Edwin P. Rutan II is a retired lawyer who graduated from Harvard Law School. He is the author of "If I Have Got to Go and Fight, I Am Willing": A Union Regiment Forged in the Petersburg Campaign: The 179th New York Volunteer Infantry 1864-1865.
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"Through expert use of statistical data, blended with astute deployment of a variety of other sources of information, Edwin P. Rutan II convincingly offers us a brand-new interpretation of the men who joined the Union army during the last half of the Civil War. It is a positive and balanced portrayal of these 'late-war' soldiers that turns the traditional view of them on its head. His book also reflects importantly on unit effectiveness; the relationship between the central, state, and local governments in creating and maintaining the Union army; and the persistence of soldiers to endure campaign and battle in America's worst war to date. This is a much-needed analysis of a vital cohort of troops who were instrumental in saving the Union in 1865, and it is a brilliant addition to Civil War soldier studies."--Earl J. Hess, professor emeritus, Lincoln Memorial University "For three decades now, progressively deeper research into the Civil War has been dismantling myths spawned by the participants themselves and perpetuated by historians whose portrayal of that epic saga tended more to soaring eloquence than scholarly examination. Combining a chronicler's craft with a lawyer's expertise in the evaluation of evidence, Ed Rutan has credibly quashed an indictment against late-war Union volunteers that originated in high-level excuse-making 160 years ago."--William Marvel, author of Lincoln's Mercenaries: Economic Motivation among Union Soldiers during the Civil War "Not since Ulysses S. Grant penned his memoirs have the 'high-bounty' volunteers of the Army of the Potomac had such a defender as Edwin Rutan II. Using sophisticated statistical analysis, numerous first-person accounts, and new categories for rating 'combat effectiveness, ' Rutan compels students of the Civil War to question long-held assumptions about the fighting value of the hundreds of thousands of men who carried the Union armies to victory in the last two years of the war."--John G. Selby, author of Meade: The Price of Command, 1863-1865