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Date: Mon, Feb 8, 2021 at 11:13 AM
Subject: H-Net Review [H-CivWar]: Drake on Browning and Silver, 'An
Environmental History of the Civil War'
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Cc: H-Net Staff <[email protected]>


Judkin Browning, Timothy Silver.  An Environmental History of the
Civil War.  Chapel Hill  University of North Carolina Press, 2020.
272 pp.  $30.00 (cloth), ISBN 978-1-4696-5538-3.

Reviewed by Brian A. Drake (University of Georgia)
Published on H-CivWar (February, 2021)
Commissioned by G. David Schieffler

A decade ago, the landscape of Civil War environmental history--the
study of how the natural world shaped the conflict and how, in turn,
the conflict left its mark upon nature--was largely featureless. Just
a few works rose up from its horizon: Lisa Brady's _War Upon the
Land, _Megan Kate Nelson's _Ruin Nation, _Andrew Mcilwaine Bell's
_Mosquito Soldiers, _Jim Downs's _Sick from Freedom, _and shorter
pieces by Mark Fiege and Ted Steinberg.[1] A few older works with
proto-environmental leanings could be laid alongside them, but not
many; the entire historiography of the field might have fit on a
single bookshelf with room to spare. But the seeds these authors
planted have allowed us to start bringing in a good harvest, with
recent books by Kathryn Shively Meier, Adam Wesley Dean, Matthew
Stith, Erin Stewart Mauldin, and Kenneth Noe (as well as my own
edited volume from 2015), not to mention a larder full of book
chapters, articles, conference papers, and the like.[2] But none of
the aforementioned works tackle the environmental history of the war
as a whole, for what are likely obvious reasons of scale and
complexity. It is to Judkin Browning and Timothy Silver's credit that
they have chosen to be the first to take on this daunting mission and
have executed it so well. _An Environmental History of the Civil War
_is not _the_ environmental history of the war--if such a thing is
possible--but as the first major attempt at a holistic account of the
conflict's impact on the natural world and vice versa, it is
impressive.

_An Environmental History of the Civil War _unfolds along lines both
chronological and thematic. Its opening chapter, for instance,
resides temporally in 1861 but also focuses on "sickness," mainly in
the form of contagious disease. The next five chapters take the
reader through to Appomattox and into Reconstruction via a similar
formula, with themes including "weather" (winter 1861-fall 1862),
"food" (fall 1862-summer 1863), "animals" (summer 1863-spring 1864),
"death and disability" (spring 1864-fall 1864), and "terrain" (fall
1864-spring 1865). But the themes are not as distinct as the
chronological distinctions might suggest. It is a cardinal rule in
ecology that all things are connected, and so it is here, too. From
the beginning, Browning and Silver are aware of the synergy among
their subjects. The illnesses of chapter 1 interact with the weather
and climate of chapter 2, which are in turn an important factor for
chapter 3's agriculture, and so on, with the relationships shifting
over time according to the fortunes of war and the vagaries of
nature.

The insights that emerge from such an approach range from the
self-evident to the profound. Take the weather, for instance. It is
not a revelation to argue that fighting outside in the rain, cold,
mud, dust, heat and drought made for a miserable experience. That
such an experience, augmented by inadequate food or tainted water, in
turn led to widespread disease and death is not a surprise, either.
But if Civil War environmental history were merely a restatement of
the obvious, it would not be of much use. Browning and Silver
certainly touch on the obvious subjects. But, deeply familiar with
the main ideas of both environmental and "standard" Civil War
histories, they soon proceed well beyond them.

There are many good examples. Taking a cue from the Columbian
Exchange, for instance, Browning and Silver argue that the rural
isolation in which many soldiers grew up rendered them acutely
vulnerable to disease once they were mustered into service. Largely
innocent of the density-dependent diseases found in urban areas and
weakened by hard training, harsh weather, bad diet, and bad hygiene,
they proceeded to fall in stunningly large numbers. In other words,
the population geography of antebellum America was a key factor in
the impact of disease once war came. And the war, in turn, fostered a
"new and distinct pattern of microbial exchange" as soldiers marched
into new regions and environments and then back again (p. 37). In
another provocative example, the authors utilize the one-two punch of
weather and disease to partially rehabilitate George McClellan's
reputation for spectacular failure in the Peninsula campaign of 1862.
Whatever his weaknesses of command, they argue, McClellan also faced
very real problems in illness, heat, humidity, and massive flooding.
It is impossible, they write, "to divorce McClellan's actions from
the natural environment in which they occurred" (p. 66).

 And humans were not the only combatants to suffer from illness and
the elements. One of the book's most interesting aspects is its
extended discussion of livestock. Like humans, legions of horses and
mules marched off into the ranks, where they were indispensable for
pulling supply wagons, hauling artillery pieces, and carrying
officers and cavalry. And as with humans, moving from a life of rural
isolation to close quarters and brutal work brought epidemic diseases
like glanders, which devastated equine populations on both sides.
Similarly, hog cholera slashed the pig population of the South, a
situation made worse by a severe lack of salt for preserving pork (a
phenomenon first noted by Ella Lonn back in 1933).[3] Nor were crops
immune, as diseases like stem rust accompanied extremes of rain and
drought to devastate Virginia wheat in 1862, a blow to both humans
and livestock alike. Indeed, even when they were healthy, horses and
mules were voracious consumers of food and water, not to mention
prodigious producers of urine and excrement. Impressment, foraging,
and stealing in order to feed soldiers are familiar subjects to Civil
War historians, but the needs of the armies' four-footed legions are
less so. Following the lead of Megan Kate Nelson, Joan Cashin, and
Erin Mauldin, Browning and Silver highlight the constant quest to
keep the animals fed. Declining pork supplies had already "helped
dictate" Confederate planning by the time Robert E. Lee invaded
Pennsylvania in summer 1863, a move inspired as much by a crying need
for calories as it was by strategy or politics (p. 124). The North,
meanwhile, found itself blessed with copious amounts of livestock,
massive and increasingly mechanized harvests, and an expanding supply
of rich and well-tended glacial soil on which to support them, a
not-inconsiderable advantage as the war dragged on.

Indeed, another strength of _An Environmental History of the Civil
War _is Browning and Silver's attentiveness beyond the battlefield.
Long after the guns fell silent at Antietam, for example, the
ecological effects of the battle lingered on. As on other bivouacs
and battlefields, the stink of urine and excrement, garbage, spilled
blood, and rotting flesh both human and equine turned stomachs for
weeks afterward (the sheer amount of dead horseflesh alone could be
staggering). But worse was the deprivation. The contesting
armies--120,000 troops in all--consumed local resources like twin
black holes, especially Lee's army, whose malnutrition was so acute
they had sickened themselves gorging on unripe corn before the
battle. There was precious little left for locals afterward. "With no
meat in the smokehouse, no corn in the crib, no crop to sell, and no
government assistance to help them," Browning and Silver write,
"Sharpsburg's civilians faced ruin." Bankruptcy and dependency on
charity loomed. "Such was the aftermath of nearly every major battle
of the war" (p. 80).

Meanwhile, short-term local weather events might have impacted
specific battles and campaigns, for instance, but Browning and Silver
note that longer-term global ones like ENSO oscillations were at
least as important. In 1862 California suffered dramatically from an
ENSO-related "atmospheric river" that brought tremendous ruin to
cropland, for example, and high water on the Mississippi allowed
Union gunboats to sail almost literally up to Ft. Donelson and force
its surrender (p. 42).  Meanwhile much of the Confederacy suffered
through historic drought that put it at further agricultural
disadvantage compared to the prodigious North. Climatology is not
destiny, to turn the famous phrase, but as Kenneth Noe does in his
recent _The Howling Storm: Weather, Climate, and the American Civil
War_ (2020), Browning and Silver remind us that local events often
hinged on global ones.

We could go on, but suffice it to say that _An Environmental History
of the Civil War _is full of similar insights. It does, however, flag
a bit as it crosses the finish line. The epilogue discusses the
postwar legacy of the war's massive ecological changes, particularly
the damage done to the South's agriculture and the ways in which that
damage fell especially hard on freedmen. It also touches on the
emergence, after the war, of the national park idea as a response to
the war's destruction. But the discussions feel just a tad too brief
after the richness of the previous chapters. In the authors' defense,
the war's ecological legacy was likely as long and complicated as its
political one. Entire books in the vein of Erin Mauldin's _Unredeemed
Land_ will be written to analyze it, and it is difficult to ask
Browning and Silver to, in essence, write one for their last chapter.

Indeed, one of the most useful aspects of this book is that it should
inspire a raft of environmental analyses both large and small. Deep
explorations of other battlefields, à la Browning and Silver's
Antietam, will no doubt yield more insights into the war's long-term
ecological effects. Their emphasis on mobilization and agriculture
promises to inspire a wealth of studies of how provisioning the war
altered local and regional ecology for decades after. And the links
between the war and Progressive conservation will likely be shown to
run far deeper than a few national parks. The prospects for the
future of Civil War environmental history are exciting.

Notes

[1]. Lisa Brady, _War Upon the Land: Military Strategy and the
Transformation of Southern landscapes During the American Civil War
_(Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2012); Megan Kate Nelson,
_Ruin Nation: Destruction and the American Civil War _(Athens:
University of Georgia Press, 2012); Andrew Mcilwaine Bell, _Mosquito
Soldiers: Malaria, Yellow Fever, and the Course of the American Civil
War _(Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2010); Jim
Downs, _Sick from Freedom: African-American Illness and Suffering
during the Civil War and Reconstruction _(New York: Oxford University
Press, 2012); Mark Fiege, "The Nature of Gettysburg," in _The
Republic of Nature: An Environmental History of the United States
_(Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2012), 199-227; Ted
Steinberg, "The Great Food Fight," in _Down to Earth: Nature's Role
in American History _4th ed. (New York: Oxford University Press,
2018), 76-85.

[2]. Kathryn Shively Meier, _Nature's Civil War: Common Soldiers and
the Environment in 1862 Virginia _(Chapel Hill: University of North
Carolina Press, 2015); Adam Wesley Dean, _An Agrarian Republic:
Farming, Antislavery Politics, and Nature Parks in the Civil War Era
_(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2015); Matthew M.
Stith, _Extreme Civil War: Guerilla Warfare, Environment, and Race on
the Trans-Mississippi Frontier _(Baton Rouge: Louisiana State
University Press, 2016); Erin Stewart Mauldin, _Unredeemed Land: An
Environmental History of Civil War and Emancipation in the Cotton
South _(New York: Oxford University Press, 2018); Kenneth Noe, _The
Howling Storm: Weather, Climate and the American Civil War _(Baton
Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2020); Brian Allen Drake,
ed., _The Blue, the Gray, and the Green: Toward an Environmental
History of the Civil War_ (Athens: University of Georgia Press,
2015).

[3]. Ella Lonn, _Salt as a Factor in the Confederacy_ (New York:
Walter Neale, 1933).

Citation: Brian A. Drake. Review of Browning, Judkin; Silver,
Timothy, _An Environmental History of the Civil War_. H-CivWar, H-Net
Reviews. February, 2021.
URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=54966

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
License.




-- 
Best regards,

Andrew Stewart


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