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39 pages 1 hour read

James M. Mcpherson

For Cause and Comrades: Why Men Fought in the Civil War

Nonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 1997

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Chapter 1Chapter Summaries & Analyses

Chapter 1 Summary: “This War Is a Crusade”

In the first chapter of the book, McPherson relates how he came to write it. While visiting Civil War battlefields where enormous carnage took place, he can’t find a satisfactory answer as to why so many soldiers gave their lives to such a cause, so he sets about trying to find out:

What prompted them to give up several of the best years of their lives—indeed, to give up life itself in this war that killed almost as many American soldiers as all the rest of the wars this country has fought combined? What enabled them to overcome that most basic of human instincts—self-preservation? (5).

Through letters and diaries and historical research, McPherson tells the reader that he is trying to understand the motivations of soldiers—why they fought, why they reenlisted, how they kept going—and he marvels at such determination in the face of so much death.

McPherson also mentions those who snuck away during battle, or found some way to avoid fighting: “Some soldiers admitted to seeking a bombproof position or to skulking” (7). He looks into the motivations of soldiers and delves into their social class to see if he can find some reason for their behavior in battle. McPherson does so in an attempt to understand why those who did not flee, or skulk, or sneak away, stayed.

Lastly, McPherson includes snippets of letters from Civil War soldiers. He explains that these letters—as opposed to published accounts such as a memoir or newspaper articles—are the best source of unfiltered information: “These are rich and in some ways almost unique sources” (11). He gives examples of blunt descriptions of the horrible conditions of war, how lonely and scared soldiers were, and why they stayed, even when they were sick in the heart, and just wanted to go home. 

Chapter 1 Analysis

McPherson titles the first chapter “This War Is a Crusade.” He outlines his research and thought process in writing the book, and how he came to the idea of writing it. He mentions the motivations of soldiers, and he includes excerpts from their diaries that show their motivations—usually honor and courage and a sense of duty to something greater than themselves. He shares a story of General John A. Wickham, who commanded the 101st Airborne Division in the 1970s, visiting Antietam battlefield in the 1980s and saying, “You couldn’t get American soldiers today to make an attack like that” (5). 

The crusade part of the chapter then, is the book itself. McPherson, fascinated by the battlefields and his knowledge of the numbers of the dead, sets out to find answers. The crusade is his need to understand why so many men were called to the crusade of the Civil War, so he reads through some 25,000 letters and almost 250 diaries of soldiers during the war. And though many of the soldiers write that they cannot, nor will they ever, be able to describe a battle, McPherson includes this information to show that though he may not be able to fully understand what the war was like, this book is his attempt, in the same way that the letters soldiers write home to their family and friends are their attempts to describe what war is like, to share their fears, feelings, thoughts on duty, and desires to come home. As a Civil War historian, McPherson seeks answers through the past, and believes the best guide to that past to be letters. 

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