As new condition textured navy blue boards, maroon spine, and gold spine lettering contained in an as new condition non price-clipped color illustrated dust jacket. Includes List of Other Books by David Detzer; Author Dedication; Foreword; Author's Note; Cast of Major Characters; Acknowledgments; Notes; and Index. Illustrated with a section of black-and-white photographic plates and map illustrated front and rear endpapers. Also included is a separate Smithsonian magazine article neatly excised from the magazine, dated July August 2011 re: The Battle of Bull Run by Ernest B. Furgurson. ""David Detzer is making a distinguished reputation in Civil War history writing about great openings. His first book -- Allegiance -- took us to the opening shots of the Civil War at Fort Sumter. Now, in Donnybrook, he gives us a marvelous account of the first great battle of the war. Like his first, this second book is comprehensive, thorough, deeply researched, rich in detail, and highly readable. It is a fine account of a major passage in that great war."" -- John C. Waugh, author. ""In the first months of the Civil War, few Americans understood how ugly the war would become, few had any sense of what an actual battlefield would be like. They would get their first important lesson in July 1861, when a great Union army and a major Confederate force clashed near a Virginia stream called Bull Run. In April 1861, Confederate artillery blasted Fort Sumter into surrender. Within weeks, the Confederacy established its capital at Richmond. On May 24, Lincoln ordered troops across the Potomac into Virginia, only a few miles from the Confederate military base near the hamlet of Manassas. A great battle was inevitable; whether this would end the war, as many expected, was the only question. On July 21, near a stream called Bull Run, the two forces fought from early morning until after dark in the first great battle of the Civil War. America would never be quite the same. Donnybrook is the first major history of Bull Run to detail the battle from its origins through its aftermath. Not since William C. Davis's study of the battle, written decades ago, has a historian approached this linchpin event with such force, insight, and fresh energy. The first Battle of Bull Run introduced citizens of this country to the draft, the effects of heavy artillery, and the emotional violence of fighting your neighbor for an uncertain cause. It tested the character of men who would later dominate the historical record: Stonewall Jackson, James Longstreet, Irvin McDowell, and William T. Sherman. In the wake of the battle, the Union was forced to reconsider its strength and searched within its ranks for a scapegoat. David Detzer is the first historian to analyze the resulting Joint Committee on the Conduct of the Present War and thus the first to exonerate General Robert Patterson. Using copious and remarkable detailed primary source material -- including the recollections of hundreds of...