id
was set in the arguments array for the "side panel" sidebar. Defaulting to "sidebar-1". Manually set the id
to "sidebar-1" to silence this notice and keep existing sidebar content. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 4.2.0.) in /home/netscrib/public_html/civilwarcavalry/wp-includes/functions.php on line 4239id
was set in the arguments array for the "footer" sidebar. Defaulting to "sidebar-2". Manually set the id
to "sidebar-2" to silence this notice and keep existing sidebar content. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 4.2.0.) in /home/netscrib/public_html/civilwarcavalry/wp-includes/functions.php on line 4239I agree..
Eric
]]>My comment on thinking about including ECF would be that a concise treatment would not be out of place … still, I think that on the whole just revising what is already a fine book while keeping one eye on the larger prize is the best deal you can cut with yourself.
]]>Thanks for the input, everyone. You have all been a big help to me with this.
Eric
]]>My book Protecting the Flank: The Battles for Brinkeroff’s Ridge and East Cavalry Field covers ECF in probably the most detail ever published, and I don’t have a whole lot to add to it. If I plugged it into the GFCA, there would be two identical treatments o the same battle.
Eric
]]>We hope to get pretty far along with the first volume this year – between the three, we will cover in detail dozens and dozens of cavalry actions during the campaign, most of them pretty obscure and hardly treated at all.
It’s an ambitious project that we hope will plow a lot of new ground, and add much to the story of the campaign. Eric and I have a mountain of untouched primary sources just waiting to be showcased.
J.D.
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