"The North can make a steam engine, locomotive, or railway car [...]
You are rushing into war with one of the most powerful, ingeniously
mechanical, and determined people on Earth -- right at your doors."
William Tecumseh Sherman, 1860
The military use of railways derives from their ability to move troops
or materiel rapidly and, less commonly, on their use as a platform for
military systems (like armoured trains and heavy artillery). Until
recently, the mobility of large armies generally depended on control of
railways to move reinforcements, ammunition and food, as the locomotive
and railway cars proved far superior to animal-drawn equipment.
In Rails to the Front, historians Augustus J. Veenendaal and H. Roger
Grant capture the critical impact of railways in an abundance of
conflicts worldwide, from the German revolutions in the 1840s to the
Gulf War in the 1990s. This lavishly illustrated, careful study is the
first of its kind in English.