This gripping narrative is an in-depth study of the valiant men of
General John Caldwell's Union Division during the Gettysburg Campaign.
Caldwell's Division made a desperate stand against a tough and
determined Confederate force in farmer George Rose's nearly 20-acre
Wheatfield. Ready for harvest, the infamous Wheatfield would change
hands nearly six times in the span of two hours of fighting on July 2,
becoming a trampled, bloody, no-man's land for thousands of wounded
soldiers.
Smith examines the lives of the Union soldiers in the ranks--as well as
leaders Cross, Kelly, Zook, Brooke, and Caldwell himself. From Colonel
Edward Cross's black bandana, to the famed Irish Brigade's charge on
Stoney Hill, to a lone young man from Washington County whose grave is
marked in stone nearby, James Smith's Storming the Wheatfield goes
deep into the lives the soldiers, evoking a personal connection with the
troops. Smith painstakingly contacted nearly one hundred descendants of
Caldwell's soldiers, producing one of the most extensively researched
narratives to date.