T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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25.1 | gods and demigods | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Fri Aug 09 1991 12:48 | 12 |
| The attack started late because, as in virtually every other engagement,
it took longer than anticipated to marshal the troops and get everything
sorted out.
Pickett would almost certainly have been viewed as Lee's implement if
the battle had gone to the South. You have only to look at the cheer
raised for Lee on the grounds of the Chancellor mansion 2 months before
to see that it was Lee the troops loved and revered, not his lieutenant
generals, who were in fact doing no more nor elss than he demanded of
them.
-d
|
25.2 | Ok, let me ask what I meant to ask | BROKE::LEE | Wanted: Personal Name. Call 555-3986 | Fri Aug 09 1991 16:26 | 5 |
| Hi Ben,
What I meant to ask: Why not try the flanks again? What was the tatical
situation/information that made Lee "go up the middle"? Was it stubborness on
Lee's part?
|
25.3 | Why the center? | TLE::SOULE | The elephant is wearing quiet clothes. | Fri Aug 09 1991 16:36 | 15 |
| Hibackatcha,
I really don't know. My guess is that Lee figured that Meade had shifted
forces to the two ends of the line to repel the attacks of July 2nd, and
that the center was weakened as a result.
It is true that Meade had shifted forces left and right, but he had plenty
left for the center, and some in reserve, without repositioning troops
overnight (July 2-3). The story goes that Meade met with his corps
commanders on the night of July 2nd and resolved neither to leave the
field nor to attack the next day, but to await Lee's move. As the meeting
broke up he took Hancock(?) aside and said that the Confederate attack
would fall on his troops in the center on the morrow.
Ben
|
25.4 | what ever happened to..... | MAASUP::FILER | | Fri Aug 09 1991 17:42 | 10 |
| What ever happened to the Maine unit which saved the little roundtop?
What happened to the comander of that unit Chapman??? From what
I saw in the CW TV series he was quite a leader. He was ordered
to hold and when he could nolonger hold due to lack of amunition,
rather than giving up this key position he turned his flank around
to sweep the hill before his force. This act not only held this
key position but defeated one of the better southern units in the
ANV killing or taking prisiner almoust the whole unit. (which greatly)
outnumbered his own!)
Jeff Filer
|
25.5 | 20th Maine | BROKE::LEE | Wanted: Personal Name. Call 555-3986 | Fri Aug 09 1991 18:07 | 13 |
| Jeff,
I believe you are refering to Joshua Chamberlain and the 20th Maine against
the ?? Alabama. They were were given much credit in the Civil War series.
As that is my only source for that part of the battle I won't be too
exuberent in my praise :-). To me, his actions, as described in that documentary,
showed great leadership and courage.
Anyways, Chamberlain went on to become a general, promoted on the field
at Petersburg. He was severely wounded there (I'm not sure when), but he kept
at his post, moving his men. Grant gave him the promotion. "They" thought
Chamberlain was going to die. He survived.
|
25.6 | Chamberlain of 20th Maine | TLE::SOULE | The elephant is wearing quiet clothes. | Fri Aug 09 1991 18:20 | 5 |
| Also became Governor of Maine and president of Bowdoin College (in some
order).
Ben
|
25.7 | Noted for posterity | REFINE::HAMILTON | Tom DTN 235-8053/8834 | Mon Aug 12 1991 13:38 | 10 |
| If your interested, Chamberlains leadership actions on Little Roundtop
are used as an example in a US Army Leadership manual (FM 20-100?).
As I remember, it is one of very few historical examples dealt with in
depth by the manual. According to the manual (as I remember it 5 years
latter), Chamberlain was praised for remaining cool and in control of his
unit, using an extrodinary amount of initiative, and exellent deployment -
before the charge down the hill. The successful counter attack was
iceing on the cake.
tom
|
25.8 | More on Chamberlain and the 20th Me. | OGOMTS::RICKER | With a Rebel yell, she cried, more, more, more | Tue Aug 13 1991 04:13 | 35 |
|
re.-.4 The 20th Maine with Chamberlain, as you asked what happened
to unit, served with distinction till Appomattox. Chamberlain wrote
a tear-jerking poem or sonnet about the surrendering ANV. There was
a story at Appomattox about Chamberlain saluting a certain group of
Rebels as they passed bye, with the Reb's returning the salute. I
can look it up if need be?
re.-.5 The mysterious Alabama outfit you referred to is the
15th Alabama. Up to that point, the 15th Ala. had never been defeated
upon the field of battle. They had reached the top of Big Round Top,
noticed that Little Round Top was deserted at that point in time, the
Commander was noted as saying, if he got his troops over to Little
Round Top, he would have been able hold that position against the
whole Union Army.
In the race for Little Round Top, the 20th Maine was the winner with
some other Nothern units dispatched by General Warren. General Warren
had some moments before recon'ed the mountain top, noticed the 15th
Ala. a'coming and skeddadled for help. Just in the nick of time, the
Union forces got there first, with the 20th Maine holding the outmost
flank position. The rest is so to speak, history.
One survivor of the 15th Ala. was quoted as saying, the 15th Ala. was
never defeated up till today. But they was in no hurry to meet those
men from Maine again in a hurry. After fierce hand to hand the 20th
Maine totally threw off guard and demoralized the 15th Ala. by the
bayonet charge. They were also helped in the rout by (I forget the Reg.
number?) some Vermont boys firing a volley from the flank into the
Rebs.
If ya'll want I could look up the facts a little better, and also dig
up the sonnet Chamberlain wrote at Appomattox?
The Alabama Slammer
|
25.9 | What a sight it must have been!! | OGOMTS::RICKER | With a Rebel yell, she cried, more, more, more | Thu Aug 15 1991 06:02 | 14 |
|
From an Union observer;
"More than half a mile their front extends....man touching man, rank,
pressing rank....The red flags wave, their horsemen gallop up and
down, the arms of [thirteen]thousand men, barrel and bayonet, gleam
in the sun, a sloping forest of flashing steel. Right on they move,
as with one soul, in perfect order without impediment of ditch,
or wall, or stream, over ridge and slope, through orchard and
meadow, and cornfield, magnificent, grim, irresistible."
The Alabama Slammer
|
25.10 | | RUTILE::DONNELLY | | Thu Aug 15 1991 08:24 | 10 |
|
Irresistable ?
Across a killing-ground?
Magnificent..but not the way to wage war..
(who said that originally ?)
Aidan
|
25.11 | Hazy recollection | CTHQ2::LEARY | | Tue Aug 20 1991 17:37 | 31 |
| Regarding Chamberlain of the 20th Maine.
I'm recalling from hazy memory so please corre t me if I am wrong.
At Appamattox (sp) after Lee surrendered, General Gordon of the ANV
was leading the Confederate army to stack its arms I believe. General
Chamberlain was the Union officer responsible for accepting the
surrender. AS Gordon led his Confederates past Chamberlain's troops,
there was no cheering or cat-calling from the Union side. Suddenly,
there was a distinct,universal snapping noise as the Union troops
all presented arms (or was it order arms) by Chamberlain's order as
the Confederates marched by. Startled, Gordon wheeled his horse towards
Chamberlain, bowed his head and directed his horse likewise, as he
pointed his sword down towards his boot. Gordon said that he had
tremendous respect for Chamberlain who gave the Confederates the
ultimate gesture of respect. Gordon stated it was " a measure of
salute from Americans to other Americans " I paraphrase.
Re- Gettysburg
Was not the Charge supposed to be done in concert with an attack on
the Union right flank by Ewell on Culp's Hill ? I believe Lee was
trying to draw off support from the Union center to the right with this
attack. I believe that Stuart was supposed to also harass the Union
rear as to divert some more attention from Seminary Ridge. However, I
may be all wet. ( Have to drag out my Gettysburg books ). Can anyone
corroborate ? Thanks.
MikeL
|
25.12 | | JUPITR::ZAFFINO | | Wed Aug 21 1991 01:12 | 7 |
| As far as I can tell, you're right Mike. I remember reading the same
battle plan which you just presented.
Slammer, I for one would be very interested in seeing that sonnet by
Chamberlain. Please forward it to me if you can find it.
Ziff
|
25.13 | Chamberlain's Sonnet | OGOMTS::RICKER | With a Rebel yell, she cried, more, more, more | Wed Aug 21 1991 03:13 | 14 |
|
"On they come, with the old swinging route step and swaying battle
flags. In the van, the proud Confederate ensign... Before us in proud
humiliation stood the embodiment of manhood; men whom neither toils and
sufferings, nor the fact of death... could bend from their resolve;
standing before us now, thin, worn, and famished, but erect, and with
eyes looking level into ours, waking memories that bound us together
as no other bond; was not such manhood to be welcomed back into the
Union so tested and assured?... On our part not a sound of trumpet
more, nor roll of drum; not a cheer, nor word, nor whisper or vain
glorying, nor motion of man... but an awed stillness rather, and breath
holding, as if it were the passing of the dead!
Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain
|
25.14 | Ewell's Blunder??? | OGOMTS::RICKER | With a Rebel yell, she cried, more, more, more | Wed Aug 21 1991 03:37 | 33 |
|
Re: .11
You are correct, Ewell was supposed to attack the right flank at
the same time of Pickett's charge to draw support from the Union
center. But, the previous day, an late afternoon attack by Ewell's
divisions was bogged down on the slopes of Culp's Hill. Some of the
troops were entrenched on the slopes and the following morning, the
fighting started just after dawn and the Confederates were driven
from the slopes.
The fighting that occurred that morning was not according to
Lee's plan. It effectively negated any support or the drawing of
Union reserves from the center. In all actuality it did nothing to
support Pickett's frontal assault. Thus leaving Pickett's troops so
to speak "hung out to dry"!
The cannonade that proceeded the charge was the biggest such
affair in the war so far, but, in all actuality did little or no
damage to the positions it was supposed to affect. Most of the
damage done was to rear echelon areas. As the fire was directed to
high and thus missing the front line troops, leaving them ready to
recieve the attack. With the Union artillery ceasing fire to draw the
infantry out, the Confederates attacked. The rest is history.
As far as Stuart is concerned, to little to late. He tried to
correct his mistake (or glory ride?)by attacking the Union rear. But
the action of Gen. Custer voided any support or harassment by Stuart.
Thus he lost face so to speak two times in one campaign. Not a good
day for J.E.B. Stuart.
The Alabama Slammer
|
25.15 | one for you | JUPITR::ZAFFINO | | Wed Aug 21 1991 06:17 | 8 |
| re .13
Thanks Slammer. It was nice. Kind of reminiscent of "The Conquered
Banner", or have you ever read that one? A little bit more gushy than
Chamberlain's, but very moving nonetheless. I'll send it if you'd
like to see it.
Ziff
|
25.16 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Tue Aug 27 1991 15:42 | 12 |
| Most of the reading I've done about Lee's assault on the center (I
prefer not to call it Pickett's Charge, as there two other divisions
involved also), leads me to believe that Lee simply believed that
the ANV could do ANYTHING. Prior to this day they had never failed
him! He was wrong. Longstreet actually was the Commander given the
job of ordering the assault when he felt the massive artillery
barrage had been effective. He was literally sick, as he had been
arguing against the attack since first conceived by Lee, and he
let Lee know he was strongly against it in no uncertain terms, several
times. After the attach he said something to the effect that "That old
man has killed off my army". Their relationship was never the same
again.
|
25.17 | It's Pickett's Charge because he commanded the infantry advance. | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | Sine titulo | Tue Aug 27 1991 16:01 | 29 |
| Er, uhm, as it turns out, Longstreet felt so bad about the prospects of
the charge's success that he tried his damnedest to abdicate resonsibil-
ity for ordering it. He required E.P. Alexander, the I Corps Colonel of
Artillery, to make the actual notification to Pickett that it was time
to advance. This notification was supposed to be given after Alexander
felt that the Confederate artillery barrage had sufficiently demoralized
or driven back the Federals; if, in Alexander's judgment, the advance
would not have a good probability of success, Alexander was to deliver
no message, thereby preventing the advance. Alexander demurred, arguing
that he didn't think the artillery could possibly do enough, and
Longstreet insisted.
Longstreet's action, in my opinion, amounted to dereliction of duty.
Alexander finally passed word to Pickett when the Federals stopped their
counterbattery fire as a ruse; he saw the Rhode islanders near the clump
of trees, whom Hancock had told to withdraw, as they moved to the rear,
and in his mind that three-gun retrograde motion grew into a general
retreat of the Federal artillery. The ruse having worked, he said go.
Pickett was *eager* for glory -- he wanted that attack so badly he could
taste it, as a way to prove himself.
Lee took no part in the tactical officering. His position, as he laid
it out for a Prussian observer three days after the battle, was to get
the troops into position and dispose them as best he could. Once the
battle started, it was in the hands, he said, of the Almighty.
-d
|
25.18 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Tue Aug 27 1991 16:21 | 6 |
| I remember now reading Alexander's account of the battle. As I
recall it, he actually felt he had the go-nogo decision...and he
probably did if he could have gutted it out. Kind of like being
the only one to vote against a DEC engineering phase exit...you
don't want to stand out as the bad guy. As Lee said "Too bad, Oh
Too bad".
|
25.19 | They never give up!? | OGOMTS::RICKER | With a Rebel yell, she cried, more, more, more | Tue Sep 03 1991 06:22 | 20 |
|
There is a legend that Pickett's Charge at Gettysburg was twice
enacted, the final scene contributing a fearful, if lesser, carnage
to the traditions of that great battle.
During a Blue and Gray reunion on the field, so some have it, aging
Confederates fell into ranks and walked across the broad terrain where
Pickett's men had charged on July 3rd, 1863.
The watching ancients in blue could not long remain bystanders,
and as the feeble ranks moved up the slope toward the spot where once
the angled stone wall had run, and where a clump of trees stood on
Cemetery Ridge, there were Yankee yells:
"Come on, boys! By God, they never made it then - and they'll not
do it now."
Upon which the old boys of the Grand Army of the Republic are
alleged to have run into position along the ridge, and when the
Confederate veterans hobbled up, to have sprung upon them tooth and
nail, the whole mass tangling in a fierce scrap until officials
managed to part them.
The Alabama Slammer
|
25.20 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Tue Sep 03 1991 16:09 | 4 |
| I read that somewhere too. Might have been during the big 1938
reunion. Also, Union troops watching the advance kept chanting
"Fredericksburg, Fredericksburg...." to the greybacks. Must have
sent a shiver up their spines.
|
25.21 | Gettysburg Folklore | OGOMTS::RICKER | With a Rebel yell, she cried, more, more, more | Wed Sep 04 1991 06:20 | 42 |
|
The deaths of generals in battle created a spate of folk tales,
some of them with the ring of truth, but now beyond the reach of the
historian's tests. Typical is the story of General John F. Reynolds,
USA, the gifted corps commander who fell at Gettysburg.
On the first day of fighting, Reynolds directed the attack of the
Iron Brigade which eventually drove General Archer's men from
McPherson's Woods, captured Archer and many of his troops, (but not
the 5th Alabama Batt.) and drove the force across Willoughby Run.
Just as the success of the thrust became apparent, Reynolds was felled
by a sharpshooter.
The bullet struck him in the neck, and Reynolds shouted a last
order to his men to hurry forward, then fell into the arms of an aide,
a Captain Wilcox. "Good God, Wilcox, I am killed," were his last words.
Some years after the war, when Pennsylvania was building a large
granite monument to her dead, a state official visited the quarry at
Mount Airy, North Carolina, where the work was being done. The monument
included a number of white columns, with statuary to be mounted
outside.
The Pennsylvanian instantly recognized one figure. "That's General
Reynolds," he said.
"Yes", said his Tar Heel guide, "and there's the man who killed
him." He pointed to a workman in a nearby shed.
The workman was Frank Wood, who told the visitor: "I went up to
Gettysburg with our army, and the first day we got separated from our
company - Private Cox and I. We got into a railroad cut, and then
climbed out under a rail fence. There was fighting all around."
"In front of us, a few hundred yards away, we saw a Yankee officer
on a big horse, with lots of gold braid about him. He was standing in
his stirrups and yelling to his boys: 'Give 'em hell, boys. Give 'em
grape.'"
"Cox asked if I could hit him, and I said I thought I might. I
raised the sights on my musket and fired, and knocked him off the
horse. I didn't know who he was at first. They told us afterward."
Wood had returned to the North Carolina hills after the war,
to make and sharpen tools used in working stone in the quarry.
It was in the quarry that he made the tools which fashioned the
white granite Pennsylvania monument, upon which stood the figure of
the general he had killed.
The Alabama Slammer
|
25.22 | | CRBOSS::QUIRICI | | Wed Sep 04 1991 12:50 | 15 |
| One of the things about Pickett's charge that may have dimished its
effectiveness was well-described by Union soldiers observing it:
"My Gawd, they're dressing their lines!" - or words to that effect.
In other words, at least once during the charge, the Confederates
STOPPED, under fire, and 'closed up' their ranks. Presumably the reason
for compacting their mass (and thus presenting a better target without
the gaps that had already been torn in their midst) was to hit
the union lines with a more compact and effective mass.
My own opinion is that it caused more Confederate casualities (more
time exposed to Union fire, a better target).
Ken
|
25.23 | Organization = firepower | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Wed Sep 04 1991 15:32 | 25 |
| The Confederates did stop at least once to dress their lines, just
for the reason you mentioned. Not only did it give them more
concentrated firepower, it gave them MORE firepower. The lines
had become so badly disorganized that companys were virtually out
of control. The first line of the assault was, at some points in
the attack, 10 to 12 ranks keep. Only the first two or three ranks
could shoot, which greatly diminshed their outgoing fire.
Of far greater consquence was the fact that the second wave of the
assault was more than 400 yards to the rear. The first wave broke
the Federal line and inflicted serious casualties. Had the second
wave been near enough to exploit that, we might be speaking Southern
today. (Well, *SOME* of us might be. ;-) ) The way it worked
out, by the time the second wave was within range to threaten the
Federal line, the damage had been repaired and reinforcements had
been brought forward.
The repulse of Pickett's first wave and the reorganization of the
Federal line was one of several instances at Gettysburg when the
margin of victory was, literally, a matter of seconds - the length
of time required for a man to run 200 yards. Pickett's Charge came
far closer to shattering the Army of the Potomac than most modern
sources are willing to acknowledge.
Wess
|
25.24 | | CRBOSS::QUIRICI | | Wed Sep 04 1991 16:15 | 13 |
| My reference is Shelby Foote, and I don't recollect the 400 yds thing.
I may have missed it, because the 'line-dressage' made such a powerful
impression. It also powerfully impressed the Union soldiers, being
I guess such a courageous, steady thing to do.
As far as the 400 yds, I would assume this interval was maintained from
the start of the assault, so the second wave paused while the first was
'dressing their line', etc.?
Is this interval more than was usual for such an infantry assault?
Who ordered it?
Ken
|
25.25 | interval, paces | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Wed Sep 04 1991 19:36 | 44 |
| You are right about the impression made by the Rebs' dressing their
line under fire. The Federals were shaken with awe, anyway, just
watching a line of infantry almost a half-mile across coming straight
at them. Like I said, Pickett's Charge was a very near thing; it
came within a few seconds of wrecking the AOP, and those Yanks on
the ridge were fully aware of what such a group of Confederate infantry
could do. Not only did it take unbelievably steady nerve, which
would be intimidating as hell to watch, it also showed that these
Rebs were not going to turn into a mob that could be whipped piecemeal.
The concentration of their fire left a lot of empty bunks in the
AOP that night.
The second wave started 'way too late. At one point, I think they
were closer to 600 yards behind the first wave. I'm not sure that
anyone ordered such an interval. It would have had to have been
Pickett, if anyone. I believe it was the fault of the officer who
was directing the second line, and I'm sorry, but I can't recall
who that was.
The standard interval would have been closer to 50 yards - never
more than 100 yards. A line of men moving at the standard infantry
pace - 110 steps per minute - would cover 256 feet in a minute.
That would give the defenders time to fire two or three shots, which
could be devastating. The idea was to hit them before they could
recover from the shock of the first wave. The pace could be picked
up to 165 steps per minute, but that pace, especially over a cultivated
field, is murderous. The men would have been too exhausted to fight
after more than a few minutes at that pace. (Hardee says a regiment
can move so many thousands of yards in one hour at the double quick,
but the pace should be slowed every hour to avoid fatiguing the
men! I have seen some fairly athletic young bucks staggering and
gasping after travelling 200 yards at double quick.)
For the record, there were five paces commonly used: Common time,
used only in training, was 90 steps/min., 28"/step. Quick time,
by FAR the most generally used, was 110 steps/min., 28"/step. Double
quick time was not a run, but a WALK, at 165 steps/min., 30"/step.
Under extreme circumstances, and only for short periods of time,
double quick could be stretched to 185 steps/min., [I think] 32"/step.
The final and fastest pace was the run, which had no set rate.
Personally, I would far rather run that double quick. Try it sometime,
with no load and on good, smooth ground.
Wess
|
25.26 | Question about infantry tactics | TFH::LEVINE | | Wed Sep 25 1991 13:16 | 16 |
| Pardon my ignorance of usch matters, but a question occured to me while
reading the last reply. Would 50 yards between infantry lines be
sufficient distance to ensure that cannon fire directed at the front
line wouldn't penetrate the rear line? Perhaps this consideration may
have entered the calculation of distancing the advancing lines? Or
then again, thinking back to the discussion of the inertia of the
cannonballs skipping along the ground, maybe even 600 yards wouldn't
render any surety of survival to the second line. In any case, if the
cannons could only be brought to bear on one line at a time, an astute
officer might try to judge which threat to defend against; rifle fire
(take account of position, number of defenders, training, length of
field to be crossed, etc) or cannon fire (size of battery, training,
loads being used, supply train, natural obstacles to aim, infantry
defending the arty, etc).
Any comments?
|
25.27 | RE: tactics | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Thu Sep 26 1991 09:25 | 29 |
| RE .26:
The type of defending fire would not have influenced the interval
between lines. There are two parts to answering your question:
As Wes mentioned, support troops were positioned to take advantage
of the disruption in a defending line caused by the first line. So
they had to be close enough (i.e. about 50 yards) to get into the fight
before the defenders had a chance to recover. If this was important
for musket fire at 2-3 shots per man per minute, it was doubly so when
attacking artillery firing double charges of cannister! Don't forget,
the front line is only two men deep - it won't stop some fire from
hitting the second line, but it _is_ the immediate target, so it gets
shot at the most.
Artillery fired a variety of stuff. At longer range, they would
probably try to burst shell in or above an attacking force, and they
weren't really precise enough for the first line to "protect" the
support line from getting hit. Solid shot might be used as the range
decreased (but there are cases on record of batteries firing at
attacking infantry with shell at close range, using fuses so short that
the shell exploded at the gun's muzzle), but a couple of people 50
yards in front are not much protection against a cannon ball. The real
killer for close-in artillery fire was cannister. It made a smoothbore
into a giant shotgun. Artillery were know to substitute nails, scrap
iron, pieces of railroad rail, etc.
MikeR
|
25.28 | More lielky protection against musketry | MAGES::BURR | | Thu Sep 26 1991 12:17 | 14 |
| The 50 yard interval was more likely chosen as a distance far enough to
avoid the danger zone from musketry aimed at the front unit rather than
artillery. The trajectory for the individual cannister projectiles may
well have been close enough to small arms that it would also be far enough
that cannister fired at the forward unit would mostly fail to reach the
rear unit. This would certainly not be true for solid shot fired on
relatively level ground and 50 yards is probably substantially farther than
the burst radius for ACW period explosive shells.
Also, the distance was probably an acceptable compromise between close
enough to support the front unit while maintaining enough separation to
allow the two formations to be controlled and maneuvered individually.
Rod Burr
|
25.29 | musketry more dangerous | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Thu Sep 26 1991 15:34 | 7 |
| The second wave would, indeed, take some casualties, but as .28
stated, the main concern was for musketry.
A 12 pound gun cannister was a 1 1/2" iron ball. It had a LOT of
inertia and penetration.
Wess
|
25.30 | Gettysburg magazine | DACT6::CHASE | Scott Chase, EPUBs, Landover Md | Sat Nov 02 1991 17:16 | 69 |
|
I took a week off towards the end of October and on a Monday took my
ten-speed up to Gettysburg and did the auto tour on my bike. Being a
Monday and "off" season, I practically had the place to myself.
Probably one of the better things I've done for historical recreation
all summer and fall. The feelings evoked standing by the Virginia
memorial while staring across the field to the "copse of trees" on a
breezy fall day...well, I could go on and on. At any rate, in the
visitor center they were selling a magazine, The GETTYSBURG Magazine,
Historical Articles of Lasting Interest. It comes out twice a year and
is devoted to just the Gettysburg campaign and related events. I've now
read two of the five issues I purchased and I highly recommend it.
The quality is much better than Civil War Times and the articles are
well documented; the maps are simply excellent. To give you a little
"flavor", here's the table of contents from July 1, 1991, issue number
five.
Introduction: "Gettysburg: Articles of Lasting Interest"
by Edwin C. Bearss (wasn't this guy a talking head in Ken Burns' Civil
War? I think he's a National Park historian)
"A. P. Hill's Advance to Gettysburg"
by Douglas Craig Haines
"The Death of Iverson's Brigade"
by Gerard A. Patterson
"The Deadly Embrace: The Meeting of the Twenty-fourth Regiment, Michigan
Infantry and the Twenty-sixth Regiment of North Carolina Troops at
McPherson's Woods, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, July 1, 1863"
by R. Lee Hadden
"Kershaw's Brigade at Gettysburg"
by Mac Wyckoff
"Baptism of Fire: The Ninth Massachusetts Battery at Gettysburg, July 2,
1863"
by Eric Campbell
"The First Minnesota at Gettysburg"
by Robert W. Meinhard
"Posey's Brigade at Gettysburg, Part 2"
by Terrence J. Winschel
"Pickett's Charge: The Reason Why"
by Henry J. Greenberg
"The Death and Burials of General Richard Brooke Garnett"
by Stephen Davis
"The Effects of Artillery Fire on Infantry at Gettysburg"
by Thomas L. Elmore
"Reunion at Gettysburg"
by Elizabeth Lewis
Sound good or what? The next one is due out January, 1992.
Gettysburg Magazine
260 Oak Street
Dayton, Ohio 45410
1-800-648-9710
Enjoy.
Scott
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25.31 | Bearss and the Cairo. | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Mon Nov 04 1991 11:52 | 19 |
| re: .30
Ed Bearss (pronounced "BARSS") was the chief historian for the
NPS. I've talked with him on the phone a few times and he seems
like a very decent fellow. He did a great deal of work in and
around Vicksburg. He has written books on Champion's Hill and
Wilson's Creek, that I know of. It was Bearss who found the sunken
Federal ironclad USS Cairo at the mouth of the Yazoo River. He
was literaly trolling for it with a magnet on a piece of cord!
HIs book on the Cairo, "Hardluck Ironclad" seems to be the definitive
work on the subject. If you ever have a chance, I HIGHLY recommend
the Vicksburg battlefield and the Cairo monument.
FWIW, around Vicksburg they pronounce the name of the ship the same
as the syrup: "Kay-ro."
Wess
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25.32 | The caissons go rolling... | CST23::DONNELLY | | Tue Nov 05 1991 12:26 | 15 |
|
re .30
The story of the Ninth Mass. Battery alone is worth the price of
admission. I don't recall the exact details but I believe they were
green troops told to hold back a strong rebel advance with little or no
infantry support. They beat back repeated charges by firing grape and
cannister timed to explode the instant it left the gun's barrels. They
fought hand to hand with some gunners swinging the poles they used to
tamp down the charges like they were pugil sticks. I don't think they
ever broke but finally retired in order (possibly leaving the guns?)
Crazy war.
TD
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25.33 | Stonewall at Gettysburg | JUPITR::ZAFFINO | | Wed Nov 13 1991 20:00 | 17 |
| This is probably beating a dead horse, but I figured that it should be
entered in the interest of fairness. I've already put my thoughts on
the subject somewhere in here (too lazy to find out exactly where), but
this particular quote from somebody much more qualified than any of us
seems to refute most of us.
Sometime after the war, in some discussion with somebody, Lee said in
a tone more emphatically than usual: "If I had had Jackson at
Gettysburg I should have one the battle, and a complete victory there
would have established Southern independence."
This comes from someone who knew the situation better than any of us
ever will, and came from a reflection of a few years of stable thought.
It's hard for me to change my opinion on this subject, but "Marse
Robert" does give me pause to consider...
Ziff
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25.34 | Wonder What Lee Was Thinking Of? | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Thu Nov 14 1991 12:49 | 23 |
| RE .33:
I wonder if Lee was thinking of the "responsiveness" of Jackson. At
the end of the first day, and at the start of the second day, Lee
ordered attacks which were either not made or greatly delayed by his
corps commanders. At least after The Seven Days, Jackson was the one
corps commander who Lee could count on to hit as fast and hard as
possible. The question of what was "possible", and what the result
might have been, is one where we might have better information than
Lee.
But, it wasn't "possible" for Lee to stand and fight successfully along
Antietam Creek, either - the ANV should, by all analysis and logic,
have been destroyed. It was the generals on both sides who made the
"impossible" happen, so it is hard to _know_ what Jackson might have
achieved at Gettysburg, just as it is hard to know what might have
happened if he had not been wounded that night at Chancellorsville - if
the AoP had been cut off from the fords, would Hooker have surrendered?
It's fun to discuss though! (And wargame...)
MikeR
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25.35 | Lee finally learned the hardway | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | As magnificent as that | Thu Nov 14 1991 13:53 | 18 |
| It was more than Lee's being able to count on Jackson, it was Jackson's
seemingly instinctive understanding of Lee's intent without Lee's having
to issue explicit nuts-and-bolts orders. The mis-executed orders at
Gettysburg were ambiguously worded, each and every one of them, and that
ambiguity was not understood by the commanders to whom the orders were
addressed. The "if yout hink an attack feasible" to Ewell on the first
day, for example, woudl certainly have elicited an advance from Jackson
because he would ahve understood that Lee really meant "do it, but use
your judgemnt as to how it should be done."
This premise is amply demonstrated by Lee's actions after the battle -
he wrote out the most comprehensive and detail-fiilled orders he ever
issued, all just for the withdrawal from Gettysburg. He had learned
the hard way that he must leave nothing to his lieutenants' wits but
must rather spell it out. Think also of what he said at the Seven
Days: "I cannot have my orders obeyed!"
-dick
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25.38 | More on Chamberlain... | CSCOA1::HUFFSTETLER | | Wed Feb 26 1992 17:49 | 15 |
| I heard on the radio Monday morning that "the last soldier to die of a
Civil War wound died on this date in 19***" or something like that.
Seems that it was none other than Joshua Chamberlain. He was wounded,
and later had a glass tube or something inserted into his belly to
drain it or whatever. It got infected or stopped working, so he died.
Anyway, he is attributed to be the last man who died as a result of a
wound inflicted in battle in the CW. I know it was him because the DJ
referenced the fact that he gave the order for the Union troups to
salute the CSA troups at Gettysburg, that he was later the governor of
Maine, etc.
Any corroborations?
Scott
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25.39 | He would be 125+? | CIPCS::CHASE | | Thu Feb 27 1992 12:50 | 13 |
|
Hmmm... Joshua Chamberlain? I heard it was someone that was a drummer
boy. Probably looked older than he was and snuck through the
enlistment procedure at maybe age 14 or 15. I want to say his death
occured in the late 50's, maybe early 60's. Wasn't Chamberlain about
28 when Gettysburg occured? That would make him about 125-130 years
old when he died?
It would be interesting to find out the name, rank, and age of the
last ACW veteran.
Scott
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25.40 | FYI | ODIXIE::RRODRIGUEZ | I think I know a short-cut | Thu Feb 27 1992 13:11 | 7 |
| While I don't have a current edition, I recall that the Guiness
Book of World Records has an Oldest Veteran category. An old
rebel took the prize and, you guessed it, a drummer boy who died
in 195?.
2
r
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25.41 | From wounds | XCUSME::MACINTYRE | | Thu Feb 27 1992 13:33 | 15 |
| Greetings,
My family and I visited Gettysburg the past summer. It was a
tremendous experience. It exposed my wife and son to a significant
part of America's history that they knew nothing about and it gave me
the chance to visit the terrain of a battle I had read so much about.
We took our bikes and made a day of it. Highly recommended.
.38 was refering to the last person to die as a result of wounds
received during the war. The drummer boy was probably the last person
to die that "served" in the war.
Marv
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25.42 | And the winner is! | OGOMTS::RICKER | Lest We Forget, 1861 - 1865 | Fri Feb 28 1992 01:35 | 11 |
| Re: .38
Also in a back issue of "Civil War Times Illustrated" they had
an article of the last surviving CW Veteran. It seemed there was sort
of a contest between one Northerner and one Southerner about who would
last the longest. And as I recall the Southerner won!
I'll see if I got the article at home. It might be a few days
before I can post it, I'll be in school for a few days, so I'll post
it as soon as I can.
The Alabama Slammer
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25.43 | Old Enough for a Pension? :^) | USEM::PMARTIN | | Fri Feb 28 1992 12:07 | 3 |
| I recall reading somewhere not long ago that the last CW veteran died
in 1959. I think his name was Walter Williams and he was on the gray
team.
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25.44 | Blue and Gray Ghosts | 57366::RICKER | Lest We Forget, 1861 - 1865 | Thu Mar 05 1992 02:55 | 25 |
|
Walter Williams was his name, of Houston, Texas. On May 10, 1959,
Williams was the subject of a feature in the NEWS and COURIER entitled
"The Last Rebel" and datelined Houston, Texas. He was then 116.
Williams had evidently caused a bit of controversy when at the age
of 110 in July 1953 he was examined at the Veterans' Administration
Hospital in Houston. The chief medical officer said at the time that
there had been some question about the legality of examining a former
Confederate in the VA clinic, but he explained (as reported in the
Mobile PRESS), they would put him through the tests for "humanitarian
reasons."
The former quatermaster who had served in General John B. Hood's
Texas Brigade, Company C., 5th Cavalry, lost his eyesight at 112 but
lived to be 117 years old.
He often told of the time he and a group of soldiers ambushed some
Yankees, killing about 100 of them, and always swore: "We didn't get
beat. We was starved out."
The final obituary notice of the Grand Army of the Republic was
a former drummer boy who had put on his uniform October 4, 1864, at the
age of 17 as a volunteer private with Company C of the Minnesota Heavy
Artillery Regiment, died at 109 on August 2, 1956.
The Alabama Slammer
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25.45 | Last wounded VS last served? | CSCOA1::HUFFSTETLER | | Fri Mar 13 1992 09:06 | 10 |
| RE last few...
Thanks for the info. I think they said, though, that he had the
distinction of being the last man to die as a result of being
*wounded* in battle as opposed to the last one to die who *served*
either side in battle. As for the year, I'll go to the Library at
lunch and see what I find on him...
Scott
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25.46 | How "True" is the View? | ODIXIE::RRODRIGUEZ | R-SQUARED | Tue Jun 09 1992 17:07 | 22 |
|
A high school history teacher (also my cross country coach) once
told me something about the preservation of the battlefield that sticks
in my memory. We worked out on the trails at the Kennesaw Mountain and
Cheatham Hill Battlefield Parks. He metioned that the trees had taken
over Kennesaw so that you could not get a real feel for the view that
the combatants had. The trenches had saplings in them and dissappeared
in a thicket. People are discouraged from walking on the remains of
the earthworks.
However, he said Gettysburg is maintains the trees etc. in a way that
preserves the appearance of the battle field. Although, I have never
visited Gettysburg, I am familiar with the layout because of a report
that I did many years ago that included a piece on G.G. Meade.
Are the graves on the battlefield, between the high ground, or removed
from the area entirely? The graves of the Kennesaw casualties are at
a National Cemetery in Marietta, five or six miles away from Cheatham
Hill. Probably because much of the Kennesaw Battle took place on
private farmland...
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25.47 | Gen. Wells/Vt. Cav. Reg. | SONATA::COOK | | Wed Aug 05 1992 12:50 | 8 |
| Is anyone out there familiar with a cavalry regiment from Vermont
who fought under General Wells at Gettysburg? I can think of only
two instances where cavalry were engaged; Custer vs. Stewart in the
east and a division of Buford's (?) on the first day on Seminary
Ridge. I'm tracing down some family trees.
Thanks.
Glenn
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25.48 | 1st Vermont Existed | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Thu Aug 06 1992 12:53 | 18 |
| RE .47:
Well, there was a 1st Vermont Cavalry regiment in Farnsworth's brigade
of Kilpatrick's division (Custer had Kilpatrick's other brigade). I
don't know when, or if, they were engaged at Gettysburg, though I still
have some possible sources.
The first day's action under Buford on Seminary Ridge involved Gamble's
and Devins' brigades, so the 1st Vt. wasn't there.
Was Wells a general at the time? The name doesn't register, and if he
was commanding the _regiment_, then he was almost certainly a colonel.
But he might have made general later in the war.
I'll see if I can find out any more...
MikeR
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25.49 | 1st Vermont Cavalry | STUDIO::REILLEY | Reil | Tue Aug 25 1992 01:07 | 37 |
|
re: .47
"In one of the more outstanding cases of advancemnt during the
Civil War William Wells rose from private to brevet major general.
The Vermont merchant had enlisted in the state's only mounted
regiment early in the war. His assignments included: private,
1st vermont Cavalry (September 9, 1861); first lieutenant, 1st
Vermont Cavalry (October 14, 1861); captain, 1st Vermont Cavalry
(November 19, 1861); major, 1st Vermont Cavalry (December 30, 1862);
colonel, 1st vermont Cavalry (July 2, 1864); commanding 2nd Brigade,
3rd Division, Cavalry Corps, Army of the Shenandoah (September 19 -
October 22, 1864 and November 10, 1864 - March 25, 1865); commanding
2nd Brigade, 3rd Division, Cavalry Corps, Army of the Potomac (March
25 - May 22, 1865); brigadier general, USV (May 19, 1865); commanding
the division (May 22 - June 1, 1865); commanding the corps (June 1 -
24, 1865); and commanding 1st Separate Brigade, 22nd Corps, Department
of Washington (June 22 - July 7, 1865). His company fought in the
Shenandoah and at 2nd Bull Run. After duty in the Washington area
Wells fought as a major at Gettysburg on the far southern flank of
the Union army. His regiment took part in the Bristoe and Mine Run
operations and the Kilpatrick-Dahlgren raid. In the course of the
Overland Campaign he became the regiment's colonel and, in the
Shenandoah Valley, took command of the brigade at Fisher's Hill.
In this position he fought at Cedar Creek and back near Petersburg
at Five Forks and then Appomattox. Breveted major general for his
war service, he was in temporary command of the corps after hostilities
had ended and then held a command at Washington. Mustered out on
January 15, 1866, he was state adjutant general, a tax official,
and a state senator."
from WHO WAS WHO IN THE UNION by Stewart Sifakis
I'll also check my Gettysburg sources for more info on the 1st VT Cav.
Tom
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