For the American Civil War, the inquiry is maybe more confusing than for most wars, because some usual answers have little if any importance. Religious devotion and ethnic hatred don't make a difference; control was famously inconsistent in Civil War armed forces; preparing was not possible; the tough force of the state was moderately ineffective; demotion and automatic submission to requests were unknown to this most law based and individualistic of nineteenth century social orders. Yet the Union and Confederate armed forces assembled three million men.
Common War armed forces were the most educated in history to that time. Their letters and journals were rich and moving on one of a kind source. One of a kind as in there was no restriction of the letters of Civil War troopers, no discouragement of journal keeping, as there has been in numerous different wars. Accordingly, a considerable lot of these letters, and journals were strikingly open and definite about critical matters that would not get into edited letters: assurance, relations in the middle of officers and men, points of interest of walks and fights, governmental issues and belief system and war