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. "We believed
that it was most desirable
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18. "that the north should win.
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19. "We believed in the principle
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20. "that the union is indissoluble.
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21. "We, or many of us at least,
also believed
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22. "that the conflict
was inevitable
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23. "and that slavery
had lasted long enough,
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24. "but we equally believed
that those who stood against us
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25. "held just as sacred convictions
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26. "that were the opposite of ours,
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27. "and we respected them
as every man with a heart
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28. must respect those
who give all for their belief."
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29. Oliver Wendell Holmes.
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30. We are the veterans
of the civil war,
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31. '61 to '65.
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32. This flag is of
the Hawkins' Zouaves,
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33. New York.
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34. Now salute.
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35. As a southerner, I would say
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36. one of the main importances
of the war
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37. is that southerners
have a sense of defeat,
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38. uh, which, uh, none of the rest
of the country has.
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39. You'll see in the movie Patton,
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40. the actor
who plays Patton saying,
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41. "we Americans
have never lost a war."
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42. That's a rather amazing
statement for him to make
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43. as Patton because
Patton's grandfather
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44. was in Lee's army
of northern Virginia,
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45. and he certainly lost a war.
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46. In 1865 in South Africa,
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47. whites drove the Basuto tribe
from their land.
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48. In Afghanistan,
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49. Russian troop movements
along the border
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50. were a cause of great
international concern.
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51. At a monastery in Austria,
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52. Gregor Mendel established
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53. the principle of heredity,
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54. and in Ireland,
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55. the poet William Butler
Yeats was born.
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56. In 1865 in America,
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57. Samuel Clemens published
his first short story
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58. as Mark twain.
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59. The 13th amendment,
abolishing slavery,
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60. was formally ratified,
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61. and the Ku Klux Klan was formed.
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62. In 1860,
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63. most of the nation's
31 million people
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64. lived peaceably
on farms or in small towns.
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65. By 1865, everything had changed.
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66. Sharpsburg, Maryland.
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67. Fredericksburg, Virginia.
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68. Murfreesboro, Tennessee.
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69. Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.
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70. Vicksburg, Mississippi.
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71. Atlanta, Georgia.
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72. By the beginning of 1865,
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73. the confederacy was dying.
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74. To the west,
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75. only the tattered confederate
army of Tennessee remained.
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76. Its soldiers, like Sam Watkins,
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77. worried more about food
and blankets and shoes
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78. than fighting.
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79. Outside Petersburg,
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80. Elisha Hunt Rhodes
and 120,000 other union troops
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81. were dug in,
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82. unable to dislodge
the stubborn rebel army.
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83. Atlanta had been razed,
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84. and georgia and the carolinas
lay helpless
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85. in William Tecumseh Sherman's
path.
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86. As the new year began,
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87. Robert E. Lee assumed command
of all Southern forces
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88. and, with it, the hopeless task
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89. of hurling back
the huge union armies
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90. now closing in from every side.
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91. With victory within his grasp,
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92. Abraham Lincoln looked forward
to a second presidential term
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93. and a new challenge—
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94. healing the nation
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95. he had struggled so hard
to reunite.
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96. "Here was the greatest
and most moving chapter
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97. "in American history,
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98. "a blending
of meanness and greatness,
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99. "an ending and a beginning.
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100. "It came out of what men were,
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101. "but it did not go
as men had planned.
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102. "Of all men,
Abraham Lincoln came the closest
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103. "to understanding
what had happened.
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104. "Yet even he, in his final
backward glance,
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105. "had to confess that something
that went beyond words
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106. had been at work
in the land."
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107. "The almighty had
his own purposes."
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108. Bruce Catton.
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109. "My aim
was to whip the rebels,
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110. "to humble their pride,
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111. "to follow them
to their innermost recesses,
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112. and to make them
fear and dread us."
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113. "War is cruelty.
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114. "There's no use
trying to reform it.
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115. The crueler it is,
the sooner it will be over."
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116. William Tecumseh Sherman.
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117. "War is all hell,"
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118. William Tecumseh Sherman
once said,
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119. and it was now his aim
to bring that hell
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120. to the heart of the confederacy.
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121. He saw from the very beginning
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122. how hard a war it was gonna be,
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123. and when he said how
hard a war it was gonna be,
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124. he was retired
under suspicion of insanity
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125. and then brought back
when they decided
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126. maybe he wasn't
so crazy after all.
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127. Sherman is maybe the first
truly modern general.
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128. He was the first one
to understand,
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129. in the present-day world,
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130. that civilians were
the backers-up of things
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131. and that if you
went against civilians,
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132. you deprived the army
of what kept it going,
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133. so he quite purposely
made war against civilians.
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134. From Atlanta in late 1864,
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135. Sherman proposed
to march his army
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136. through the heart of Georgia
all the way to Savannah.
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137. His army would live
off the land,
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138. destroying everything
in its path
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139. that could conceivably aid
the faltering confederacy
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140. and a good deal that couldn't.
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141. "I can make this march,"
he promised,
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142. "and make Georgia howl."
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143. Lincoln's advisors thought
Sherman's plan foolhardy.
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144. The president approved it.
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145. "If you can whip Lee
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146. and I can march to the
Atlantic," Sherman told Grant,
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147. "I think uncle Abe
will give us 20 days' leave
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148. to see the young folks."
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149. "there are rumors
that we are to cut loose
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150. "and march south to the ocean.
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151. "We're in fine shape
and, I think,
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152. could go anywhere
uncle Billy would lead."
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153. Private Theodore Upson.
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154. Before leaving Atlanta,
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155. Sherman ordered all townspeople,
white and black,
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156. out of their homes,
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157. then directed his men
to burn or destroy
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158. anything of use to the rebels.
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159. Civilians looted the town
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160. and helped spread the Blaze
throughout the city.
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161. "A grand and awful spectacle
is presented to the beholder
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162. "in this beautiful city,
now in flames.
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163. "The heaven is one expanse
of lurid fire.
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164. "The air is filled
with flying cinders.
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165. "The city which,
next to Richmond,
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166. "has furnished more material
for prosecuting the war
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167. than any other
in the south..."
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168. "Exists no more
as a means for injury
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169. to be used by the enemies
of the union."
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170. Sherman began his march.
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171. 62,000 men in blue
were on the move
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172. in two great columns.
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173. Their supply train
stretched 25 miles.
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174. A slave watching the army
stream past
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175. wondered aloud
if anybody was left up north.
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176. "The name of the captor
of Atlanta, if he fails now,
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177. "will become
the scoff of mankind
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178. "and the humiliation of
the United States for all time.
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179. If he succeeds, it will be
written on the tablet of fame."
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180. London herald.
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181. "reaching the hill just
outside the old rebel works,
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182. "we paused to look back.
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183. "Behind us lay Atlanta in ruins,
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184. "the black smoke
rising high in the air,
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185. "hanging like a pall.
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186. "Then we turned
our horses' heads to the east.
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187. "Atlanta was soon lost
behind the screen of trees
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188. and became
a thing of the past."
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189. It had been cumulative evidence
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190. that an army
could subsist itself
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191. on what was growing
in the fields, winter or summer,
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192. and they were
a moving city, like.
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193. They would grind their own corn
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194. at the grist mills
along the way,
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195. butcher their own cattle.
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196. Sherman was perfectly satisfied
he could make the march
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197. without difficulty
with regard to supplies.
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198. In fact, they ate better
on that march
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199. than they did not marching.
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200. Sweet potatoes were
particularly prized, and pork.
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201. They had plenty to eat.
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202. "This is probably
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203. "the most gigantic
pleasure excursion ever planned.
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204. "It already beats everything
I ever saw soldiering
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205. and promises
to prove much richer yet."
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206. "we had a gay old campaign.
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207. "Destroyed all we could not eat,
stole their niggers,
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208. "burned their cotton and gins,
spilled their sorghum,
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209. "burned and twisted
their railroads,
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210. and raised hell, generally."
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211. Sherman's men tore up railroads,
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212. heating the rails
and twisting them beyond repair.
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213. It became a trademark—
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214. Sherman's neckties.
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215. He forbade his men to plunder
the homes they passed,
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216. but neither he nor they
took the order very seriously.
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217. "I've got a regiment that
can kill, gut, and scrape a pig
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218. without breaking ranks."
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219. "they say no living thing
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220. "is found in Sherman's track,
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221. "only chimneys,
like telegraph poles,
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222. to carry the news of
his attack backwards."
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223. Mary Chesnut.
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224. "I doubt if history
affords a parallel
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225. "to the deep and bitter enmity
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226. "of the women of the south.
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227. "No one who sees them and hears
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228. but must feel the
intensity of their hate."
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229. "as far as the eye could reach,
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230. "the lurid flames
of burning houses
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231. "lit up the heavens.
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232. "I could stand
out on the veranda
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233. and, for 2 or 3 miles, watch
the Yankees as they came on."
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234. "I could Mark
when they reached the residence
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235. of each and every friend
on the road."
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236. The troops looted slave
cabins, as well as mansions,
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237. poked their ramrods
into flower beds
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238. in search of buried valuables,
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239. and burned everything
in their path.
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240. "The thousand pounds of
meat in my smokehouse is gone.
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241. "My 18 fat turkeys, my hens,
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242. "chickens, and fowl,
my young pigs
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243. "are shot down in my yard
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244. as if they were
the rebels."
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245. "the cruelties practiced
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246. "on this campaign
towards the citizens
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247. "have been enough to blast
a more sacred cause than ours.
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248. We hardly deserve
success."
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249. At Milledgeville, Georgia,
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250. Sherman's men
boiled their coffee
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251. over bonfires
of confederate currency,
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252. held a mock session
of the legislature
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253. that passed a resolution
returning Georgia to the union.
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254. Sherman's men
were feasting on delicacies
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255. foraged from local farms
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256. when a band of emaciated men
tottered into the firelight.
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257. They were union escapees
from Andersonville prison.
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258. An Indiana colonel remembered
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259. that the sight
of the starved men
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260. "sickened and infuriated"
his troops.
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261. "When foraging now,
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262. "they think of
the tens of thousands
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263. "of their imprisoned comrades
slowly perishing with hunger,
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264. and they sweep
with the scythe of destruction."
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265. Before they were
through, Sherman and his men
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266. would cross 425 miles
of hostile territory
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267. and wreak $100 million
worth of havoc.
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268. The south would never forget.
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269. "We will fight you to the death.
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270. "Better to die a thousand deaths
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271. than submit to live under you
and your negro allies."
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272. General John bell hood.
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273. Lacking a leg
and the use of one arm,
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274. John bell hood had to be strapped
to the saddle each morning,
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275. but he fought as hard
and as recklessly as ever.
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276. Hood and his dwindling army
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277. now tried to divert
Sherman's attention
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278. by moving north to join forces
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279. with Nathan Bedford Forrest's
cavalry
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280. and invade Tennessee.
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281. Sherman was delighted.
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282. "If he will go
to the Ohio river,
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283. I'll give him rations," he said.
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284. "My business
is down south."
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285. Waiting for hood in Tennessee
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286. was a fresh, well-equipped
union army
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287. 1/3 again as large as hood's,
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288. commanded by George Thomas,
"the rock of Chickamauga."
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289. At Franklin, hood ordered
a series of 13 hopeless charges
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290. in which 12 confederate generals
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291. and 7,000 soldiers were lost,
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292. more men than U.S. Grant
had lost at cold harbor
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293. the year before,
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294. more than George McClellan lost
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295. in all the battles
of the 7 days in 1862.
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296. Franklin is a horrendous battle,
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297. and the flower of the army fell.
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298. There's a strong suspicion
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299. that hood was trying
to discipline his army
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300. by staging that charge,
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301. and there's some truth in it.
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302. His army was wrecked.
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303. The defeat at Nashville
is in large part
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304. due to what had happened
at Franklin a month before.
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305. At Nashville,
George Thomas attacked
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306. what was left of hood's army.
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307. "My boot was full of blood
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308. "and my clothing
saturated with it.
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309. "I reached
general hood's headquarters.
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310. "He was much agitated
and affected,
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311. "pulling his hair
with his one hand—
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312. "he had but one—
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313. and crying like
his heart would break."
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314. Sam Watkins.
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315. Hood's army had disintegrated.
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316. "I beheld for the first
and only time," he confessed,
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317. "a confederate army
abandon the field in confusion."
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318. Hood resigned.
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319. Lee recalled Joe Johnston
to active duty
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320. and put him in charge
of patching together
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321. whatever confederate forces
remained outside of Virginia.
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322. "We were willing to go anywhere
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323. "or to follow anyone
who would lead us.
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324. "We were anxious
to flee, fight, or fortify.
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325. "I have never seen an army
so confused and demoralized.
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326. The whole thing seemed to be
tottering and trembling."
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327. "gentlemen,
you cannot qualify war
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328. "in harsher terms than I will.
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329. "We cannot change the hearts
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330. "of these people of the south,
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331. "but we can make war so terrible
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332. "and make them so sick of war
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333. "that generations will pass away
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334. before they again
appeal to it."
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335. William Tecumseh Sherman.
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336. "Darkest of all Decembers
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337. "ever my life has known,
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338. "sitting here by the embers,
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339. stunned, helpless, alone."
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340. Mary Chesnut.
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341. "My name is Charles Jess.
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342. "I was born in south Carolina
as a slave,
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343. "and I was freed
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344. "when Sherman's army came
into the county of Chatham.
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345. "I was a union man.
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346. "I's a slave
and could not be anything else
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347. "because I wanted my freedom,
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348. "and I hoped and expected
it would give me my freedom,
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349. as it did."
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350. "the negroes followed the army
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351. "like a sable cloud in the sky
before a thunderstorm.
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352. They thought it was freedom
now or never."
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353. 25,000 slaves
fled to Sherman's army,
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354. jubilant he had come
to liberate them,
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355. but fearful that if they strayed
too far from his columns,
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356. they would be caught
by confederate guerrillas.
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357. "Perfect anarchy reigned,"
one plantation owner said.
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358. It was, said another,
"the breath of emancipation."
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359. And the Yankees
would come, and after a while,
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360. there would be
a whole troop of men come.
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361. They said they were Yankees,
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362. all riding horses.
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363. So I asked them, I said,
"where are they going?"
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364. They said they all
going home now.
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365. They said, "well, all of you
niggers is all free now."
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366. "They gather
around me in crowds,
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367. "and I can't find out
whether I am Moses or Aaron,
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368. but surely I am rated
as one of the congregation."
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369. "it seems the good
people in the north
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370. "are terribly worried about us.
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371. "They called us the lost army,
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372. "and some thought we
would never show up again.
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373. "I don't think they know
what kind of an army this is
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374. "that uncle Billy has.
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375. "Why, if Grant can keep
Lee and his troops busy,
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376. we can tramp all over
this confederacy."
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377. Private Theodore Upson.
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378. Throughout the north,
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379. people wondered what
had happened to Sherman's army,
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380. until suddenly,
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381. William Tecumseh Sherman
emerged near Savannah.
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382. "December 25, 1864.
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383. "Dear Mr. president,
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384. "I beg to present you,
as a Christmas gift,
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385. "the city of Savannah,
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386. "with 150 heavy guns
and plenty of ammunition,
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387. also about 25,000 bales
of cotton."
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388. He then regroups at Savannah,
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389. and in the last week
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390. of January,
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391. he starts into south Carolina.
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392. South Carolina gets it
even worse than Georgia
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393. because they figured
that's where secession started.
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394. Sherman now turned
his columns northward
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395. into the carolinas.
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396. A relentless
winter rain was falling,
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397. and confederate generals
were confident
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398. no army could march
through the mud,
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399. but Sherman and his men
made a steady 10 miles a day.
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400. Battalions of axmen led the way,
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401. hacking down whole forests
to construct corduroy roads.
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402. "When I learned
that Sherman's army
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403. "was marching through
the Salkehatchie swamps
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404. "making its own roads
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405. "at the rate
of a dozen miles a day
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406. "and bringing its artillery
and wagons with it,
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407. "I made up my mind that there had
been no such army in existence
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408. since the days
of Julius Caesar."
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409. Joseph E. Johnston.
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410. Sherman's men were still
harsher in south Carolina
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411. than they had been in Georgia.
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412. "Here is where treason began,"
a private said,
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413. "and by god,
this is where it shall end."
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414. Few houses were left standing.
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415. "The wind moans
among the bleak chimneys
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416. "and whistles through
the gaping windows.
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417. "The market is a ruined shell,
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418. its spire fallen in,
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419. "the old bell, secessia,
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420. "that had rung out every
state as it seceded,
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421. lying half-buried
in the earth."
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422. On February 17, 1865,
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423. fort Sumter was abandoned,
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424. along with all of Charleston.
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425. "This disappointment,"
Jefferson Davis admitted,
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426. "is extremely bitter."
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427. "a city of ruins,
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428. "of desolation,
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429. of vacant houses,
of widowed women..."
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430. "Of rotting wharves,
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431. "of deserted warehouses,
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432. "of weed-wild gardens,
of miles of grass-grown streets,
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433. "of acres of pitiful
and voiceful barrenness—
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434. "that is Charleston,
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435. wherein rebellion
loftily reared its head."
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436. "Jack Middleton
writes from Richmond,
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437. "the wolf is at the door here.
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438. "We dread starvation far more
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439. "than we do Grant or Sherman.
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440. Famine—that is the word now."
Copy !req
441. Mary Chesnut.
Copy !req
442. Everywhere the union
armies marched,
Copy !req
443. the back roads filled
with confederate refugees.
Copy !req
444. Thousands fled to Texas
in search of a new start.
Copy !req
445. Thousands more
flocked to Richmond,
Copy !req
446. hoping the confederate
government would care for them.
Copy !req
447. There was little it could do.
Copy !req
448. The confederate government
was coming apart.
Copy !req
449. The governor of north Carolina
Copy !req
450. refused to permit
any but his own troops
Copy !req
451. to wear the 92,000 uniforms
he was hoarding.
Copy !req
452. In Georgia,
Copy !req
453. governor Joseph brown
threatened to secede
Copy !req
454. from the confederacy.
Copy !req
455. States' rights still came first.
Copy !req
456. "If the confederacy fails,
Copy !req
457. "there should be written
on its tombstone—
Copy !req
458. died of a theory."
Copy !req
459. President Jefferson Davis.
Copy !req
460. "I have been up
to see the congress,
Copy !req
461. "and they do not seem able
to do anything
Copy !req
462. "except eat peanuts
and chew tobacco,
Copy !req
463. while my army
is starving."
Copy !req
464. Robert E. Lee.
Copy !req
465. Lee begged for more supplies.
Copy !req
466. Davis had none to give.
Copy !req
467. A single stick of firewood
cost $5.00 in Richmond.
Copy !req
468. A barrel of flour
had risen to $250
Copy !req
469. and could rarely be found
even at that price.
Copy !req
470. "I daily part
with my raiment for food.
Copy !req
471. "We find no one
who will exchange eatables
Copy !req
472. "for confederate money,
Copy !req
473. so we are devouring
our clothes."
Copy !req
474. Hundreds of confederate soldiers
were deserting every day,
Copy !req
475. cold, hungry, barefoot,
Copy !req
476. driven by desperate letters
from home.
Copy !req
477. Lee asked that slaves
now be armed
Copy !req
478. to defend the confederacy.
Copy !req
479. "We must decide," he said,
Copy !req
480. "whether the negro shall fight
for us or against us.
Copy !req
481. Those willing to fight,"
he added,
Copy !req
482. would be freed
after the war."
Copy !req
483. The confederate congress
finally authorized black troops
Copy !req
484. because,
as the Richmond examiner said,
Copy !req
485. "the country will not deny
general Lee anything
Copy !req
486. he may ask for."
Copy !req
487. 6 days later,
Copy !req
488. the citizens of Richmond
saw an astonishing sight—
Copy !req
489. a new confederate battalion
Copy !req
490. made up of white convalescents
and black hospital orderlies
Copy !req
491. marching up main street
to the strains of Dixie.
Copy !req
492. "you cannot make
soldiers of slaves
Copy !req
493. "or slaves of soldiers.
Copy !req
494. "The day you make
a soldier of them
Copy !req
495. "is the beginning of the end
of the revolution,
Copy !req
496. "and if slaves
seem good soldiers,
Copy !req
497. then our whole theory
of slavery is wrong."
Copy !req
498. Senator Howell Cobb, Georgia.
Copy !req
499. Earlier that winter,
Copy !req
500. the United States congress
had voted 119 to 56
Copy !req
501. to pass the 13th amendment
to abolish slavery
Copy !req
502. and sent it to the states
for ratification.
Copy !req
503. 11 months later,
Copy !req
504. slavery was officially
abolished everywhere
Copy !req
505. and for all time.
Copy !req
506. "Verily, the work does not end
Copy !req
507. "with the abolition of slavery,
Copy !req
508. but only begins."
Copy !req
509. Frederick Douglass.
Copy !req
510. "I see the president
almost every day.
Copy !req
511. "I saw him this morning
about 8:30,
Copy !req
512. "coming into business.
Copy !req
513. "We've got so that we exchange
bows, and very cordial ones.
Copy !req
514. "I see very plainly
Copy !req
515. "Abraham Lincoln's dark brown
face with its deep-cut lines,
Copy !req
516. "the eyes always, to me,
Copy !req
517. with a latent sadness
in the expression."
Copy !req
518. "None of the artists or pictures
Copy !req
519. "has caught the deep, though
subtle and indirect, expression
Copy !req
520. "of this man's face.
Copy !req
521. "There is something else there.
Copy !req
522. "One of the great
portrait painters
Copy !req
523. of 2 or 3 centuries ago
is needed."
Copy !req
524. Walt Whitman.
Copy !req
525. "March 4th.
Copy !req
526. "We captured 25 Cannon.
Copy !req
527. "General mower fired them today
in a salute
Copy !req
528. "in honor of the inauguration
of Mr. Lincoln
Copy !req
529. "for his second term.
Copy !req
530. "His first inauguration was not
celebrated in north Carolina,
Copy !req
531. "but the glorification over
the beginning of his second term
Copy !req
532. goes to make up
the deficiency."
Copy !req
533. George Nichols.
Copy !req
534. Inauguration day
was cold and windy,
Copy !req
535. just as it had been
4 years earlier...
Copy !req
536. But the U.S. capitol
was now complete,
Copy !req
537. its great iron dome in place,
Copy !req
538. crowned by a bronze Liberty.
Copy !req
539. Just before the president
began to speak,
Copy !req
540. the clouds parted,
Copy !req
541. flooding the stand
with brilliant sunlight.
Copy !req
542. "Fondly do we hope,
Copy !req
543. "fervently do we pray
Copy !req
544. that this mighty scourge of war
may speedily pass away."
Copy !req
545. "Yet if god wills
that it continue
Copy !req
546. "until all the wealth piled up
Copy !req
547. "by the bondsman's 250 years
of unrequited toil
Copy !req
548. "shall be sunk
Copy !req
549. "and until every drop of blood
drawn with the lash
Copy !req
550. "shall be paid
by another drawn with the sword,
Copy !req
551. "as was said 3,000 years ago,
Copy !req
552. "so still must be said,
Copy !req
553. "the judgments of the lord
Copy !req
554. are true and righteous
altogether."
Copy !req
555. "With malice towards none,
Copy !req
556. "with charity for all...
Copy !req
557. "With firmness in the right
Copy !req
558. "as god gives us
to see the right,
Copy !req
559. "let us strive on
to finish the work we are in,
Copy !req
560. "to bind up the nation's wounds,
Copy !req
561. "to care for him
who shall have borne the battle
Copy !req
562. "and for his widow
and his orphan...
Copy !req
563. "To do all
which may achieve and Cherish
Copy !req
564. "a just and lasting peace
among ourselves
Copy !req
565. and with all nations."
Copy !req
566. Can it be anyone but Lincoln
Copy !req
567. that any of us could be drawn to
Copy !req
568. as the central figure
of the war?
Copy !req
569. Because, in a way,
he comprehended both sides.
Copy !req
570. "We must not be enemies.
We must be friends."
Copy !req
571. "I'm a tired man,"
Lincoln said afterwards.
Copy !req
572. "Sometimes I think
I'm the tiredest man on earth."
Copy !req
573. In the crowd
just a few yards from Lincoln
Copy !req
574. was the young actor
John Wilkes booth,
Copy !req
575. a pistol in his pocket.
Copy !req
576. His vantage point
on the balcony,
Copy !req
577. booth said afterwards,
had offered
Copy !req
578. "an excellent chance
to kill the president...
Copy !req
579. If I had wished."
Copy !req
580. John Wilkes booth
Copy !req
581. was a fervent believer
in slavery and white supremacy,
Copy !req
582. but during 4 years of war,
Copy !req
583. he had not been able
to bring himself
Copy !req
584. actually to fight
for the Southern cause.
Copy !req
585. "I have begun
to deem myself a coward
Copy !req
586. and to despise
my own existence."
Copy !req
587. His mind fixed on Lincoln
Copy !req
588. as the tyrant responsible
for all the country's troubles
Copy !req
589. and his own.
Copy !req
590. Booth hatched a scheme
to kidnap Lincoln
Copy !req
591. and gathered a worshipful band
of dubious conspirators
Copy !req
592. willing to help out.
Copy !req
593. Lewis Paine,
Copy !req
594. a wounded confederate
Copy !req
595. who had recently sworn
allegiance to the union.
Copy !req
596. David E. Herold,
Copy !req
597. a druggist's clerk
Copy !req
598. who was thought by some
to be mentally retarded.
Copy !req
599. George Atzerodt,
Copy !req
600. a German-born wagon painter
Copy !req
601. barely able to make himself
understood in English.
Copy !req
602. And John H. Surratt,
Copy !req
603. a sometime confederate spy
Copy !req
604. whose widowed mother Mary
Copy !req
605. kept a Washington boardinghouse
Copy !req
606. where booth and his admirers
sometimes met.
Copy !req
607. Two weeks
after the inauguration,
Copy !req
608. booth and his accomplices,
all wearing masks,
Copy !req
609. rode out
toward the soldiers' home,
Copy !req
610. where Lincoln often slept,
Copy !req
611. hoping to intercept
his carriage.
Copy !req
612. The president never came.
Copy !req
613. "So goes the world,"
booth wrote.
Copy !req
614. "Might makes right."
Copy !req
615. Late in march, Lincoln sailed
down to city point, Virginia,
Copy !req
616. to confer with his generals
Copy !req
617. aboard Grant's
floating headquarters,
Copy !req
618. the river queen.
Copy !req
619. Sherman, who had interrupted
his march through the carolinas,
Copy !req
620. had met Lincoln
only once before, in 1861,
Copy !req
621. and found him then
a weak and partisan politician
Copy !req
622. unequal to his task.
Copy !req
623. The talks lasted two days.
Copy !req
624. Grant, Sherman,
and admiral Porter
Copy !req
625. detailed plans
for one last major campaign.
Copy !req
626. Lincoln, satisfied that victory
seemed within reach,
Copy !req
627. outlined plans for peace.
Copy !req
628. "If the rebels would lay down their
guns and go home," Lincoln said,
Copy !req
629. "they should be welcomed back
Copy !req
630. as citizens
of the United States."
Copy !req
631. "I never saw him again.
Copy !req
632. "Of all the men I ever met,
Copy !req
633. "he seemed to me to possess more
of the elements of greatness
Copy !req
634. "combined with goodness
Copy !req
635. than any other."
Copy !req
636. William Tecumseh Sherman.
Copy !req
637. "My own corps was stretched
Copy !req
638. "until the men stood
like a row of vedettes
Copy !req
639. "15 feet apart.
Copy !req
640. "It was not a line,
Copy !req
641. it was the mere skeleton
of a line."
Copy !req
642. General John B. Gordon.
Copy !req
643. Ulysses S. Grant
and Robert E. Lee
Copy !req
644. had faced one another
in front of Petersburg
Copy !req
645. for 9 months.
Copy !req
646. Slowly, steadily,
Copy !req
647. Grant had extended his trenches
around Petersburg.
Copy !req
648. Lee's lines had been forced
to stretch, too,
Copy !req
649. but his army was shrinking.
Copy !req
650. In 9 months,
Copy !req
651. 60,000 Southern soldiers
had deserted.
Copy !req
652. "All of us think
we're whipped now.
Copy !req
653. "The men are ragged
and are getting half rations.
Copy !req
654. "Some say we'll have to
go to Georgey,
Copy !req
655. but the men
will not go there."
Copy !req
656. The thinning confederate
lines around Petersburg
Copy !req
657. finally extended 53 miles.
Copy !req
658. Grant's forces numbered 125,000.
Copy !req
659. Lee's had dwindled to 35,000.
Copy !req
660. Lee's only hope lay in
moving his army to the southwest
Copy !req
661. to link up with Johnston
in the hills of north Carolina
Copy !req
662. and fight on.
Copy !req
663. On march 25th,
Copy !req
664. confederates
under John B. Gordon
Copy !req
665. mounted a sudden night assault
that briefly won possession
Copy !req
666. of an earthwork
called fort Stedman.
Copy !req
667. It was Lee's last advance.
Copy !req
668. Grant counterattacked,
Copy !req
669. racing around the rebel flank
Copy !req
670. to block Lee's escape
at five forks.
Copy !req
671. There, on April 1st,
Copy !req
672. he routed a confederate division
under George Pickett.
Copy !req
673. The next day,
Copy !req
674. union forces attacked
all along the Petersburg line.
Copy !req
675. Slowly, relentlessly,
and at great cost,
Copy !req
676. they drove the confederates
out of their trenches.
Copy !req
677. Among the Southern dead
left behind
Copy !req
678. were shoeless boys
as young as 14.
Copy !req
679. "The conduct
of the Southern people
Copy !req
680. "appears many times truly noble,
as exemplified, for instance,
Copy !req
681. "in the defense of Petersburg.
Copy !req
682. "Old men with silver locks
lay dead in the trenches
Copy !req
683. "side by side
with mere boys of 13 or 14.
Copy !req
684. "It almost makes one sorry
to have to fight against people
Copy !req
685. who show such devotion for
their homes and their country."
Copy !req
686. Washington Roebling.
Copy !req
687. A.P. hill, who had served Lee
faithfully in a dozen battles
Copy !req
688. and staved off confederate
disaster at Antietam,
Copy !req
689. tried to rally his men.
Copy !req
690. Two union infantrymen
shot him dead
Copy !req
691. as he rode between the lines.
Copy !req
692. "He is at rest,
Copy !req
693. and we who are left
are the ones to suffer."
Copy !req
694. Petersburg, the scene
of 9 months' siege,
Copy !req
695. fell to Grant's army.
Copy !req
696. As black civilians
cheered the black soldiers
Copy !req
697. that led the union
columns into the city,
Copy !req
698. Lee's army slipped
across the Appomattox river.
Copy !req
699. In Richmond, Jefferson Davis
was attending 10:00 services
Copy !req
700. that Sunday morning
Copy !req
701. at St. Paul's
episcopal church
Copy !req
702. when the sexton
handed him a message.
Copy !req
703. "President Davis, my lines
are broken in 3 places.
Copy !req
704. Richmond must be evacuated
this evening."
Copy !req
705. Robert E. Lee.
Copy !req
706. "I happened to sit in the
rear of the president's pew,
Copy !req
707. "so near that I plainly saw
the sort of gray pallor
Copy !req
708. "that came upon his face
Copy !req
709. as he read a scrap of paper
thrust into his hand."
Copy !req
710. Davis hurried from the church
Copy !req
711. and ordered his government
to move to Danville, Virginia,
Copy !req
712. 140 miles to the south.
Copy !req
713. On the evening of April 2nd,
Copy !req
714. Davis and his cabinet
boarded the last train,
Copy !req
715. a series of freight cars
labeled "treasury department,"
Copy !req
716. "quartermaster's department,"
"war department."
Copy !req
717. "we tried to comfort
ourselves by saying in low tones
Copy !req
718. "that the capital
was only moved temporarily,
Copy !req
719. "that general Lee
would make a stand
Copy !req
720. "and repulse the daring enemy,
Copy !req
721. and that we would yet win
the battle and the day."
Copy !req
722. A slave dealer named Lumpkin
Copy !req
723. failed to get his
50 chained slaves aboard.
Copy !req
724. He had to unlock $50,000 worth
of property in the street
Copy !req
725. and let them go.
Copy !req
726. The retreating confederates
set fire to much of Richmond.
Copy !req
727. Mobs plundered stores,
broke into abandoned houses.
Copy !req
728. The fire on land spread
to the confederate arsenal.
Copy !req
729. The explosion rocked the city
Copy !req
730. and shattered windows
for miles around.
Copy !req
731. "Everything was
in the wildest confusion.
Copy !req
732. "The low characters of the town
had broken into everything
Copy !req
733. "and were looting the town,
Copy !req
734. "being aided
to a considerable extent
Copy !req
735. "by the soldiers
Copy !req
736. who had broken
through all discipline."
Copy !req
737. "I saw a confederate
soldier on horseback
Copy !req
738. "pause under my window.
Copy !req
739. "He wheeled
and fired behind him,
Copy !req
740. "rode a short distance,
Copy !req
741. "wheeled and fired again.
Copy !req
742. Coming up the street
rode a body of men in blue."
Copy !req
743. "arriving at the capital,
I sprang from my horse,
Copy !req
744. "first unbuckling the stars
and stripes from my saddle,
Copy !req
745. "and with captain Langdon,
I rushed up to the roof.
Copy !req
746. "Together, we hoisted the first
large flag over Richmond
Copy !req
747. and, on the peak of the roof,
drank to its success."
Copy !req
748. Mrs. Robert e. Lee, too crippled
by arthritis to travel,
Copy !req
749. remained in Richmond.
Copy !req
750. The union commander
posted a guard before her house,
Copy !req
751. a black cavalryman,
Copy !req
752. to ensure no harm came to her.
Copy !req
753. "April 3, 1865.
Copy !req
754. "Thank god
I have lived to see this.
Copy !req
755. "It seems to me
Copy !req
756. "that I have been dreaming
a horrid nightmare
Copy !req
757. "for 4 years,
Copy !req
758. "and now the nightmare is gone.
Copy !req
759. I want to see Richmond."
Copy !req
760. On April 3rd,
Abraham Lincoln and his son tad
Copy !req
761. arrived at Rockett's wharf
aboard a small barge
Copy !req
762. and were escorted
through the smoking city
Copy !req
763. by a unit of black cavalry.
Copy !req
764. Freed slaves
mobbed the president,
Copy !req
765. laughing, singing,
weeping for joy,
Copy !req
766. kneeling before him,
Copy !req
767. straining to touch his clothes.
Copy !req
768. "I know I am free,"
said one man,
Copy !req
769. "for I have seen father Abraham
and felt him."
Copy !req
770. The president walked
about a mile through the crowd
Copy !req
771. and loped up the steps
of the confederate white house,
Copy !req
772. now union headquarters.
Copy !req
773. When he sat down
at Jefferson Davis' desk,
Copy !req
774. the troops outside
burst into cheers.
Copy !req
775. "Richmond has fallen,
Copy !req
776. "and I have no heart
to write about it.
Copy !req
777. "They are too many for us.
Copy !req
778. "Everything lost in Richmond,
even our archives.
Copy !req
779. Blue-black
is our horizon."
Copy !req
780. Mary Chesnut.
Copy !req
781. "There is a stillness
in the midst of which
Copy !req
782. "Richmond, with her ruins
and her unchanging spires,
Copy !req
783. "rests beneath a ghastly,
fitful glare.
Copy !req
784. "We are under the shadow
of ruins.
Copy !req
785. "From the pavements
where we walk
Copy !req
786. "stretches a vista
of devastation.
Copy !req
787. "The wreck, the loneliness
seem interminable.
Copy !req
788. "There is no sound of life
Copy !req
789. "but the stillness
of the catacomb,
Copy !req
790. "only as our footsteps fall dull
on the deserted sidewalk
Copy !req
791. "and a funeral troop of echoes
Copy !req
792. "bump against the dead walls
and closed shutters in reply.
Copy !req
793. "And this is Richmond,
Copy !req
794. "says a melancholy voice.
Copy !req
795. And this is Richmond."
Copy !req
796. On April 8th,
Copy !req
797. Abraham and Mary Lincoln
took a drive together
Copy !req
798. past a country cemetery
on the outskirts of Petersburg.
Copy !req
799. "It was a
retired place shaded by trees,
Copy !req
800. "and early spring flowers were
opening on nearly every grave.
Copy !req
801. "It was so quiet and attractive
Copy !req
802. "that we stopped the carriage
and walked through it.
Copy !req
803. "Mr. Lincoln seemed
thoughtful and impressed.
Copy !req
804. "He said,
Copy !req
805. "Mary, you are younger than I.
You will survive me.
Copy !req
806. "When I'm gone,
Copy !req
807. lay my remains in some
quiet place like this."
Copy !req
808. "general Lee was riding slowly
Copy !req
809. "along the line
of tangled wagons.
Copy !req
810. He rode erect,
as if incapable of fatigue."
Copy !req
811. Lee's army fled westward.
Copy !req
812. Grant was right behind them.
Copy !req
813. "On and on, hour after hour,
Copy !req
814. "from hilltop to hilltop,
Copy !req
815. "the lines were alternately
forming, fighting,
Copy !req
816. "and retreating,
Copy !req
817. "making one
almost continuous battle.
Copy !req
818. "A boy soldier came running by
at the top of his speed.
Copy !req
819. "When asked why he was running,
he shouted back,
Copy !req
820. I'm running
'cause I can't fly."
Copy !req
821. From Danville on April 4th,
Copy !req
822. Jefferson Davis
issued a proclamation
Copy !req
823. pledging to fight on.
Copy !req
824. "Relieved from the
necessity of guarding cities,
Copy !req
825. "with our army free to move
from point to point,
Copy !req
826. "nothing is now needed
to render our triumph certain
Copy !req
827. "but our own
unquenchable resolve.
Copy !req
828. No peace will ever be made
with the infamous invaders."
Copy !req
829. On April 6th at Sayler's creek,
Copy !req
830. union cavalry and infantry
Copy !req
831. inflicted 6,000 casualties
on Lee's army
Copy !req
832. and captured 8 generals,
Copy !req
833. including Lee's own son Custis.
Copy !req
834. He now had fewer
than 25,000 men.
Copy !req
835. 125,000 federal troops
Copy !req
836. were now closing in on Lee
from 3 sides.
Copy !req
837. Union general Phil Sheridan
wired Grant,
Copy !req
838. "if the thing is pressed,
Copy !req
839. I think
that Lee will surrender."
Copy !req
840. "Let the thing be pressed,"
Lincoln answered.
Copy !req
841. An officer urged Lee
to surrender.
Copy !req
842. The general asked what the country would
think of him if he failed to fight on.
Copy !req
843. "The country be damned,"
said the officer,
Copy !req
844. "there is no country.
Copy !req
845. "There has been no country
for a year or more.
Copy !req
846. You're the country
to these men."
Copy !req
847. "the few men who still
carried their muskets
Copy !req
848. "had hardly the appearance
of soldiers,
Copy !req
849. "their clothes all tattered
and covered with mud,
Copy !req
850. "their eyes sunken
and lusterless,
Copy !req
851. "yet still they were waiting
for general Lee to say
Copy !req
852. where they were
to face about and fight."
Copy !req
853. Magnus Thompson,
35th Virginia cavalry battalion.
Copy !req
854. Lee's confederate army
was moving
Copy !req
855. along one side
of the Appomattox river,
Copy !req
856. a Willow-fringed run
that any country boy could jump.
Copy !req
857. His pursuers clung
to the opposite bank.
Copy !req
858. "5 P.M., April 7, 1865.
Copy !req
859. "General Lee,
Copy !req
860. "the result of last week
must convince you
Copy !req
861. "of the hopelessness
of further resistance.
Copy !req
862. "I regard it as my duty
to shift from myself
Copy !req
863. "the responsibility
of any further effusion of blood
Copy !req
864. "by asking of you the surrender
Copy !req
865. "of that portion
of the confederate states army
Copy !req
866. known as the army
of northern Virginia."
Copy !req
867. Ulysses S. Grant.
Copy !req
868. On April 8th,
Copy !req
869. Grant again flanked Lee's army
Copy !req
870. and captured two trainloads
of supplies.
Copy !req
871. The confederates were living
on handfuls of parched corn.
Copy !req
872. That night,
Copy !req
873. Lee and his weary lieutenants
gathered around a campfire
Copy !req
874. near the little village
of Appomattox courthouse.
Copy !req
875. "We met in the woods
at his headquarters
Copy !req
876. "by a low-burning
bivouac fire.
Copy !req
877. "There was no tent, no table,
no chairs, no camp stools.
Copy !req
878. "On blankets spread
upon the ground
Copy !req
879. "or on saddles
at the roots of trees
Copy !req
880. we sat around
the great commander."
Copy !req
881. General John B. Gordon.
Copy !req
882. They were almost
entirely surrounded,
Copy !req
883. outnumbered nearly 5 to 1,
Copy !req
884. without hope
of resupply or reinforcement.
Copy !req
885. "By sunrise, we had reached
Appomattox station,
Copy !req
886. "where we might
cut Lee's retreat.
Copy !req
887. "Already we heard the sharp ring
of the horse artillery.
Copy !req
888. "There was no mistake.
Copy !req
889. "Sheridan was square
across the enemy's front,
Copy !req
890. "holding at bay
all that was left
Copy !req
891. "of the proudest army
of the confederacy.
Copy !req
892. It had come at last—
the supreme hour."
Copy !req
893. April 9th was palm Sunday.
Copy !req
894. Lee ordered Gordon to make one
more attempt at breaking out.
Copy !req
895. At dawn, just outside
Appomattox courthouse,
Copy !req
896. Gordon's men drove federal
cavalry from their positions
Copy !req
897. and swept forward
to the crest of a hill.
Copy !req
898. Below them,
Copy !req
899. a solid wall of blue
was advancing—
Copy !req
900. the entire union army
of the James.
Copy !req
901. "There is
nothing left for me to do
Copy !req
902. "but to go
and see general Grant,
Copy !req
903. and I would rather die
a thousand deaths."
Copy !req
904. Shortly before noon,
Copy !req
905. Lee dispatched a letter
under a white flag
Copy !req
906. into the union lines.
Copy !req
907. Grant was resting in a field,
Copy !req
908. nursing a blinding headache.
Copy !req
909. Suddenly, a horseman
galloped up at full speed,
Copy !req
910. a reporter noted,
Copy !req
911. "waving his hat above his head
and shouting at every jump."
Copy !req
912. Grant opened the envelope,
looked at it,
Copy !req
913. then asked his friend
general John Rawlins
Copy !req
914. to read it aloud—
Copy !req
915. Lee would surrender.
Copy !req
916. Grant himself said nothing,
Copy !req
917. betrayed no more emotion,
a witness said,
Copy !req
918. than "last year's bird nest,"
Copy !req
919. but his headache
had instantly disappeared.
Copy !req
920. "No one looked
his comrade in the face.
Copy !req
921. "Finally colonel duff,
chief of artillery,
Copy !req
922. "sprang upon a log
and proposed 3 cheers.
Copy !req
923. "A feeble hurrah came
from a few throats,
Copy !req
924. when all broke down
in tears."
Copy !req
925. Lee dispatched
colonel Charles Marshall
Copy !req
926. to Appomattox courthouse
Copy !req
927. to find a suitable building
Copy !req
928. in which he and Grant
might meet.
Copy !req
929. The streets
were almost deserted.
Copy !req
930. Marshall stopped the first
civilian he happened to see,
Copy !req
931. Wilmer McLean,
who reluctantly agreed
Copy !req
932. to loan the armies his house
for the occasion.
Copy !req
933. "By a singular coincidence,
Copy !req
934. "the meeting
of generals Lee and Grant
Copy !req
935. "took place in the house
of Wilmer McLean,
Copy !req
936. "the same gentleman
who, in 1861,
Copy !req
937. "at the battle of bull run,
Copy !req
938. "had tendered his house
to general Beauregard
Copy !req
939. "for headquarters.
Copy !req
940. "He removed from Manassas
after the battle
Copy !req
941. "with the intention
of seeking some quiet nook
Copy !req
942. where the alarms of war
could never find him."
Copy !req
943. "1:00 came.
Copy !req
944. "I turned about.
Copy !req
945. "There behind me appeared
a commanding form,
Copy !req
946. "superbly mounted,
richly accoutered,
Copy !req
947. "of imposing bearing,
noble countenance,
Copy !req
948. "with expression of deep sadness
Copy !req
949. "over-mastered
by a deeper strength.
Copy !req
950. "It was no other
than Robert E. Lee.
Copy !req
951. "Not long after
appeared another form—
Copy !req
952. "plain, unassuming, simple,
and familiar to our eyes,
Copy !req
953. "but as awe-inspiring as Lee
in his splendor and sadness.
Copy !req
954. "It was Grant,
Copy !req
955. "sitting his saddle
with the ease of a born master,
Copy !req
956. "taking no notice of anything,
Copy !req
957. "all his faculties gathered
into intense thought.
Copy !req
958. "He seemed greater
than I had ever seen him,
Copy !req
959. a look as of another world
about him."
Copy !req
960. Lee arrived
at the McLean house first,
Copy !req
961. magnificent
in a crisp gray uniform,
Copy !req
962. an engraved sword at his side.
Copy !req
963. "I have probably to be
general Grant's prisoner,"
Copy !req
964. he explained to an aide,
Copy !req
965. "and thought I must make
my best appearance."
Copy !req
966. He waited half an hour
for Grant to arrive.
Copy !req
967. The union commander wore
a private's dirty jacket.
Copy !req
968. His boots and trousers
were splattered with mud.
Copy !req
969. He had no sword.
Copy !req
970. The two commanders shook hands.
Copy !req
971. "What general Lee's
feelings were, I do not know.
Copy !req
972. "As he was a man of much dignity
Copy !req
973. "with an impassible face,
Copy !req
974. "his feelings
were entirely concealed
Copy !req
975. "from my observation,
Copy !req
976. "but my own feelings
were sad and depressed.
Copy !req
977. "I felt like anything
rather than rejoicing
Copy !req
978. "at the downfall of a foe
Copy !req
979. "who had fought
so long and valiantly
Copy !req
980. "and had suffered so much
for a cause,
Copy !req
981. "though that cause was,
I believe,
Copy !req
982. one of the worst for which
people ever fought."
Copy !req
983. Grant reminded Lee that
they had met once before
Copy !req
984. during the Mexican war.
Copy !req
985. Lee said he had not remembered
what Grant looked like.
Copy !req
986. "Our
conversation grew so pleasant
Copy !req
987. "that I almost forgot
the object of the meeting.
Copy !req
988. General Lee called my attention
to the object."
Copy !req
989. They knew each other.
Copy !req
990. Grant remembered Lee very well.
Copy !req
991. Lee didn't quite remember Grant.
Copy !req
992. That was understandable
Copy !req
993. from the time
that they were acquainted
Copy !req
994. back in the early days,
Copy !req
995. but I think
it was the sensitivity
Copy !req
996. that the two men
had for each other
Copy !req
997. and for the moment,
Copy !req
998. enormous dignity and yet
the necessary informality—
Copy !req
999. Grant not wanting to get
to the point too quickly,
Copy !req
1000. Lee bringing him up shortly
Copy !req
1001. to the point
of why they're together;
Copy !req
1002. Lee dressed
in his last good uniform,
Copy !req
1003. Grant apologizing that
he was rushing from the field
Copy !req
1004. and didn't have time to change;
Copy !req
1005. The scribe being unable
to hold the pen steady
Copy !req
1006. and having it taken
by another soldier;
Copy !req
1007. The, uh...
Copy !req
1008. That, from Lee's point of view,
awful moment,
Copy !req
1009. and from Grant's point
of view, glorious moment,
Copy !req
1010. and yet for the two of them,
a sad and quiet moment;
Copy !req
1011. And Lee taking his leave
Copy !req
1012. and doffing his hat
from traveller
Copy !req
1013. and riding back to his troops
Copy !req
1014. after securing
those reasonable terms.
Copy !req
1015. It was the—
it was the beginning
Copy !req
1016. of the unification
of the country.
Copy !req
1017. The terms Grant offered
were simple and generous.
Copy !req
1018. Confederate officers
Copy !req
1019. could keep their side-arms
and personal possessions.
Copy !req
1020. Officers and men
who owned their own horses
Copy !req
1021. could keep them, too.
Copy !req
1022. It was planting season.
Copy !req
1023. Grant asked Lee
how many men he had
Copy !req
1024. and if they needed any rations.
Copy !req
1025. Lee said he no longer knew
the size of his army,
Copy !req
1026. but he was sure
all his men were hungry.
Copy !req
1027. Grant offered 25,000 rations.
Copy !req
1028. "This will have
the best effect upon my men.
Copy !req
1029. "It will be very gratifying
Copy !req
1030. and do much toward
conciliating our people."
Copy !req
1031. Colonel Ely S. Parker,
Copy !req
1032. a Seneca Indian
and a member of Grant's staff,
Copy !req
1033. inscribed the articles
of surrender
Copy !req
1034. for the two commanders to sign.
Copy !req
1035. The two men shook hands again.
Copy !req
1036. Lee left the house,
mounted traveller,
Copy !req
1037. and started
back toward his army.
Copy !req
1038. The union soldiers
began to cheer.
Copy !req
1039. Grant ordered them to stop.
Copy !req
1040. "The confederates
are now our prisoners,"
Copy !req
1041. he explained,
Copy !req
1042. "and we do not want to exult
over their downfall.
Copy !req
1043. "The war is over.
Copy !req
1044. The rebels are
our countrymen again."
Copy !req
1045. Lee's men lined the road
to his camp.
Copy !req
1046. "As he approached,
Copy !req
1047. "we could see
the reins hanging loose,
Copy !req
1048. "and his head was sunk
low on his breast.
Copy !req
1049. "As the men began to cheer,
Copy !req
1050. "he raised his head,
and, hat in hand, he passed by,
Copy !req
1051. his face flushed,
his eyes ablaze."
Copy !req
1052. "as he passed,
they raised their heads
Copy !req
1053. "and looked upon him
with swimming eyes.
Copy !req
1054. "Those who could find voice
said good-bye.
Copy !req
1055. "Those who could not speak
Copy !req
1056. passed their hands gently
over the sides of traveller."
Copy !req
1057. "if one army drank
the joy of victory
Copy !req
1058. "and the other
the bitter draught of defeat,
Copy !req
1059. "it was a joy moderated
by the recollection of the cost
Copy !req
1060. "at which it had been purchased
Copy !req
1061. "and a defeat mollified
Copy !req
1062. "by the consciousness
of many triumphs.
Copy !req
1063. "If the Victors could recall
a Malvern hill, an Antietam,
Copy !req
1064. "a Gettysburg, a five forks,
Copy !req
1065. "the vanquished could recall
a Manassas, a fredericksburg,
Copy !req
1066. a Chancellorsville,
a cold harbor."
Copy !req
1067. A crowd of soldiers
waited in front of Lee's tent.
Copy !req
1068. "Boys," he told them,
Copy !req
1069. "I have done
the best I could for you.
Copy !req
1070. "Go home now,
Copy !req
1071. "and if you make as good
citizens as you have soldiers,
Copy !req
1072. "you will do well,
Copy !req
1073. "and I shall
always be proud of you.
Copy !req
1074. Good-bye,
and god bless you all."
Copy !req
1075. He turned and disappeared
into his tent.
Copy !req
1076. The formal surrender
came 3 days later.
Copy !req
1077. General John B. Gordon,
Copy !req
1078. shot through the face
and wounded 4 more times
Copy !req
1079. in the service
of the confederacy,
Copy !req
1080. led 20,000 men toward the union
lines for the last time—
Copy !req
1081. not to fight,
but to stack their arms
Copy !req
1082. and surrender
their battle flags.
Copy !req
1083. There to receive them
Copy !req
1084. was major general
Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain,
Copy !req
1085. himself wounded six times
for the union.
Copy !req
1086. Promoted on the field
at Petersburg near death,
Copy !req
1087. he had somehow survived.
Copy !req
1088. "On they come
Copy !req
1089. "with the old swinging route
step and swaying battle flags.
Copy !req
1090. "Before us in proud humiliation
Copy !req
1091. "stood the embodiment
of manhood—
Copy !req
1092. "thin, worn, and famished,
Copy !req
1093. "but erect and with eyes
looking level into ours,
Copy !req
1094. "waking memories that bound us
together as no other bond.
Copy !req
1095. "Was not such manhood
to be welcomed back
Copy !req
1096. "into the union
so tested and assured?
Copy !req
1097. "On our part, not a sound
of trumpet more
Copy !req
1098. "nor roll of drum,
not a cheer nor word
Copy !req
1099. "nor whisper of vain glorying
nor motion of man,
Copy !req
1100. "but an awed stillness, rather,
and breath-holding,
Copy !req
1101. as if it were
the passing of the dead."
Copy !req
1102. Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain.
Copy !req
1103. Now Chamberlain made
an extraordinary gesture.
Copy !req
1104. "Chamberlain called his men
into line,
Copy !req
1105. "and as my men marched
in front of them,
Copy !req
1106. "the veterans in blue
gave a soldierly salute
Copy !req
1107. "to those vanquished heroes,
Copy !req
1108. a token of respect
from Americans to Americans."
Copy !req
1109. General John B. Gordon.
Copy !req
1110. "At the sound of that
machinelike snap of arms,
Copy !req
1111. "general Gordon started,
Copy !req
1112. "then wheeled his horse,
facing me,
Copy !req
1113. "touching him gently
with the spur
Copy !req
1114. "so that the animal
slightly reared,
Copy !req
1115. "and, as he wheeled,
horse and rider made one motion.
Copy !req
1116. "The horse's head swung down
with a graceful bow,
Copy !req
1117. "and general Gordon dropped
his sword point to his toe
Copy !req
1118. in salutation."
Copy !req
1119. In Washington,
fireworks filled the sky.
Copy !req
1120. A great crowd gathered
around the white house
Copy !req
1121. and called for Lincoln.
Copy !req
1122. He was too weary
to make a formal speech
Copy !req
1123. but asked the band
to play Dixie.
Copy !req
1124. "I have always thought it one of the
best tunes I ever heard," he said.
Copy !req
1125. The next day,
Copy !req
1126. Lincoln walked over
to Alexander Gardner's studio
Copy !req
1127. at the corner
of 7th and D street
Copy !req
1128. to sit for another portrait.
Copy !req
1129. Somehow, the glass-plate
negative cracked
Copy !req
1130. while being developed.
Copy !req
1131. The photographer
made a single print,
Copy !req
1132. then threw the negative away.
Copy !req
1133. Over the next 4 years,
Copy !req
1134. there would be plenty of time
to make more Lincoln portraits.
Copy !req
1135. Just a few blocks away,
Copy !req
1136. a friend found John Wilkes booth
alone in his darkened room
Copy !req
1137. and asked him if he wanted
to get a drink.
Copy !req
1138. "Yes," said booth,
Copy !req
1139. who was now drinking
a quart of Brandy a day,
Copy !req
1140. "anything to drive away
the blues."
Copy !req
1141. Corporate
funding for this special 25th
Copy !req
1142. anniversary presentation of
the civil war was provided by.
Copy !req
1143. Before thousands
fell on the battlefield,
Copy !req
1144. before millions were
freed and before a country
Copy !req
1145. forged its identity...
A nation declared a new
Copy !req
1146. birth of freedom,
rededicating itself to the
Copy !req
1147. proposition that all
men are created equal.
Copy !req
1148. Bank of America is proud
to sponsor "the civil war,"
Copy !req
1149. a film by Ken burns,
Copy !req
1150. newly restored for
it's 25th anniversary.
Copy !req
1151. Original
production of "the civil war"
Copy !req
1152. was made possible by
generous contributions
Copy !req
1153. from these funders.
Copy !req
1154. And by the corporation
for public broadcasting.
Copy !req
1155. And by contributions
to your PBS station from
Copy !req
1156. viewers like you, thank you.
Copy !req