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Welcome to Clash of Steel!


Featured battle : Mill Springs

Part of American Civil War

Date : 19 January 1862 - 20 January 1862

Gen George H Thomas, at the head of a Union column of around 4,000 men advancing south through Kentucky towards Tennessee was attacked by Crittenden's Tennesseeans who had made a hard march through terrible weather and mud to confront them before they reached the Cumberland River. The attack started well for the Confederates but they were exhausted after wading through such mud and their 'surprise' attack didn't phase Thomas who summoned re-inforcements from nearby. When Zollicoffer, the Tennessee General under Crittenden was shot, his men broke and ran, much of the rest of the rebel line following their lead. Thomas' Union troops pursued as far as the river.

Featured image :

Arbeia - Reconstruction of a Roman Fort Gatehouse

Arbeia - Reconstruction of a Roman Fort Gatehouse

A excellent reconstruction of the imposing 2 passage gatehouse which might once have stood on that spot at Arbeia Roman Fort

Gallery updated : 2022-04-04 08:33:43

Featured review :

Echoes From Dawn Skies - Early Aviators: A Lost Manuscript Rediscovered

Frederick Warren Merriam
In the 1950's F. W. Merriam, a key figure in early British aviation before the First World War, wrote a manuscript of reminiscences of his friends and colleagues from those days. People like Hugh Short (of Shorts Brothers), Lord Brabazon, Alliott Verdon-Roe, and many others contributed memories of the trials and tribulations of building, flying and often crashing those very early machines with delightful detail and understatement. However the book remained unpublished at Merriam's death in 1956 and disappeared from view. Then recently, with the help of Merriam's granddaughter Sylvia and Mick Oakey of The Aviation Historian magazine, the manuscript was unearthed, rescued and at last published. This book is a gem, plain and simple. Wittily and engagingly written, each chapter brings some new anecdote from the people who were there at the beginning, with Aviator's Certificates (original pilot's licences) numbers in the low double or even single figures. The book is produced to a very high quality and contains lots of appropriate photos and illustrations, along with an appendix listing all of the people Merriam himself taught to fly from the iconic Brooklands aerodrome. For anyone interested in the early years of pre-war flight, this book is an absolute must.
Air World Books, 2021

Reviewed : 2022-11-30 20:43:34