McCLELLAN TAKES COMMAND, ARMY OF THE POTOMAC Vol 2 Beatie CIVIL WAR (2002

$ 10.03

Topic: Civil War (1861-65) Subject: History Binding: Hardcover w/Jacket

Description

McCLELLAN TAKES COMMAND, ARMY OF THE POTOMAC Vol 2 Beatie CIVIL WAR (2002. You are considering a hardcover book, with DJ, ARMY OF THE POTOMAC: McCLELLAN TAKES COMMAND, SEPTEMBER 1861-FEBRUARY 1862, VOLUME II by Russell H. Beatie; PUBLISHER: Da Capo Press, Cambridge, MA; 2002 printing; 630 pages. Has $45.00 price on DJ flap. McClellan's First Campaign, the third volume of Russel H. Beatie's magisterial series, covers the pivotal early months of General George B. McClellan's Peninsula Campaign through the siege of Yorktown, the pursuit toward Richmond, and the battle of Williamsburg. Condition: No known damage. Packages mailed to Illinois addresses will be charged Illinois sales tax. Items paid by Paypal can only be mailed to the address shown on the Paypal payment. SHIPPING TIME I try to ship no later than the next business day after payment. Due to volume, however, I have a noon cut-off, so, if your payment is received after 12:00 noon, it will not be mailed until at least the next business day. Saturdays and Sundays are not business days. Occasionally, I am out of town on Fridays or Mondays. Packages that will be traveling by FedEx Ground or UPS may take an extra day to get shipped as I am not close to their drop-off locations. S/H For MULTIPLE PURCHASES: I will combine multiple items whenever possible and normally reduce total shipping costs. IMPORTANT!!!!!! International Shipping: Import duties, taxes, and charges are NOT INCLUDED in the item price or shipping charges. These charges are the buyer's responsibility. Please check with your country's customs office to determine what these additional costs will be prior to bidding / buying. These charges are normally collected by the delivering freight (shipping) company or when you pick the item up do not confuse them for additional shipping charges. I will not mark merchandise values below value or mark items as "gifts" as US and International government regulations prohibit such behavior.