Lee Invades Pennsylvania - Part One

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 6 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 11

  • @haroldk3913
    @haroldk3913 10 місяців тому +1

    Excellent run down on how Lee maneuvered his 3 primary corps. He did it really well as far as accomplishing convincing Hooker to finally start heading north as well. The only mention in this I would say differently is about Milroy. The narrator says he barely got away. Generals who are worth anything don't abandon their command, so they can escape personally. A commander's job is to stay and direct the fighting of their command so long as humanly possible; so long as his men still have the means to resist. If he is surrounded and its hopeless, and he makes a judgment call that it is no longer war but senseless murder of his men to keep on, then he can surrender. But he surrenders with his men. That is what a real fighting and honorable general does. In the 20th Century and today Milroy would be in violation of the Uniform Code of Military Justice for running away and abandoning his command. That is what is called officer misconduct. Same thing that Rosecrans did at Chickamauga.

  • @hvymettle
    @hvymettle Рік тому +2

    The map tells the story. Based on his 1862 advance into Maryland, Lee in 1863 was seeking to position his army on the line of the Monocacy River at Frederick in order to threaten DC. In 1862 Lee had advanced directly on Frederick but given McClellan's unusually speedy advance was forced to abandon the position since he lacked the manpower to adequately man the crossings. In 1863 Lee chose an indirect approach since Hooker had deftly placed his army between Frederick and DC blocking the direct approach. Lee chose to advance Ewell towards the Susquehanna River in order to create the "horns of a dilemma" for the Union commander, as to whether he would concentrate at Hanover for a move on Baltimore or DC, or concentrate at Gettysburg more a move towards Frederick to threaten DC. Lee's maneuvering led Meade to advance from Hooker's concentration on a broad front in order to cover both possibilities. Lee got what he wanted when Meade advanced his left wing to Gettysburg in a movement to contact to locate Lee's main body. Lee had Hill fix the AoP in position west of town but Rodes botched the flank attack that would have dislodged it from its Oak Ridge/McPherson's Ridge position. Hill then had to conduct costly frontal assaults to maintain the initiative and drive the I Corps from the field. Early's flank attack was successful but Ewell didn't have the reserves available to exploit the success and drive the regrouping Union forces from Cemetery Hill.

  • @williamcanfield2889
    @williamcanfield2889 Рік тому +2

    The “u” in Staunton is silent. It is pronounced as Stanton.

    • @gettysburgminutebyminute8607
      @gettysburgminutebyminute8607  Рік тому +1

      Yes, thank you! I'm a WA state resident, apologies. I struggle with the unfamiliar geography and place names.

    • @SweeturKraut
      @SweeturKraut 8 місяців тому

      I have lived in south eastern VA since 1987. In early 2001/2 timeframe I was corrected on the pronunciation of “Staunton” to omit the U sound. No shame. It wasn’t until 2010/11 I was informed that the town in north east NC was pronounced “MO- Yok” not “Moi-ock”

  • @mindbomb9341
    @mindbomb9341 Місяць тому

    You are incredible sir! I would love to ask you a few questions for a board game on the campaign I am designing -- using some unique fog of war mechanics (which I feel is missing from most games on the matter, but is essential to do any justice to the campaign).

  • @decimated550
    @decimated550 2 роки тому +2

    at a park ranger walk n talk in gettysburg this summer, we were told that another reason for Lee's invasion was to destroy the pennsylvania coal mines on which the union naval blockade depended. I was fascinated by that! Imagine if history went another way, and we'd be talking about "the battle of the coal mines". Rebels firing cannons with red hot shot into openings, etc. I forget who said, it was on a scholarly video on youtube, that if a coal mine is set on fire, it will burn forever. In fact, the town of Centralia PA apparently has a coal mine that has been smouldering for 60 years.

    • @manilajohn0182
      @manilajohn0182 Рік тому

      The strategic objective of the campaign was to achieve a great enough success to force the recall of Grant and lift the siege of Vicksburg. One Confederate cabinet member said that the conventional wisdom was that the surest way to aid Vicksburg was to threaten Washington D.C. and Baltimore.

  • @malafunkshun8086
    @malafunkshun8086 5 місяців тому

    There was indeed a ball after Jeb Stuart’s “grand review.” Scott Mingus and Eric Wittenberg mention this in their two volume work “If We’re Striking for Pennsylvania.”
    Aloha 😊🤙🏼

  • @matthewkeaneone
    @matthewkeaneone Рік тому

    Everytime I try to open your website link it says it's "not secure"

    • @gettysburgminutebyminute8607
      @gettysburgminutebyminute8607  Рік тому

      It isn't 'secure'. It uses the HTTP protocol, not HTTPS. My opinion, no big deal. I could convert it to the new protocol, but why? Costs money to do that, no real benefit. My opinion. Your call. Sorry.