Lincoln and His Admirals

Lincoln and His Admirals
by Craig Symonds

Lincoln and His Admirals
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Book Summary Information

Author: Craig Symonds
Edition: Hardcover
Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published)
Published: 2008-10-17
ISBN: 0195310225
Number of pages: 448
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Book Reviews of Lincoln and His Admirals

Book Review: Little about Ships
Summary: 5 Stars

In May, 1861, two months after assuming the presidency, Abraham Lincoln told his Secretary of the Navy, the crusty Gideon Welles, that "I know but little about ships". Over the next four years, Lincoln learned a great deal about ships, and about much more besides. In his highly acclaimed book, "Lincoln and his Admirals" (2008) Craig Symonds tells the little-known story of Lincoln's relationship to the Navy. Symonds is professor emeritus of history at Annapolis, and this book was the co-winner of the prestigious Lincoln Prize. Symonds has written extensively about both naval history and Civil War history, including works about Gettysburg, biographies of Confederate Generals Joseph Johnston and Patrick Cleburne, and a biography of Confederate Admiral Franklin Buchanan. But "Lincoln and his Admirals" may prove to be Symonds's most enduring work. It is a true accomplishment which manages the rare feat of saying something fresh and valuable about Lincoln and the Civil War.

Symonds's book is not a military history of the engagements of the Navy. Thus, some of the most famous naval actions of the Civil War, such as Farragut's victory at Mobile Bay, (and his capture of New Orleans for that matter), or the Navy warship "Kerseage's" capture of the CSA's raider "Alabama" are not described in detail. Even the on-the-seas description of the Union blockade is sparse. In general, Symonds describes naval engagements only to the extent they cast light on Lincoln's relationship to the Navy and of the Navy's political history during the war. The focus of the book is thus on Lincoln, on Secretary Welles and Assistant Secretary Gustavus Fox, and on their political relationship with the rest of Lincoln's cabinet, especially Secretary of State Seward, Secretary of War Stanton, and Secretary of the Treasury Chase. The command relationship, or lack of it, between the Army and the Navy is discussed throughout. Symonds gives close attention as well to the command structure of the Navy. At the outset of the Civil War, there were no Admirals in the service. The service developed as Lincoln and Welles searched for leaders in a way that had many parallels to Lincoln's painful search for able leaders of the Army.

With all the attention to the political growth of the Navy, Symonds's primary focus is on Lincoln's own growth as a leader. Symonds's portrait weaves together Lincoln's growing mastery of the Navy with broader political issues, especially those involving slavery and Emancipation. The book examines Lincoln's leadership in the sensitive areas of foreign affairs raised by the Civil War. Symonds has insights to offer into Lincoln's personal life, particularly with the death of his young son Willie early in his administration. Without sentimentalizing the matter, Symonds shows how Lincoln used his gift for storytelling and his sense of humor to break tension and to advance his political goals.

The book is organized by chapters covering each of the years 1861 - 1864, with a brief epilogue for 1865 and an important Introduction. The discussion early in the book of Fort Sumter and Lincoln's tentativeness at this point of his presidency is one of the most detailed and important of the book. Symonds also gives a thorough account of the early "Trent" affair, which threatened a war with Britain that the United States could ill afford, and of the political and legal issues involving the origins of the blockade. Much of the book describes the poor coordination and rivalry between the Army and the Navy and of how Lincoln had to work to pull the services together. Lincoln became a hands-on commander in order to implement the necessary coordination and to satisfy his own curiosity and interest in technology and in the instruments of war, especially as they involved river warfare and the development of ironclads. Symonds offers a full discussion of the Navy's role at Forts Henry and Donelson and at Vicksburg. He shows the importance of the Navy's coastal activities to the question of dealing with escaped slaves or "contrabands" and how this ultimately contributed to the Emancipation Proclamation.

Throughout the book, Symonds emphasizes how Lincoln grew into greatness. Lincoln emerges in Symonds's account as a somewhat passive, and reflective leader who tried to allow events to unfold in order to make an informed, balanced decision. Symonds accepts Lincoln's own characterization of his presidency: "I claim not to have controlled events, but confess plainly that events have controlled me." (Introduction, at xi) Lincoln also, for Symonds, was a principled but pragmatic leader. Lincoln allowed situations to develop and then made what he felt was the best decision under the circumstances without necessarily becoming "hamstrung by established doctrine." (Introduction, at xi.) Symonds also praises Lincoln's creativity and ingenuity with mechanical things (Lincoln was the only president to hold a patent), a factor sometimes overlooked in his leadership. In Symonds's account, Lincoln grows from an inexperienced, vacillating leader, to a president who gradually learns to master events and subordinates. Ultimately, when he finds Army and Navy leadership with which he is satisfied, Lincoln becomes willing to delegate and have professionals take control of the military aspects of the war.

This is a dense, difficult book. It covers some matters covered in most histories of the Civil War but treats them in a new way. It also addresses some matters that people knowledgeable about the conflict will find unfamiliar. The book is a study of the political role of the Navy during the war. But even more, it is a meditation on the evolving character of Lincoln's leadership.

Robin Friedman

Summary of Lincoln and His Admirals

Abraham Lincoln began his presidency admitting that he knew "little about ships," but he quickly came to preside over the largest national armada to that time, not eclipsed until World War I. Written by prize-winning historian Craig L. Symonds, Lincoln and His Admirals unveils an aspect of Lincoln's presidency unexamined by historians until now, revealing how he managed the men who ran the naval side of the Civil War, and how the activities of the Union Navy ultimately affected the course of history.

Beginning with a gripping account of the attempt to re-supply Fort Sumter--a comedy of errors that shows all too clearly the fledgling president's inexperience--Symonds traces Lincoln's steady growth as a wartime commander-in-chief. Absent a Secretary of Defense, he would eventually become de facto commander of joint operations along the coast and on the rivers. That involved dealing with the men who ran the Navy: the loyal but often cranky Navy Secretary Gideon Welles, the quiet and reliable David G. Farragut, the flamboyant and unpredictable Charles Wilkes, the ambitious ordnance expert John Dahlgren, the well-connected Samuel Phillips Lee, and the self-promoting and gregarious David Dixon Porter. Lincoln was remarkably patient; he often postponed critical decisions until the momentum of events made the consequences of those decisions evident. But Symonds also shows that Lincoln could act decisively. Disappointed by the lethargy of his senior naval officers on the scene, he stepped in and personally directed an amphibious assault on the Virginia coast, a successful operation that led to the capture of Norfolk. The man who knew "little about ships" had transformed himself into one of the greatest naval strategists of his age. A unique and riveting portrait of Lincoln and the admirals under his command, this book offers an illuminating account of Lincoln and the nation at war. In the bicentennial year of Lincoln's birth, it offers a memorable portrait of a side of his presidency often overlooked by historians.


In the conversation below, two noted Lincoln historians, Craig L. Symonds and James M. McPherson (Pulitzer-Prize winning author of Abraham Lincoln) discuss the often-neglected role of the Union Navy in the Civil War. The discussion centers on the introduction of a new kind of warship with iron sides and revolving gun turrets called the U.S.S. Monitor, designed by engineer John Ericsson. Ironclads, or monitors as they were called, were used in the Union blockade of Southern ports. Though both Lincoln and Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles embraced the new ships, Admiral Samuel Du Pont did not. DuPont's failed attack on Charleston not only brought and end to his career but also earned him derision for his failure to adapt to new technology. Both authors share the prestigious 2009 Lincoln Prize for the year?s best books on Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War. McPherson?s Tried by War: Abraham Lincoln as Commander in Chief and Symonds's Lincoln and His Admirals were the winning books.

A Conversation Between Two Lincoln Historians: James M. McPherson and Craig L. Symonds

McPherson: We know from [the diary of] John Hay that Lincoln put himself through a cram course of readings in military history and strategy during the fall and winter of 1861-62, mainly so he could deal more intelligently and forcefully with such generals as McClellan, Halleck, and Buell. Did Lincoln do anything comparable to overcome his admission that he knew "little about ships"?

Symonds: Not really. A lifelong autodidact, Lincoln focused on learning as much as he could about war in the first months of the conflict, but he saw from the beginning that the land war was far more important than the naval war. While he read all that he could about the theories of war, he did not undertake a similar regimen concerning naval strategy, in part because there were fewer such books. He was fascinated by new weaponry, played a role in getting the Navy to adopt Ericsson's Monitor, and he consulted both Seward and Bates on the legality of the blockade, but for the most part, he relied on Gideon Welles, and especially the Assistant Navy Secretary, Gustavus Fox, to provide him with whatever professional knowledge or technical information he needed.

McPherson: Historians hold a wide range of opinions about the effectiveness of the blockade and how important a role it played in ultimate Union victory. Where do you stand on this question?

Symonds: I guess it depends on whether the glass is half full or half empty. The blockade was never impervious, and at times seemed quite porous. As many have argued, the South was able to import through the blockade the weapons and supplies it needed to sustain its armies in the field for four years, though it did encounter serious shortages in specific areas such as steam engines, engine parts, and railroad rails. Exports were a different story. Cotton exports plunged from 2.8 million bales in the last year of peace to only 55,000 bales in the first year of war. That undercut the Confederacy's ability to establish credit overseas, contributed to inflation and civilian unrest at home, and generally undermined the Confederate economy. The loss of southern revenue from cotton exports was greater than the amount the North spent to establish and maintain the blockade. Given that, I think the blockade was worth the investment. If it succeeded in shortening the war by, say, six month, it probably saved many thousands of lives.

McPherson: Along with Gideon Welles and Gustavus Fox, Lincoln was critical of Samuel Francis Du Pont for lack of aggressiveness and pertinacity in the failed attack on the defenses of Charleston on April 7, 1863, and compared Du Pont to McClellan. Was this fair?

Symonds: There are many things in war that are not fair. Du Pont was very likely correct in asserting that Charleston could not be taken by a purely naval attack, as Gideon Welles repeatedly encouraged him to do, and he was effectively fired for demonstrating that his view was correct. [Historian] Kevin Weddle calls Du Pont "Lincoln's Tragic Admiral," a victim of Welles' determination to protect the reputation of his beloved monitors. But Du Pont's fall from grace was due not merely to his failure to capture Charleston. It was also due to two other factors: one was that Lincoln had become scarred by his lengthy and frustrating relationship with McClellan during the 1862 campaign, and by 1863 he had began to view Du Pont through a prism defined by that experience. When Du Pont called for reinforcements, or bemoaned the obstacles in front of him, it was McClellans' voice that Lincoln heard. The other reason for Du Pont's fall is that he never fully explained to the President precisely why he objected to a navy-only attack. Instead he only hinted at it by detailing how strong the enemy defenses were and how limited his own forces were. He never clearly laid out an alternative with the kind of strong advocacy that showed his willingness to carry it out. Even then, I think Lincoln would have stood by Du Pont but for Du Pont's own foolish behavior when he insisted that the government must publish his official reports (including compromising information about the vulnerabilities of the monitors) in order to counter hostile newspaper articles about him. In the end, Du Pont's reticence and touchiness were responsible for his tragedy.

McPherson: Did Lincoln show unjustified favoritism toward John A. Dahlgren when he promoted him to Rear Admiral and gave him command of the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron even though Dahlgren had limited experience in seagoing command?

Symonds: Dahlgren was unquestionably Lincoln's favorite admiral. He much appreciated Farragut's success, but he liked Dahlgren, often went to the Washington Navy Yard to visit with him, and eventually he asked Welles to promote him to admiral, even though Dahlgren had virtually no important sea service. Most of the navy looked upon Lincoln's decision to promote his friend from commander to Rear Admiral in one step as personal favoritism. It was favoritism, but whether it was unjustified depends on how well Dahlgren performed in command. Though Charleston never fell, Dahlgren was an active and effective commander of the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron, and despite suffering poor health that might have ended the career of a less determined man, Dahlgren worked hard and earned the confidence of his officers throughout the long and wasting siege.

McPherson: From 1862 on, Acting Rear Admiral Samuel Phillips Lee wanted to attack the defenses of Wilmington to shut down the port to blockade runners. When the time came in 1864 to carry out the attack, however, Welles, Fox, and Grant convinced Lincoln that Lee was not the man to command it, and replaced him with Rear Admiral David Dixon Porter. Was this treatment of Lee justified?

Symonds: Like Du Pont, Phillips Lee was a competent officer who was at his best managing the multivariate activities of a far-flung squadron. Unlike Du Pont, he never had the chance to prove himself in a major battle and thereby win promotion to the permanent rank of Rear Admiral. Because the authorizing legislation stipulated that promotions to admiral must be won in battle, Lee repeatedly asked Welles for permission to attack Wilmington, North Carolina. Not until 1864 did Welles accede, and when he did he sent Lee off to the backwater of the Mississippi Squadron and brought in the brash David Dixon Porter to carry it out. Lee felt himself a victim of Welles' favoritism for others. But in this case, it was U. S. Grant as much as Gideon Welles who was responsible. In Grant's view, Lee had not been sufficiently aggressive during the move up the James River, and he wanted someone else to command of the attack on Wilmington. When Farragut declined the command, Welles gave it to Porter. Lee's anger at this treatment is understandable, but Welles and Grant had concluded that while Lee was an effective manager, he was not the man for a full-scale attack. In the end, Lee never did get a chance to prove himself in the kind of engagement that might have won him the promotion he sought. Read more


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