1. Original production
of "the civil war"
Copy !req
2. was made possible by
generous contributions
Copy !req
3. from these funders.
Copy !req
4. And by the corporation for
public broadcasting and by
Copy !req
5. contributions to your PBS
station from viewers like you,
Copy !req
6. thank you.
Copy !req
7. Corporate funding for
this special 25th anniversary
Copy !req
8. presentation was provided by.
Copy !req
9. Before thousands
fell on the battlefield,
Copy !req
10. before millions were
freed and before a country
Copy !req
11. forged its identity...
A nation declared a new
Copy !req
12. birth of freedom,
rededicating itself to the
Copy !req
13. proposition that all
men are created equal.
Copy !req
14. Bank of America is proud
to sponsor "the civil war,"
Copy !req
15. a film by Ken burns,
Copy !req
16. newly restored for
it's 25th anniversary.
Copy !req
17. "I have just this moment
heard from the front.
Copy !req
18. "There is nothing yet
of a movement,
Copy !req
19. "but each side
is continually on the alert,
Copy !req
20. "expecting something to happen.
Copy !req
21. "To think we are
to have here soon
Copy !req
22. "what I've seen
so many times—
Copy !req
23. "the awful loads
and trains and boatloads
Copy !req
24. "of bloody and pale,
and wounded young men again.
Copy !req
25. "For that is what
we certainly will have.
Copy !req
26. I see all the signs here."
Copy !req
27. Walt Whitman.
Copy !req
28. Men's beliefs, uh, had
a startling simplicity to it.
Copy !req
29. Uh, for example, a soldier
in line at Gettysburg
Copy !req
30. told, "you will advance
a mile across that open valley
Copy !req
31. and take that hill."
Copy !req
32. I, for one, would say,
Copy !req
33. "general, I—I don't think
we should do this.
Copy !req
34. I don't believe
we can get there."
Copy !req
35. But they—they—they took it
in a matter of course.
Copy !req
36. Um, and you must remember
they fought for four years,
Copy !req
37. which is a long time.
Copy !req
38. And this simplicity
was severely tested,
Copy !req
39. but they never lost it.
Copy !req
40. Uh, they—they—duty, uh,
bravery under adversity—
Copy !req
41. very simple virtues,
and they had them.
Copy !req
42. In 1864, a rebellion in China
that cost 20 million lives
Copy !req
43. finally came to an end.
Copy !req
44. In 1864, the czar's armies
conquered Turkistan
Copy !req
45. and Tolstoy finished
war and peace.
Copy !req
46. In 1864, Louis Pasteur
pasteurized wine,
Copy !req
47. the Geneva convention
Copy !req
48. established the neutrality
of battlefield hospitals,
Copy !req
49. and Karl Marx
Copy !req
50. founded the international
workingmen's association
Copy !req
51. in London and New York.
Copy !req
52. Nevada became a state,
Copy !req
53. and for the first time,
Copy !req
54. the words "in god we trust"
appeared on a U.S. coin.
Copy !req
55. In 1864, the civil war
was in its fourth year.
Copy !req
56. Union ships
controlled the Mississippi.
Copy !req
57. The union blockade
was tightening.
Copy !req
58. Lee had been beaten
at Gettysburg.
Copy !req
59. Vicksburg and Chattanooga
had fallen.
Copy !req
60. As confederate hopes
began to dim,
Copy !req
61. union objectives
became clear—
Copy !req
62. attack the heart of
the confederacy at Atlanta
Copy !req
63. and destroy Lee's army
of northern Virginia.
Copy !req
64. But there was still
no real end in sight.
Copy !req
65. As Robert E. Lee
and Ulysses S. Grant
Copy !req
66. prepared to confront each other
for the first time,
Copy !req
67. neither knew
what awaited their armies
Copy !req
68. along a 100-mile Crescent
east of Richmond.
Copy !req
69. To win, one would
have to outthink
Copy !req
70. as well as outfight the other.
Copy !req
71. In 1864, for the first time
in history,
Copy !req
72. a nation would try
to hold an election
Copy !req
73. in the midst of civil war.
Copy !req
74. After 31/2 years of war,
Copy !req
75. Abraham Lincoln's prospects
for reelection
Copy !req
76. did not seem bright.
Copy !req
77. For Elisha Hunt Rhodes,
Copy !req
78. stuck in the union trenches
outside Petersburg,
Copy !req
79. the war stretched on
interminably.
Copy !req
80. To confederate Sam Watkins
at Franklin, Tennessee,
Copy !req
81. it seemed
"the death angel was there
Copy !req
82. to gather its last harvest."
Copy !req
83. That same year,
William Tecumseh Sherman,
Copy !req
84. now in command of
the union's western armies,
Copy !req
85. would set out through
the mountains of Georgia
Copy !req
86. for Atlanta.
Copy !req
87. Lieutenant Washington Roebling,
Copy !req
88. who thought he'd seen
the worst at Gettysburg,
Copy !req
89. came close to losing his faith
in the union cause.
Copy !req
90. In Washington,
a sometime poet, Walt Whitman,
Copy !req
91. worked as a nurse
in the crowded union hospitals
Copy !req
92. until they overwhelmed him.
Copy !req
93. In 1864, the pictures that
would come back from the war
Copy !req
94. would be too horrible to look at
for years to come.
Copy !req
95. "it is enough to make
the whole world start
Copy !req
96. "at the awful amount
of death and destruction
Copy !req
97. "that now stalks abroad.
Copy !req
98. "I begin to regard
the death and mangling
Copy !req
99. "of a couple of thousand men
as a small affair,
Copy !req
100. "a kind of morning dash,
Copy !req
101. "and it may be well
that we become hardened.
Copy !req
102. The worst of the war
is not yet begun."
Copy !req
103. William Tecumseh Sherman.
Copy !req
104. In early 1864, Spotswood rice,
Copy !req
105. a slave on a tobacco plantation,
Copy !req
106. escaped and made his way
to Glasgow, Missouri,
Copy !req
107. where he enlisted
in the union army.
Copy !req
108. "Benton barracks hospital,
St. Louis, Missouri.
Copy !req
109. "My children,
Copy !req
110. "a few lines to let you know
that I have not forgot you
Copy !req
111. "and that I want to see you
as bad as ever.
Copy !req
112. "I feel confident
that I will get you.
Copy !req
113. "Your miss kitty said
that I tried to steal you,
Copy !req
114. "but I let her know
that god never intended for man
Copy !req
115. "to steal
his own flesh and blood.
Copy !req
116. "I once thought that I had
some respect for them,
Copy !req
117. "but now my respect
is worn-out,
Copy !req
118. and I have no sympathy
for slave holders."
Copy !req
119. Spotswood rice.
Copy !req
120. "The Willard hotel may be
much more justly called
Copy !req
121. "the center of Washington
and the union
Copy !req
122. "than either the capitol,
the white house,
Copy !req
123. "or the state department.
Copy !req
124. Everybody may be seen there."
Copy !req
125. Nathaniel Hawthorne.
Copy !req
126. On the afternoon
of march 8, 1864,
Copy !req
127. a stubby, rumpled man
made his way
Copy !req
128. across the crowded lobby
of Willard's hotel.
Copy !req
129. A 14-year-old boy
carrying a satchel
Copy !req
130. followed in his wake.
Copy !req
131. He didn't have
his three stars on yet
Copy !req
132. because he wasn't going
to get his commission
Copy !req
133. until the next day,
Copy !req
134. but he just walked
up to the desk
Copy !req
135. and asked for a room,
Copy !req
136. and there had been
a great many generals
Copy !req
137. in and out of Willard's.
Copy !req
138. Practically all of them had been
in and out of Willard's.
Copy !req
139. The desk clerk said,
"well, I've got something
Copy !req
140. up on the top floor,
if that will do,"
Copy !req
141. and Grant said,
"that will do fine,"
Copy !req
142. and he gave him
the register to sign,
Copy !req
143. and Grant signed it.
Copy !req
144. When the clerk looked down
and saw "U.S. grant and son,
Copy !req
145. galena, Illinois,"
Copy !req
146. his eyes bugged out of his head.
Copy !req
147. Word spread quickly
Copy !req
148. that the man
Lincoln had recently placed
Copy !req
149. at the head
of all the union armies
Copy !req
150. was in the hotel,
Copy !req
151. and when he and his son entered
the crowded dining room,
Copy !req
152. everyone stood and cheered.
Copy !req
153. afterwards,
he strolled two blocks
Copy !req
154. up pennsylvania avenue
to the white house,
Copy !req
155. where president
and Mrs. Lincoln
Copy !req
156. were giving a reception.
Copy !req
157. "I wish to express
my entire satisfaction
Copy !req
158. "with what you have done
up to this time,
Copy !req
159. "so far as I can understand it.
Copy !req
160. "The particulars of your plans
Copy !req
161. I neither know
nor seek to know."
Copy !req
162. Abraham Lincoln.
Copy !req
163. Three years earlier,
Copy !req
164. Grant had been notable
only for his failures.
Copy !req
165. Now he was the conqueror
of Donelson,
Copy !req
166. Vicksburg, and Chattanooga
come to Washington
Copy !req
167. to receive the rank
of lieutenant general,
Copy !req
168. last held by George Washington.
Copy !req
169. He had command now
of 533,000 men,
Copy !req
170. the largest army in the world.
Copy !req
171. "I want to push on
as rapidly as possible
Copy !req
172. "to save hard fighting.
Copy !req
173. "These terrible battles are
very good things to read about
Copy !req
174. "for persons
who lose no friends,
Copy !req
175. "but I am decidedly in favor
Copy !req
176. "of having as little of it
as possible.
Copy !req
177. The way to avoid it
is to push forward."
Copy !req
178. Ulysses S. Grant.
Copy !req
179. Hiram Ulysses Grant was born
at point pleasant, Ohio,
Copy !req
180. on April 27, 1822.
Copy !req
181. His father Jesse ran a tannery,
Copy !req
182. and its stench was one
of his first memories.
Copy !req
183. He was sensitive
and withdrawn with people,
Copy !req
184. but wonderful with horses.
Copy !req
185. His father thought him
hopelessly impractical
Copy !req
186. and got him an appointment
to west point.
Copy !req
187. A clerk mistakenly
registered the boy
Copy !req
188. as Ulysses S. Grant
Copy !req
189. and rather than complain,
he lived with it.
Copy !req
190. His friends called him Sam.
Copy !req
191. He was graduated
in the middle of his class.
Copy !req
192. The next year he was engaged
to Julia dent,
Copy !req
193. the daughter
of a Missouri slave owner.
Copy !req
194. He adored her, and she
bore him four children.
Copy !req
195. Grant thought
the Mexican war wicked
Copy !req
196. but went anyway.
Copy !req
197. "I considered my supreme duty
was to my flag," he wrote,
Copy !req
198. and served bravely in battle,
Copy !req
199. riding alone through
a hail of enemy fire
Copy !req
200. to bring ammunition to his men.
Copy !req
201. After the war,
Copy !req
202. the army sent him to a remote
California outpost,
Copy !req
203. where, lonely and miserable
without his family,
Copy !req
204. he began to drink.
Copy !req
205. "dear Julia, I sometimes
get so anxious to see you
Copy !req
206. "and our children that
I am almost tempted to resign
Copy !req
207. "and trust to Providence
Copy !req
208. "and my own exertions
for a living.
Copy !req
209. "Whenever I get to thinking up
the subject, however,
Copy !req
210. poverty, poverty begins
to stare me in the face."
Copy !req
211. In 1854, he left
the army and returned east
Copy !req
212. to rejoin Julia
and work a piece of land
Copy !req
213. his father-in-law gave him.
Copy !req
214. He called it "hardscrabble farm"
and could not make a go of it.
Copy !req
215. He tried bill collecting,
real estate, raising potatoes,
Copy !req
216. even peddling firewood
in the street.
Copy !req
217. Nothing worked.
Copy !req
218. One year, in St. Louis,
he pawned his watch
Copy !req
219. to buy Christmas presents
for his family.
Copy !req
220. He had been reduced
to working as a clerk
Copy !req
221. in his father's harness shop
in galena, Illinois,
Copy !req
222. when the war began.
Copy !req
223. As a west point graduate,
Grant was a scarce commodity.
Copy !req
224. He reentered the army
and never looked back.
Copy !req
225. "in this season,
I saw energies in Grant.
Copy !req
226. "He dropped a stooped-shouldered
way of walking
Copy !req
227. "and set his hat
forward on his head
Copy !req
228. in a careless fashion."
Copy !req
229. John A. Rawlins.
Copy !req
230. He was promoted
to brigadier general,
Copy !req
231. won a small battle
at Belmont, Missouri,
Copy !req
232. then a big one at fort Donelson
Copy !req
233. at a time when
other northern generals
Copy !req
234. were going down to defeat.
Copy !req
235. "his soldiers do not salute him.
Copy !req
236. "They only watch him
Copy !req
237. "with a certain
sort of familiar reverence.
Copy !req
238. "They observe him coming
and, rising to their feet,
Copy !req
239. "gather on each side of the way
to see him pass.
Copy !req
240. "No napoleonic displays,
no ostentation, no speech,
Copy !req
241. no superfluous flummery."
Copy !req
242. He was distinctly unglamorous
Copy !req
243. and had only
one personal attendant,
Copy !req
244. a runaway Missouri slave
named bill.
Copy !req
245. He didn't like marching bands
Copy !req
246. and could recognize
only two tunes.
Copy !req
247. "One was Yankee doodle, "
he said,
Copy !req
248. "and the other wasn't."
Copy !req
249. He insisted that his meat
be cooked dry
Copy !req
250. because even a suggestion
of blood on his plate
Copy !req
251. made him sick.
Copy !req
252. Once, on the Eve of a battle
Copy !req
253. in which thousands
of men would die,
Copy !req
254. he had a teamster
tied to a tree for six hours
Copy !req
255. for mistreating a horse.
Copy !req
256. He was methodical, dogged,
Copy !req
257. and uncommonly clearheaded
under fire.
Copy !req
258. Grant the general
has many qualities,
Copy !req
259. but he had a... A thing
that's very necessary
Copy !req
260. for a great general.
Copy !req
261. He had what they call
4:00-in-the-morning courage.
Copy !req
262. You could wake him up
at 4:00 in the morning
Copy !req
263. and tell him that they just
turned his right flank,
Copy !req
264. and he would be
as cool as a cucumber.
Copy !req
265. He had an ability
to concentrate,
Copy !req
266. and a good example of that
Copy !req
267. is he would be working
at his desk, bent over writing,
Copy !req
268. and he would need something
across the room—
Copy !req
269. a document or something.
Copy !req
270. He would get up
Copy !req
271. and never get out
of that crouched position,
Copy !req
272. go over there and pick up
the document he'd need,
Copy !req
273. and come back to his desk
and sit down again
Copy !req
274. without ever having
straightened up.
Copy !req
275. It's an example of how
he could concentrate.
Copy !req
276. He drank bourbon,
and he got drunk easily.
Copy !req
277. A galena neighbor, John Rawlins,
was made his chief of staff
Copy !req
278. and took it upon himself
to keep Grant sober.
Copy !req
279. Grant never got drunk
when his wife was around.
Copy !req
280. There was only two conditions
Grant would drink under.
Copy !req
281. One was his wife wasn't there,
Copy !req
282. and the other was there
wasn't anything going on.
Copy !req
283. He went on a true bender
during the Vicksburg campaign,
Copy !req
284. but it was when
nothing was happening.
Copy !req
285. It was if he—
Copy !req
286. whether it was anything sexual
Copy !req
287. about his wife
being out of touch,
Copy !req
288. I'm not too sure about,
Copy !req
289. but I do know
that it was, uh, boredom
Copy !req
290. that would—
that would make him drink.
Copy !req
291. Now he traveled south
to Meade's headquarters
Copy !req
292. at Brandy station
near Culpeper, Virginia—
Copy !req
293. the largest union encampment
of the war.
Copy !req
294. "April 19. Yesterday
the 6th corps was reviewed
Copy !req
295. "by lieutenant general
U.S. Grant.
Copy !req
296. "He is a short, thickset man
Copy !req
297. "and rode his horse
like a bag of meal.
Copy !req
298. "I was a little disappointed
in the appearance,
Copy !req
299. but I liked
the look of his eye."
Copy !req
300. Elisha Hunt Rhodes.
Copy !req
301. "We all felt at
last that the boss had arrived."
Copy !req
302. While Grant
conferred with Meade,
Copy !req
303. members of his staff
described Grant's triumphs
Copy !req
304. in the west.
Copy !req
305. Veterans of the army of
the Potomac were not impressed.
Copy !req
306. "That may be," one said,
Copy !req
307. "but Grant
never met Bobby Lee."
Copy !req
308. "can anybody say
they know the general?
Copy !req
309. "I doubt it.
Copy !req
310. He looks so cold,
quiet, and grand."
Copy !req
311. "I think that Lee
should have been hanged.
Copy !req
312. "It was all the worse
that he was a good man
Copy !req
313. "and a fine character
and acted conscientiously.
Copy !req
314. "It's always the good men
who do the most harm
Copy !req
315. in the world."
Copy !req
316. Henry Adams.
Copy !req
317. Lee is, uh, one of the most
difficult people to talk about
Copy !req
318. because he's been immortalized,
Copy !req
319. or as they call him now,
some people, "the marble man."
Copy !req
320. He's been dehumanized
by the glory and the worship.
Copy !req
321. Uh, he was a warm, outgoing man,
Copy !req
322. always had time for any private
soldier's complaint.
Copy !req
323. Uh, once a northern soldier
Copy !req
324. being marched
to the rear as a prisoner
Copy !req
325. complained to Lee in person
that someone had taken his hat.
Copy !req
326. And he said, "that man got it."
Copy !req
327. And Lee made the man
give him his hat back.
Copy !req
328. The man Grant faced across the
Rapidan river in Virginia
Copy !req
329. came from a family as celebrated
Copy !req
330. as Grant's was obscure.
Copy !req
331. Robert E. Lee
was born in 1807
Copy !req
332. at Stratford in
Westmoreland county, Virginia,
Copy !req
333. and was raised by his mother.
Copy !req
334. She taught him to revere
general Washington,
Copy !req
335. a neighbor remembered,
Copy !req
336. "to practice self-denial
and self-control" in all things.
Copy !req
337. His father,
"light horse Harry" Lee,
Copy !req
338. had been a friend
and favorite lieutenant
Copy !req
339. of George Washington,
Copy !req
340. but light horse Harry also
squandered two wives' fortunes
Copy !req
341. before deserting his family
for the west indies.
Copy !req
342. At west point,
Copy !req
343. Robert E. Lee did not earn
a single demerit.
Copy !req
344. Classmates called him
"the marble model,"
Copy !req
345. but liked him in spite
of his perfection.
Copy !req
346. He was graduated second
in his class in 1829.
Copy !req
347. In 1831, he married
Copy !req
348. Martha Washington's
granddaughter, Mary Custis.
Copy !req
349. She bore him seven children
Copy !req
350. and endured his long absences
as best she could.
Copy !req
351. The mansion at Arlington
with its 250 slaves
Copy !req
352. was her home before it was his.
Copy !req
353. Appointed to the prestigious
corps of engineers,
Copy !req
354. he was three times
promoted for bravery
Copy !req
355. during the Mexican war,
Copy !req
356. where he once met
a young Ulysses s. Grant.
Copy !req
357. Superintendent of west point,
captor of John brown,
Copy !req
358. he was at the start of the war
Copy !req
359. the nation's
most promising soldier.
Copy !req
360. In 1861, Lee refused command
of the union army
Copy !req
361. and followed his state
out of the union,
Copy !req
362. not because he approved
of slavery or secession,
Copy !req
363. but because he believed
his first duty was to Virginia.
Copy !req
364. "I did only
what my duty demanded.
Copy !req
365. "I could have taken
no other course
Copy !req
366. without dishonor."
Copy !req
367. "the man who stood before
us was the realized king Arthur.
Copy !req
368. "The soul that looked
out of his eyes
Copy !req
369. "was as honest and fearless
Copy !req
370. "as when it first
looked out on life.
Copy !req
371. "One saw the character
as clear as crystal,
Copy !req
372. "without complication,
Copy !req
373. and the heart as tender
as that of ideal womanhood."
Copy !req
374. A union girl watching Lee
ride past her Pennsylvania home
Copy !req
375. said, "I wish he were ours."
Copy !req
376. Early in the war,
he was ridiculed
Copy !req
377. as "the king of spades"
Copy !req
378. because of his fondness
for entrenching
Copy !req
379. and "granny Lee" because of
his gray hair and strict ways,
Copy !req
380. but after he drove McClellan
off the peninsula,
Copy !req
381. stopped pope at second Manassas,
Copy !req
382. demolished Burnside
at Fredericksburg,
Copy !req
383. and destroyed hooker
at Chancellorsville—
Copy !req
384. all despite
overwhelming odds—
Copy !req
385. he won the unshakable confidence
of Jefferson Davis
Copy !req
386. and the unqualified love
of his officers and men.
Copy !req
387. He is a very great general,
Copy !req
388. and, uh, h-he's superb on both
the offensive and the defensive.
Copy !req
389. Uh, he took long chances,
Copy !req
390. but he took them
because he had to.
Copy !req
391. If Grant had not
had superior numbers,
Copy !req
392. he might have taken chances
as long as Lee took.
Copy !req
393. The only way to win
was with long chances,
Copy !req
394. and it made him brilliant.
Copy !req
395. No one ever called him
Bobby Lee to his face.
Copy !req
396. His men called him
"Marse Robert"
Copy !req
397. or "uncle Robert."
Copy !req
398. He had a terrible temper,
Copy !req
399. which he worked all his life
to control.
Copy !req
400. When angered,
his icy stare was unforgettable.
Copy !req
401. There was a young man
brought before him
Copy !req
402. for some infraction
of the rules,
Copy !req
403. and can you imagine being
brought before general Lee
Copy !req
404. for having broken the rules?
Copy !req
405. And the young man was trembling,
Copy !req
406. and Lee said,
"you need not be afraid.
Copy !req
407. You'll get justice here,"
Copy !req
408. and the young man said,
"I know it, general.
Copy !req
409. That's what I'm scared of."
Copy !req
410. He referred to
the union army as "those people"
Copy !req
411. rather than as "the enemy."
Copy !req
412. Now "those people"
had a new commander
Copy !req
413. whom Lee had not tested.
Copy !req
414. When Grant began
his spring campaign of '64,
Copy !req
415. he took what they called
"the heavies" —
Copy !req
416. the heavy artillerymen
out of the forts in Washington
Copy !req
417. and put them in the field.
Copy !req
418. Many had been in the army
two or three years
Copy !req
419. and never had heard
a shot fired in anger,
Copy !req
420. and as these units marched
into camp,
Copy !req
421. they were so much larger
than the combat regiments
Copy !req
422. that, uh, soldiers alongside
the road used to say,
Copy !req
423. "what division is that?"
Copy !req
424. There were so many of them,
Copy !req
425. but they had some fierce things.
Copy !req
426. The first time
they'd go into combat,
Copy !req
427. they'd have a mangled corpse—
an artillery casualty—
Copy !req
428. by the side of the road
with a blanket over him,
Copy !req
429. and as the new green regiments
came abreast of them,
Copy !req
430. they'd whisk
the blanket off and say,
Copy !req
431. "this is what's waiting
for you up ahead."
Copy !req
432. Not a—not a—
not a very pleasant story.
Copy !req
433. "to get possession of Lee's
army was the first object.
Copy !req
434. "With the capture of his army,
Copy !req
435. "Richmond would
necessarily follow.
Copy !req
436. "It was better to fight him
outside his stronghold
Copy !req
437. than in it."
Copy !req
438. Ulysses S. Grant.
Copy !req
439. "This advance by general Grant
Copy !req
440. "inaugurated the seventh act
in the on to Richmond drama
Copy !req
441. played by the armies
of the union."
Copy !req
442. General John B. Gordon.
Copy !req
443. "That man Grant will fight
us every day and every hour
Copy !req
444. till the end of the war."
Copy !req
445. General James Longstreet.
Copy !req
446. Grant's plan called
for four simultaneous blows.
Copy !req
447. William Tecumseh Sherman
had orders
Copy !req
448. to strike out from Chattanooga
for Atlanta.
Copy !req
449. Franz Sigel would advance
up the Shenandoah valley.
Copy !req
450. Benjamin Butler
was to lead an army
Copy !req
451. up from the James river,
Copy !req
452. and George Gordon Meade was
to lead the army of the Potomac,
Copy !req
453. 110,000 strong,
Copy !req
454. south against Lee.
Copy !req
455. "Wherever Lee goes,
you will go also,"
Copy !req
456. Grant told Meade,
Copy !req
457. and Grant would come along, too.
Copy !req
458. Lee's strategy was unchanged—
Copy !req
459. destroy the union resolve
to wage war.
Copy !req
460. He would refuse to fight Grant
in the open,
Copy !req
461. force him to attack
fortified confederate positions,
Copy !req
462. and thereby offset
Grant's superior numbers.
Copy !req
463. The bloody cost
Copy !req
464. of trying to force the south
back into the union at gunpoint
Copy !req
465. would bolster antiwar sentiment
in the north.
Copy !req
466. "if we can break up
the enemy's arrangements early
Copy !req
467. "and throw him back,
Copy !req
468. "he will not be able to recover
his position or his morale
Copy !req
469. "until the presidential
election is over,
Copy !req
470. and then we shall have a new
president to treat with."
Copy !req
471. General James Longstreet.
Copy !req
472. "April 1, 1864.
Copy !req
473. "The president came down
to Culpeper to review the army.
Copy !req
474. "The president was mounted
on a fractious horse.
Copy !req
475. "Soon after the march began,
his tall hat fell off.
Copy !req
476. "His pantaloons
slipped up to the knees,
Copy !req
477. "showing his white
homemade drawers,
Copy !req
478. "which presently
slipped up also,
Copy !req
479. "revealing a long, hairy leg.
Copy !req
480. "While we were inclined
to smile,
Copy !req
481. "we were, uh, very much chagrined
to see our poor president
Copy !req
482. compelled to endure
such... Torture."
Copy !req
483. Washington Roebling.
Copy !req
484. "On the morning of may 4, 1864,
Copy !req
485. "we, with the entire
grand army of the Potomac,
Copy !req
486. "were in motion
toward the Rapidan.
Copy !req
487. "The dawn was clear,
warm, and beautiful.
Copy !req
488. "As the almost countless
encampments were broken up,
Copy !req
489. "with bands in all directions
playing lively airs,
Copy !req
490. "banners waving,
Copy !req
491. "regiments, brigades,
and divisions falling into line.
Copy !req
492. "The scene, even to eyes
long familiar
Copy !req
493. "with military displays,
Copy !req
494. was one of unusual grandeur."
Copy !req
495. Chaplain A.M. Stewart.
Copy !req
496. Lee's 60,000 men
were waiting for Grant
Copy !req
497. in the tangled thicket
known as the wilderness,
Copy !req
498. in which they had trapped
the same army
Copy !req
499. under Joseph hooker
only a year before.
Copy !req
500. "covered by a dense forest
Copy !req
501. "almost impenetrable by troops
in line of battle,
Copy !req
502. "the undergrowth was so heavy
Copy !req
503. "that it was scarcely possible
to see more than 100 yards
Copy !req
504. "in any direction.
Copy !req
505. "The movements of the enemy
could not be observed
Copy !req
506. until the lines
were almost in collision."
Copy !req
507. Advance units of the union army
Copy !req
508. camped for the night on the old
Chancellorsville battlefield,
Copy !req
509. where winter rains had
washed open the shallow graves.
Copy !req
510. "in glades
they meet skull after skull
Copy !req
511. "where pine cones lay—
Copy !req
512. "the rusted gun,
green shoes full of bones,
Copy !req
513. "the moldering coat
and cuddled-up skeleton.
Copy !req
514. "And scores of such.
Copy !req
515. "Some start as in dreams,
Copy !req
516. "and comrades lost bemoan.
Copy !req
517. "By the edge of these wilds,
stonewall had charged,
Copy !req
518. but the year and the man
were gone."
Copy !req
519. "It grew dark,
and we built a fire.
Copy !req
520. "The dead were all around us.
Copy !req
521. "Their eyeless skulls
seemed to stare steadily at us.
Copy !req
522. The trees swayed and sighed
gently in the soft wind."
Copy !req
523. Private Frank Wilkeson.
Copy !req
524. The battle of
the wilderness began in chaos.
Copy !req
525. Units got lost,
fired on their own comrades.
Copy !req
526. Officers tried to navigate
by compass.
Copy !req
527. But on the second day,
Copy !req
528. union forces drove through
the confederate center.
Copy !req
529. As a worried Lee watched,
Copy !req
530. general John Gregg's texans
hurried to plug up the hole.
Copy !req
531. "scarce had we moved a step
Copy !req
532. "when general Lee,
in front of the whole command,
Copy !req
533. "raised himself in his stirrups,
uncovered his gray hairs,
Copy !req
534. "and with an earnest voice
exclaimed,
Copy !req
535. texans always move them."
Copy !req
536. "Never before in my lifetime
did I ever see such a scene
Copy !req
537. "as was enacted
when Lee pronounced these words.
Copy !req
538. "A yell rent the air
Copy !req
539. "that must have been heard
for miles around.
Copy !req
540. "A courier riding by my side,
Copy !req
541. "with tears coursing
down his cheeks, exclaimed,
Copy !req
542. I would charge hell itself
for that old man."
Copy !req
543. The texans held the position
until reinforcements came.
Copy !req
544. By the end of the day,
Copy !req
545. the confederates had smashed
Grant's right,
Copy !req
546. seized two generals
and 600 prisoners,
Copy !req
547. and come close to cutting
the union supply line.
Copy !req
548. Grant received these reports
without comment.
Copy !req
549. Right in the middle
of the battle of the wilderness,
Copy !req
550. all staff men
who had been fighting
Copy !req
551. in the east all this time—
Copy !req
552. and he had just come
from the west—
Copy !req
553. kept talking about
Bobby Lee, Bobby Lee.
Copy !req
554. He will do this
and do that other,
Copy !req
555. and Grant finally told them,
Copy !req
556. "I'm tired of hearing
about Bobby Lee.
Copy !req
557. "You'd think he was going
to do a double somersault
Copy !req
558. "and land in our rear.
Copy !req
559. "Quit thinking about
what he's going to do to you
Copy !req
560. "and think about what
you're going to do to him.
Copy !req
561. Bring some guns up here."
Copy !req
562. Things like that.
Copy !req
563. Grant's, uh—he's wonderful.
Copy !req
564. The wilderness is probably not
the bloodiest battle in the war,
Copy !req
565. but the most terrible battle
in the war in many ways.
Copy !req
566. Grant in two days loses more men
Copy !req
567. than hooker did—did
at Chancellorsville.
Copy !req
568. But in the wilderness,
Copy !req
569. the leaves from the previous
year cover the ground,
Copy !req
570. and using the type of weapon
they used in the civil war,
Copy !req
571. you have lots of lint
and linen smoldering,
Copy !req
572. falling into the leaves,
Copy !req
573. and it will set
these leaves afire,
Copy !req
574. and men who've been shot badly
through the bowels,
Copy !req
575. with broken legs,
Copy !req
576. will not be able to move
Copy !req
577. as the fire starts burning
toward them,
Copy !req
578. and large numbers of wounded men
will perish in the flames.
Copy !req
579. Grant's first move
had been a disaster.
Copy !req
580. The wilderness had cost
17,000 men.
Copy !req
581. That night, brush fires
raged through the woods.
Copy !req
582. 200 wounded federal soldiers
burned alive
Copy !req
583. while the entrenched armies
listened to their screams.
Copy !req
584. "I am holding my breath in awe
at the vastness of the shadow
Copy !req
585. "that floats like a pall
over our heads.
Copy !req
586. "It is come that man has no
longer an individual existence,
Copy !req
587. but is counted in thousands
and measured in miles."
Copy !req
588. Clara Barton.
Copy !req
589. In the wilderness,
Copy !req
590. surgeons amputated limbs without
letup for more than 100 hours
Copy !req
591. and sent back behind the lines
2,000 wounded men each day.
Copy !req
592. "as a wounded man
was lifted on the table,
Copy !req
593. "often shrieking with pain
as the attendants handled him,
Copy !req
594. "the surgeon quickly
examined the wound
Copy !req
595. "and resolved upon
cutting off the wounded limb.
Copy !req
596. "Some ether was administered.
Copy !req
597. "The surgeon snatched his knife
from between his teeth,
Copy !req
598. "wiped it rapidly once or twice
Copy !req
599. "across his bloodstained apron,
Copy !req
600. "and the cutting began.
Copy !req
601. "The operation accomplished,
Copy !req
602. "the surgeon would look around
with a deep sigh
Copy !req
603. "and then...
Copy !req
604. Next."
Copy !req
605. Carl Schurz.
Copy !req
606. "The wilderness
was a useless battle
Copy !req
607. fought with great loss
and no result."
Copy !req
608. Washington Roebling.
Copy !req
609. Grant, in the wilderness—
Copy !req
610. after that first night
in the wilderness—
Copy !req
611. went to his tent,
broke down, and cried very hard.
Copy !req
612. Uh, some
of the staff members said
Copy !req
613. they'd never seen a man
so unstrung,
Copy !req
614. but he didn't cry
until the battle was over,
Copy !req
615. and he wasn't crying
when it began again next day.
Copy !req
616. What was different about Grant
Copy !req
617. became clear the next morning
Copy !req
618. when he gave the order to march.
Copy !req
619. For the first time
after a defeat,
Copy !req
620. the army of the Potomac
was moving forward.
Copy !req
621. "may 7.
Copy !req
622. "If we were under
any other general except Grant,
Copy !req
623. "I should expect a retreat,
Copy !req
624. but Grant is not
that kind of soldier."
Copy !req
625. Elisha Hunt Rhodes.
Copy !req
626. "our spirits Rose,"
one union man remembered.
Copy !req
627. "We marched free.
The men began to sing."
Copy !req
628. "Ulysses," another soldier said,
"don't scare worth a damn."
Copy !req
629. "general Grant
is not going to retreat.
Copy !req
630. "He will move his army
to Spotsylvania.
Copy !req
631. "I'm so sure of his next move
Copy !req
632. that I have already made
arrangements."
Copy !req
633. He knew what Grant
was going to do
Copy !req
634. because he could
make himself Grant
Copy !req
635. for long enough to figure out
Copy !req
636. what Grant would do
in a situation.
Copy !req
637. When, uh, they fired, let's see,
five or six generals
Copy !req
638. before they got to Grant,
Copy !req
639. and by the time
they let McClellan go,
Copy !req
640. Lee said, "I'm afraid they're
gonna keep making these changes
Copy !req
641. until they get someone
I don't understand."
Copy !req
642. Uh, they never got anyone
he didn't understand,
Copy !req
643. but, uh, they finally got Grant,
Copy !req
644. who knew how to whip him
and did.
Copy !req
645. In the first years of the war,
Copy !req
646. battle was bloody but sporadic.
Copy !req
647. From now on, it would be waged
without a break.
Copy !req
648. From the wilderness
to cold harbor,
Copy !req
649. it would not stop for 30 days.
Copy !req
650. It was, one soldier wrote,
Copy !req
651. "living night and day
Copy !req
652. within the valley
of the shadow of death."
Copy !req
653. Our father, who art in heaven...
Copy !req
654. "may 8.
Copy !req
655. "The dreadful work
is beginning again.
Copy !req
656. "John I. Miller,
my cousin,
Copy !req
657. "killed at the head
of his regiment.
Copy !req
658. "The blows now fall so fast
on our heads,
Copy !req
659. it is bewildering."
Copy !req
660. Mary Chesnut.
Copy !req
661. But deliver us from evil.
Copy !req
662. At Spotsylvania,
Copy !req
663. the two armies mauled each other
for days without gaining ground.
Copy !req
664. It was the most
relentless exchange of fire
Copy !req
665. in the history of warfare
up to that time.
Copy !req
666. Some men were hit
by so many bullets
Copy !req
667. that their bodies fell apart.
Copy !req
668. A union veteran remembered it
Copy !req
669. simply as "the most terrible day
I have ever lived."
Copy !req
670. "the enemy's dead
were piled upon each other
Copy !req
671. "in front
of the captured breastworks,
Copy !req
672. "in some places
four layers deep.
Copy !req
673. "Below the mass
of fast-decaying corpses,
Copy !req
674. "the convulsive twitching
of limbs showed
Copy !req
675. "that there were wounded men
still alive.
Copy !req
676. The place was well named
the bloody angle."
Copy !req
677. The two armies lost
another 20,000 men.
Copy !req
678. "may 12th,
yellow tavern, Virginia.
Copy !req
679. General Jeb Stuart killed."
Copy !req
680. When Lee got the news, he said,
Copy !req
681. "I can scarcely think of him
without weeping."
Copy !req
682. Again and again,
Lee anticipated Grant,
Copy !req
683. and again and again, the union
commander skirted south and east
Copy !req
684. in a semicircle,
Copy !req
685. the two armies locked in
a brutal, clumsy stranglehold
Copy !req
686. as the battle lines lurched
toward Richmond.
Copy !req
687. "we must destroy
this army of Grant's
Copy !req
688. "before he gets to the James.
Copy !req
689. "If he gets there,
it will become a siege,
Copy !req
690. and then it will be
a mere question of time."
Copy !req
691. "May 11th.
Copy !req
692. "We have now ended the sixth day
of very heavy fighting,
Copy !req
693. "and the result up to this time
is much in our favor.
Copy !req
694. "I propose to fight it out
on this line,
Copy !req
695. if it takes all summer."
Copy !req
696. Grant continued
his stubborn flanking maneuvers
Copy !req
697. in an attempt
to get around Lee's right
Copy !req
698. and move on Richmond.
Copy !req
699. He did it with
superior numbers and doggedness,
Copy !req
700. kept going,
move by the left flank,
Copy !req
701. move by the left flank,
move by the left flank,
Copy !req
702. and Lee's backing up
the whole time,
Copy !req
703. losing men
that he couldn't replace.
Copy !req
704. "may 15, 1864.
Copy !req
705. "Dear Emily,
the papers must have told you
Copy !req
706. "that we have been
fighting a little.
Copy !req
707. "Our corps has only 12,000 left
out of 27,000.
Copy !req
708. "Uncle Robert E. Lee
isn't licked yet by a long shot,
Copy !req
709. "and if we are not mighty
careful, he'll beat us.
Copy !req
710. "I think we have done very well
to avoid that fate so far.
Copy !req
711. "Tomorrow we have
another battle.
Copy !req
712. I don't think
it will amount to much."
Copy !req
713. Washington Roebling.
Copy !req
714. Grant and Lee now raced for a
crossroads called cold harbor
Copy !req
715. near the Chickahominy river.
Copy !req
716. Again, Lee got there first
and ordered his men to dig in
Copy !req
717. and prepare for the all-out
assault he knew would follow.
Copy !req
718. As they settled down
for the night on June 2nd,
Copy !req
719. veterans on the union side
sensed what was coming.
Copy !req
720. "the men were calmly writing
their names and home addresses
Copy !req
721. "on slips of paper
Copy !req
722. "and pinning them
to the backs of their coats
Copy !req
723. "so that their bodies
might be recognized
Copy !req
724. and their fate made known
to their families at home."
Copy !req
725. General Horace Porter.
Copy !req
726. When the bugles blew
for the attack at 4:30 A.M.,
Copy !req
727. 60,000 union men started
toward the unseen enemy.
Copy !req
728. The battle of cold harbor
had begun.
Copy !req
729. "I had seen the dreadful
carnage in front of Marye's hill
Copy !req
730. "at Fredericksburg,
Copy !req
731. "but I had seen nothing
to exceed this.
Copy !req
732. It was not war.
It was murder."
Copy !req
733. Those were men who
knew how to take a position
Copy !req
734. where you could do
the most killing from.
Copy !req
735. When that whole army
was lined up,
Copy !req
736. they're waiting and hoping
Copy !req
737. and praying something
would come at them,
Copy !req
738. and Grant threw three corps
at them,
Copy !req
739. and in approximately 7 minutes,
they shot about 7,000 men down.
Copy !req
740. It was a bloody mess.
Copy !req
741. It's the only thing Grant ever
admitted that he'd done wrong.
Copy !req
742. "I've always regretted
Copy !req
743. "that the last assault
at cold harbor was ever made.
Copy !req
744. "No advantage whatever
was gained
Copy !req
745. to compensate for
the heavy loss we sustained."
Copy !req
746. When another assault
was suggested,
Copy !req
747. union officers
rejected the idea outright.
Copy !req
748. "I will not take my regiment
in another such charge,"
Copy !req
749. said a New Hampshire captain,
Copy !req
750. "if Jesus Christ himself
should order it."
Copy !req
751. After the battle,
Copy !req
752. the diary of a young
Massachusetts volunteer
Copy !req
753. was found spattered with blood.
Copy !req
754. Its last entry read,
Copy !req
755. "June 3, 1864,
cold harbor, Virginia.
Copy !req
756. I was killed."
Copy !req
757. "our matters here
are at a deadlock.
Copy !req
758. "Unless the rebs
commit some great error,
Copy !req
759. "they will hold us in check
until kingdom come.
Copy !req
760. "We are thoroughly tired
and disgusted.
Copy !req
761. "These two armies remind me
very much of two schoolboys
Copy !req
762. "trying to stare each other
out of countenance.
Copy !req
763. "Everyone knows that if Lee were
to come out of his trenchments,
Copy !req
764. "we could whip him,
Copy !req
765. but Bob Lee is a little
too smart for us."
Copy !req
766. Washington Roebling.
Copy !req
767. From the wilderness to
cold harbor, in a single month,
Copy !req
768. the army of the Potomac
had lost 50,000 men,
Copy !req
769. half as many as it had lost
in three years of struggle.
Copy !req
770. "June 5, 1864.
Copy !req
771. "Our people lost
very severely yesterday.
Copy !req
772. "In every calculation
that we make,
Copy !req
773. "we make ourselves out
to be 20,000 men stronger,
Copy !req
774. "yet in every fight, they show
as many men as we have,
Copy !req
775. "and they always show
as long a line as we do
Copy !req
776. "no matter how long
we make ours.
Copy !req
777. "June 7, 1864.
Copy !req
778. "Another one of
my best friends in the army
Copy !req
779. "has been killed.
Copy !req
780. One goes after the other
with perfect regularity."
Copy !req
781. "Grant doesn't care a snap if
men fall like the leaves fall.
Copy !req
782. "He fights to win,
that chap does.
Copy !req
783. "He has the disagreeable habit
Copy !req
784. of not retreating
before irresistible veterans."
Copy !req
785. Mary Chesnut.
Copy !req
786. "he keeps his own counsel,
padlocks his mouth,
Copy !req
787. "while his countenance
indicates nothing—
Copy !req
788. "that is, gives no expression
of his feelings
Copy !req
789. "and no evidence
of his intentions.
Copy !req
790. "He smokes almost constantly
Copy !req
791. "and has a habit of whittling
with a small knife,
Copy !req
792. "cutting a small stick
into small chips,
Copy !req
793. making nothing."
Copy !req
794. "Grant is a butcher
Copy !req
795. "and not fit
to be at the head of an army.
Copy !req
796. "He loses two men
to the enemy's one.
Copy !req
797. "He has no management,
no regard for life.
Copy !req
798. I could fight an army
as well myself."
Copy !req
799. Mary Lincoln.
Copy !req
800. When several of Lee's officers
denounced Grant as a butcher,
Copy !req
801. Lee quieted them.
Copy !req
802. "I think Grant has managed
his affairs remarkably well
Copy !req
803. up to the present time,"
he said.
Copy !req
804. Grant kept moving.
Copy !req
805. He slipped his army
Copy !req
806. out of his trenches,
Copy !req
807. crossed the Chickahominy,
Copy !req
808. feinted toward Richmond,
Copy !req
809. then shifted left again
Copy !req
810. to the James river.
Copy !req
811. His target now was Petersburg—
Copy !req
812. south of
the confederate capital—
Copy !req
813. where he hoped to cut off
Lee's supplies
Copy !req
814. and destroy the army
of northern Virginia.
Copy !req
815. For the first time, Lee
misjudged Grant's intentions,
Copy !req
816. rushing much of his army
to the outskirts of Richmond
Copy !req
817. to meet an attack
Grant did not plan to make.
Copy !req
818. Instead, union engineers
laid a pontoon bridge
Copy !req
819. all the way across the James
in just eight hours.
Copy !req
820. On June 12th,
Copy !req
821. the massive army of the Potomac
began to cross.
Copy !req
822. It took four days.
Copy !req
823. "general Grant,
I begin to see it.
Copy !req
824. "You will succeed.
Copy !req
825. "God bless you.
Copy !req
826. A. Lincoln."
Copy !req
827. 16,000 union troops
under general William Smith
Copy !req
828. were the first
to reach Petersburg.
Copy !req
829. The city was defended
Copy !req
830. by fewer than 3,000 confederates
under general Beauregard.
Copy !req
831. Smith moved slowly
to the attack.
Copy !req
832. Reinforcements intended
to aid him got lost on the way.
Copy !req
833. Still, his late-afternoon
assault made progress.
Copy !req
834. When night fell,
Copy !req
835. Petersburg seemed
within the union's grasp.
Copy !req
836. General Winfield Scott Hancock
urged a moonlight assault,
Copy !req
837. but Smith begged off,
Copy !req
838. remembering cold harbor.
Copy !req
839. During the night,
Copy !req
840. confederate reinforcements
were brought up.
Copy !req
841. The opportunity was gone.
Copy !req
842. "the rage of the enlisted
men was devilish.
Copy !req
843. "The most bloodcurdling
blasphemy I ever listened to
Copy !req
844. I heard that night."
Copy !req
845. In just six weeks,
Copy !req
846. Grant and Lee had
all but crippled each other,
Copy !req
847. and now both armies dug in
for a siege.
Copy !req
848. The burrowing would go on
for 10 months.
Copy !req
849. The men lived in a 20-mile
labyrinth of trenches,
Copy !req
850. plagued by flies,
Copy !req
851. open to rain
and the fierce Virginia sun,
Copy !req
852. and exposed to shell
and mortar fire.
Copy !req
853. "nothing for excitement
Copy !req
854. "except that a few were
picked off by sharpshooters.
Copy !req
855. "A feeling prevails
that sooner or later,
Copy !req
856. this experience
will befall us all."
Copy !req
857. Private John W. Haley.
Copy !req
858. Fire!
Copy !req
859. Colonel
Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain,
Copy !req
860. one of the heroes of Gettysburg,
Copy !req
861. led his regiment
in an assault on Petersburg.
Copy !req
862. As he turned to rally his men,
Copy !req
863. a bullet smashed
through his pelvis,
Copy !req
864. severed arteries,
nicked his bladder.
Copy !req
865. He stayed on his feet,
Copy !req
866. leaning on his sword
with one hand
Copy !req
867. and waving his men on
with the other
Copy !req
868. until they had
all passed him by.
Copy !req
869. Then he sank to the ground.
Copy !req
870. Doctors did not expect him
to live.
Copy !req
871. In tribute to his courage,
Copy !req
872. Grant promoted him on the field
to brigadier general.
Copy !req
873. Chamberlain's obituary appeared
in the newspapers the next day.
Copy !req
874. Petersburg is
a magnificent salute
Copy !req
875. to the durability of men
on both sides.
Copy !req
876. Uh, it was just—
it was a rehearsal
Copy !req
877. for world war I trench warfare,
Copy !req
878. and they stood up
very well to it,
Copy !req
879. but the soldiers always did
in that war.
Copy !req
880. They were—it's, to us,
an almost incredible bravery,
Copy !req
881. considering the casualties.
Copy !req
882. "June 23, 1864.
Copy !req
883. "The demand down here
for killing purposes
Copy !req
884. "is far ahead of the supply.
Copy !req
885. "Thank god, however,
for the consolation
Copy !req
886. "that when the last man is
killed, the war will be over.
Copy !req
887. "This war, you know, differs
from all previous wars
Copy !req
888. "in having no object
to fight for.
Copy !req
889. "It can't be finished
Copy !req
890. "until all the men
on either the one side
Copy !req
891. "or the other are killed.
Copy !req
892. "Both sides are trying
to do that as fast as they can
Copy !req
893. "because it would be a pity
to spin this affair out
Copy !req
894. for two or three years
longer."
Copy !req
895. Washington Roebling.
Copy !req
896. "dear Henry,
Copy !req
897. "I feel more lonely and sad
than I have been in some time.
Copy !req
898. "Oh, that I knew
Copy !req
899. what the termination of this
awful conflict would be."
Copy !req
900. "Henry, I want to see you,
but don't you come.
Copy !req
901. "Join for the war
if 'tis 40 years.
Copy !req
902. "If you get killed,
'tis the most honorable death.
Copy !req
903. "If you escape, I will rejoice.
Copy !req
904. I love thee still."
Copy !req
905. Mollie Vanderberg.
Copy !req
906. "our bleeding, bankrupt,
almost dying country
Copy !req
907. "longs for peace,
Copy !req
908. "shudders at the prospect of
further wholesale devastation,
Copy !req
909. of new rivers
of human blood."
Copy !req
910. Horace Greeley.
Copy !req
911. "At night, my ward became
Copy !req
912. "like the dim caverns
of the catacombs,
Copy !req
913. "where, instead of the dead
in their final rest,
Copy !req
914. "there were wasted figures
burning with fever
Copy !req
915. "and raving from the agony
of splintered bones,
Copy !req
916. "tossing restlessly
from side to side
Copy !req
917. "with every ill, it seemed,
which human flesh was heir to.
Copy !req
918. "From the rafters,
Copy !req
919. "the flickering oil lamp
swung mournfully,
Copy !req
920. casting a ghastly light."
Copy !req
921. Private Alexander hunter,
17th Virginia.
Copy !req
922. When the war began,
Copy !req
923. there were only a handful
of army hospitals in the north.
Copy !req
924. When it ended,
Copy !req
925. the union was running
more than 350,
Copy !req
926. the confederacy, 154.
Copy !req
927. There were 16 hospitals
in Washington alone.
Copy !req
928. When these proved insufficient,
Copy !req
929. men were cared for
in the patent office,
Copy !req
930. even in the house
and senate chambers.
Copy !req
931. Hospitals were
giant warehouses for the dying.
Copy !req
932. The biggest and best,
north or south,
Copy !req
933. was Chimborazo at Richmond,
Copy !req
934. with 8,000 beds,
Copy !req
935. five soup kitchens,
icehouses, dairy cattle,
Copy !req
936. a herd of goats,
Copy !req
937. a bakery that turned out
10,000 loaves of bread a day,
Copy !req
938. and a 400-keg brewery.
Copy !req
939. "arous'd and angry,
Copy !req
940. "I'd thought to beat the alarum,
Copy !req
941. "and urge relentless war.
Copy !req
942. "But soon my fingers fail'd me,
Copy !req
943. "my face droop'd
and I resign'd myself
Copy !req
944. "to sit by the wounded
and soothe them,
Copy !req
945. or silently
watch the dead."
Copy !req
946. Walt Whitman.
Copy !req
947. Walt Whitman was
too old for the ranks,
Copy !req
948. not qualified to be an officer,
Copy !req
949. not enthusiastic about
"firing a gun
Copy !req
950. or drawing a sword
on another man,"
Copy !req
951. but when his younger brother
was wounded at Antietam,
Copy !req
952. and Whitman went to find him
in the hospital,
Copy !req
953. he was appalled by what he saw.
Copy !req
954. He moved to Washington
to help with the wounded,
Copy !req
955. giving out small gifts,
changing dressings,
Copy !req
956. and reciting his poetry.
Copy !req
957. "the doctors tell me
Copy !req
958. "I supply the patients
with a medicine
Copy !req
959. "which all their drugs
and bottles and powders
Copy !req
960. "are helpless to yield.
Copy !req
961. "It has saved
more than one life,
Copy !req
962. "so I go around.
Copy !req
963. Some of my boys die.
Some get well."
Copy !req
964. "no woman under 30 years
need apply to serve
Copy !req
965. "in government hospitals.
Copy !req
966. "All nurses are required
to be very plain-looking women.
Copy !req
967. "Their dresses must be
brown or black,
Copy !req
968. "with no bows,
no curls, no jewelry,
Copy !req
969. and no hoop skirts."
Copy !req
970. Dorothea Dix.
Copy !req
971. Early in the war,
Copy !req
972. Dorothea Dix volunteered
her services to the union.
Copy !req
973. The 59-year-old crusader
for the mentally ill
Copy !req
974. was put in charge
of all women nurses
Copy !req
975. employed by the armies.
Copy !req
976. Tireless, and so autocratic
Copy !req
977. one woman called her
"dragon Dix,"
Copy !req
978. she barred any applicant
she thought interested
Copy !req
979. in romantic adventure.
Copy !req
980. Even nuns were sometimes
turned down.
Copy !req
981. By the end of the war, though,
Copy !req
982. the only question
she asked potential recruits
Copy !req
983. was "when can you start?"
Copy !req
984. Under her strict guidance,
Copy !req
985. care for the sick and wounded
was vastly improved.
Copy !req
986. Despite the bitter criticism
and petty rivalry
Copy !req
987. of male colleagues,
Copy !req
988. she stayed at her post
for all four years—
Copy !req
989. the entire war—
without pay.
Copy !req
990. "army square hospital.
Copy !req
991. "I am learning
not to let myself feel
Copy !req
992. "as much as I did at first,
Copy !req
993. yet I never can
get used to it."
Copy !req
994. Harriet Foote Hawley.
Copy !req
995. "they would see that
the doctor gave them up
Copy !req
996. "and would ask me about it.
Copy !req
997. "I would tell them the truth.
Copy !req
998. "I told one man that,
and he asked, how long?
Copy !req
999. "I said, not over 20 minutes.
Copy !req
1000. "He did not show any fear.
They never do.
Copy !req
1001. "He put his hand up slow
Copy !req
1002. "and closed his eyes
with his own fingers,
Copy !req
1003. "and stretched himself out
Copy !req
1004. "and crossed his arms
over his breast.
Copy !req
1005. "Now, fix me, he said.
Copy !req
1006. "I pinned the toes
of his stockings together.
Copy !req
1007. "That was the way
we laid corpses out,
Copy !req
1008. "and he died in a few minutes.
Copy !req
1009. "His face looked as pleasant
as if he was asleep,
Copy !req
1010. "and many is the time
Copy !req
1011. the boys would fix themselves
that way before they died."
Copy !req
1012. "Lorenzo strong, company a,
9th United States cavalry.
Copy !req
1013. "Shot by a shell last Sunday.
Copy !req
1014. "Right leg amputated
on the field.
Copy !req
1015. "Took a turn for the worse.
Copy !req
1016. "I stayed and saw all.
Copy !req
1017. "The doctor comes in and gives
him a little chloroform.
Copy !req
1018. "One of the nurses
constantly fans him,
Copy !req
1019. "for it is fearfully hot.
Copy !req
1020. "He asks to be raised up,
Copy !req
1021. "and they put him
in a half-sitting posture.
Copy !req
1022. "He called for Mark repeatedly,
Copy !req
1023. "half deliriously, all day.
Copy !req
1024. "Life ebbs, runs now
with the speed of a millrace.
Copy !req
1025. "His eyes turned back.
Copy !req
1026. "A crowd, including
two or three doctors,
Copy !req
1027. "several students,
and many soldiers,
Copy !req
1028. "has silently gathered.
Copy !req
1029. "The struggle goes on
and dwindles
Copy !req
1030. "a little more
and a little more,
Copy !req
1031. "and then welcome oblivion,
Copy !req
1032. "painlessness, death.
Copy !req
1033. "A pause.
Copy !req
1034. The crowd drops away."
Copy !req
1035. "June 17, 1864.
Copy !req
1036. "Dearest mother,
Copy !req
1037. "this place seems to have got
the better of me.
Copy !req
1038. I think I shall come home
for a short time."
Copy !req
1039. "I think I understand
Copy !req
1040. "the purpose
of the south properly
Copy !req
1041. "and that the best way
to deal with them
Copy !req
1042. "is to meet them fair
and square on any issue.
Copy !req
1043. "We must fight them,
cut into them,
Copy !req
1044. "not talk to them, and pursue
till they cry enough.
Copy !req
1045. "War is the remedy
our enemies have chosen,
Copy !req
1046. and I say let us give them
all they want."
Copy !req
1047. William Tecumseh Sherman.
Copy !req
1048. On the same day that Grant
stepped off into the wilderness,
Copy !req
1049. Sherman's grand army of the west
Copy !req
1050. moved south from Chattanooga
towards Atlanta,
Copy !req
1051. 100 miles away.
Copy !req
1052. William Tecumseh Sherman
and Ulysses S. Grant
Copy !req
1053. had survived
hard times together.
Copy !req
1054. Their friendship
had been forged in Kentucky
Copy !req
1055. when Sherman had come close
to breaking down,
Copy !req
1056. persuaded the war
would never end.
Copy !req
1057. "Grant stood by me
when I was crazy,
Copy !req
1058. "and I stood by him
when he was drunk,
Copy !req
1059. and now we stand
by each other always."
Copy !req
1060. Sherman was an orphan
Copy !req
1061. and had graduated sixth
in his class at west point
Copy !req
1062. when he was only 20.
Copy !req
1063. Tall and red-haired,
intelligent and irritable,
Copy !req
1064. he wore shoes
rather than military boots,
Copy !req
1065. slept little, and talked a lot.
Copy !req
1066. "Boiling over with ideas,"
a friend said.
Copy !req
1067. "he was always too busy
to eat much.
Copy !req
1068. "He talked and smoked cigars
incessantly,
Copy !req
1069. "giving orders,
dictating telegrams,
Copy !req
1070. bright and chipper."
Copy !req
1071. He hated politicians,
profiteers, sentimentalists.
Copy !req
1072. Above all, he hated reporters,
Copy !req
1073. whom he considered
worse than spies
Copy !req
1074. because they printed
military secrets
Copy !req
1075. just to sell newspapers.
Copy !req
1076. "these dirty
newspaper scribblers
Copy !req
1077. "have the impudence of Satan.
Copy !req
1078. "They come into camp, poke about
among the lazy shirks,
Copy !req
1079. "and pick up their camp rumors
and publish them as facts.
Copy !req
1080. "They are a pest,
Copy !req
1081. and I treat them as spies,
which, in truth, they are."
Copy !req
1082. He was convinced
if he killed them all,
Copy !req
1083. there would be news from hell
before breakfast.
Copy !req
1084. Family and friends
called him "Cump."
Copy !req
1085. His men called him
"uncle Billy."
Copy !req
1086. He was ruthless in war.
Copy !req
1087. Now Grant entrusted his friend
Copy !req
1088. with the second
most important part
Copy !req
1089. of his grand strategy—
Copy !req
1090. to seize Atlanta and smash
the combined confederate armies
Copy !req
1091. of Tennessee and Mississippi
under Joseph E. Johnston.
Copy !req
1092. In Washington,
Copy !req
1093. Lincoln's chances
for reelection were slim.
Copy !req
1094. "I'm going to be beaten,"
Lincoln wrote that summer,
Copy !req
1095. "and unless some
great change takes place,
Copy !req
1096. badly beaten."
Copy !req
1097. With Grant stalled
at Petersburg,
Copy !req
1098. Sherman had to win.
Copy !req
1099. Sherman had surveyed
parts of Georgia
Copy !req
1100. as a young lieutenant.
Copy !req
1101. "I knew Georgia better than
the rebels did," he wrote.
Copy !req
1102. He knew the fighting there
would be scattered and sporadic,
Copy !req
1103. "a big Indian war,"
he called it.
Copy !req
1104. Joseph E. Johnston,
Copy !req
1105. the confederate commander
who now faced Sherman,
Copy !req
1106. was heartily disliked
by president Jefferson Davis,
Copy !req
1107. but he was very nearly
worshiped by his men.
Copy !req
1108. "I do not believe
there was a soldier in his army
Copy !req
1109. "but would gladly
have died for him.
Copy !req
1110. "With him,
everything was his soldiers.
Copy !req
1111. He would feed his soldiers
if the country starved."
Copy !req
1112. Sam Watkins.
Copy !req
1113. Outgunned, outsupplied,
Copy !req
1114. and outnumbered almost 2 to 1,
Copy !req
1115. Joseph Johnston could only hope
to slow Sherman's advance
Copy !req
1116. and perhaps lure him into making
Copy !req
1117. the kind of doomed frontal attack
Copy !req
1118. that would help swing
the election against Lincoln.
Copy !req
1119. But Sherman's advance
was a masterpiece of planning.
Copy !req
1120. In a matter of hours,
Copy !req
1121. his engineers replaced
burned Bridges
Copy !req
1122. and repaired
ripped up rail lines.
Copy !req
1123. When Nathan Bedford Forrest's
raiders collapsed a tunnel
Copy !req
1124. in Sherman's rear,
Copy !req
1125. one weary Southern private
was not impressed.
Copy !req
1126. "Sherman," he said,
Copy !req
1127. "probably carried
a spare tunnel with him."
Copy !req
1128. Slowly, relentlessly,
Copy !req
1129. he forced Johnston
out of Dalton...
Copy !req
1130. Resaca...
Copy !req
1131. Cassville...
Copy !req
1132. Allatoona...
Copy !req
1133. New hope church.
Copy !req
1134. A surrendering confederate
told his captors,
Copy !req
1135. "Sherman will never go to hell.
He'll flank the devil
Copy !req
1136. and make heaven
in spite of the guards."
Copy !req
1137. "June 14th.
Copy !req
1138. "We killed
general Polk yesterday
Copy !req
1139. and made good
progress today."
Copy !req
1140. William Tecumseh Sherman.
Copy !req
1141. At Kennesaw mountain,
north of Atlanta,
Copy !req
1142. the confederates dug in.
Copy !req
1143. On June 27th,
Copy !req
1144. 13,000 union men
stormed up the mountain
Copy !req
1145. and were hurled back.
Copy !req
1146. The federals "seemed to walk up
and take death,"
Copy !req
1147. a southerner remembered,
Copy !req
1148. "as coolly as if they were
automatic or wooden men."
Copy !req
1149. "I've heard men say that
if they ever killed a yankee
Copy !req
1150. "during the war,
they were not aware of it.
Copy !req
1151. "I am satisfied
that on this memorable day
Copy !req
1152. "every man in our regiment
killed from 20 to 100 each.
Copy !req
1153. All that was necessary
was to load and shoot."
Copy !req
1154. The union lost 3,000 men,
Copy !req
1155. the confederates, only 750.
Copy !req
1156. "One or two more such assaults,"
an aide warned Sherman,
Copy !req
1157. "would use up this army."
Copy !req
1158. Sherman never admitted
Copy !req
1159. he had made a mistake
at Kennesaw mountain,
Copy !req
1160. but he never repeated it either.
Copy !req
1161. Reluctantly, he returned
to his slow flanking maneuvers,
Copy !req
1162. forcing Johnston
back to within sight
Copy !req
1163. of Atlanta itself,
Copy !req
1164. but there, he stalled,
Copy !req
1165. just like Grant.
Copy !req
1166. Two months
of relentless fighting
Copy !req
1167. had resulted
in identical stalemates.
Copy !req
1168. Sherman was stopped
north of Atlanta.
Copy !req
1169. Grant and Lee were deadlocked
outside Petersburg.
Copy !req
1170. Without a decisive victory
somewhere,
Copy !req
1171. Abraham Lincoln was sure
to lose the fall election.
Copy !req
1172. Time was running out.
Copy !req
1173. "Miss Kitty Diggs,
Copy !req
1174. "I want you to understand
that Mary is my child,
Copy !req
1175. "and she is a god-given right
of my own,
Copy !req
1176. "and you may hold on to her
as long as you can,
Copy !req
1177. "but I want you to remember
this one thing—
Copy !req
1178. "that the longer you keep
my child from me,
Copy !req
1179. "the longer you will
have to burn in hell
Copy !req
1180. "and the quicker
you will get there.
Copy !req
1181. "I have no fears about
getting Mary out of your hands.
Copy !req
1182. "This whole government
gives cheer to me,
Copy !req
1183. and you cannot
help yourself."
Copy !req
1184. Spotswood rice.
Copy !req
1185. Corporate
funding for this special 25th
Copy !req
1186. anniversary presentation of
the civil war was provided by.
Copy !req
1187. Before thousands
fell on the battlefield,
Copy !req
1188. before millions were
freed and before a country
Copy !req
1189. forged its identity...
A nation declared a new
Copy !req
1190. birth of freedom,
rededicating itself to the
Copy !req
1191. proposition that all
men are created equal.
Copy !req
1192. Bank of America is proud
to sponsor "the civil war,"
Copy !req
1193. a film by Ken burns,
Copy !req
1194. newly restored for
it's 25th anniversary.
Copy !req
1195. Original
production of "the civil war"
Copy !req
1196. was made possible by
generous contributions
Copy !req
1197. from these funders.
Copy !req
1198. And by the corporation
for public broadcasting.
Copy !req
1199. And by contributions
to your PBS station from
Copy !req
1200. viewers like you, thank you.
Copy !req