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The Man Who Tried to Burn New York
The Man Who Tried to Burn New York
Author: Nat Brandt
In a desperate attempt to bring the North to the bargaining table and end what was to the South a losing war, Confederate spies in Canada launch a plot to burn New York City on the day after Thanksgiving in 1864. A group of rebel officers---all escapees from Union prison camps who had fled to neutral Canada for safety---reach the city by train a...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780815602279
ISBN-10: 0815602278
Publication Date: 1/31/1986
Pages: 292
Rating:
  • Currently 4.5/5 Stars.
 1

4.5 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Syracuse University Press
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
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hardtack avatar reviewed The Man Who Tried to Burn New York on + 2686 more book reviews
This is an interesting, in-depth examination of the Confederate attempt to burn down New York City in the Fall of 1864, a proposed 19th century version of 9/11. Fortunately, it failed miserably. How the Confederate agents, based in Canada, thought they could destroy New York City without endangering the lives of hundreds of thousands of civilians, including countless woman and children is a wonderment. But that was what they claimed wouldn't happen.

What was most amazing was New York City was a hot bed of support for the Confederacy. At least, it was until after this failed attempt to destroy it. Even the Copperhead (Confederate supporters) newspapers tried to blame "insane women" for the attempt. At least one of the newspaper publishers condemned the attempt, actually to save his own hide.

Only one Confederate agent was captured a few weeks later, and he lied about his participation in the attempt until the final days before his execution. Those who protested again his hanging apparently forgot the Confederacy hanged several Union soldiers who took part in The Great Locomotive Chase, an attempt to destroy parts of the western Confederate railroad system, in which no civilians were endangered.

However, my biggest problem with the book is on page 105, where one Confederate agent is listed at staying in a hotel in an area described as "...a desolation, a place of lager beer saloons, emigrant boarding houses, and the vilest dens." Excuse me! But I'm a beer drinker and definitely a lager man. What's wrong with lager beer! :-)


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