1. Original production
of "the civil war"
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2. was made possible by
generous contributions
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3. from these funders.
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4. And by the corporation for
public broadcasting and by
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5. contributions to your PBS
station from viewers like you,
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6. thank you.
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7. Corporate funding for
this special 25th anniversary
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8. presentation was provided by.
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9. Before thousands
fell on the battlefield,
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10. before millions were
freed and before a country
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11. forged its identity...
A nation declared a new
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12. birth of freedom,
rededicating itself to the
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13. proposition that all
men are created equal.
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14. Bank of America is proud
to sponsor "the civil war,"
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15. a film by Ken burns,
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16. newly restored for
it's 25th anniversary.
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17. "I require able-bodied men
with good horse and gun.
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18. "I wish none but those who
desire to be actively engaged.
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19. "Come on, boys,
if you want a heap of fun
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20. and to kill some Yankees."
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21. Nathan Bedford Forrest.
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22. Bedford Forrest's granddaughter
lived here in Memphis.
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23. She recently died,
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24. and I got to know her,
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25. and she even let me swing
the general's saber
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26. around my head once,
which was a great treat,
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27. and I had thought a long time,
and I called her and said,
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28. "I think the war produced
two authentic geniuses.
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29. "One of them
was your grandfather,
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30. and the other
was Abraham Lincoln."
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31. And there was a silence
at the other end of the phone,
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32. and she said,
"well, you know, in our family,
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33. we never thought much
of Mr. Lincoln."
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34. She didn't like my
coupling her grandfather
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35. with Abraham Lincoln
all these years later.
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36. Southerners are very strange
about that war.
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37. There was fighting
all across the country—
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38. at the Sabine crossroads near
the Texas-Louisiana border
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39. and down the red river,
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40. on the little blue in Missouri,
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41. at poison spring
and Jenkins ferry in Arkansas,
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42. and far out in Indian territory.
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43. By the summer of 1864,
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44. the union initiative
had ground to a halt.
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45. Despite its powerful
industrial machine,
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46. despite increasing hardships
for the south,
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47. the north was losing
control of the war.
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48. As the casualty lists
grew longer,
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49. opposition to the war increased.
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50. With the presidential
campaign looming,
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51. Abraham Lincoln now knew
he would have to do something
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52. that had never
been done before—
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53. submit to a popular election
during civil war
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54. and win it.
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55. "The struggle within
and without,"
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56. an advisor told Lincoln,
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57. "is for
our national existence."
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58. At Petersburg,
Robert E. Lee's entrenched army
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59. continued to resist
Ulysses S. Grant's
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60. two-month-old siege.
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61. To end the stalemate,
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62. union troops were digging
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63. deep beneath
the confederate lines.
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64. North of Atlanta,
William Tecumseh Sherman
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65. would have to blast through
an impenetrable system
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66. of trenches, breastworks,
and parapets
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67. to take the city,
if he ever got there.
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68. That summer, in the sweltering
Mississippi heat,
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69. confederate general
Nathan bedford Forrest
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70. would cement his reputation
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71. as the most terrifying cavalry
commander of the war.
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72. Meanwhile,
in the Shenandoah valley,
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73. a diminutive union general,
Phil Sheridan,
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74. would gleefully wreck
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75. every farm and village
he could lay his hands on,
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76. while in Richmond, Jefferson
Davis struggled desperately
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77. to keep the idea
of the confederacy alive.
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78. At the end of the year,
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79. union quartermaster
general Montgomery Meigs
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80. would lose a son
and bring his grief
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81. to the doorstep
of Robert E. Lee.
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82. By the summer of 1864,
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83. people could hardly remember
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84. that there had ever been
a time without war,
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85. and many did not believe
it would ever end.
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86. "Dear Mr. president,
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87. "the tide is setting
strongly against us.
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88. "Two special causes are assigned
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89. "to this great reaction
in public sentiment—
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90. "the want of military success
at Petersburg and Atlanta
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91. "and the impression
that we are fighting,
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92. not for union, but for
the abolition of slavery."
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93. Henry Raymond,
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94. chairman,
republican national committee.
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95. The siege of Petersburg went on.
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96. Morale had never been lower.
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97. "We should never have
wars like this again,"
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98. one union soldier said.
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99. In less than 6 months,
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100. from the wilderness
to Spotsylvania,
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101. cold harbor to Petersburg,
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102. Grant had nearly
destroyed his army.
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103. "The people are wild for peace,"
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104. a newspaper reported.
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105. "Lincoln's re-election
is an impossibility."
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106. Nevertheless, 140,000 soldiers
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107. re-enlisted
in the union army.
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108. Pride and patriotism
had much to do with it
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109. and a desire to see
the thing through,
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110. but so did the promise
of a month's furlough.
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111. "3 more years of hell,"
wrote one soldier,
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112. "in exchange
for 30 days of heaven—home."
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113. Harper's weekly.
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114. "The political campaign
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115. "which ends in the election
of the 8th of November
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116. "decides the most important
question in history.
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117. "It has always been
the fate of republics
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118. "to be destroyed by faction.
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119. "That fear is
now about to be confirmed
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120. or dissipated forever."
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121. The key,
everyone knew, was Atlanta.
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122. If Sherman could reach
the railroad hub of the south,
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123. the war might end at last,
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124. but it was the stalemate
in Virginia
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125. that concerned Lincoln now.
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126. "July 4, 1864,
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127. "the glorious fourth
has come again,
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128. "and we have had
quite a celebration
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129. "with guns firing shot and shell
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130. "into Petersburg
to remind them of the day.
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131. "This day makes
4 fourth of Julys
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132. "that I have passed in the army,
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133. "the first at camp Clark,
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134. "the second
at Harrison's landing,
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135. "the third at Gettysburg,
and today at Petersburg.
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136. "I had a party of officers
to dine with me.
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137. "This was our bill of fare—
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138. "stewed oysters, canned,
roast Turkey, canned,
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139. "bread pudding, tapioca pudding,
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140. "apple pie made in camp,
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141. lemonade, cigars."
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142. "Tomorrow, if we march,
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143. hardtack and salt pork
will be our fare."
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144. Elisha Hunt Rhodes.
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145. "The enemy throw a number
of shells daily into Petersburg,
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146. "but they do little damage.
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147. "The women and children seem
not to mind them at all.
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148. "On one street yesterday where
such a number of shells burst
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149. "that I would have considered it
a warm place in the field,
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150. "women were passing about
with little concern,
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151. "dodging around a corner
when they heard a shell coming
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152. "or putting their heads
out of their windows
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153. "to see what damage they'd done.
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154. "A lady yesterday sent
Wardlaw and myself
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155. some ice cream and cakes."
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156. Harry Hammond.
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157. To relieve the
pressure on Petersburg,
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158. Lee sent 10,000 men north
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159. to push union troops
out of the Shenandoah
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160. and harass Washington itself.
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161. In charge of the Southern forces
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162. was a ruthless
confederate general
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163. named Jubal early.
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164. Early attacked fort Stevens,
on the outskirts of Washington,
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165. terrifying the city,
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166. despite the 74 forts
that now made it
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167. the most heavily fortified
city on earth.
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168. Federal troops,
including Elisha Hunt Rhodes,
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169. were hastily brought up
from Petersburg
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170. to protect the capital.
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171. "July 12, 1864.
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172. "We marched in line of battle
into a peach orchard
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173. "in front of fort Stevens,
and here the fight began.
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174. "For a short time
it was warm work,
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175. "but as the president and many
ladies were looking at us,
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176. "every man tried to do his best.
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177. "Without our help,
the small force in the forts
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178. "would have been overpowered.
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179. "Jubal early should have
attacked early in the morning,
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180. but early was late!"
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181. Meanwhile, to stop
William Tecumseh Sherman's
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182. advance on Atlanta,
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183. Nathan bedford Forrest
was also on the move.
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184. You're asking about, uh...
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185. The most man
in the world, in some ways.
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186. Forrest was a natural genius.
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187. Someone said that he was
born to be a soldier
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188. the way John Keats
was born to be a poet.
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189. He had some basic principles
that, when you translate them,
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190. they fit right
into the army manual.
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191. When he said, "get there first
with the most men,"
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192. he's saying,
"take the interior lines
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193. and bring superior force
to bear."
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194. He had some very simple things.
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195. He used to say,
"hit them on the end"
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196. and he used to say,
"keep up the skeer."
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197. And these are all
good military principles
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198. expressed in Forrest's own way.
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199. And he was able to look
at a piece of ground
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200. and see how to use it.
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201. He had a marvelous sense
of topography.
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202. He could see
the key to a position
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203. and know where to hit.
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204. "Forrest,"
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205. William Tecumseh Sherman
later said,
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206. "was the most remarkable man
our civil war produced
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207. on either side."
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208. He was the son
of an illiterate blacksmith.
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209. He made himself a millionaire
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210. selling land, cotton,
and slaves.
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211. In 1861,
he enlisted as a private,
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212. then quit to raise and equip
an entire cavalry battalion
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213. out of his own pocket.
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214. By the end of the war,
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215. he had become
lieutenant general,
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216. the only man on either side
to rise so far.
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217. He was the most feared
cavalry commander of the war,
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218. the "wizard of the saddle,"
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219. wounded 4 times in battle
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220. and famous for having horses
shot out from under him.
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221. Old bedford Forrest,
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222. he's the most colorful man
in the war.
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223. He killed more men than any
other general officer ever has,
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224. had more horses
shot out from under him
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225. than any other officer ever had.
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226. He had 30 horses
shot from under him
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227. in the course of the war,
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228. and he killed 31 men
in hand-to-hand combat,
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229. and he said, "I was
a horse ahead at the end."
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230. He was a master
of the lightning raid
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231. and an expert at winning
against long odds.
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232. He fought his battles,
he said, "by ear,"
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233. and he could anticipate
an enemy's movements
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234. with uncanny precision.
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235. He was only
surprised in battle once.
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236. It was a place called Parker's
crossroads up in Tennessee.
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237. He was on a raid,
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238. and he was closing in
on an opponent
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239. and fixing to finish him off
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240. when he was attacked in the rear
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241. by a force that he did not
suspect was within many miles.
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242. And everybody was
terribly upset,
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243. and said, "general,
what shall we do?"
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244. And he said, "split in two
and charge both ways,"
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245. and did and got out.
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246. In June 1864,
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247. in an attempt to cut off
Sherman's supplies
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248. at Brice's crossroads
near Tupelo, Mississippi,
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249. Forrest outdid even himself.
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250. The union army
coming to stop him
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251. was nearly 3 times
as strong as his,
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252. but Forrest was unimpressed.
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253. Factoring in
the mud-clogged roads
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254. and the blazing mid-June sun,
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255. he predicted the union cavalry
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256. would arrive well ahead
of the union infantry,
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257. giving him time to whip it
on his own terms.
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258. It all happened
exactly as he said.
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259. No army, it seemed,
could stop him.
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260. Forrest was free to slash
at Sherman's forces,
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261. slowing his approach to Atlanta.
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262. "Forrest must be
hunted down and killed
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263. "if it costs 10,000 lives
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264. and bankrupts
that federal treasury."
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265. William Tecumseh Sherman.
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266. "Who shall revive
the withered hopes
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267. "that bloomed at the opening
of Grant's campaign?
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268. "All are tired
of this damnable tragedy.
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269. "Each hour is but sinking us
deeper into bankruptcy
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270. and desolation."
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271. New York world.
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272. The summer of 1864
was the north's darkest hour.
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273. Grant's losses
had been appalling.
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274. His army was stalled
in front of Petersburg,
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275. his grand strategy
apparently come to nothing.
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276. Franz Sigel's army had been
routed in the Shenandoah.
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277. Ben Butler was bottled up
in a loop of the James river
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278. called the Bermuda hundred.
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279. Even William Tecumseh Sherman
was stalled outside Atlanta.
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280. "Mr. Lincoln
is already beaten.
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281. "He cannot be re-elected,
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282. and we must have
another ticket."
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283. Horace Greeley.
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284. No nation
had ever held an election
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285. in the midst of a civil war.
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286. No president
since Andrew Jackson
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287. had won a second term.
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288. Long after Lincoln
was nominated,
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289. politicians in his own party
still hoped to reconvene
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290. and pick another nominee.
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291. Even Lincoln believed
his re-election unlikely.
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292. "We cannot have free
government without elections,
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293. "and if the rebellion
could force us
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294. "to forego or postpone
a national election,
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295. "it might fairly be claimed
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296. to have already
conquered and ruined us."
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297. Abraham Lincoln.
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298. "After 4 years of failure
to restore the union
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299. "by the experiment of war,
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300. "we demand
that immediate effort be made
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301. "for a cessation of hostilities
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302. at the earliest
practicable moment."
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303. Democratic national platform.
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304. The democrats wanted
an end to the war,
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305. with or without victory.
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306. Their nominee was
general George McClellan,
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307. whose ambition had not shrunk
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308. since Lincoln removed him
from command.
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309. "McClellan was
our first commander,
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310. "and as such, he was almost
worshipped by his soldiers.
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311. "The political friends
of general McClellan
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312. "well understood that fact,
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313. "and it was a very crafty thing
for them to nominate him
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314. as their candidate
for the presidency."
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315. The south rejoiced
at McClellan's nomination.
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316. "The first ray of real light,"
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317. vice-president
Alexander Stephens said,
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318. "since the war began."
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319. Wherever it could,
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320. the south exploited
antiwar feeling in the north.
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321. The confederate government
sent money
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322. to support
the union peace movement
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323. and painted Lincoln
as the candidate of war.
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324. The campaign was ugly.
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325. Democrats charged that
the real goal of old Abe's war
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326. was miscegenation,
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327. a new word for the "blending
of white and black."
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328. Republicans charged democrats
with treason.
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329. The 1864 presidential election
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330. had become a referendum
on the war itself.
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331. All the word
from all Republicans,
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332. even on a most local level,
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333. indicated that Lincoln
couldn't possibly win.
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334. The fortunes of war had turned too
badly, too sour for the union.
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335. At one really poignant moment,
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336. Lincoln sat in the privacy
of his office
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337. contemplating the fact
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338. that he probably
wasn't going to be re-elected
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339. and that McClellan,
of all people,
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340. would replace him as president.
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341. "This morning,
as for some days past,
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342. "it seems exceedingly probable
that this administration
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343. "will not be re-elected.
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344. "Then it will be my duty
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345. "to so cooperate
with the president-elect
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346. "as to save the union
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347. "between the election
and the inauguration
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348. "as he will have secured
his election on such ground
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349. that he cannot possibly
save it afterward."
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350. Pressured to drop emancipation
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351. as a condition of peace
with the south,
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352. Lincoln refused.
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353. "The proclamation had promised
freedom," Lincoln said,
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354. "and the promise being made,
must be kept."
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355. "I should be damned
in time and in eternity
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356. "if I were to return to slavery
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357. the black warriors
who have fought for the union."
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358. Attention!
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359. Fire!
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360. "Spy Johnson,
shot near coffin."
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361. Even before bull run,
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362. stolen secrets
and intricate codes
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363. streamed between Washington
and Richmond.
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364. Allan Pinkerton ran
the northern secret service,
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365. while confederate
major William Norris
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366. had a spy network that extended
as far north as Montreal.
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367. In 1864, several Southern agents
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368. even invaded Vermont.
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369. Spies were everywhere.
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370. "Women who come before
the public are in a bad box now.
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371. "All manner of things, they say,
come over the border
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372. "under the huge hoops now worn,
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373. "so they are
ruthlessly torn off.
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374. "Not legs but arms
are looked for under hoops
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375. and, sad to say, found."
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376. Mary Chesnut.
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377. Rose O'Neal Greenhow,
a Washington widow,
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378. ran a confederate spy ring
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379. just a few blocks
from the white house.
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380. Much of her information
came from an infatuated suitor,
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381. senator Henry Wilson,
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382. chairman of the military affairs
committee.
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383. Imprisonment failed
to stop belle Boyd
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384. from coaxing secrets out
of union officers in Washington
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385. and passing them on
in code to Richmond
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386. inside rubber balls that
she tossed from her cell window
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387. to a shadowy agent
she knew only as "C.H."
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388. Her admirers called her
"la belle rebelle."
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389. Slaves and former slaves
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390. made especially good
union operatives,
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391. guiding northern troops
through swamps and forests
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392. and reporting on their masters.
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393. "After all,"
one union officer said,
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394. "they had been spies
all their lives."
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395. One northern agent,
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396. a black servant named
Mary Elizabeth Bowser,
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397. even worked inside
the confederate white house.
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398. In November of 1863,
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399. a Southern courier, Sam Davis,
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400. was sentenced to death
at Pulaski, Tennessee,
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401. for spying.
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402. On the scaffold,
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403. Davis' bravery proved so moving
that the commanding general
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404. was unable to give
the order of execution.
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405. Davis finally gave it himself.
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406. "July 21st, Thursday,
in front of Petersburg.
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407. "The mine which
general Burnside is making
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408. "causes a good deal of talk
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409. "and is generally
much laughed at.
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410. "It is an affair
of his own entirely
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411. and has nothing to do
with the regular siege."
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412. For a month,
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413. a regiment of Pennsylvania
coal miners
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414. worked to dig a 500-foot tunnel
beneath the confederate lines
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415. and pack it with 4 tons
of gunpowder.
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416. Burnside's idea was
to blow a hole
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417. in the Petersburg defenses,
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418. then rush through
to take the town.
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419. Above ground,
not far from the tunnel,
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420. the unsuspecting
confederate commander
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421. was general William Mahone,
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422. a veteran of almost
every major battle
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423. fought by the army
of northern Virginia.
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424. At dawn on July 30,
union sappers lit the fuse.
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425. A great crater
was torn in the earth
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426. 30 feet deep, 70 feet wide,
250 feet long.
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427. The stunned confederates
fell back.
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428. Then the plan
began to fall apart.
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429. A precious hour went by
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430. before the union assault force
got started,
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431. and when it did,
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432. 3 divisions stormed
down into the great hole,
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433. rather than around it.
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434. Their commander,
general James H. Ledlie,
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435. did not even watch the battle,
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436. huddling instead in a bombproof
shelter with a bottle of rum.
Copy !req
437. Once inside the crater,
the union soldiers found
Copy !req
438. there was no way up the sheer
30-foot wall of the pit,
Copy !req
439. and no one had thought
to provide ladders.
Copy !req
440. General Mahone ordered
his men back to the rim
Copy !req
441. to pour fire down upon them.
Copy !req
442. Scores of black troops
were killed
Copy !req
443. when they tried to surrender
at the crater,
Copy !req
444. bayoneted or clubbed
by confederates shouting,
Copy !req
445. "take the white man!
Kill the nigger!"
Copy !req
446. "it was the saddest affair
Copy !req
447. "I have ever witnessed
in the war.
Copy !req
448. "Such opportunity
for carrying fortifications
Copy !req
449. I have never seen and do not
expect again to have."
Copy !req
450. Ulysses S. Grant.
Copy !req
451. General Ledlie
was dismissed from the service.
Copy !req
452. Burnside was granted
extended leave
Copy !req
453. and never recalled to duty.
Copy !req
454. "July 30, 1864.
Copy !req
455. "The work and expectations
of almost two months
Copy !req
456. "have been blasted.
Copy !req
457. "The first temporary success
had elated everyone so much
Copy !req
458. "that we already had imagined
ourselves in Petersburg,
Copy !req
459. "but 15 minutes changed it all
Copy !req
460. "and plunged everyone
into a feeling of despair
Copy !req
461. "almost of ever
accomplishing anything.
Copy !req
462. "Few officers can be found
this evening
Copy !req
463. "who have not drowned
their sorrows
Copy !req
464. in the flowing bowl."
Copy !req
465. Washington Roebling.
Copy !req
466. "The day has been
so excessively hot
Copy !req
467. "that I am almost melted.
Copy !req
468. "The thermometer in the wardroom
Copy !req
469. "stands at 90 degrees,
Copy !req
470. "while on deck the weather
is very pleasant,
Copy !req
471. "a fair breeze
blowing from the east.
Copy !req
472. "Everything is dirty,
everything smells bad,
Copy !req
473. "everybody is demoralized.
Copy !req
474. "How are you, ironclad?
Copy !req
475. "A man who would stay
in an ironclad from choice
Copy !req
476. "is a candidate
for the insane asylum,
Copy !req
477. "and he who stays from
compulsion is an object of pity.
Copy !req
478. Fresh leaks are breaking out
every day."
Copy !req
479. Robert B. Ely.
Copy !req
480. For two full years now,
Copy !req
481. union troops had occupied
fort Pulaski
Copy !req
482. at the entrance
to Savannah harbor,
Copy !req
483. blocking confederate supplies
and waiting patiently
Copy !req
484. for a union army to come
and seize the city itself.
Copy !req
485. To fill the time,
the men played baseball,
Copy !req
486. fast becoming
the national pastime,
Copy !req
487. south as well as north.
Copy !req
488. But 300 miles away,
Copy !req
489. Sherman was stuck
in the hills of north Georgia.
Copy !req
490. "The enemy must have
Copy !req
491. at least 50 miles of
connected trenches," he wrote.
Copy !req
492. "The whole country
is one vast fort."
Copy !req
493. "well, I think the damned
old cuss of a preacher
Copy !req
494. "lied like Dixie,
Copy !req
495. "for he said that
god has fought all our battles
Copy !req
496. "and won our victories.
Copy !req
497. "Now, if he had done all that,
why is it not in the papers
Copy !req
498. and why has
he not been promoted?"
Copy !req
499. Sergeant Albinus fell.
Copy !req
500. "Is it possible that
god will bless a people
Copy !req
501. "as wicked as our soldier?
Copy !req
502. "I fear not.
Copy !req
503. "One unceasing tide
of blasphemy and wickedness,
Copy !req
504. coarseness and obscenity."
Copy !req
505. Orville C. Bumpass.
Copy !req
506. Men bet on anything—
Copy !req
507. boxing matches, horse races,
Copy !req
508. baseball games, and cockfights.
Copy !req
509. In union camps, victorious birds
Copy !req
510. named "Grant" and "bill Sherman"
Copy !req
511. fought losers called
"Beauregard,"Jeff Davis,"
Copy !req
512. and "bob Lee."
Copy !req
513. "the boys would
frequently have a louse race.
Copy !req
514. "The lice were placed in plates.
Copy !req
515. "And the first that crawled off
was the winner.
Copy !req
516. "There was one fellow
named Dornin,
Copy !req
517. "who was winning all the money.
Copy !req
518. "We could not understand it.
Copy !req
519. "If a fellow happened to catch
a fierce-looking louse,
Copy !req
520. "he would call on Dornin
for a race.
Copy !req
521. "Dornin would come
and always win the stake.
Copy !req
522. "At last we found out
Dornin's trick—
Copy !req
523. he always
heated the plate."
Copy !req
524. Sam Watkins.
Copy !req
525. "Rutland, Vermont.
Dear Edward,
Copy !req
526. "it will be hard
to have all my sons go,
Copy !req
527. "but if it is right,
I've nothing to say.
Copy !req
528. "As you value your good name,
Copy !req
529. "your peace of mind,
Copy !req
530. "and happiness here
and hereafter,
Copy !req
531. "do keep aloof
from card playing,
Copy !req
532. "for imperceptibly you will
be led, I fear, to gambling.
Copy !req
533. Your devoted mother."
Copy !req
534. There were, in all, 450
brothels in Washington, D.C.,
Copy !req
535. known to steady customers
as "fort Sumter,"
Copy !req
536. "madame Russell's bake oven,"
Copy !req
537. and "headquarters, U.S.A."
Copy !req
538. Men called a trip there
"going down the line."
Copy !req
539. "I had a good time
in Washington—
Copy !req
540. "lager beer
and a horse and buggy,
Copy !req
541. "and in the evening,
horizontal refreshments,
Copy !req
542. "or in plainer words,
riding a Dutch gal.
Copy !req
543. Had a good time generally,
I tell you."
Copy !req
544. Private Eli Veazie.
Copy !req
545. "In the city of New Orleans,
Copy !req
546. "we could see signs
of smothered hate and prejudice
Copy !req
547. "to both our color and present
character as union soldiers,
Copy !req
548. "but for once in his life,
Copy !req
549. "your humble correspondent
walked fearlessly and boldly
Copy !req
550. "through the streets
of a Southern city,
Copy !req
551. "and he did this
Copy !req
552. "without being required to take
off his cap at every step
Copy !req
553. "or to give all the sidewalks
Copy !req
554. "to those lordly princes
of the sunny south,
Copy !req
555. "the planters' sons.
Copy !req
556. "Oh, chivalry!
Copy !req
557. "How hast thou lost
thy potent power and charms?
Copy !req
558. "By what means, pray tell me,
hast thou so degenerated
Copy !req
559. "as to lose the respect
and admiration
Copy !req
560. even of the sable sons
of Africa?"
Copy !req
561. That summer, congress
finally passed legislation
Copy !req
562. giving black soldiers
equal pay with whites.
Copy !req
563. On August 5, 1864,
Copy !req
564. union admiral David Farragut
led 18 ships
Copy !req
565. storming past 3 forts
Copy !req
566. to engage the confederate fleet
guarding mobile bay.
Copy !req
567. Farragut suffered from vertigo
so intense
Copy !req
568. he ordered himself lashed
to the rigging of his flagship.
Copy !req
569. When a mine sank the lead vessel
Copy !req
570. and the captains
of the other ships hesitated,
Copy !req
571. Farragut shouted,
Copy !req
572. "damn the torpedoes,
full speed ahead!"
Copy !req
573. And rammed and shelled
the rebel fleet into submission.
Copy !req
574. It was the first good news
Copy !req
575. for the union,
and Lincoln, all year.
Copy !req
576. "In camp. Near Atlanta.
Copy !req
577. "Dear companion,
Copy !req
578. "I seat myself
one time more in life
Copy !req
579. "to drop you a few lines.
Copy !req
580. "I am wore out marching.
Copy !req
581. "We have been running
from one place to another
Copy !req
582. "for 5 days.
Copy !req
583. I must close, for it is
Avery bad place to write."
Copy !req
584. Benjamin Franklin Jackson.
Copy !req
585. Back in Alabama,
Copy !req
586. Benjamin Franklin Jackson's
wife Martha
Copy !req
587. awoke with a start.
Copy !req
588. A mourning dove was sitting
on her windowsill.
Copy !req
589. She took it as a sign
her husband had been killed
Copy !req
590. and began to weep silently
Copy !req
591. so that her family
would not hear her grief
Copy !req
592. and think her superstitious.
Copy !req
593. Her husband had been
fatally wounded that morning
Copy !req
594. in battle with Sherman's men.
Copy !req
595. "Mine eyes have beheld
the promised land.
Copy !req
596. "The domes and spires of Atlanta
are glittering
Copy !req
597. "in the sunlight before us
Copy !req
598. and only 8 miles distant."
Copy !req
599. Finally, Sherman was at Atlanta.
Copy !req
600. For more than two months,
Copy !req
601. confederate general
Joseph Johnston
Copy !req
602. had kept his army intact,
Copy !req
603. dodging Sherman's superior force
Copy !req
604. and looking for
the right moment to attack.
Copy !req
605. The opportunity never came.
Copy !req
606. An increasingly frustrated
Jefferson Davis
Copy !req
607. now removed
the popular Johnston.
Copy !req
608. His troops were stunned.
Copy !req
609. "The news came
like a flash of lightning,
Copy !req
610. "staggering
and blinding everyone.
Copy !req
611. "Farewell, old fellow!
Copy !req
612. We privates loved you because
you made us love ourselves."
Copy !req
613. Sam Watkins.
Copy !req
614. Joseph Johnston's replacement
Copy !req
615. was 33-year-old John bell hood
of Texas.
Copy !req
616. His arm had been mangled
at Gettysburg,
Copy !req
617. and he'd lost a leg
at Chickamauga,
Copy !req
618. but his recklessness
remained intact.
Copy !req
619. His men called him
"old wooden head."
Copy !req
620. "hood is a bold fighter.
Copy !req
621. I am doubtful as to
other qualities necessary."
Copy !req
622. Robert E. Lee.
Copy !req
623. Sherman was delighted with hood,
Copy !req
624. sure he would be
attacked at last.
Copy !req
625. Many of his units were now armed
with Henry repeating rifles,
Copy !req
626. capable of firing 15 shots
without being reloaded.
Copy !req
627. Outgunned rebels complained
Copy !req
628. the Yankees could now load
on a Sunday
Copy !req
629. and keep shooting all week.
Copy !req
630. To cut off Atlanta's rail links
Copy !req
631. with Richmond,
Copy !req
632. Sherman sent 35-year-old
Copy !req
633. general James McPherson's army
Copy !req
634. east of the city.
Copy !req
635. McPherson was a special favorite
of Sherman's—
Copy !req
636. handsome, warm-hearted,
intelligent.
Copy !req
637. "If he lives,"
Sherman predicted,
Copy !req
638. "he'll outdistance Grant
and myself."
Copy !req
639. Northern papers cheered
the union advance
Copy !req
640. and daily predicted
Atlanta's fall.
Copy !req
641. But on July 22nd,
Copy !req
642. hood rushed to counter
the new union threat.
Copy !req
643. The battle of Atlanta had begun.
Copy !req
644. It raged all afternoon,
Copy !req
645. the lines forming,
falling back, reforming,
Copy !req
646. attacking again.
Copy !req
647. At 2:00,
general McPherson himself
Copy !req
648. went to inspect
the imperiled union position
Copy !req
649. and rode right into a band
of rebel skirmishers.
Copy !req
650. Ordered to surrender, McPherson
raised his hat politely,
Copy !req
651. turned his horse about,
and raced for the union lines.
Copy !req
652. The rebels shot him in the back.
Copy !req
653. Sherman covered
the body of his young friend
Copy !req
654. with an American flag
Copy !req
655. and wept.
Copy !req
656. "Sherman had the rare faculty
Copy !req
657. "of remaining calm
under great responsibilities
Copy !req
658. "and scenes of great excitement.
Copy !req
659. "At such times,
his eccentricities disappeared.
Copy !req
660. "His mind seemed never so clear,
his confidence never so strong,
Copy !req
661. "his spirit never so inspiring
Copy !req
662. "in the crisis
of some fierce struggle,
Copy !req
663. "like that of the day
when McPherson fell
Copy !req
664. in front of Atlanta."
Copy !req
665. General Jacob D. Cox.
Copy !req
666. Crying "McPherson
and revenge, boys,
Copy !req
667. McPherson and revenge,"
Copy !req
668. the union army smashed down
on the rebels.
Copy !req
669. In less than 30 minutes,
hood was forced to withdraw.
Copy !req
670. At Ezra church,
west of the city,
Copy !req
671. hood again tried
to rout Sherman's army.
Copy !req
672. Again he failed.
Copy !req
673. 1/3 of his army was gone—
20,000 men,
Copy !req
674. and hood fell back into Atlanta.
Copy !req
675. "I cannot describe it.
Copy !req
676. "I remember I went in the rear
of the building,
Copy !req
677. "and there I saw a pile
of arms and legs
Copy !req
678. "rotting and decomposing.
Copy !req
679. "I have no recollection
in my whole life
Copy !req
680. of ever seeing anything that
I remember with more horror."
Copy !req
681. Sam Watkins.
Copy !req
682. Behind their ramparts,
Copy !req
683. the confederates waited
for Sherman to attack.
Copy !req
684. "The Yankee gents can't get
their men to charge our works,"
Copy !req
685. a texan said,
Copy !req
686. but Sherman saw no need
to be so rash.
Copy !req
687. He sealed off
the city's supplies and waited.
Copy !req
688. Federal guns began shelling
Copy !req
689. the heavily fortified
confederate trenches
Copy !req
690. and the city beyond.
Copy !req
691. "Saturday, August 21st.
Copy !req
692. "Another week of anxiety
and suspense has passed,
Copy !req
693. "and the fate of Atlanta
is still undecided.
Copy !req
694. "It is said that about
20 lives have been destroyed
Copy !req
695. "by these terrible missiles
Copy !req
696. "since the enemy began
to throw them into the city.
Copy !req
697. "It is like living
in the midst of a pestilence.
Copy !req
698. No one can tell, but he may be
the next victim."
Copy !req
699. Outside Atlanta,
things were no better.
Copy !req
700. "The enemy hold us
by an inferior force,"
Copy !req
701. Sherman admitted
as the siege dragged on.
Copy !req
702. "We are more besieged
than they."
Copy !req
703. "Both Grant and Sherman,"
Copy !req
704. George Templeton strong
predicted from New York,
Copy !req
705. "are on the Eve
of disaster."
Copy !req
706. Every evening for a month
during the siege,
Copy !req
707. a Georgia sharpshooter
played his cornet so beautifully
Copy !req
708. that men on both sides
stopped to listen.
Copy !req
709. Finally, on August 31st,
Copy !req
710. the same day that
Copy !req
711. George McClellan was nominated
Copy !req
712. for president,
Copy !req
713. Sherman hurled most of his army
Copy !req
714. against the macon & western
railroad
Copy !req
715. south of the city
Copy !req
716. in one more attempt
to break hood's grip.
Copy !req
717. It worked.
Copy !req
718. On September 1, 1864,
Copy !req
719. hood abandoned Atlanta.
Copy !req
720. Sherman's troops marched in
the next day.
Copy !req
721. "Atlanta is ours
and fairly won."
Copy !req
722. "September 3, 1864.
Copy !req
723. "Glorious news this morning—
Atlanta taken at last.
Copy !req
724. "It is, coming
at this political crisis,
Copy !req
725. the greatest event
of the war."
Copy !req
726. George Templeton strong.
Copy !req
727. "Dear general Sherman,
Copy !req
728. "I feel you have accomplished
the most gigantic undertaking
Copy !req
729. "given to any general
in this war
Copy !req
730. "and with a skill and ability
Copy !req
731. "that will be acknowledged
in history as unsurpassed,
Copy !req
732. if not unequalled."
Copy !req
733. U.S. Grant.
Copy !req
734. In Sherman's honor,
Copy !req
735. Grant ordered
a 100-gun salute
Copy !req
736. fired into the confederate works
at Petersburg.
Copy !req
737. "Atlanta is gone.
Copy !req
738. "That agony is over.
Copy !req
739. There is no hope, but we will
try to have no fear."
Copy !req
740. Mary Chesnut.
Copy !req
741. To avenge Sherman's
victories in Georgia,
Copy !req
742. 6 confederate agents slipped
into New York City
Copy !req
743. armed with phosphorous,
intent upon burning down
Copy !req
744. the city's most
fashionable hotels.
Copy !req
745. They managed to light 10 fires
Copy !req
746. and set
P.T. Barnum's museum ablaze.
Copy !req
747. Firemen put everything out.
Copy !req
748. All but one
of the confederates got away.
Copy !req
749. "The people of the north can't be
rolling in wealth and comfort,"
Copy !req
750. the captured man said
before he was hanged,
Copy !req
751. "while we at the south
Copy !req
752. are bearing all the hardship
and privations."
Copy !req
753. From the front,
on his wedding anniversary,
Copy !req
754. Robert E. Lee wrote home
to his wife in Richmond.
Copy !req
755. "Dear Mary,
Copy !req
756. "do you recollect
what a happy day
Copy !req
757. "33 years ago this was?
Copy !req
758. "How many hopes and pleasures
it gave birth to?
Copy !req
759. "God has been very merciful
and kind to us,
Copy !req
760. "and how thankless and sinful
I have been.
Copy !req
761. "I pray that he may continue
his mercies and blessings to us
Copy !req
762. "and give us
a little peace and rest
Copy !req
763. together in this world."
Copy !req
764. "that man Haupt
Copy !req
765. "has built a bridge
across the Potomac creek
Copy !req
766. "about 400 feet long
and nearly 100 feet tall
Copy !req
767. "over which loaded trains
are running every hour,
Copy !req
768. and there is nothing in it
but beanpoles and cornstalks."
Copy !req
769. Abraham Lincoln.
Copy !req
770. Near Petersburg,
Copy !req
771. the union camp at city point
on the James river
Copy !req
772. suddenly found itself one
of the world's busiest seaports,
Copy !req
773. with bakeries, barracks,
warehouses,
Copy !req
774. a200-acre tent hospital,
more than a mile of wharves,
Copy !req
775. and a new 70-mile railroad built
by Herman Haupt in record time
Copy !req
776. to bring supplies
and fresh troops
Copy !req
777. right up to the union trenches.
Copy !req
778. "Not merely profusion but
extravagance," a visitor wrote,
Copy !req
779. "soldiers provided
with everything."
Copy !req
780. An industrial machine
of unparalleled power
Copy !req
781. now kept the war supplies
streaming to the front.
Copy !req
782. In Cleveland, Ohio,
when the war began,
Copy !req
783. there was not a single forge
or foundry.
Copy !req
784. When the war ended,
there were 21,
Copy !req
785. employing 3,000 men
Copy !req
786. and turning out 60,000 tons
of steel a year.
Copy !req
787. By then, the cold spring foundry
opposite west point
Copy !req
788. on the Hudson
Copy !req
789. was producing 7,000
artillery projectiles a week
Copy !req
790. and the military
telegraph system
Copy !req
791. was carrying over
3,300 messages a day
Copy !req
792. along 15,000 miles of wire.
Copy !req
793. "The world has seen
its iron age,
Copy !req
794. "its silver age, its golden age,
Copy !req
795. "and its bronze age.
Copy !req
796. This is the age of shoddy."
Copy !req
797. For shrewd northern businessmen,
Copy !req
798. there were quick profits
in army contracts.
Copy !req
799. Philip Armour gave up
gold mining
Copy !req
800. to strike it rich
packing pork for the army.
Copy !req
801. Samuel Colt of Hartford
told his men
Copy !req
802. to "run the armory night and day
with double sets of hands."
Copy !req
803. Jay Cooke sold war bonds,
Copy !req
804. raised more than $400 million
for the union,
Copy !req
805. and got rich on the commissions.
Copy !req
806. Unscrupulous contractors sold
the war department rusty rifles,
Copy !req
807. boats that leaked,
caps that melted in the rain.
Copy !req
808. When one manufacturer was asked
Copy !req
809. why the soles of the shoes
he supplied fell off
Copy !req
810. after a few minutes' marching,
Copy !req
811. he explained they had been meant
for the cavalry.
Copy !req
812. "You can sell almost
anything to the government
Copy !req
813. at almost any price
you've got the guts to ask."
Copy !req
814. I think that
the north fought that war
Copy !req
815. with one hand behind its back.
Copy !req
816. At the same time
the war was going on,
Copy !req
817. the homestead act
was being passed.
Copy !req
818. All these marvelous inventions
were going on.
Copy !req
819. In the spring of '64,
Copy !req
820. the Harvard-Yale boat races
were going on,
Copy !req
821. and not a man in either crew
Copy !req
822. ever volunteered
for the army or the Navy.
Copy !req
823. They didn't need them.
Copy !req
824. I think that if it had been
more Southern successes
Copy !req
825. and a lot more,
Copy !req
826. the north simply would have
brought that other arm out
Copy !req
827. from behind its back.
Copy !req
828. I don't think the south ever
had a chance to win that war.
Copy !req
829. Out west, bloody Bill Anderson,
a confederate guerrilla
Copy !req
830. who rode with union scalps
tied to his bridle,
Copy !req
831. led 30 men
into Centralia, Missouri,
Copy !req
832. killed 24 unarmed
federal soldiers,
Copy !req
833. then ambushed 116 more.
Copy !req
834. On October 26th,
Copy !req
835. Anderson himself
was ambushed and killed,
Copy !req
836. but one of his close
lieutenants, Jesse James,
Copy !req
837. got away.
Copy !req
838. In Tennessee,
Copy !req
839. Nathan bedford Forrest's men
surrounded fort pillow,
Copy !req
840. held by a unit of Tennessee
unionists and black troops,
Copy !req
841. and demanded its surrender.
Copy !req
842. When the union commander
refused, the fort was overrun.
Copy !req
843. As many as 300 soldiers,
most of them black, were killed,
Copy !req
844. many after they surrendered.
Copy !req
845. "It is hoped that these
facts will demonstrate
Copy !req
846. "to the northern people
Copy !req
847. that negro soldiers cannot cope
with southerners."
Copy !req
848. Nathan bedford Forrest.
Copy !req
849. "I said, don't shoot me,
Copy !req
850. "and one of them said,
go out and hold my horse.
Copy !req
851. "I made a step or two,
and he said,
Copy !req
852. "turn around. I will hold
my horse and shoot you, too.
Copy !req
853. I no sooner turned around
than he shot me in the face."
Copy !req
854. "I fell down as if I was dead.
Copy !req
855. He shot me again
and hit my arm, not my head."
Copy !req
856. "I laid there until I could
hear him no more,
Copy !req
857. "and then I started back.
Copy !req
858. "I got back about sunup
Copy !req
859. "and wandered about
until a gunboat came along,
Copy !req
860. and I came up on that
with about 10 others."
Copy !req
861. Private George Shaw, company B,
6th U.S. heavy artillery.
Copy !req
862. In retaliation for fort pillow,
Copy !req
863. Grant ended the system
Copy !req
864. under which prisoners
had always been exchanged
Copy !req
865. until the south agreed
to recognize
Copy !req
866. "no distinction whatever between
white and colored prisoners."
Copy !req
867. Davis and Lee refused.
Copy !req
868. North and south,
Copy !req
869. prisons soon bulged
with unexchanged prisoners.
Copy !req
870. Already inadequate prison camps
became nightmares.
Copy !req
871. The worst
was the confederate prison
Copy !req
872. near Andersonville, Georgia.
Copy !req
873. Meant to hold a maximum
of 10,000 northern prisoners,
Copy !req
874. by August 1864,
it had 33,000—
Copy !req
875. the fifth-largest city
in the confederacy.
Copy !req
876. Its commandant, a German-Swiss
immigrant named Henry Wirz,
Copy !req
877. forbade prisoners
to build shelters.
Copy !req
878. Most lived in holes
scratched in the ground
Copy !req
879. covered by a blanket.
Copy !req
880. The daily ration
was a teaspoon of salt,
Copy !req
881. 3 tablespoons of beans,
and half-pint of cornmeal.
Copy !req
882. A foul creek called
sweet water branch
Copy !req
883. served as both drinking water
and sewer.
Copy !req
884. "1/3 of the original
enclosure was swampy,
Copy !req
885. "a mud of liquid filth,
Voidings from the thousands,
Copy !req
886. "seething with maggots
in full activity.
Copy !req
887. "Death at the hands
of the guards,
Copy !req
888. "though murder in cold blood,
was merciful
Copy !req
889. "beside the systematic, studied,
absolute murder inside
Copy !req
890. by slow death."
Copy !req
891. In one year,
13,000 men died at Andersonville
Copy !req
892. and were buried in mass graves.
Copy !req
893. "Can those be men?
Copy !req
894. "Are they not really corpses?
Copy !req
895. "They lay there,
most of them, quite still,
Copy !req
896. "but with a horrible look
in their eyes.
Copy !req
897. "The dead there
are not to be pitied
Copy !req
898. "as much as some of the living
that have come from there—
Copy !req
899. if they can
be called living."
Copy !req
900. Walt Whitman.
Copy !req
901. "When I was taken prisoner,
I weighed 165 pounds,
Copy !req
902. "and when I came out,
I weighed 96 pounds
Copy !req
903. and was considered stout
compared with some I saw."
Copy !req
904. "my heartaches
for these poor wretches,
Copy !req
905. "Yankees though they are,
Copy !req
906. "and I am afraid god will suffer
some terrible retribution
Copy !req
907. "to fall upon us
for letting such things happen.
Copy !req
908. "If the Yankees should ever
come to southwest Georgia
Copy !req
909. "and go to Anderson
and see the graves there,
Copy !req
910. god have mercy
on the land!"
Copy !req
911. With Sherman's
victory at Atlanta,
Copy !req
912. Lincoln's chances of re-election
were improving.
Copy !req
913. And now came more bad news
for the confederacy.
Copy !req
914. Phil Sheridan and 45,000 men
were on the loose
Copy !req
915. in the Shenandoah.
Copy !req
916. "The whole country
Copy !req
917. "from the blue Ridge
to the north mountains
Copy !req
918. "has been made untenable
for a rebel army.
Copy !req
919. "I have destroyed
over 2,000 barns
Copy !req
920. "filled with wheat, hay,
and farming implements
Copy !req
921. "and over 70 mills.
Copy !req
922. "Tomorrow I will continue
the destruction.
Copy !req
923. "When this is completed,
Copy !req
924. "the valley will have
but little in it
Copy !req
925. for man or beast."
Copy !req
926. General Phil Sheridan.
Copy !req
927. He was sent there to
clear it out once and for all.
Copy !req
928. His instructions were
to strip it so clean
Copy !req
929. that a crow flying across it
Copy !req
930. would have to carry
his own provender,
Copy !req
931. and he came close to doing it.
Copy !req
932. No union officer
Copy !req
933. was fonder of fighting
than Sheridan.
Copy !req
934. None, save Sherman,
was so relentless.
Copy !req
935. His orders were to follow
Jubal early "to the death."
Copy !req
936. Before dawn on October 18th,
Jubal early tried one last time
Copy !req
937. to destroy Sheridan's army
by attacking at cedar creek,
Copy !req
938. while Sheridan himself
was asleep at Winchester
Copy !req
939. 20 miles away.
Copy !req
940. At first it seemed
early had succeeded.
Copy !req
941. Union forces were driven
from their camps.
Copy !req
942. Sheridan mounted
his great black horse Rienzi
Copy !req
943. and galloped through
his retreating men,
Copy !req
944. urging them to turn back.
Copy !req
945. They stopped
and began to chant his name.
Copy !req
946. "God damn you!"
Sheridan shouted.
Copy !req
947. "Don't cheer me. Fight!"
Copy !req
948. The union lines re-formed
and won back the field.
Copy !req
949. Early fled, and the Shenandoah
was closed forever
Copy !req
950. to the confederacy.
Copy !req
951. "General Sheridan,
when this particular war began,
Copy !req
952. "I thought a cavalryman
should be at least 6'4" high,
Copy !req
953. "but I have changed my mind.
Copy !req
954. 5'4 " will do in a pinch."
Copy !req
955. Abraham Lincoln.
Copy !req
956. At Petersburg,
Copy !req
957. Grant fired
a second 100-gun volley
Copy !req
958. into the enemy works.
Copy !req
959. "Dear Nat, I think well
of the president.
Copy !req
960. "He has a face
like a Hoosier Michelangelo,
Copy !req
961. "so awful ugly
it becomes beautiful,
Copy !req
962. "with its strange mouth,
its deep-cut, crisscross lines,
Copy !req
963. "and its doughnut complexion.
Copy !req
964. "I do not dwell
on the supposed failures
Copy !req
965. "of his government.
Copy !req
966. "He has shown
an almost supernatural tact
Copy !req
967. "in keeping
the ship afloat at all.
Copy !req
968. I more and more rely upon
his idiomatic western genius."
Copy !req
969. Walt Whitman.
Copy !req
970. Harper's weekly.
Copy !req
971. "Abraham Lincoln
Copy !req
972. "and Andrew Johnson
Copy !req
973. "have been elected by enormous
Copy !req
974. "and universal majorities
Copy !req
975. "in almost all the states.
Copy !req
976. "This result is the proclamation
of the American people
Copy !req
977. "that they are not conquered.
Copy !req
978. "This is what they confirm
Copy !req
979. "by the re-election
of Mr. Lincoln.
Copy !req
980. "In himself, he is unimportant,
Copy !req
981. "but as the representative
Copy !req
982. "of the feeling and purpose
of the American people,
Copy !req
983. he is the most important fact
in the world."
Copy !req
984. "I give thanks to the almighty
Copy !req
985. "for this evidence
of the people's resolution.
Copy !req
986. "This contest has demonstrated
to the world
Copy !req
987. "that a people's government
can sustain a national election
Copy !req
988. in the midst
of a great civil war."
Copy !req
989. Sherman's and Sheridan's
victories had changed the odds.
Copy !req
990. Lincoln carried 55%
of the popular vote.
Copy !req
991. Only 3 states—Kentucky,
Delaware, and New Jersey—
Copy !req
992. went to George McClellan.
Copy !req
993. Virtually all of the general's
old command,
Copy !req
994. the union army of the Potomac,
Copy !req
995. voted for Abraham Lincoln.
Copy !req
996. "That grand old army
performed many heroic acts,
Copy !req
997. "but never in its history
did it do a more devoted service
Copy !req
998. than vote
for Abraham Lincoln."
Copy !req
999. "not the fall of Richmond,
nor Wilmington,
Copy !req
1000. "nor Charleston,
nor Savannah, nor mobile,
Copy !req
1001. "nor all combined
can save the enemy
Copy !req
1002. "from the constant
and exhaustive drain
Copy !req
1003. "of blood and treasure
which must continue
Copy !req
1004. "until he shall discover
that no peace is attainable
Copy !req
1005. unless based on the recognition
of our indefeasible rights."
Copy !req
1006. President Jefferson Davis.
Copy !req
1007. If it hadn't begun before,
Copy !req
1008. the lost cause was born
with his words.
Copy !req
1009. As Davis spoke at Richmond,
Copy !req
1010. his audience could hear
Grant's guns at Petersburg,
Copy !req
1011. just 20 miles away.
Copy !req
1012. More and more,
Copy !req
1013. it was becoming
a confederacy of the mind.
Copy !req
1014. It was a realization
that defeat was foreordained.
Copy !req
1015. Miss Chesnut,
for instance, said,
Copy !req
1016. "it's like in a Greek tragedy,
Copy !req
1017. "where you know what
the outcome is bound to be,
Copy !req
1018. and we're living
a Greek tragedy."
Copy !req
1019. And things began to close in
on them more and more.
Copy !req
1020. There was scarcely a family
that hadn't lost someone.
Copy !req
1021. There were—
disruption of society.
Copy !req
1022. The blockade was working.
Copy !req
1023. They couldn't
get very simple things
Copy !req
1024. like needles to sew with—
very simple things.
Copy !req
1025. And the discouragement began
to settle in more and more
Copy !req
1026. with the realization that they
were not gonna win that war.
Copy !req
1027. Their political leaders
did everything they could,
Copy !req
1028. especially Jefferson Davis,
to assure them
Copy !req
1029. that this was
the second American revolution,
Copy !req
1030. and if they would stand fast,
they way their forefathers had,
Copy !req
1031. victory was unquestionably
gonna come,
Copy !req
1032. but the realization came
more and more
Copy !req
1033. that it was not gonna come,
Copy !req
1034. especially that they were not
gonna get foreign recognition,
Copy !req
1035. without which we wouldn't have
won the first revolution,
Copy !req
1036. and all those things
closed in on them.
Copy !req
1037. In the north,
Copy !req
1038. the reservoir of men
seemed bottomless.
Copy !req
1039. Whole units, like the 3rd
Massachusetts volunteers,
Copy !req
1040. had still never heard
a shot fired in anger.
Copy !req
1041. Lincoln now issued
a proclamation
Copy !req
1042. making the last Thursday
in November
Copy !req
1043. a national day of Thanksgiving.
Copy !req
1044. In the trenches at Petersburg,
Copy !req
1045. 120,000 Turkey and chicken
dinners were served
Copy !req
1046. to Grant's huge army.
Copy !req
1047. Only yards away,
Copy !req
1048. the confederates had no feast,
Copy !req
1049. but held their fire all day
Copy !req
1050. out of respect
for the union holiday.
Copy !req
1051. Lincoln called for more men
to finish the war.
Copy !req
1052. The south had
no more men to spare.
Copy !req
1053. And William Tecumseh Sherman
had begun his march to the sea.
Copy !req
1054. "We lay in grim repose
Copy !req
1055. "and expected the renewal
of the mortal conflict.
Copy !req
1056. "The conviction
everywhere prevailed
Copy !req
1057. that we could sustain
but one more campaign."
Copy !req
1058. Captain James F.J. Caldwell.
Copy !req
1059. On the night of November 25th
Copy !req
1060. at the winter garden theater
Copy !req
1061. on Broadway,
Copy !req
1062. Shakespeare's
Julius Caesar opened.
Copy !req
1063. 3 brothers had
the starring roles—
Copy !req
1064. Edwin, Junius,
and John Wilkes booth.
Copy !req
1065. At one point
in Shakespeare's play,
Copy !req
1066. Cassius speaks
of the assassination of Caesar.
Copy !req
1067. "How many ages hence
Copy !req
1068. "shall this our lofty scene
be acted over,
Copy !req
1069. in states unborn
and accents yet unknown?"
Copy !req
1070. "captain Clapp, 77th New York.
Wounded at Petersburg."
Copy !req
1071. "Captain Smith, 77th New York.
Wounded at wilderness."
Copy !req
1072. "Captain Taylor,
61st Pennsylvania.
Copy !req
1073. Wounded at Spotsylvania."
Copy !req
1074. "Captain Orr, 77th New York.
Lost arm at cedar creek."
Copy !req
1075. "Captain Defoe.
Eye shot out at Spotsylvania."
Copy !req
1076. "Major Ellis, 49th New York.
Died of wound at Spotsylvania."
Copy !req
1077. "Captain Hickmott,
49th New York.
Copy !req
1078. Killed at wilderness."
Copy !req
1079. "Lieutenant Lyon, 77th New York.
Killed at Spotsylvania."
Copy !req
1080. "Lieutenant Belding,
77th New York.
Copy !req
1081. Killed at cedar creek."
Copy !req
1082. "Union officers.
All killed in battle."
Copy !req
1083. "it really looks
as if it would never end."
Copy !req
1084. "The most inspiring sight
Copy !req
1085. "is the flock of buzzards
constantly hovering over us
Copy !req
1086. "and waiting for their feast.
Copy !req
1087. "Those birds are
at least impartial
Copy !req
1088. because they eat
both sides alike."
Copy !req
1089. "The same, I suppose,
is true of worms."
Copy !req
1090. Washington Roebling.
Copy !req
1091. By the spring of 1864,
Copy !req
1092. union dead completely filled
the military cemeteries
Copy !req
1093. of Washington and Alexandria.
Copy !req
1094. Secretary of war Stanton
Copy !req
1095. ordered the quartermaster
general, Montgomery Meigs,
Copy !req
1096. to choose a new site.
Copy !req
1097. Meigs was a Georgian
who had served under Lee
Copy !req
1098. in the peacetime army,
but he had developed
Copy !req
1099. an intense hatred
for all his fellow southerners
Copy !req
1100. who fought against the union
he still served.
Copy !req
1101. Without hesitation,
he picked the grounds
Copy !req
1102. of Robert E. Lee's
home at Arlington
Copy !req
1103. for the new army cemetery,
Copy !req
1104. and ordered that the union dead
be laid to rest
Copy !req
1105. within a few feet
of the front door
Copy !req
1106. of the man
he blamed for their deaths
Copy !req
1107. so that no one could ever again
live in the house.
Copy !req
1108. In October, meigs' own son John
was killed
Copy !req
1109. by confederate guerrillas
in the Shenandoah
Copy !req
1110. and buried
in Mrs. Lee's Rose garden.
Copy !req
1111. At one point that year,
the union army was sending back
Copy !req
1112. 2,000 wounded, maimed, and dying
men a week to Washington.
Copy !req
1113. Now the men Grant was sending
to fight Robert E. Lee
Copy !req
1114. were being buried
in Lee's own front yard.
Copy !req
1115. And that yard became
Arlington national cemetery,
Copy !req
1116. the union's
most hallowed ground.
Copy !req
1117. Corporate
funding for this special 25th
Copy !req
1118. anniversary presentation of
the civil war was provided by.
Copy !req
1119. Before thousands
fell on the battlefield,
Copy !req
1120. before millions were
freed and before a country
Copy !req
1121. forged its identity...
A nation declared a new
Copy !req
1122. birth of freedom,
rededicating itself to the
Copy !req
1123. proposition that all
men are created equal.
Copy !req
1124. Bank of America is proud
to sponsor "the civil war,"
Copy !req
1125. a film by Ken burns,
Copy !req
1126. newly restored for
it's 25th anniversary.
Copy !req
1127. Original
production of "the civil war"
Copy !req
1128. was made possible by
generous contributions
Copy !req
1129. from these funders.
Copy !req
1130. And by the corporation
for public broadcasting.
Copy !req
1131. And by contributions
to your PBS station from
Copy !req
1132. viewers like you, thank you.
Copy !req