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00000cam c2200205 c 4500
000001237672
20170623133001
170612s2016 mduab b 001 0 engd
▼a 9781421419374
▼a (KERIS)BIB000014221204
▼a 211047
▼c 211047
▼d 211047
▼a Army, Thomas F.,
▼c Jr.
▼a Engineering victory:
▼b how technology won the Civil War/
▼d by Thomas F. Army, Jr.
▼a Baltimore:
▼b Johns Hopkins University Press,
▼c 2016.
▼a xiv, 369 p.:
▼b ill., maps;
▼c 24 cm.
▼a Johns Hopkins studies in the history of technology
▼a Includes bibliographical references and index.
▼a Introduction: masters and mechanics -- Part I. The education and management gap: schooling, business, and culture in mid-nineteenth century America -- Common school reform and science education -- Mechanics' institutes and agricultural fairs: transmitting knowledge and information in antebellum America -- Building railroads: the early development of the modern management system -- Part II. Skills go to war -- Wanted: volunteer engineers -- Early successes and failures: Fort Henry and Fort Donelson, Island No. 10, and Middle Tennessee -- McClellan tests his engineers: the Peninsula Campaign, 1862 -- Thomas Scott, Daniel McCallum, Herman Haupt, and the birth of the United States Military Railroad -- Summer-Fall 1862: Maryland, Kentucky, and Tennessee -- Part III. Applied engineering -- Vicksburg -- Gettysburg -- Chattanooga -- The Red River and Petersburg -- Atlanta and the Carolina Campaign -- Conclusion: know-how triumphant.
▼a 김자옥
▼a 단행본
▼a 355.974
▼b Ar5e
| 자료유형 : | 단행본 |
|---|---|
| ISBN : | 9781421419374 |
| 개인저자 : | Army, Thomas F., Jr. |
| 서명/저자사항 : | Engineering victory: how technology won the Civil War/ by Thomas F. Army, Jr. |
| 발행사항 : | Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2016. |
| 형태사항 : | xiv, 369 p.: ill., maps; 24 cm. |
| 총서사항 : | Johns Hopkins studies in the history of technology |
| 서지주기 : | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
| 내용주기 : | Introduction: masters and mechanics -- Part I. The education and management gap: schooling, business, and culture in mid-nineteenth century America -- Common school reform and science education -- Mechanics' institutes and agricultural fairs: transmitting knowledge and information in antebellum America -- Building railroads: the early development of the modern management system -- Part II. Skills go to war -- Wanted: volunteer engineers -- Early successes and failures: Fort Henry and Fort Donelson, Island No. 10, and Middle Tennessee -- McClellan tests his engineers: the Peninsula Campaign, 1862 -- Thomas Scott, Daniel McCallum, Herman Haupt, and the birth of the United States Military Railroad -- Summer-Fall 1862: Maryland, Kentucky, and Tennessee -- Part III. Applied engineering -- Vicksburg -- Gettysburg -- Chattanooga -- The Red River and Petersburg -- Atlanta and the Carolina Campaign -- Conclusion: know-how triumphant. |
| 분류기호 : | 355.974 |
| 언어 | 영어 |
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