compassion and a man who loved his family just as much as he loved his soldiers, R.E. Lee is not the man of my previous assumptions. Lee and his men, almost always outnumbered by at least 2-to-1 odds, always seemed to hold their own. Even though they had less rations, less clothes, less guns, less ammunition, and less men overall, the Army of Northern Virginia always had the highest morale on the entire battlefield. Just on their morale alone, they may have added 2-3 years on to the Civil War. Even in their first battle of the war, heavily predicted as a Union rout, was quite the opposite as the Union forces were routed instead. The most important thing about Lee though is the respect he held for others and the respect he ended up receiving in return. Even though he lost, the nation regarded him as an American hero. Even Union officers including Lieutenant-General Ulysses S. Grant himself tipped his hat and saluted Lee after Appomattox. Turns out that there is some form of beauty in war after all.
Profile Image for John Conquest.
75 reviews8 followers
August 3, 2018
Wanted to read this after visiting Monument Avenue in Richmond, VA for the first time in many years. Absolutely beautiful sculptures I wanted to see again before they get demolished (the Jeb Stuart in particular looks royal on sunny days) and replaced with local 'art.' Art in apostrophes because outside of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (which has an excellent Napoleon exhibit right now) my experience at other venues has been things like monkeys carved into soap and bicycle wheels bent into the shape of an engorged benis.

Profile Image for Aaron Crofut.
399 reviews53 followers
May 7, 2017
"What he seemed, he was- a wholly human gentleman, the essential elements of whose positive character were two and only two, simplicity and spirituality."

I have to highly recommend the Harwell abridgment of Freeman's classic and monumental biography of Robert E. Lee. A truly good biography will stir the reader's emotions at the end by making him miss the person studied after he is gone, and so it is with this book. Lee's military prowess during the Civil War will be well known to most people who pick up this book (those who are not should start elsewhere; I would recommend Shelby Foote if you can spare the time). What this book adds is the man himself who existed for 59 years outside of the war. The son of a Revolutionary War hero and the son-in-law of George Washington's only (adopted) son, Lee is steeped in the Washingtonian ideal of a Virginia gentleman. His life up until the Civil War is one of duty well executed and devotion to his family. The former is put to the test by the secession of Virginia: is his duty to the Nation or to the State? Lee reluctantly sides with Virginia and his family, where for the next four years he outshines all other American generals in talent, determination, and personal virtue.

This book exemplifies why biographies are worth reading: they bring to life virtues we wish to inculcate into the readers. The last few pages of this book summarize those virtues magnificently, but one cannot just skip to those last few pages. To understand those words, the whole story has to be digested first. The ethos and pathos cannot be summarized. Lee standing at Sayler's Creek holding the battle flag to rally the tattered remnants of the Army of Northern Virginia speaks as much as any human words ever could, but even to understand that event, one must know how powerful the ANV had been at its height and how it became so dangerous despite all odds. In my own experience, I believe it is impossible to go to Appomattox and understand what happened there without first having gone to Gettysburg.

The only reason I docked this review one star is the treatment of Longstreet. This is not to say the man did not make mistakes, but at least in this abridged version, there is no apparent reason why Lee would put so much faith in his "old war horse." Lee himself had reasons, and as a biography, those reasons should be made manifest, but they are not. Apart from that, though, I would absolutely recommend this work to anyone. It was a joy to read and profitable to the intellect.
Profile Image for Andrew.
372 reviews5 followers
September 12, 2023
This book gets dismissed a lot for hero worshiping Lee. He does that, but it’s not a 600 page love letter. It’s like 585 pages of really interesting civil war history told from a “fog of war� perspective from the south (something often missing in civil war books which are usually told from the northern perspective) and 15 pages of love and admiration.

So I think you can safely ignore all the passages about Lee’s religious sainthood and stick to the extremely well researched history (like extremely well researched�.like 20 years of reading primary documents) and gain a perspective on how things played out from the southern perspective that is not easily found elsewhere. I thought it was extremely interesting that most northern versions discuss McClellan’s incompetence and slowness, but this makes it sound like the south considered him their biggest threat and most competent enemy.

Similarly, you appreciate all the logistics that went into planning a campaign. Like feeding tens of thousands of people wasn’t easy.

But most importantly, I think the reason this book is so fascinating is because you hear very little about Lincoln or grant. It’s completely told from the perspective of the confederacy. It brings the civil war to life in a new way. And the fog of war (I.e. you learn about things the same way Lee did, not from an omnipresent narrator) is a method I think more historians should employ. It forces the writer to actually cite how things were know. “Lee received a telegram from Davis telling him they’d received intelligence that Grant had sent half his army to cross the James River� versus “Grant crossed the James River and Lee quickly moved to stop his approach.�

Highly recommend if you’re a civil war buff.
Profile Image for Gregg Jones.
84 reviews3 followers
May 20, 2016
It was a challenge to read all 4 vols. It was the best profile of Gen Robert E. Lee I have yet to find. Freeman's details of Lee's youth is invaluable. There is so much there that explains what and how his adult was formed. I would recommend it to anyone that would wish to see and understand the American experience. Lee's life time spans from America's founding fathers to the start of the concept of Modern America.

Last, Lee did help end the American Civil War. He could have kept fighting in a horrible Guerrilla warfare that would have ruined the chances of a United America. He did tell the Confederate Army to stop fighting and become "good citizens". Thank God he did try to make the transition a good one. He could have sabotaged this but he did not. He did not start the Civil War but I believe he did end it. For that, I say God Bless Robert E. Lee.
Profile Image for Matt S.
7 reviews
March 24, 2019
“History is written by the victor� has never been truer than in this case. From a time when men had honor and were statesman comes the biography of one who towered over the rest. Slandered by decades of falsities taught to our children, this portrait of Lee shows none of the cruel vitriol put forth by schools of modernity. Rather, we see the man who lead West Point, who lead our forces in Mexico, whose virtues were espoused by men of his time. This is required reading for those who want to understand who Lee was and what he really stood for - and stood against.
Profile Image for Rich Kreitz.
47 reviews
February 18, 2020
Basically a 600 page love letter regarding his life. Was an interesting read and am glad I did. But a great foundation in Civil War history beforehand is required. There are virtually no maps to reference nor any larger context of the war. I know a decent amount about the war and found myself constantly referencing timelines and battle maps from other sources.

Want a good perspective of Gen Lee’s life, this is your book. Want a good, broad perspective of him and how he affected the war look elsewhere.
Profile Image for Don Heiman.
1,039 reviews4 followers
May 23, 2015
Harwell's abridgment of Douglas Freeman's 4 volume biography entitled "Lee" was published in 1961. Freeman's history of General R.E. Lee was published 1934-35 and won a Pulitzer. The abridgment faithfully captures Freeman's writing, presents a remarkable flow, and is inspiring. This is a "must" read for students of the Civil War and for those who love biographies of exceptional people.
Profile Image for Deborah Sowery-Quinn.
867 reviews
June 4, 2020
This was a tough slog for me - can't imagine reading the original 4 volume work - as the battles were hard for me to follow geographically & strategically. However, I enjoyed the parts about Lee, the man, his family life etc.
Profile Image for Darren Sapp.
AuthorÌý10 books22 followers
July 31, 2021
I read the abridgement (600 pages) of what was originally four volumes of near a million words. This version is 80% battle narrative from the Confederate viewpoint with Lee biography bookending it. Those bookends are awesome. Freeman's detailed research shines.
Profile Image for Benton Crane.
2 reviews
June 11, 2025
This book was recommended to me by a licensed battlefield guide at Gettysburg who told me it was the best biography on Lee ever written. After reading it myself I'm inclined to agree with his expert opinion. Anyone who picks up this book should read it with the context that Freeman was a partisan of Lost Cause historical revisionism, and this bias surfaces repeatedly. To Freeman, Lee is still the Marble Man, the archetype of southern honor and manhood who was nearly blameless in his conduct.

Despite the Lost Cause revisionism, it's hard to argue with Freeman's assertion that Lee was the most exceptional general of the Civil War. The Army of Northern Virginia under Lee's leadership repeatedly defeated much larger and better equipped foes, and Lee inspired such confidence in his men that they were willing to make such terrible sacrifices on Cemetery Ridge and the trenches of Petersburg.

Even as an abridged version this book is a daunting read. It will likely only be of interest to committed history buffs. However, Freeman's narrative style is both engaging and entertaining despite the general syntax belonging to a different literary era. Despite it's ideological shortcoming and its convenient white-washing of Lee as a scion of Virginia's slavocracy (even after the war Lee used his influence to ensure that Virginia would not be dominated by "Negros and carpetbaggers" in Freeman's words), it should still be on the reading list of any serious student of the Civil War.
Profile Image for Ridgewalker.
155 reviews2 followers
July 9, 2017
Robert E. Lee embodied everything that was good about the South. He was a perfect Southern gentleman and hands down the best general on either side of the Civil war. He did more with less men who were always under equipped and often barefoot and half starving than should have been possible. Those that served under him loved him and would and did follow him anywhere he led them. The people of the South admired him for the good man he was.

This book is an abridgment of the four volume series. It is very well written and gives a detailed account of all of the battles of the Civil War the army of Northern Virginia participated in. It is sometimes hard to follow because of the detail but the immersion gives you a feel for the brilliance of the man who led the army. Robert E Lee was a good man in the best sense. I highly recommend this book.
Profile Image for Rick.
22 reviews2 followers
December 11, 2017
Finished reading "Lee" by Douglas Southall Freeman. This was a biography of Robert E. Lee. It was interesting to me to see some of the key moments of the Civil War from the Southern perspective. Strangely, most of the history books I've read on the subject--even if written by Southerners--seemed to key in on the North's point of view.

I was also very interested in the events in Lee's life after the war, a time that is rarely discussed. Unfortunately, I haven't been able to get a good recommendation on books about the Reconstruction; some are better than others, but no one has recommended any as being "good". That was a harsh time in US history and I can only imagine how much smoother it could have gone had Lincoln lived to oversee it. President Johnson tried to keep some of Lincoln's vision, but Congress was less than cooperative (go figure).
Profile Image for Robert Lloyd.
260 reviews1 follower
February 24, 2019
Well written biography but be warned

So this is a very informative and well written book, however I think the reader will need to recognize when the author is crossing the line from biography to hagiography. I will concede that people wrote differently back then, however in the book Lee was displayed as a saintly individual, who was made to seem mythical. Having said this, the author did write a thorough narrative of the major events in his life, and I learned new things about Genersl Lee
350 reviews
September 29, 2024
For me I would give this 3 stars but given when it was written I rated it based on that time. It was hard to read 600 pages written by a man that believed Lee could do no wrong. Even when he admitted he had made errors they were minor. I am glad that books written now are often more balanced than when this was written at the beginning of the 20th century. That being said, the author certainly is one of the best researchers of Lee's life--especially given that this is a 1/4 abridged version of his 4 volume work on the man.
Profile Image for Mike.
497 reviews1 follower
September 28, 2017
An informative book that demonstrates why Lee is so highly regarded as a General even though he didn't attain victory. the exploration of his pre and post civil war lives give insights into why he left the US Army to fight for Virginia. The book veers into hagiography at times but is still worth reading.
Profile Image for Sean.
21 reviews
April 18, 2023
After the war, while Robert E. Lee was touring the South, a young lady said after meeting him, “We had heard of God, but here was General Lee!� Robert E. Lee is not only a Southern icon, but an American one, whose legacy should be understood and honored. The lesson I learned from reading this book is the utility, the simplicity, and the greatness in living by a code.
Profile Image for Nancy.
199 reviews2 followers
October 27, 2017
A really good read, but too many battle details for my taste.
Profile Image for Roger Causey.
29 reviews2 followers
December 14, 2017
So refreshing to read a historical book written before the age of political correctness. I Tried to read Clouds of Glory by Michael Korda but couldn't stomach that one.
Profile Image for Louis.
308 reviews1 follower
February 25, 2018
An irritatingly exhaustive bore.
This was the abridged version and I can’t imagine how dull the full version is. Avoid!
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