This book presents the most accurate picture of the United States Marine
Corps at the onset of the American Civil War and describes the actions
of the Marines at the Battle of First Manassas, or as the Union called
it, Bull Run. To tell the story of the actions of the U.S. Marines in
the Manassas Campaign, distinguished Marine Corps historians Bruce H.
Norton and Phillip Gibbons begin with Marine actions in October 1859 at
Harpers Ferry, where they were instrumental in suppressing John Brown's
raid on the town's Federal Armory and attempted slave insurrection. The
Marines were the only professional fighting force that could respond
immediately when the call for assistance came to retake the Armory,
which Brown's men had seized. The Marines were led by highly
professional and well-trained officers and non-commissioned officers who
represented a decades-old standard of excellence well established by the
eve of the Civil War. The book then discusses Marine actions at the
Battle of First Manassas, the Civil War's first battle, on July 21,
1861, a story that has never been adequately or accurately told. In both
engagements, the Marines proved that they were "at all times ready," as
the Corps remains to this very day.