Richard and I started playing this strategic level ACW a couple of weeks back. It reminds me of War Between the States, so much so that I thought it must be a reissue or something, but I've now decided it is different.
I have been trying to read the rules, but find I am forgetting them as soon as they have been read. The game therefore seems more complex than it really is, but I am finding it a struggle to remember all the caveats, exclusions and changes depending on time, place etc. A number of times we have had actions only to find that they couldn't have occurred for various reasons so we undid them. As a learning exercise that's okay, but it does make planning difficult.
It is also a bugger to photograph, or maybe I just haven't got my act together. I'm the Union so probably in character!
But drilling down here is the Western Theatre in detail:
Washington Bugle
8th April 1862
DC Falls to Rebels
White House Burned
Lincoln Flees!
Rebels under TJ “Stonewall” Jackson capture DC following major defeat for
the Army of the Potomac
War
for the Union News from the Front by our correspondent at the table’s edge
The morn of the battle did not
bode well for Cadet General of the Army Haughey with a portentous spill of his
morning coffee. Setting the tone for the day, an ill conceived landing in the
swampy town of Beaufort,North Carolina in the middle of Winter ended in abject
failure. The demoralized Union troops were finally picked out of the swamp by
the Union Navy following a sharp rebuff by the Confederates under Macgruder. Cadet General Haughey rued not having read the
manual on successful Sea Movement during his time at West Point, but vowed to
redouble his efforts so he can pass his final exams. Once the weather improved,
however, a Major Disaster soon followed as General George McClellan’s Army of
the Potomac suffered a major rout at the hands of the numerically smaller, but
extremely motivated and very lucky rebel army of Northern Virginia lead by
Confederate Army General JE Johnston.
Ordered by Confederate Cadet
General Ciszewski to cross the Potomac after months of inactivity, the rebel
army gambling heavily with the dice gods, engaged McClellan’s forces on the
outskirts of the capital. Following a top of the table result and a bloody
exchange with 20,000 casualties on both sides, McClellan’s nerve failed and he
split his forces with the battered Army of the Potomac retreating into
Baltimore, whilst a garrison was sent into the fortifications in DC.
Mr Lincoln and his family were
hurriedly evacuated upon hearing news of the rebel’s victory and advance on the
Capitol. Pausing briefly before departing in Carriage 1, and responding to
questions from our correspondent, Mr Lincoln offered these prescient words of
encouragement to Cadet General of the Army Haughey:
“Let no feeling of discouragement prey upon you, and in the end you are sure to succeed.”*
*Mr Lincoln has obviously read the scenario victory levels which make it very hard for the Rebels to avoid a sudden death game ending in 1862.
As Mr Lincoln’s carriage sped
out of the Capitol along Pennsylvania Avenue, Confederate General Thomas Jackson,
urging on his wearied, but exalted veterans to storm the DC defences, narrowly
avoided death with the natural 6 thrown on the CRT. The battered and
demoralized defenders of Fort Washington then routed from the city.
In exuberant scenes, rebels
were seen waving Confederate Flags in the Oval Office of the White House before
accidentally setting fire to the curtains whilst smoking the President’s
cigars. The White House has been burned for the second time in its history.
A successful assault late in
the day on the strategically important river junction of Cairo, Illinois by the
Army of the Mississippi, lead to the discovery of important rules on Naval Zones
of Influence, after Cadet General Haughey raised his hand and caught the
attention of the umpire who disallowed the assault.
In spite of year’s of board
generalship between them, both Cadet Generals Haughey and Ciszewski continue to
struggle with their studies of what are proving to be truly comprehensive, but
epic “Rules for a Civil War”. They hope the extensive case studies encountered
over the last few weeks will stand them in good stead for their final exams.
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