Did the CONFEDERACY Have BETTER GENERALS?!?!?!

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  • Опубліковано 12 січ 2025

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  • @AtunSheiFilms
    @AtunSheiFilms  3 роки тому +5999

    CORRECTIONS: Due to an unfortunate case of me being a damn fool, I confused Confederate casualty statistics at the Siege of Vicksburg with those of the entire campaign. To give a more balanced view of United States casualty rates, the graphic which appears onscreen at 37:15 should really have incorporated the approximately 2200 Union soldiers killed or wounded at the Battle of Champion Hill as well, which tallied to 8% of Grant's forces at that battle. Still a staggering victory, no doubt, but a dumb numerical error on my part, so sorry about that.
    Also, the Winter War did end in victory for the Soviets, but at a much greater loss of life.

    • @francescodegregorio2824
      @francescodegregorio2824 3 роки тому +36

      why did you rewrite this?

    • @jonathannelson103
      @jonathannelson103 3 роки тому +138

      And in the Haitian revolution the side with the most men won. Not to mention that France was going through its own revolution at the time. They were , distracted.They were also supported by powerful countries, Spain and Britain.

    • @danieldyson1660
      @danieldyson1660 3 роки тому +222

      @@francescodegregorio2824 I think the pinned comment that originally said this disappeared.

    • @danieldyson1660
      @danieldyson1660 3 роки тому +71

      @@jonathannelson103 most men yes, but less advanced technology. The point was about both I believe.

    • @jonathannelson103
      @jonathannelson103 3 роки тому +16

      @@danieldyson1660 but they also had the Spanish and British fighting the French in Haiti because of the wars going on in Europe. Surely you don't think that they were less advanced than the French.

  • @Clancy192
    @Clancy192 2 роки тому +7228

    When someone complained that Grant was a drunk, Lincoln said "find out what whiskey he drinks and send a case to each of my generals".

    • @wesleywyndam-pryce5305
      @wesleywyndam-pryce5305 2 роки тому +72

      citation?

    • @coaxill4059
      @coaxill4059 2 роки тому +573

      It was a perfect message!
      A way to say "Yall are bitchin, but he's doing what we actually need so maybe you should start emulating him."

    • @mister_kaniela
      @mister_kaniela 2 роки тому +884

      @@wesleywyndam-pryce5305 1863 October 30, New York Times, Blair’s Bitters, Quote Page 4, Column 4, New York. Took me 30 seconds. Come on dude.

    • @mister_kaniela
      @mister_kaniela 2 роки тому +513

      @@wesleywyndam-pryce5305 and by come on dude, I mean grow up and google your own questions

    • @unsrescyldas9745
      @unsrescyldas9745 2 роки тому +179

      @@mister_kaniela Lmao, no. The first person should have cited a source and not run around dropping quotes even if they are true. not a good way to keep knowledge, makes it more of a hearsay, or a readsay in this case.

  • @Mattastrophic1
    @Mattastrophic1 3 роки тому +2067

    "General Lee, what about the Western theater?"
    "There's a Western Theater?"

    • @JD-od6jh
      @JD-od6jh 3 роки тому +15

      😂

    • @kousand9917
      @kousand9917 3 роки тому +11

      Lol

    • @chaos7547
      @chaos7547 3 роки тому +106

      "If I close my eyes it is not there"

    • @seankeaney823
      @seankeaney823 3 роки тому +40

      “What about the Shenandoah River Valley?”

    • @jamesbednar8625
      @jamesbednar8625 3 роки тому +61

      Everyone always forgets about the brutal fighting in the Trans-Mississippi Theater. Though did not have the massive armies of the Eastern/Western Theaters, the Trans-Mississippi was just as, if not more than, brutal.

  • @iainhansen1047
    @iainhansen1047 3 роки тому +3431

    “If only general Sherman had spontaneously combusted”
    Holy shit dude

    • @craftpaint1644
      @craftpaint1644 3 роки тому +123

      I thought he was going to go on about aliens next.

    • @poke0043moto
      @poke0043moto 3 роки тому +73

      I wonder if that’s a reference to the ww2 tank?

    • @ScorpionViper1001
      @ScorpionViper1001 3 роки тому +209

      I laughed my butt off at "If only Judah P. Benjamin had brought forth the power of the ark of the Covenant."

    • @ChronicAndIronic
      @ChronicAndIronic 3 роки тому +5

      @@poke0043moto LMAOOOO

    • @fuzzydunlop7928
      @fuzzydunlop7928 3 роки тому +39

      @@poke0043moto I hope not, that’s a myth in and of itself.

  • @snoopsq.527
    @snoopsq.527 Рік тому +3950

    I love how Forrest's testimony to congress was basically just the 1800's equivalent of "I'm not racist, I have black friends!"

    • @GNF54
      @GNF54 Рік тому +525

      “I’m not racist, my slaves think I’m pretty cool”

    • @TonPaulHatesBlacks
      @TonPaulHatesBlacks Рік тому +7

      I forget; did he testify in his Grand Wizard outfit?

    • @TonPaulHatesBlacks
      @TonPaulHatesBlacks Рік тому +1

      Is there a transcript available online?

    • @GNF54
      @GNF54 Рік тому +245

      @@user-lv1jk9qb9t excuse me

    • @p.a.i.dinc.7346
      @p.a.i.dinc.7346 Рік тому +6

      Lol

  • @boxofbanjos9124
    @boxofbanjos9124 3 роки тому +1879

    "See ya in hell, Billy Yank."
    "See ya in hell, Johnny Reb."
    I have no idea how these two lines could break my heart into so many tiny little pieces.

    • @Kuronosa
      @Kuronosa 3 роки тому +231

      We know the series isnt over yet..... Somewhere between Black Confederates and Sherman, he stated that the series was only halfway over, and it would be VERY obvious when it was...

    • @Ugly_German_Truths
      @Ugly_German_Truths 3 роки тому +31

      Hell is 2020 ;) We just left it.

    • @valdemarhammer5981
      @valdemarhammer5981 3 роки тому +70

      i think he just quoted the movie gettysburg. Just watch the trailer and you will see the scene

    • @Professor_Nixon
      @Professor_Nixon 3 роки тому +120

      Oh, but the post-credits scene put all of Marvels to shame. So get excited for Checkmate Amerikaners

    • @rocksteadyska6933
      @rocksteadyska6933 3 роки тому +18

      @@Professor_Nixon maybe it's a Yahtzee nazi?

  • @noah-front
    @noah-front 3 роки тому +3972

    Napoleon: 'the amateurs discuss tactics, the professionals discuss logistics.'
    Lee: Logistics are annoying.

    • @thewampire4640
      @thewampire4640 3 роки тому +535

      Thats why napoleon has an era named after him, and lee hasnt, and lost a war betraying his country

    • @jeansmith4053
      @jeansmith4053 3 роки тому +264

      @Fascism and violence are cool In some people's opinions, sure. There were nationalists and state rights guys in the past, i think you're oversimplifying here.
      Legally, I think treason against the federal government wasn't acceptable back then either.

    • @andresorozco2871
      @andresorozco2871 3 роки тому +177

      @Fascism and violence are cool Sure! Lee was more loyal to his home state that promoted the slave system that gave him and his comrades power and privileges than to the federal government, which, just out of fear, believed it was going to take away those privileges.

    • @tamirj.b.n9814
      @tamirj.b.n9814 3 роки тому +29

      Lee: logistics why you bully

    • @tamirj.b.n9814
      @tamirj.b.n9814 3 роки тому +126

      @@thewampire4640 well Lee had a tank named after him
      But it was a shitty tank so nothing to worry about

  • @douglaswills4624
    @douglaswills4624 3 роки тому +7612

    I won't lie to you: "If only Sherman would have spontaneously combusted at the battle of Chattanooga." Is one of the single funniest things I've ever heard.

    • @cyberus1438
      @cyberus1438 3 роки тому +91

      I was in stitches!

    • @tcpratt1660
      @tcpratt1660 3 роки тому +159

      That wouldn't have helped, George Thomas was also at Chattanooga...although when Thomas took Atlanta, it's likely the city would not have been malevolently and evilly burnt as Sherman did, which paradoxically just might have made Reconstruction a lot easier...

    • @barbiquearea
      @barbiquearea 3 роки тому +46

      If that had happened it could have saved the Union a lot of money post war during Reconstruction. Seriously the man did a number on the state of Georgia during his March into the Sea.

    • @irishladdie9702
      @irishladdie9702 3 роки тому +125

      Fire cannot kill a dragon

    • @jamestown8398
      @jamestown8398 3 роки тому +172

      "If only we could have cloned Jeb Stewart so he could be in both the western and the eastern theaters at the same time."

  • @jarynn8156
    @jarynn8156 Рік тому +2378

    The biggest mistake people make when playing Chess is neglecting naval supremacy.

    • @Shaun_Jones
      @Shaun_Jones Рік тому +146

      I have it on good authority that chessboards are not immune to the solid shot of 11-inch Dahlgren guns.

    • @FuelDropforthewin
      @FuelDropforthewin 10 місяців тому +97

      My favorite opening is queen's gambit into shore bombardment.

    • @BrownSofaGamer
      @BrownSofaGamer 10 місяців тому +15

      Once you cross your opponent’s King’s T it’s checkmate.

    • @Andy_Babb
      @Andy_Babb 8 місяців тому +3

      lol well played

    • @d.n5287
      @d.n5287 8 місяців тому +26

      And the ICBM. Don't forget the ICBM, you don't recover from that mistake.

  • @mjlamey1066
    @mjlamey1066 3 роки тому +4858

    Ironic that the Confederates so admired Napoleon, whose possibly greatest, and most winning, attribute was that he constantly fretted over his logistics and manpower.

    • @ieatmice751
      @ieatmice751 3 роки тому +496

      Also his offensive tactics, which the south barely used properly

    • @marks_sparks1
      @marks_sparks1 3 роки тому +700

      A general crucial to the Union victory and given no credit is Quartermaster General Montgomery C Meigs. He basically ensured the Union outprivisioned the rebels. No point having a big industrial capacity and no way of getting it to the troops.

    • @bradysullivan4548
      @bradysullivan4548 3 роки тому +53

      How did you comment this 2 days ago

    • @Vesperitis
      @Vesperitis 3 роки тому +77

      @@bradysullivan4548 time travel

    • @charles_sumner3088
      @charles_sumner3088 3 роки тому +52

      How is there a comment that’s 2 days old on a vid that released this morning?

  • @Royal-sd8eh
    @Royal-sd8eh 3 роки тому +3085

    “Clan leader”
    “Repentant clan leader”
    “Well that’s ok then”
    One of my favorite parts of the video

    • @ltdom
      @ltdom 3 роки тому +43

      It makes me laugh every time I see this video

    • @virtualcynical8515
      @virtualcynical8515 3 роки тому +43

      That's Southern Logic for you.

    • @1911dawg
      @1911dawg 2 роки тому +17

      He was just a clash player

    • @edwardclement102
      @edwardclement102 2 роки тому

      The real KKK not modern saved the South from being exterminated by the Radicals

    • @BrawnyStream
      @BrawnyStream 2 роки тому +31

      @@edwardclement102 by radicals do you mean people who want a fair and equitable society?

  • @terrorsaur599
    @terrorsaur599 3 роки тому +2986

    “Strategy without tactics is the slowest route to victory. Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat.”
    - Sun Tzu.

    • @ashutoshtripathi.
      @ashutoshtripathi. 3 роки тому +85

      Sums both sides decently.

    • @pyromania1018
      @pyromania1018 3 роки тому +140

      Well, Grant's tactics and strategy allowed him to win the war in roughly a year once he was put in overall command. Sherman's March was an excellent usage of having both, and also helped speed up the war's end.

    • @1337billybob
      @1337billybob 3 роки тому +17

      "I'm going to murder a bunch of prostitutes slaves to prove some kind of flawed point on discipline" - Sun Tzu

    • @bbh6212
      @bbh6212 3 роки тому +59

      "What the ancients called a clever fighter is one who not only wins, but excels in winning with ease. Hence his victories bring him neither reputation for wisdom nor credit for courage."
      "Cleverness has never been associated with long delays."

    • @bbh6212
      @bbh6212 3 роки тому +25

      @@1337billybob there is no evidence that this story ever happened. Though it should be noted that the man we believe to be Sun Tzu did lose the war he fought in and his nation was destroyed

  • @giacomoromano8842
    @giacomoromano8842 Рік тому +1047

    Fun italian fact: Lincoln tried to recruit Garibaldi as a general during the early stages of the war. The famous italian fighter though declined the invitation, obviously for reasons related to the italians conflicts at the time as well as personal motives, but he claimed the lack of a abolition act as a cause, as he was a fiery abolitionist, not happy by the ambiguous position of Lincoln on the matter at the time.

    • @vehx9316
      @vehx9316 Рік тому +117

      An additional fun fact, when Garibaldi volunteered his services. But there was no real evidence that Lincoln actively courted him. Politically it would be suicide to put a foreigner in charge of Union armies.
      Moreover after the EP was passed, Garibaldi was the first to sign Lincoln's praises.

    • @noonespecial9704
      @noonespecial9704 Рік тому +56

      Another fact, San Marino praised Lincoln so much, that they offered him citizenship in their country and invited him over to discuss a diplomatic alliance. Lincoln denied the offer but thanked the nation for it's eager support for the union.

    • @giacomoromano8842
      @giacomoromano8842 Рік тому +19

      ​@@vehx9316 you are in the wrong here, good ser. We know that the diplomat Henry Shelton Sanford went personally, on order of Lincoln, to seek out and deliver Garibaldi a letter wrote by Lincoln and the possible appointment of Garibaldi as a officer or even a general in the war. Now, i admit, details are misty, and said letter seen to have been lost to time, but the fact remain. Garibaldi did not volunteer his service, he refused it. All view on the facts agree that, in some measures, Lincoln sought Garibaldi, not the other way around, and why wouldn't it? Garibaldi was a general of incredible renown and a skilled tactician as well, with proved and tested military experience in numerous campaign in italy and around the world. He fought against official militaries and army, as well as proper military campaigns numerous times by that point, proving victorious most often than not. Not to mention, numerous italians lived and served in the Union, as well as in the Confederate, army, so to put such a famous national figure at the head of a brugade or platoon of such troops would have been a wise move, as well as a propaganda master stroke. I don't see it as an impossibility, and here i showed that your affirmations stands on no ground.

    • @vehx9316
      @vehx9316 Рік тому +4

      @@giacomoromano8842 "Henry Shelton Sanford went personally, on order of Lincoln, to seek out and deliver Garibaldi a letter wrote by Lincoln "
      If that is so, then surely we should have a copy of the said letter to been seen would we not ?
      It's a nice tale, but we have no real evidence proving it. Lincoln's government was a hodgepodge of individual actions at times which unfortunately clouds matters in whether Lincoln personally approves it or was even made aware of it.
      The perfect example was the offer to leave Fort Sumpter. Now it was made, but it was made by Seward, Lincoln wasn't even aware of it and he was pretty pissed about it against Seward.

    • @vehx9316
      @vehx9316 Рік тому +2

      @@giacomoromano8842 no that not true, there was an offer made yes. But there is no evidence that it came DIRECTLY from Lincoln. Its more likely someone in Lincoln's governmetn acting on their own accord.

  • @iammrbeat
    @iammrbeat 3 роки тому +3512

    That's always how I assumed Nathan Bedford Forrest exactly sounded actually.

    • @jeanlanes962
      @jeanlanes962 3 роки тому +116

      Mr. Breast give me money

    • @TheStimpy60
      @TheStimpy60 3 роки тому +86

      I loved how he showed that ridiculous statue of NBF when he was first mentioned

    • @ronaldofrias2176
      @ronaldofrias2176 3 роки тому +4

      It's BeatMasterMatt...

    • @ChaseMcCain81
      @ChaseMcCain81 3 роки тому

      Hey

    • @lisa2948
      @lisa2948 3 роки тому +6

      Sup Mr beat

  • @mk9127
    @mk9127 3 роки тому +4068

    Honestly the only thing the rebel is right about is that “checkmate Lincolnites” sounds so much better lol

    • @thunderbird1921
      @thunderbird1921 3 роки тому +297

      Anyone else love to see a series with this done by a British guy and a soldier from Napoleon's Grande Armee? THAT would be entertaining.

    • @pouquy4197
      @pouquy4197 3 роки тому +192

      @@thunderbird1921 Checkmate Wellingtonites ?

    • @sean_d
      @sean_d 3 роки тому +30

      @@thunderbird1921 I'd love to hear him do those accents

    • @benlowe1701
      @benlowe1701 3 роки тому +96

      @@thunderbird1921 I would actually like to see him go at some of the myths about the revolutionary war, opposite a red coat...

    • @SRosenberg203
      @SRosenberg203 3 роки тому +43

      Yeah I have to agree with that one too. "Checkmate, Davisites!" just doesn't have the same ring to it...

  • @BulkLion10
    @BulkLion10 3 роки тому +2998

    “God fights on the side with the best artillery”
    - Napoleon

    • @justingick4218
      @justingick4218 3 роки тому +80

      @Velstadt Hekkleson also god: lets make all of europe declare war on HIM not his nation. And make him lose because the russians ran away faster.

    • @snowman6645
      @snowman6645 3 роки тому +48

      @@justingick4218 bro 1 French man from a small island fucked up Europe and north and South America

    • @tricorne.953
      @tricorne.953 3 роки тому +68

      @Velstadt Hekkleson That is true and all, but you can never deny the fact he fought 60 battles and only lost 8 most at the end of his career, fought 8 coalitions and still won most of it.

    • @tricorne.953
      @tricorne.953 3 роки тому +34

      @Velstadt Hekkleson I have never denied this. Of course I am aware, his tactics got old, and it is evident. Duke wellington could tell he had some antics in waterloo.
      But again, I'm telling you that Napoleon was still a wise military leader. And spread a lot of revolutionary ideas across europe thanks to his empire.
      Again, never denied he did stuff wrong, but neither should you deny that he had an incredible military career.

    • @snowman6645
      @snowman6645 3 роки тому +3

      @Velstadt Hekkleson Napoleon won a war that he lost it was him against shit ton of countries

  • @Chris-qo4rt
    @Chris-qo4rt 2 роки тому +2436

    Arguing "we were doomed from the start" is basically admitting the secessionists were just stupid or suicidal.

    • @vehx9316
      @vehx9316 2 роки тому +229

      now tack on the fact that they were unequivocally proven to be fighting for slavery, it makes them even worst. Like were you honestly expecting a participation trophy when you fought to preserve an inhumane and immoral institution ?

    • @TheStapleGunKid
      @TheStapleGunKid 2 роки тому +185

      _"Let me tell you what is coming. After the sacrifice of countless millions of treasure and hundreds of thousands of lives, you may win Southern independence if God be not against you, but I doubt it. I tell you that, while I believe with you in the doctrine of states rights, the North is determined to preserve this Union. They are not a fiery, impulsive people as you are, for they live in colder climates. But when they begin to move in a given direction, they move with the steady momentum and perseverance of a mighty avalanche; and what I fear is, they will overwhelm the South.”_ --Texas Governor Sam Houston, April 16, 1861

    • @kristaskrastina2863
      @kristaskrastina2863 Рік тому +61

      @@TheStapleGunKid It's interesting that he very accurately predicted the losses. No one could imagine there would be hundreds of thousands of dead.

    • @CowMaster9001
      @CowMaster9001 Рік тому +37

      Plenty of slave revolts were begun with the awareness that they faced incredibly long odds. Self-interest can be a powerful motivation

    • @robreich6881
      @robreich6881 Рік тому +16

      They were stupid.

  • @hallamhal
    @hallamhal 3 роки тому +2705

    At General Sherman's funeral, Joseph E Johnston kept his hat off as a mark of respect, despite the fact it was a cold wet February day in New York. Johnston argued "If I were in his place, and he were standing here in mine, he would not put on his hat." He died ten days later, of pneumonia.

    • @romanempire4495
      @romanempire4495 3 роки тому +329

      Should'a worn the hat.

    • @sushikazuki5945
      @sushikazuki5945 2 роки тому +265

      @@joepetto9488 idk they’re also kind of darkly comedic too, in the “this is terrible but I’m gonna laugh really loudly at it” way

    • @isaacsorrels4077
      @isaacsorrels4077 2 роки тому +345

      How to achieve peak badass and peak dumbass in one action.

    • @declanedmison5442
      @declanedmison5442 2 роки тому +98

      The one time he didn’t think about the big picture.

    • @TheRedKing247
      @TheRedKing247 2 роки тому +477

      Even in death, Sherman killed a confederate.

  • @EmmaBonn96
    @EmmaBonn96 2 роки тому +2528

    If Sherman spontaneously combusted I do believe he would run as fast as he could to get as much Georgia as he could

    • @kenabbott8585
      @kenabbott8585 2 роки тому +20

      Or wherever there were some women and children.

    • @averyn34
      @averyn34 2 роки тому +367

      @@kenabbott8585 cry more

    • @kenabbott8585
      @kenabbott8585 2 роки тому

      @@averyn34
      If I cried every time some Leftist celebrated rape, arson, looting, and cowardice, I'd have died of dehydration decades ago.

    • @JinghisKhan
      @JinghisKhan 2 роки тому +142

      @@averyn34 WE BRING THE JUBILEE.

    • @Ellimist000
      @Ellimist000 2 роки тому

      @@kenabbott8585 lol did he kill even a 10th as many women and children as were enslaved in Georgia? Like yea people in history suck, sorry bro

  • @needbettername8583
    @needbettername8583 3 роки тому +3506

    "Grant was just a drunk!"
    Then you got steamrolled by a drunk... should probably stop saying that.

    • @Rex-gu1bu
      @Rex-gu1bu 3 роки тому +24

      Grant sucked. His claim to flame is he doesn't flinch when he takes high casualties, he can live with the loss of his soldiers life. Lincoln wants it, i'll give it to him and never get replaced.

    • @needbettername8583
      @needbettername8583 3 роки тому +498

      @@Rex-gu1bu Souds similar to a lot of confederate generals to me. Difference is, Grants method worked.

    • @weirdofromhalo
      @weirdofromhalo 3 роки тому +323

      @@Rex-gu1bu Grant doesn't suck at all lmao. If you're only looking at the Peninsular Campaigns, it looks bad, but he took way less casualties in the Western theater than the Confederate generals he faced, as Andy says in this very video.

    • @Rex-gu1bu
      @Rex-gu1bu 3 роки тому +13

      @@weirdofromhalo "Andy is high as a kite and it slipped passed you that this is a thinly veiled propaganda piece for the north and demonizing the south. The fact that it was comedy allows it to escape scrutiny. "Lee always took a higher percentage of casualties than anybody else in the war". Um, what? Yeah, he was usually outnumbered 2-1, so the loss of his 13000 is a higher percentage than the loss of 17000 of his opponent who has over twice the men he has. That proves that the North had a tremendous advantage in numbers and often relied on it. Yet he spins it as Lee loses more men. He makes no sense and he shows his dummy southerner frowning as if he made a point. The Northerner of course is sensible and no Northern stereotypes are poked at. I give this video a fail for what I could see he was going for. "Lee lost a higher percentage of men than anybody in the war". Wow, whata fail. I am the only one who called this out.

    • @Rex-gu1bu
      @Rex-gu1bu 3 роки тому +10

      Who is "you"? Lee didn't get steamrolled and neither did I. Maybe the "you" that got steamrolled is the other poster?

  • @Trey_816
    @Trey_816 Рік тому +1550

    My great great great great grandfather Robert R. Byers, who was a Union soldier during the American Civil War, remembered trying (and failing) to hold back laughter when he heard that Stonewall Jackson was gunned down by his own men.

    • @BlueandButternut
      @BlueandButternut Рік тому +166

      Meanwhile, Grant said:
      "[Jackson] and I were at West Point together for a year and we served in the same army in Mexico. He was a gallant soldier and a Christian gentleman, and I can fully understand the admiration your people have for him."

    • @kenabbott8585
      @kenabbott8585 Рік тому

      How many women and girls did he rape?

    • @nbenefiel
      @nbenefiel Рік тому +34

      The Brits could not support the South. They outlawed slavery in 1807 and 1838. There is no way they could support the South. As for McClelland was wonderful at training the army but was a lousy field officer. He was just too cautious.

    • @kenabbott8585
      @kenabbott8585 Рік тому +20

      @@nbenefiel
      "The Brits could not support the South"
      They came quite close to doing so, especially since the Confederacy offered an emancipation plan.
      And McClelland's gotten something of a rehabilitation in recent years. Most of the mistakes he got blamed for were Lincoln's mismanagement, and the plan that Grant followed at the end was McClellan's plan.
      McClellan was a good choice for an invasion, because he had a reputation from the Mexican War of being kind to civilians. And THIS is why he got fired. Lincoln got tired of him whining about his terrorism.

    • @kristaskrastina2863
      @kristaskrastina2863 Рік тому +41

      ​@@kenabbott8585
      The Brits thought about that - but I don't think they'd want to step into another potentially messy and bloody war after the Crimean one. It might simply not worth it.
      And, if I'm not mistaken, the Southern emancipation plan was just about freeing slaves to draft them into the army. It looks like a desperate measure - not good for international relations. If you have to draft the men you despise - you're screwed.
      McClellan was a great strategist, but he blundered a lot himself. The main reason of it was lousy recon. Why did McClellan always think he was outnumbered? Because his army was always blind! I'd like to see McClellan's command with good recon - then we could honestly judge his actual tactical skills, not his thoughts and precautions.
      Let's look at Antietam - the essence of McClellan's blunders:
      1. The cavalry didn't do anything. Why Hooker and Meade could put the same horsemen (with many of the same Generals) to good use (look at Gettysburg Campaign - it was good!), but McClellan couldn't? As the result, the Army of the Potomac was again completely unaware of Lee's army's positions and numbers and had to act blindly. That alone made Antietam the bloodiest day on Western Hemisphere. Hooker tried to flank the enemy but was flanked hinself by Stuart's artillery. After that... you know.
      2. No general battle plan. It's just weird. I'd understand Pope or even Hood not having it - but McClellan was smarter that that.
      3. McClellan dissolved the Wings before the battle, creating a mess. Who was the IX Corps Commander: Cox or Burnside who had no other troops under his command? Good that they were next to each other during the actual battle.
      4. Burnside's Bridge... oh, man.
      - What was Burnside suppose to do in the battle? Create a diversion to weaken the Rebs at the north? Okay, then why did the order to attack come at 10 AM, four hours after Hooker's engagement? What kind of a diversion was it?
      - McClellan later said that he planned Burnside's attack as the main one. Hmm... by just one Corps? Through a narrow and well-defended bridge? Only a blockhead would plan that - and McClellan wasn't one.
      - The recon screwed up again by showing Burnside the wrong ford to cross. The flanking force by Rodman had to find the right one by themselves - that's why it took three hours to flank 700 Georgians who defended the bridge.
      - After Burnside crossed the bridge, he felt his position was insecure and asked for reinforcements. He got none - and was swept by A.P. Hill's Light Division.
      But I understand why McClellan didn't want to pursue Lee after Antietam. He didn't think his troops were good enough for that - and maybe he was right.
      No, Grant's plan wasn't McClellan's one. McClellan would never send the main army through the Wilderness - and Grant's idea of constant push wouldn't look good for McClellan. But I'd say Grant would be a perfect General for McClellan's strategy: he was brave, fast and accustomed to fleet support. So marching on Richmond while removing obstacles like forts, enemy troops and Magruder's circuses would be a good task for Grant :)

  • @rundownthriftstore
    @rundownthriftstore 3 роки тому +2029

    Confederate: “No sir no, we were doomed from the start!”
    Tyrion Lannister: “A stupid rebellion then”

    • @MonteKristof
      @MonteKristof 3 роки тому +95

      Exactly. some are still sore losers 200 years after...

    • @Mw-tr2oz
      @Mw-tr2oz 3 роки тому +2

      So said king George

    • @Constructivecynicism
      @Constructivecynicism 3 роки тому +11

      @@MonteKristof Case in point. ^

    • @jefft5824
      @jefft5824 3 роки тому +51

      @@Mw-tr2oz moving an army across the Atlantic isn't the same as moving it across the Potomac

    • @Mw-tr2oz
      @Mw-tr2oz 3 роки тому

      @@jefft5824 I was going somewhere else with that statement

  • @Vanq22114
    @Vanq22114 2 роки тому +4972

    Oversimplified had a great metaphor for Grant's generalship. While Lee was playing chess, Grant was grabbing the sledgehammer.

    • @a-drewg1716
      @a-drewg1716 2 роки тому +681

      which is also funny considering McClellan played that game of chess with Lee and did so, according to Lee, brilliantly. We love to shit on McClellan because of his lack luster performance during the Civil War but it wasn't because he was a bad leader, no. In fact although his performance was lack luster he never actually suffered a massive defeat and always moved his army into the best position. He was in actuality a brilliant leader. The problem was again he was playing chess with Lee instead of fighting a war.

    • @projectpitchfork860
      @projectpitchfork860 2 роки тому +211

      @@a-drewg1716 McClellan was a good staff officier but he wad terrible as a field commander.

    • @eeguy77
      @eeguy77 2 роки тому +392

      @@a-drewg1716 McClellan is isn't criticized for never losing a major defeat, he's criticized for never pushing is advantages, even when they were clear he had them. Which is why he also never had a major win and the war dragged on. Contrast that to Grant who made a couple big mistakes, but he also won the war decisively. That's why Grant was far more impactful in the war than McClellan ever could be.

    • @QuiteWellAdjusted
      @QuiteWellAdjusted 2 роки тому +180

      @@projectpitchfork860 McClellan is a textbook example of theoretical expertise without practical experience. He strikes me (knowing nothing about his career except what I've learned from Checkmate Lincolnites) as someone who studied the campaigns of Alexander, Caesar, Washington, and Napoleon until he could reenact the Battle of the Granicus beat for beat but put him behind a real army in a real battlefield and he choked

    • @vintheguy
      @vintheguy 2 роки тому +6

      Ah yes the channel with a quarter quarter accurate history, conveniently presenting the most clean versions of their history (as much as possible with certain topics) all delivered with no sources whatsoever and some of the clearest bias this side a Mississippi

  • @feelshowdy
    @feelshowdy 2 роки тому +2248

    The way Johnny Reb hissed at the mention of Grant's name was like a vampire being spritzed with holy water, or a cat being spritzed with regular water.

    • @ComedicLetter
      @ComedicLetter 2 роки тому +136

      Now I’m wondering if cats are religious and all water is holy to them. And this is why all house cats hate water, because they are little furry demons.

    • @ViktoriousDead
      @ViktoriousDead 2 роки тому +32

      @@ComedicLetter holy shit………………….

    • @paulastiles5507
      @paulastiles5507 2 роки тому +23

      @@ComedicLetter Nah. Some of my brattiest cats don't react much to getting sprayed.

    • @ComedicLetter
      @ComedicLetter 2 роки тому +27

      @@paulastiles5507 they’ve become too powerful

    • @ComedicLetter
      @ComedicLetter 2 роки тому +5

      @@joepetto9488 that man is made of flesh

  • @TheAntiburglar
    @TheAntiburglar 2 роки тому +1046

    I just realized in rewatching this that Forrest straight up ADMITTED THE WAR WAS OVER SLAVERY. Welp, that's that I guess.

    • @TheStapleGunKid
      @TheStapleGunKid 2 роки тому +196

      He certainly wasn't the only honest rebel in that regard:
      _"The South went to war on account of slavery. South Carolina went to war, as she said in her secession proclamation, because slavery would not be secure under Lincoln. South Carolina ought to know what was her cause for seceding."_ --Confederate Colonel John Mosby.

    • @meshuggahshirt
      @meshuggahshirt Рік тому +116

      "We want him here among us, he is the only laboring class we have" is truly a breathtaking line

    • @averybishopmartin6964
      @averybishopmartin6964 Рік тому +148

      @@TheStapleGunKid
      Lost Cause Apologists: "It wasn't about slavery! It was about states rights!"
      The Confederate States and members of the Confederacy at the time: "This is about slavery."

    • @vehx9316
      @vehx9316 Рік тому +39

      @@averybishopmartin6964
      I can only imagine if time travel was invented and these 2 groups got to meet face to face.
      Both sides would have viewed the other as crazy lunatics.

    • @BlueandButternut
      @BlueandButternut Рік тому +2

      That isn't what he said, he said that the North was fighting for emancipation. Was he right? Not necessarily, but the quote had nothing to do with the Southern Cause.

  • @shinglemcdingle4093
    @shinglemcdingle4093 3 роки тому +987

    Honey wake up, new "Checkmate, Lincolnites!" epsiode just dropped

  • @jy3n2
    @jy3n2 3 роки тому +2033

    Yes, Grant did win by having superior numbers. Part of winning a war is to know your advantages and use them.

    • @pyromania1018
      @pyromania1018 3 роки тому +172

      Having superior numbers doesn't hurt, but it's HOW you use them that matters most. Look at Thermopylae. Numbers counted for nothing when they tried to charge a tiny bottleneck. The Persians only won because they were tipped off about an alternate route that allowed them to surround the Spartans. Grant had the numbers, the equipment, and the creativity to win important strategic victories, and all with lower casualties (both in percentage and numbers) than Robert E. Lee. He didn't just throw men at an enemy position until the rebels ran out of bullets.

    • @ElBandito
      @ElBandito 3 роки тому +7

      @@pyromania1018 Were the Persians tipped off, or properly scouted out the alternate route? Don't blindly trust nationalistic propaganda. ;)

    • @sandshark2
      @sandshark2 3 роки тому +52

      @@ElBandito they were tipped off by another soldierfighting alongside the spartans, as it wasnt just 300 spartans but an additional 2-4000 troops coming from other greek states. One thought the war was already lost, so let the persians in exchange for a more peaceful overtaking rather than a ransacking of Greece as the Persians promised when the Spartans acted like… well spartans

    • @pyromania1018
      @pyromania1018 2 роки тому +44

      @N Fels True, it was 300 Spartans, over 1,000 slaves, and many others who don't get much focus against an army that certainly didn't number almost 2 million. And it may have indeed been a scout rather than a traitor. But you get what I mean, right? Under the right circumstances, numbers count for nothing. It's how you use them that matters.
      You are correct that the Spartans were not as formidable as they were portrayed as: once other Greek city-states started using proper tactics and strategy, they mauled the Spartans with hardly any losses, kind of like how Grant acted like a proper general instead of a wannabe movie star. They also spent considerable resources oppressing a slave population: that "wolf" was, in actuality, a random slave minding his own business.

    • @dew9103
      @dew9103 2 роки тому +35

      @@pyromania1018 what you are saying about using superior numbers, I completely agree with. Look at McClellan, burnside, hooker they all have superior number and “merely failed to win!”

  • @janmelantu7490
    @janmelantu7490 3 роки тому +539

    “Just a minor hallucination”
    “Do you…have hallucinations often?”
    I’m DYING

  • @slippedplauge1885
    @slippedplauge1885 Рік тому +317

    Lincoln weoting the letter and never sending it is kinda like therapy. He was upset and wrote his feelings then reread it and realized he should let his generals general. Thats rrspectable amd a sign of a good leader

    • @Shaun_Jones
      @Shaun_Jones 11 місяців тому +56

      Writing an angry letter and then throwing it away is a time-honored method of relieving stress.

    • @yourpalpalmetto979
      @yourpalpalmetto979 8 місяців тому +29

      anyone who hace ever wrote a comment then deleted it will understand

    • @joshyoung1440
      @joshyoung1440 5 місяців тому +1

      ​@@yourpalpalmetto979 *has *written

    • @joshyoung1440
      @joshyoung1440 5 місяців тому +3

      It's not "kinda like" therapy, it's literally a common component of therapy. By the way, speaking of taking two damn seconds to read what you wrote before sending it, *writing *respectable *and

    • @slippedplauge1885
      @slippedplauge1885 5 місяців тому +5

      @@joshyoung1440 took a lot of energy to reply to my comment because I mi$spelled words. You ok bro? Maybe you ahould start writing things and never send them... As therapy. You seem to have a lot of anger

  • @cosmicape13
    @cosmicape13 3 роки тому +3927

    I don't see how calling Grant a drunk makes your generals look better. If anything you've just owned up to the fact that they were so inept they couldn't even beat a drunk.

    • @petriew2018
      @petriew2018 3 роки тому +283

      imagine trying to take pride in being beaten that thoroughly by a drunk... makes you wonder about some people...

    • @BinaryVoodooDoctor
      @BinaryVoodooDoctor 3 роки тому +276

      This reminded me about how I keep saying “Either Hillary Clinton is not this nefarious criminal you think she is, or the Republicans you keep electing are too stupid to prosecute her, which is it?”

    • @rangergxi
      @rangergxi 3 роки тому +59

      @@BinaryVoodooDoctor She's a student of Kissinger. Avoiding prosecution is a learned art.

    • @Hdtk2024
      @Hdtk2024 3 роки тому +107

      @@rangergxi For what crime? There is nothing. And you know her opponent looked for ANYTHING the last 30 years. There is nothing.

    • @rangergxi
      @rangergxi 3 роки тому +64

      ​@@Hdtk2024 I would consider American foreign policy to be quite criminal.

  • @JP12345
    @JP12345 3 роки тому +401

    "Grant was an alcoholic who was always drunk"
    "So you admit you lost to a drunk man?"

    • @ZealothPL
      @ZealothPL 3 роки тому +5

      NOT LIKE THAT!
      /S

    • @JP12345
      @JP12345 3 роки тому +6

      @@joepetto9488 ouch

    • @kristaskrastina2863
      @kristaskrastina2863 28 днів тому +1

      It becomes even more hilarious when applied to specific battles.
      Shiloh
      - Grant was an alcoholic who was always drunk.
      - Okay, so you zerg rushed a smaller force whose leader was drunk AND absent at the day 1 - and still lost?!
      Vicksburg
      - Grant was an alcoholic who was always drunk.
      - Okay, so so you let an alcoholic cut Vicksburg off supplies and just choke it into surrender. Oh, and at the same time you also let a cavalryman scared of horses ravage your supplies without any risk. Nice job!
      Chattanooga
      - Grant was an alcoholic who was always drunk.
      - Okay, who sent his best general to Knoxville just before a big battle?
      - It was Bragg.
      - That's who was drunk then.
      Overland Campaign
      - Grant was an alcoholic who was always drunk. He couldn't win a single battle against Lee!
      - Okay, but why did Lee end up defending Richmond and Petersburg?
      - What about Cold Harbor? Grant massively blundered there.
      - Why couldn't Lee make any use of that blunder?

  • @TheHistocrat
    @TheHistocrat 3 роки тому +6223

    All that and you didn't even mention Nathan Bedford Forrest's worst crime of all.
    Appearing in Forrest Gump.

    • @Ugly_German_Truths
      @Ugly_German_Truths 3 роки тому +222

      can you really mention the namedrop and a few frames of ... was that "Birth of a Nation" they showed him in? as "appearing in"???
      also Forest Gump is okay. Not too historically accurate, but an impressive movie and keeping pretty well up for being 20 years old.

    • @thejoester1011
      @thejoester1011 3 роки тому +276

      @@Ugly_German_Truths Umm... I think it was a joke.

    • @adamcadle7078
      @adamcadle7078 3 роки тому +50

      @@Ugly_German_Truths 20 year check that math again....closer to 30

    • @CBfrmcardiff
      @CBfrmcardiff 3 роки тому +87

      Crumbs - Forrest Gump is 30 years old and you youngsters think it's ancient history. Ouch.
      "Holding up pretty well" indeed! The cheek!

    • @jerryborjon
      @jerryborjon 3 роки тому +65

      ...what’s wrong with Forrest Gump? Or are you being a contrarian for the sake of it?

  • @russmitchellmovement
    @russmitchellmovement Рік тому +118

    Lee: I'm going to mount this gigantic raid into Pennsylvania and suffer huge casualties in order to mount a campaign of no strategic significance! I am the best general!
    Meade: Bring it.

  • @brucculi349
    @brucculi349 3 роки тому +597

    Holy cow a 49 minute "Checkmate, Lincolnites" video on the 4th of July? This day can't get any better!

    • @goldenageofdinosaurs7192
      @goldenageofdinosaurs7192 3 роки тому +20

      Yes, this was a wonderful Independence Day gift!

    • @AffectionateDna-lq6fr
      @AffectionateDna-lq6fr 27 днів тому

      @@brucculi349 Lest, you forget that Abraham Lincoln Suspended the Constitution and placed the entire USA under Military RULE. And Abraham Lincoln and his Union Military arrested Northerners without "Probable Cause" and denied the. "Due Process of Law."
      Abraham Lincoln and his Union Army jailed the civilian definitely, even women. Executed Civilians right along with POWs. Over 7,000 at Fort Douglas POW camp in Chicago.

    • @AffectionateDna-lq6fr
      @AffectionateDna-lq6fr 22 дні тому

      @@goldenageofdinosaurs7192
      I suppose Abraham Lincoln smiled for the camera in 1863? While he had Ordered the Murder of over 7,000 Americans at Chicago, that he could not feed. Rebels and Civilians. Did Abraham Lincoln get his Southern Wealth to fund his Chase Bank in Manhattan, NY too?

  • @gregtravis84
    @gregtravis84 3 роки тому +2263

    I have been studying the Civil War for 40 years and this is one of the few times that I have heard someone give General George Thomas his due. Undoubtedly the best General on either side.

    • @caedo7090
      @caedo7090 3 роки тому +45

      He was fantastic, but I personally think Grant was the best.

    • @ITILII
      @ITILII 3 роки тому +30

      Thomas was indeed great but I think the 2 best Union Generals were Grant and Sherman; and the 2 best Confederate Generals were Jackson and Forrest.

    • @TheBigtx99
      @TheBigtx99 2 роки тому +97

      @@ITILII majority of the CSA generals were complete ass. Why the military named so many of their bases after some of the worst generals is beyond me.
      Yes there were a ton of shitty Union officers and general at the start. The USA military at the time was mostly a office of status and standing, similar to the issues plaguing the British military hierarchy. That said, the one thing old Abe did was firing and forcing the shit generals out of the military, relatively quickly. After he cleared out the shit tier generals, those who Abe HAD to relay on were great.
      The CSA just kept throwing their shit tier military generals out from end to end. General Bragg and Hood were terrible.

    • @isaacsorrels4077
      @isaacsorrels4077 2 роки тому +84

      The only reason Thomas can't be compared to Grant or Sherman is due to his lack of influence; considering treatment towards him by his peers due to his heritage it's not surprising.
      I always look at Thomas as the biggest what-if; what could he have pulled off had he been given more influence?

    • @samy7013
      @samy7013 2 роки тому +7

      @@isaacsorrels4077 : Very insightful comment. Thank you for sharing it.

  • @here_bedragons
    @here_bedragons 3 роки тому +699

    Thing about Grant being “a drunk” something that often gets overlooked is how we’re now coming to understand alcoholism as a disease and one that can be passed down through the family. Plus in the end Grant beat his alcoholism, in an age where drinking was far more ubiquitous than it is today

    • @rangergxi
      @rangergxi 3 роки тому +111

      Its kinda funny. Literally everybody would be considered an alcoholic by todays standards as far as 19th century America goes.

    • @vladdietheladdie7345
      @vladdietheladdie7345 3 роки тому +25

      @@rangergxi then wouldn't that make him worse? Being considered an alcoholic back then really meant you were *BAD*

    • @here_bedragons
      @here_bedragons 3 роки тому +80

      @@vladdietheladdie7345 by what I’ve read Grant did have it pretty bad. He had a close circle who worked hard to help keep him clean, and throughout the war Grant didn’t go into the battle drunk. And eventually he beat his alcoholism…which I honestly find about as amazing as his time in the army and as President

    • @erraticonteuse
      @erraticonteuse 3 роки тому +46

      @@vladdietheladdie7345 Actually, we're talking about a time when the Temperance movement had also picked up steam, so that makes it even harder to gauge how bad Grant's drinking was. Sure, a lot of people drank more and harder than we do today, but the people who didn't also had a more extreme reaction to anyone who was even visibly tipsy in front of others. (I do tend to believe the analysis that suggests that Grant didn't drink often but couldn't stop himself once he started, but do feel the influence of Temperance rhetoric gets overlooked regardless.)

    • @zacharywiedner327
      @zacharywiedner327 3 роки тому +38

      @@erraticonteuse Especially when temperance, like anything else, was used as a political prop. At least some of the People accusing Grant of being a drunk were equally as fond of the bottle, and simply using the booze angle as a convenient character assassination vehicle.

  • @Robert-ku6jx
    @Robert-ku6jx Рік тому +407

    I love how Johnny goes from “It wasn’t about slavery” to openly calling the Union Army the Abolition Army.

    • @TheStapleGunKid
      @TheStapleGunKid Рік тому +69

      That's actually a term you often see in actual Confederate propaganda of the time. For example, Jefferson Davis responded to the emancipation with his own proclamation, in which he denounced the Union army as "mercenaries for abolition".

    • @vehx9316
      @vehx9316 Рік тому +54

      @@TheStapleGunKid
      And somehow people can still think that the war wasn't about slavery........

    • @havable
      @havable Рік тому +15

      Conservatives have always been the same.

    • @havable
      @havable Рік тому +19

      @@vehx9316 Its not that they think the war wasn't about slavery, its that they lie about what they know.

    • @jeffreygao3956
      @jeffreygao3956 Рік тому +1

      Well, then. We made Neo-Confederate belief extinct!

  • @dflatt1783
    @dflatt1783 3 роки тому +988

    "Lets switch to the Western theatre."
    "You sure you want to do that?"
    LOL

    • @Rex-gu1bu
      @Rex-gu1bu 3 роки тому +3

      Hehe

    • @foolslayer9416
      @foolslayer9416 3 роки тому +27

      **looks at General Grant* Oh boy...

    • @lostpapertown
      @lostpapertown 3 роки тому +3

      Epic Knockout

    • @marseldagistani1989
      @marseldagistani1989 3 роки тому +3

      Sherman if nukes were a thing: Nuke Atlanta

    • @dflatt1783
      @dflatt1783 3 роки тому +8

      @@joepetto9488 Once again a neo-con twisting unverifiable events to fit their narrative. Imagine my surprise.

  • @andrewwestfall65
    @andrewwestfall65 3 роки тому +882

    This reminded me of my high school teacher talking about it. We didn't spend too much time going over it, but a rough approximation of what he said was "The southern military was focused on winning every battle and gaining personal accolades, the northern military was trying to win a war. So, yes, the south won a lot more battles, but they tended to be smaller-scale. Northern generals were more willing to retreat from positions that had little value if it meant keeping more soldiers and being in a better position to win the key battles."

    • @MollymaukT
      @MollymaukT 3 роки тому +108

      Is kinda fitting how Davis compared the South to cavaliers and the North to Cromwell and in the end just like the royalists his army was commanded by a bunch of aristocratic fops more concerned with personal glory than with anything else

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 3 роки тому +42

      Winfield Scott's Anaconda Plan, proposed at the beginning of the war, anticipated the Union's eventual strategy very accurately.

    • @fearlessfosdick160
      @fearlessfosdick160 3 роки тому +15

      I think that the fairest thing one could say about this is that, especially early on, the Southern commanders tended to be superior tacticians relative to Union commanders. However, their many victories also tended to be sterile because they were having to wage largely defensive campaigns.

    • @matthewhubka6350
      @matthewhubka6350 3 роки тому +2

      Makes sense, I learned that Lincoln used the telegram to give orders to everyone, so a coordinated larger scale view of the war makes sense

    • @alundavies8402
      @alundavies8402 3 роки тому +4

      @@MollymaukT The Cavaliers were not fops but they were out for personal glory but that was the way of things then. Cromwell was a beastly man although King Charles 1 should have recognised Parliament from early on and had He done that Cromwell wouldn’t have had any thing to raise an army for.

  • @morriganlefay5438
    @morriganlefay5438 3 роки тому +676

    At last, Atun-Shei's beard has grown long enough for another Checkmate Lincolnites episode

    • @Ugly_German_Truths
      @Ugly_German_Truths 3 роки тому +22

      so we just will have to wait till he can get a Custer Mustache? :D

    • @theseus0467
      @theseus0467 3 роки тому +12

      next episode Jackson's Beard is gonna look like a goatee.

    • @d.n5287
      @d.n5287 3 роки тому +15

      I think that's actually what determines his upload schedule for these videos.

    • @11Survivor
      @11Survivor 3 роки тому +15

      @@d.n5287 It is. It really is.
      All jokes aside, it makes sense because of what the beard entails.

  • @dorpth
    @dorpth Рік тому +401

    There was a civil war strategy game called "AGEOD's American Civil War", and it had one interesting aspect to it that I never saw other historical war games try.
    Each general had 2 main stats: military (how good a general they were) and political (how well connected they were)
    Dismissing a general took a big political toll depending on their political rating. A killed or dismissed general would be replaced by the next highest political rank.
    McClellan had an awful military rating, but the highest political. A huge part of the Union strategy was maneuvering and building enough political capital to dismiss McClellan and replace him with someone better (Grant had the highest military, but a low political).
    Basically, the Union player spent the early war pulling your hair out trying to uproot all the nepo babies running the Army of the Potomac.

    • @rexblade504
      @rexblade504 Рік тому +50

      The Union army was FULL of political generals, people who paid for officer commissions without any military experience. That is why they struggled so early in the war before the were able to oust them. Also McClellan was actually a decent commander but was too cautious which prevented the Union from pushing their advantage when they did get it. But when he did fight, he did quite well as compared to many other of the Union officers like McDowell or Burnside.

    • @dorpth
      @dorpth Рік тому +52

      The game reflects almost exactly that. The Union spends the first one-third of the war fighting its own internal command structure politics almost more than it does the Confederacy.

    • @kristaskrastina2863
      @kristaskrastina2863 Рік тому +23

      @@rexblade504
      Both armies had a lot of political generals (it was easy for a politician to raise a regiment or two under his command). Not all of them were ousted in the early stages - for example, General Dan Sickles was pretty decent until he was wounded at Gettysburg.
      McClellan was a better strategist than a tactician. Also he had a very bad recon - that's why he had no solid knowledge on the opposing force and always thought he was outnumbered. Lee completely outgeneraled him at the Peninsula - but McClellan fully returned the favor in Maryland preventing Lee from achieving anything.
      McDowell was a good Corps commander. As an army commander he was... average, not so bad. The First Bull Run was a mess simply because everybody was inexperienced.
      Burnside was a lot better than people think :) North Carolina and Knoxville were his big achevements. The bridge at Antietam - it wasn't Burnside's fault that the recon screwed up and showed him the wrong ford. Fredericksburg - you should just trust the honest dude who declined THRICE and don't appoint him as an army commander :)

    • @TheLongTake
      @TheLongTake Рік тому +21

      There's an old game from 1991 I used to play as a kid (and now play on DosBox) called No Greater Glory, which put you in Lincoln's or Davis' position. That game had generals with 3 stats: Initiative, Ability, and Prestige. Top 5 Union and top 3 Confederate generals in terms of prestige got mad if they weren't assigned the top 5 or 3 commands, and not doing that (or assigning a general to replace them with lower prestige) would result in losing loyalty in the political faction they belonged to and the region they came from. The trick was to manage your forces and your offensive and defensive assignments such that the generals with good ability rose in prestige while not damaging your loyalty. For the Union in particular this was tricky, since all the best generals were unknowns and all the high prestige ones (except for Halleck) had very low ability scores. It's also one of the few games that made McClellan useful. His ability of 4 (out of ten) meant that you could have him hold a position and reasonably expect it to be well defended, and his low initiative of 1 meant that you could order him to advance, pinning enemy forces in a location, but unless the troops had very high morale/experience, he wouldn't actually advance and risk losing a battle. His greatest liability, in other words, ends up being quite useful for feints. Really cool game that accomplishes a lot with very little.

    • @dorpth
      @dorpth Рік тому +3

      @@TheLongTake Sounds cool. Is it playable by modern standards?

  • @herculesatan4514
    @herculesatan4514 3 роки тому +1116

    Forrest: “Now I’m not a racist; I have many African American friends that agree with me…
    “But-“

    • @MWSin1
      @MWSin1 3 роки тому +146

      Forrest: I'm not racist. The people I own will vouch for me.

    • @Mw-tr2oz
      @Mw-tr2oz 3 роки тому +9

      Forest 2024

    • @ddjsoyenby
      @ddjsoyenby 3 роки тому +21

      "i just think they'd be happier if they all subjucated to us under thr3@t uh deth"
      "sir as your lawyer you shouldn't have said that"

    • @operleutnant7235
      @operleutnant7235 3 роки тому +2

      Forrest Gump is a saint you bastard!

    • @Beef_Master_Flex
      @Beef_Master_Flex 3 роки тому +4

      “What do you mean they’re slaves”

  • @kn6706
    @kn6706 3 роки тому +904

    I now choose to believe that neo-Confederate war historians have nightmarish hallucinations about Ulysses S. Grant whenever someone brings him up.

    • @Double_D__
      @Double_D__ 2 роки тому +86

      They also have panic attacks whenever they see fire and scream "AH, IT'S SHERMAN! RUN!"

    • @WardudeProxies
      @WardudeProxies 2 роки тому +64

      I think they focus on sherman so much as to avoid the mention of Grant's name.

    • @loganosmolinski4446
      @loganosmolinski4446 2 роки тому +10

      @@WardudeProxies if they speak his name they might get his attention and nobody wants that.

    • @Ballin4Vengeance
      @Ballin4Vengeance 2 роки тому +6

      Copium does that to your brain

    • @abdurrahmanqureshi3030
      @abdurrahmanqureshi3030 2 роки тому +1

      Why would they when Grant had to use twice as many soldiers to win and still lost a good portion of battles? Also Sherman was nothing compared to even the most mediocre Confederate general and that is just facts.

  • @hanslazarito6789
    @hanslazarito6789 3 роки тому +1519

    26:47 For those who couldn't understand what Billy was saying during Johnny Reb's "hallucination", he said these words written by Ulysses S. Grant to General S.B. Buckner at Fort Donelson:
    Sir:
    Yours of this date proposing Armistice, and appointment of commissioners, to settle terms of capitulation is just received. No terms except unconditional and immediate surrender can be accepted. I propose to move immediately upon your works.
    I'm just saying this in case no one said this yet.

    • @deeznoots6241
      @deeznoots6241 3 роки тому +140

      Unconditional Surrender Grant

    • @capitanleon9570
      @capitanleon9570 3 роки тому +8

      thanks

    • @kellenbigman
      @kellenbigman 3 роки тому +7

      Thank you for your service.

    • @admechskitarii6967
      @admechskitarii6967 3 роки тому +6

      Whats most ironic out of all of this is that Buckner was named after a Latino

    • @MrSourceMan
      @MrSourceMan 3 роки тому +52

      Basically;
      Give up your shit, I'm fucking coming.

  • @peterlepper5199
    @peterlepper5199 Рік тому +199

    More about Grant and "his" slaves; all but one of the enslaved people that Grant managed *were not* his. They were his father-in-law's, only *loaned* to his wife specifically because his father-in-law suspected that Grant would free them if given the chance. He was regularly seen working in the field with them, which put off his more conservative neighbors, and refused to beat them (even when his wife prompted him to do so).
    As for William Jones (the one time his father-in-law actually gave him ownership)? When Grant freed him, he was in the deepest financial distress of his life, and he could have made a killing selling Jones at a slave market, money that would have supported him and his family when they were on the brink of destitution. Grant stood by his morals, even at great cost to himself and his family.
    One final note, about General Orders No. 11; Grant would spend the rest of his life atoning for that mistake, including by appointing a record number of Jewish Americans to office during his time as President (as well as a record number of African-Americans and other minority groups). His sincerity may well be judged by the fact that one of the pallbearers at his funeral was a Rabbi.

    • @5552-d8b
      @5552-d8b Рік тому +10

      Hey Peter I have one question. I don’t fully because I’m still studying Grant but when he was president. The situation with the black hills with native Americans that led to Custer last stand. I’m the situation with the black hills did grant have good intentions for the Indians and was just naive because people took advantage of his trust or was he basically abused the Indians in every opportunity? Im just trying to understand

    • @peterlepper5199
      @peterlepper5199 Рік тому +49

      @@5552-d8b Grant's attitudes towards the native Americans were complicated. He was genuinely concerned for their well-being, but unfortunately he was still very much a product of his time and culture and believed that the best thing for them was to be "civilized." It puts him ahead of other generals of his time - such as, unfortunately, Sherman - who worked to violently expel the tribes from their homes, but still pretty backwards by our standards.
      The situation with the Sioux in the black hills was also complicated. Grant actually traveled to the Indian Territory to speak with them (the first president ever to do so) and invited tribal leaders to the White House. His proposal for them was still not exactly enlightened; he wanted them to resettle somewhere else and assimilate into American society. It is important to recognize that, at the time, this was still a very liberal policy as plenty of other people simply wanted to exterminate them (not justifying the actions, just putting them in context). However, he was backed into a corner by white settlers ignoring government orders and ultimately went along with his more belligerent officers. To quote Ron Chernow's stellar biography:
      "There was something profoundly contradictory about Grant's attitude toward the whole situation. In addressing Congress in December, he placed ultimate blame for what had happened to the Sioux on the white men: 'Hostilities there have grown out of the avarice of the white man who has violated our treaty stipulation in his search for gold.' All along he had ardently desired to bring justice to Native Americans. This raised questions of why Grant had caved in to greedy miners. To answer this, he invoked force majeure, saying that 'rumors of rich discoveries of gold' had drawn miners to the region and any effort to remove them would have led to desertion by the bulk of troops sent there. In other words, U.S. troops would have refused to thwart the miners, even under direct orders from the president. Thus Ulysses S. Grant, an advocate of a Peace Policy toward the Indians, found himself, willy-nilly, on the side of those raping their lands and violating a sacred treaty commitment. In the last analysis, Grant had to favor the American electorate and sacrifice the Sioux. It was a terribly ironic coda to a policy premised upon humane treatment of Native Americans."
      It's also worth noting that Grant didn't particularly like Custer and wanted to remove him from command of the expedition after Custer publicly criticized him, but he was persuaded to relent by Sheridan.

    • @5552-d8b
      @5552-d8b Рік тому +22

      @@peterlepper5199 o ok so In his head he thought he was “helping”. But in reality is was just letting the Indians assimilate into society because he thought there lives would be better in a “civilized world” I do know that he prevented genocide attempts which is good on his part at least.

    • @vehx9316
      @vehx9316 Рік тому

      I always find it fascinating that lost causers likes to say that Grant killed Indians, while conveniently forgetting that Lee and the rest of the Confederates fought for a government that was formed to explicitly enslave people.
      Guess the whole "they were just fighting for hearth and home" does not apply when demonizing the North.........

  • @hfar_in_the_sky
    @hfar_in_the_sky 2 роки тому +738

    I've rewatched this episode a couple of times now and the line "If only Sherman spontaneously combusted at the Battle of Chattanooga!" never fails to get a laugh out of me

    • @Daedalus9393
      @Daedalus9393 2 роки тому +17

      The rebs would have needed luck like that to win against him

    • @kristaskrastina2863
      @kristaskrastina2863 Рік тому +12

      @@Daedalus9393 Strategically - yes. Tactically - nah, a single Sherman's blunder was enough for Johnston to win the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain. But that didn't change a thing, because Sherman learned the lesson and continued to flank Johnston, making him retreat.

    • @Daedalus9393
      @Daedalus9393 Рік тому +20

      @@kristaskrastina2863 fair enough, I wasn’t so much trying to imply that he was the greatest commander of all time more that the confederate mythologization of their own commanders is largely unearned

    • @elijahpadilla5083
      @elijahpadilla5083 Рік тому +11

      ​@@kristaskrastina2863Essentially, the best comparison to Sherman I've seen in media is Gamera. Occasionally loses, pretty frequently does something absolutely terrible, but never loses the same way twice and is very easy to project as a hero when he opposes something even worse.

    • @jeffreygao3956
      @jeffreygao3956 Рік тому +3

      I'd like to formally apologize for what he just said about Judah P. Benjamin.

  • @griffin09
    @griffin09 3 роки тому +339

    That demonic monolith voice reading of Unconditional Surrender is probably one of the greatest things I've seen on UA-cam. My lungs are on fire.

    • @kategrant2728
      @kategrant2728 3 роки тому +11

      I hope someone clips that

    • @chanzpalau-agbayani1270
      @chanzpalau-agbayani1270 3 роки тому +6

      26:46

    • @rileyknapp5318
      @rileyknapp5318 3 роки тому +3

      Do you have a transcript? It got a little hard to understand?

    • @nukclear2741
      @nukclear2741 3 роки тому

      @@rileyknapp5318 it’s the unconditional surrender quote by Grant.

    • @nicholaschavez8162
      @nicholaschavez8162 3 роки тому +1

      @@rileyknapp5318 Yours of this date proposing an armistice and the appointment of rommissioners to settle on the terms of capitulation is just received. "No terms except unconditional and immediate surrender can be accepted. I propose to move immediately on your works...."

  • @samanthadouglas5446
    @samanthadouglas5446 3 роки тому +489

    Right before Forrest’s speech to the Black Civic’s Union part of the video. It said “Nathan Bedford Forrest said” then it cut to an Arby’s commercial saying “new chicken nuggets every day value” and now I’m just imagining him shouting about chicken nuggets to a crowd of black political leaders.

  • @corbinmcnabb
    @corbinmcnabb Рік тому +114

    4:38
    The argument that slavery wasn't THE issue for the South would have shocked the state governments that seceded.
    Every state that seceded, passed a resolution giving their reasons for seceding. Every one of them mentioned slavery in their reasoning.
    No exceptions.

    • @yoshii63
      @yoshii63 7 місяців тому +8

      Ehhhhhh except North Carolina, which didn't mention slavery in their documents, and Louisiana, who didn't have one. But their delegates sent to Texas showed the reason for secession was slavery.

    • @henrysanders6544
      @henrysanders6544 6 місяців тому

      But slavery was not the reason Lincoln went to war. Lincoln said he would allow the south to keep slavery. Lincoln waged war with the south because he disagreed with the states right to secede from the union.

    • @Doc_Paradox
      @Doc_Paradox 6 місяців тому

      @@henrysanders6544 wrong, the demand was to remove the institution of slavery at which point the south decided to succeed because they didnt want to be told what they can and can not do with their "property" I really can not fathom how you mouth breathers can look at words written by the very men talking of the refusal to not only relinquish their slaves but to give these poor men the rights to be seen as equals. then say "eRm iT aCtUaLLy wAsnT aBouT SlaVery" you're the real lost cause here.

    • @TheRealBass72
      @TheRealBass72 6 місяців тому +1

      Last part aged well

    • @YokaiX
      @YokaiX 5 місяців тому +3

      ⁠@@henrysanders6544read carefully. Stop the whataboutism and deflection. We’re talking about the South. Not Lincoln. The South fought for their States’ rights to uphold and expand slavery. They seceded over slavery.

  • @eightfootmanchild
    @eightfootmanchild 3 роки тому +431

    They were SO good, they engaged in a highly advanced and intricate tactic known as losing.

    • @placitas52
      @placitas52 3 роки тому +7

      Great quote, even for today.

    • @abdurrahmanqureshi3030
      @abdurrahmanqureshi3030 3 роки тому +1

      So Hannibal Barca was a bad general simply because he lost the war due to logistics?
      Just say '"I dislike the confederates and will do anything to discredit them even if the implications I am making are false " instead of the mental gymnastics.

    • @Bagster321
      @Bagster321 3 роки тому +10

      @@abdurrahmanqureshi3030 it was a joke mate😂 Settle down

    • @jetcraneboyd4278
      @jetcraneboyd4278 3 роки тому +2

      @@abdurrahmanqureshi3030 Hannibal lost because Rome was to stubborn not because of logistics.

    • @vedsingh2108
      @vedsingh2108 3 роки тому +3

      @@jetcraneboyd4278 he lost because of logistics. The sheer amount of manpower they could field overwhelmed him

  • @pyromania1018
    @pyromania1018 2 роки тому +1394

    My high school American history teacher had this to say about the Confederates:
    "The Southern ruling class was in many ways philosophical if not literal descendants of the Cavaliers during the English Civil War."
    And it's appropriate because Jeff Davis explicitly used the name "Cromwell" to describe the Union in a number of his speeches and writings. The Cavaliers were all about looking dashing while committing fancy, grandiose maneuvers... that failed to accomplish anything. The Roundheads, by contrast, were all about practicality, appearance be damned, and through this, they ultimately won. But the Confederates didn't seem to remember that.

    • @jonnie106
      @jonnie106 2 роки тому +60

      @Jackson Attilio Good point. It's like, if there'd been any real substance to the Dixie they were defending, it might've worked. As it was, they stood to in the defense of personal aggrandizement. A place of such selfishness that it needed slaves to demonstrate its self-importance. This 'look at me' style of being might feel good and look good, but all that 'me' attitude in the south leaves little room for any 'us' solidarity; and a regiment of unified 'us' troops will always defeat a brigade of 'look at me' soldiers. The southerners failed to bank on the 'United' part of the country's name; in every way it was always poised to defeat a self-indulgent Dixie.
      They also willingly shed blood defending that last, most distasteful vice of humanity... slavery. Too selfish to just advance the 'self dying out' of the practice that some notable few of them could foresee. There'd have been nothing to fight over or secede over otherwise. Once the bid to maintain slavery was launched, it couldn't be unlaunched in case of defeat. To leave a legacy of not being the racist manipulators of humanity that they actually were, thus is spawned... the lost cause.

    • @Tareltonlives
      @Tareltonlives 2 роки тому +82

      And they absolutely believed that: the sense of superiority came from the idea that they were Anglo Norman aristocracy rather than Puritan peasants and Continental immigrants

    • @Sewblon
      @Sewblon 2 роки тому +10

      @@jonnie106 Those slaves were not for demonstrating self-importance. They were for making money.

    • @jonnie106
      @jonnie106 2 роки тому +30

      @@Sewblon Indeed. The money made via slavery may have been the defining attribute of their self-importance.

    • @fortunateson7852
      @fortunateson7852 2 роки тому +17

      It’s also amusing that the southern accents are often so exaggerated (Gone With the Wind style) when in reality they were much closer to the British accent. Particularly those that were educated. There are actual recordings of confederate officers (made in the 1920’s) to prove this. I mean it’s only a generation or two since the War of Independence.

  • @NardoVogt
    @NardoVogt 3 роки тому +538

    "How is that humble pie?"
    "It's a little dry..."
    KIlled me

    • @General_Rubenski
      @General_Rubenski 3 роки тому +3

      Explain

    • @bigrigjoe5130
      @bigrigjoe5130 3 роки тому +16

      @@General_Rubenski "Humble Pie" is a term people say to mean that you have to figuratively eat your own words. That you were wrong or embarrased about something.
      Say you brag that your local sports team is going to win the big game, the they get their asses kicked. You have to eat your humble pie.
      Also sometimes refered to as "eating crow"
      Making it a literal pie that the guy was literally eating was a funny little joke

    • @Isolder74
      @Isolder74 3 роки тому +5

      @@bigrigjoe5130 It's also a meat pie made of the cast off parts of an animal so is the lowest quality possible.

  • @HoneyTheFracking
    @HoneyTheFracking 2 роки тому +116

    Nathan Bedford Forrest saying "the n*gro is the only labouring class we have" is one of the best examples of saying the quiet part loud I've ever seen

    • @AhuramazdaShah-d8z
      @AhuramazdaShah-d8z 5 місяців тому

      Bro doesn’t have to censor negro. Its not the n-word

    • @Ridgwaycer
      @Ridgwaycer Місяць тому

      It's also funny since it's flat out ignoring poor whites working on their farms for subsidence. They were also a labor class.
      Methinks his class bias is showing.

  • @charlesbrooks94
    @charlesbrooks94 3 роки тому +235

    “No no no no no, Sherman is but the apprentice. He, is the master” I lost my shit, that bit was great 🤣

    • @Ugly_German_Truths
      @Ugly_German_Truths 3 роки тому +25

      Always two there are, No more, no less. a master and an apprentice. :D

    • @zeroone8800
      @zeroone8800 3 роки тому +11

      Was most of that supposed to be intelligible? I was basically only able to understand the same that Google was with the subtitles.

    • @Kingwolf_555
      @Kingwolf_555 3 роки тому +31

      @@zeroone8800 it was Grant's order for unconditional surrender.

    • @hussamgunter7381
      @hussamgunter7381 3 роки тому +21

      AAAAAAWAY DOWN SOUTH IN THE LAND OF TRAITORS

    • @dragonsword7370
      @dragonsword7370 3 роки тому +18

      @@hussamgunter7381 Rattlesnakes and alligators,
      Right away! Come away! Right away! Right away, come away!

  • @fumarc4501
    @fumarc4501 2 роки тому +253

    “How’s that humble pie taste, Billy?
    It’s a little dry.” *[while eating literal pie]*
    Lmao love it.

  • @joeevans5770
    @joeevans5770 3 роки тому +294

    When we needed them the most Billy Yank and Johnny Reb returned

  • @thewitchbasket
    @thewitchbasket Рік тому +89

    I love this series so much. I love how you break down misinformation without glorifying important figures. When Union commanders and/or soldiers do reprehensible things, you call them out on it. Plus you correct any mistakes you make!

  • @RobertJRoman
    @RobertJRoman 3 роки тому +167

    Lincoln didn't send that letter to Meade, but it was nice of him to record it for us, knowing that UA-cam might need it in 2021. Classy indeed.

    • @philwilliams6042
      @philwilliams6042 3 роки тому +22

      this is why you should always clear your browser history, one never knows when out of work actors will snap and get political

  • @Datch18
    @Datch18 3 роки тому +358

    “Repentent clan leader”
    “Oh well that’s ok then” 🤣🤣

    • @Thebluebridgetroll
      @Thebluebridgetroll 3 роки тому +9

      I cackled

    • @exeldofcanadia3461
      @exeldofcanadia3461 3 роки тому +7

      Best line in the series

    • @stardragon7893
      @stardragon7893 3 роки тому +18

      "An honorable organization," like that somehow makes the racially-based terrorism better.

    • @thunderbird1921
      @thunderbird1921 3 роки тому +5

      Interestingly, Hitler and Nazi Germany tried to stir up pro-Nazi sentiment in the 1930s South because they thought the prejudice and bitterness there would be ripe for spreading their ideology. It failed however because of anti-German sentiment from World War I (the Southerners were mostly of Anglo descent) and because even Southerners of that era thought that the Nazi antisemitism was highly controversial. Basically, hate canceled out hate.

    • @gratuitouslurking8610
      @gratuitouslurking8610 3 роки тому +1

      @@thunderbird1921 It was from a comic special, but I think it was put best when the Joker teamed up with the Red Skull and then backstabbed him when he learned he was a Nazi: 'I may be a insane criminal, but I'm an AMERICAN insane criminal!' Paraphased from memory but still.

  • @TheShadowOfMars
    @TheShadowOfMars 3 роки тому +265

    For those who found the nightmare inaudible: "Sir: Yours of this date proposing Armistice, and appointment of Commissioners, to settle terms of Capitulation is just received. No terms except unconditional and immediate surrender can be accepted.
    I propose to move immediately upon your works."

  • @emberfist8347
    @emberfist8347 Рік тому +63

    The issue with the Confederacies tactics reminds me as a World War II-focused Historian on the issue the Axis had particularly Japan. They thought they could win the in one big decisive battle which constantly led to them losing ships and resources they couldn't afford to lose. While the Allies almost fell into this trap with Operation Downfall, they mostly focused on achieving actual strategic objectives like seizing vital islands keeping the route to Australia open etc.

    • @jeffreygao3956
      @jeffreygao3956 9 місяців тому +2

      Yamamoto was right; Imperial Japan was truly lost when they provoked the United States.

    • @Shaun_Jones
      @Shaun_Jones 8 місяців тому +1

      Well, Downfall would have been different; there was literally nothing else left to attack. Practically every island that Japan had held was either captured or blockaded; the navy was down to one old battleship, no cruisers, and a singe digit number of destroyers; and every single flyable aircraft was in the home islands.

    • @emberfist8347
      @emberfist8347 8 місяців тому

      @@Shaun_Jones But they could still turn Japan into Berlin or Leningrad. They had every citizen ready to fight off an invasion and had their best tanks (read: Ones that could actually counter the Sherman) on the home islands plus jets.

    • @Shaun_Jones
      @Shaun_Jones 8 місяців тому

      @@emberfist8347 you can’t just take a battle plan that worked for a single city and scale it up to a landmass the size of California. It would have taken years, possibly decades, to starve out Japan. Besides, both Leningrad and Berlin show that that doesn’t always work. Leningrad held out for years and was still standing when relieved; Berlin eventually had to be stormed, block-by-block, house-by-house; it was some of the most brutal and costly urban fighting of the entire war.

    • @emberfist8347
      @emberfist8347 8 місяців тому +1

      @@Shaun_Jones That was my point about having a conventional fight over the Home Islands would be a costly victory at best or a defeat at worst.

  • @StefanMilo
    @StefanMilo 3 роки тому +4226

    What a brilliant video and just in time for America’s annual treason celebration!

    • @sebastianc5155
      @sebastianc5155 3 роки тому +154

      Britain did the treason

    • @MemeSupreme69
      @MemeSupreme69 3 роки тому +503

      S I L E N C E, R E D C O A T

    • @jimvargaco.6344
      @jimvargaco.6344 3 роки тому +122

      Mad old King George committed the treason denying that the rights of Englishmen followed them to the ends of the earth.

    • @nolanmoore4937
      @nolanmoore4937 3 роки тому +222

      It ain't treason if it's successful.

    • @philwilliams6042
      @philwilliams6042 3 роки тому +79

      funny how the French never get mentioned as the ringers in that war

  • @JohnDahleAL
    @JohnDahleAL 3 роки тому +710

    Everyone: "Mr. President, General Grant is a Drunk!"
    Lincoln: "Well then, send a barrel of whatever he is drinking to the other Generals."
    Grant was never given his due honor in American history, both as a president and a general.

    • @skinflutey
      @skinflutey 3 роки тому +18

      His presidency was marred with corruption.

    • @Natureboy1235
      @Natureboy1235 3 роки тому +23

      He is the most underrated president.

    • @Mortablunt
      @Mortablunt 3 роки тому +35

      Generals: "Grant is reckless, a drunkard, and a butcher. He is unfit to lead!"
      Lincoln: "I can't spare this man. He fights."

    • @jeffersonclippership2588
      @jeffersonclippership2588 3 роки тому +9

      @@skinflutey I mean, all American politics was corrupt back then.

    • @robertnett9793
      @robertnett9793 3 роки тому +7

      I think to remember something like this happened. Not exactly... But - and pleas correct me if I am wrong here - wasn't there something that some other generals were about to bad mouth Grant as a drunk to president Lincoln and he just shrugged it of and was like 'Now - in that case send HIM a keg of his favorite poison'

  • @HobnailJohn
    @HobnailJohn 3 роки тому +741

    As a ranger at a Civil War battle field, I've had basically every part of this as an actual conversation with real people. Not the whole thing in one sitting with one set of visitors, but over time have been told pretty much everything Johnny Reb here said and tried to counter with many of the same arguments used by Billy Yank. Feels like beating my head against a brick wall sometimes...

    • @BradyPostma
      @BradyPostma 3 роки тому +88

      Fighting the good fight and beating your head against a brick wall are very similar tasks.

    • @hvymtal8566
      @hvymtal8566 3 роки тому +25

      @@BradyPostma God's honest truth, amen :p

    • @coryflynn6391
      @coryflynn6391 3 роки тому +9

      Grant was an idiot and Lee was a genius. Railroads, telegraph, and cannon foddle won that war. I hate the shit happened, but if the north had better Generals the shit wouldn't have lasted 4 years. Hell they had to cut off Texas to even have a chance of winning... well that and allowing the middle states to keep slavery and join the union. Shit isn't rocket science the resources won and the north had that in spades. Lee could've ended the war if he would've marched on DC, but the war to him wasn't about what others were fighting for. To him it was a love for his state and he did not want to see the union fall, but he also did not want to see his home fall either.

    • @tavernburner3066
      @tavernburner3066 3 роки тому +4

      Well now you can just show them this video.

    • @HobnailJohn
      @HobnailJohn 3 роки тому +92

      @@coryflynn6391 Did you even watch the video? Also, if war is a simple matter of resources, explain how the colonies won the Revolution? Or how the US lost Vietnam and Afghanistan?

  • @charlessaint7926
    @charlessaint7926 Рік тому +148

    South, "We had the best generals and soldiers!"
    North, "And they couldn't beat us. We even had one arm tied behind our back, and our commander was an alcoholic."

    • @kristaskrastina2863
      @kristaskrastina2863 Рік тому +41

      "...Our BEST commander was an alcoholic".

    • @kenabbott8585
      @kenabbott8585 Рік тому +4

      More soldiers
      More gear
      More supplies
      Used terrorism.
      "One arm tied behind our back."
      Uhhhhhh yeah.

    • @triarcness
      @triarcness Рік тому

      Bruh the South absolutely used terrorism as well. 21:13. At least watch the video before trying to frame the North as "the big meanies who used tactics like being better and terrorism" when the South were literally racists using blacks as cannon fodder and committing terrorism as well. Just laugh about the North beating the South with an alchohalic because the South fucking sucked lmao

    • @Ghost-gp6ct
      @Ghost-gp6ct Рік тому

      ​@@kenabbott8585ah yes another southern hypocrisy. Accused one another of terrorism while slaving millions of people just because they were born of a different skin color. Like how idiot you could be, you seems to forgot that even before the civil war your pro slave state responded with violence against abolitionist. Like harrassment and burning down their property. The Fugitive Slave Act ironically violate the state right's of the free state. Seems like the South only main contribution to the US is their never ending hypocrisy.

    • @Ghost-gp6ct
      @Ghost-gp6ct Рік тому +12

      ​@@kenabbott8585also you will have more soldier if half of your population aren't slaves.

  • @theunorthodoxorthodox3328
    @theunorthodoxorthodox3328 3 роки тому +1012

    BLACK CONFEDERATES! BLACK CONFEDERATES!
    Legit laughed when he did that.

    • @dustinjacks9087
      @dustinjacks9087 3 роки тому +7

      Well to s point: they were black and did serve the confederacy. So he was not wrong. While maybe not listed infantrymen, they did serve. Much like a cook, medic, or spy in the military of that time.
      Now were they listed regulars? Thats a different topic.

    • @theunorthodoxorthodox3328
      @theunorthodoxorthodox3328 3 роки тому +60

      @@dustinjacks9087
      Yes yes we've all seen his video on that topic.

    • @anthonybariek997
      @anthonybariek997 3 роки тому +45

      @@dustinjacks9087 slaves working for an arm is very different to slaves serving in an army

    • @SandfordSmythe
      @SandfordSmythe 3 роки тому +8

      There was a highly rated black Creole Militia in New Orleans that wanted to fight but were refused. New Orleans at the time had good race relations.

    • @Milner62
      @Milner62 3 роки тому +1

      @@dustinjacks9087, Check out the Fold3 you can see thousands of Black Confederate enlistment cards as infantrymen and calvary men. Too many people assume that they were not given guns but thousands were and we still have the records of them as well.

  • @inspectorwinship9538
    @inspectorwinship9538 3 роки тому +931

    "It's almost as if racism and the Civil War are interrelated." Simple and yet, frigging brilliant exposition.

    • @thunderbird1921
      @thunderbird1921 3 роки тому +17

      From what I read not too long ago, the Lost Cause thing and Jim Crow South actually had Hitler and the Nazis in the 1930s believing it was a ripe spot for spreading their ideology (as they saw similarities between it and post World War I Germany). Their propaganda effort failed however, as the southerners at that time were primarily of Anglo descent and had strong anti-German sentiment from WWI and even many of them though the Nazis' antisemitism was highly controversial (at least one southern newspaper even awkwardly criticized Hitler for not congratulating American runner Jesse Owens in 1936, rather ironic considering what was going on there during that era). In the end, the frustrated Nazis focused as much effort as possible on the German American Bund.

    • @dLimboStick
      @dLimboStick 3 роки тому +18

      @Leonard squirrel Only people with water on the brain say that.

    • @lucaslonchampt613
      @lucaslonchampt613 3 роки тому +16

      @Leonard squirrel Do you even know what genocide is?

    • @dLimboStick
      @dLimboStick 3 роки тому +12

      @Leonard squirrel We will always have the southern states treasonous acts in our history books. Statues honoring traitors will be in the dumpster where they belong.

    • @beastinthesky6774
      @beastinthesky6774 3 роки тому +14

      If you encounter anyone who tries to claim that the war wasn’t about slavery and the confederacy wasn’t a white suptemacist organization, direct them to the Cornerstone speech. Neo-confederates try to rewrite history, but the actual confederates didn’t beat around the bush when it came to talking about their white supremacist beliefs. Also the letters of secession are riddled with slavery talk, some of them outright say that slavery is the main cause of secession.

  • @Owesomasaurus
    @Owesomasaurus 3 роки тому +658

    Re: Forrest:
    That whole section illustrated a big issue I have with military history: divorcing battlefield exploits from the human, political and moral dimensions of their exploits ends up exalting monsters and excusing atrocities.
    Thank you for not doing that.

    • @inovakovsky
      @inovakovsky 3 роки тому +16

      That is interesting since a small reaction channel understands bringing their issues when discussing a person but less relevant when discussing battlefield abilities. I do agree with this sentiment, when the Bin Laden comparison is brought up.

    • @Cody435
      @Cody435 3 роки тому +12

      I actually disagree because we already know what these men did before and after the war and from a historians perspective if you are comparing them as generals the morality of the human being does not affect the strategy of these men and just because you don't talk about the horrible things these people did in a video that's supposed to talk about military achievements or the lack thereof doesn't mean you are honoring them it just means that you are talking about them as a general. People need to understand the difference. Now when morality crosses a line on the field of battle case in point the fort pillow massacre that absolutely belongs in this video. But taking fifteen minutes to talk about the morals of NBF as a Clan member and Lee as a slave owner just doesn't belong in this video. And to be clear Lee's morals do need to be talked about more, people nowadays have romanticized Lee as like this perfect individual well he is actually a incredibly horrible person, but it doesn't belong in a video about military achievements. I would suggest watching vlogging through history's reaction to this video he is a historian who specializes In American History during the civil war and makes some really good points in his video while also adding alot to it.

    • @MrGreenTabasco
      @MrGreenTabasco 3 роки тому +30

      @@Cody435 You would be right, if this was a discussion between two well meaning martial history enthusiasts. But this was always about the whole debate surrounding these generals and the framing of the conflict. These videos began with the idea that it was "the war of northern agression" and such were always all about the way we think about these events, and never just about clean cut comparisons of certain aspects of the conflict.

    • @heysemberthkingdom-brunel5041
      @heysemberthkingdom-brunel5041 3 роки тому +2

      That's of course most egregious in the cases of the Second World War and the Civil War... Almost as if there is a certain thru-line between them...

    • @Owesomasaurus
      @Owesomasaurus 3 роки тому +20

      @@Cody435 the problem is that most people are not divorcing the battlefield from the man.
      Sure, it would be great if we could discuss a perfectly spherical battle in a vacuum, but the human brain links "badass general" and "badass person" too readily to not put things in context.

  • @will_from_pa
    @will_from_pa Рік тому +52

    I love when an ad plays at the perfect moment.
    “Now Billy Yank you know he gave a speech to a black civics organization in which he said…”
    YOU CAN NOW GET TWO SIZZLIES FOR $5

    • @chaosmike89th
      @chaosmike89th 4 місяці тому

      Somewhat sadly and ironically, I got a fucking trump campaign ad.

  • @coryfice1881
    @coryfice1881 3 роки тому +277

    "I had black friends during the civil war how could I possibly be a member of the Klan?" Forrest.

    • @asuperstraightpureblood
      @asuperstraightpureblood 3 роки тому +3

      He owned slaves who willingly joined his cavalry brigade and given their freedom and some money at the end of the war. Then he joins the klan😳 then he resigns because of the violence. When he got old he joined the fight for black civil rights. His story is amazing. A huge character.

    • @SplotPublishing
      @SplotPublishing 3 роки тому +31

      @@asuperstraightpureblood I think today we would rightly call that a "grifter." He had whatever point of view benefitted him at the time. And as for "willingly," are you fucking serious? They didn't "willingly" do shit. THEY WERE SLAVES. Even if you ask a slave what he wants, he's not REALLY free to tell you anything but what you want to hear, or what he thinks you want to hear.

    • @stopefinaround
      @stopefinaround 3 роки тому +9

      "I had black *employees* " :P

    • @collinsagyeman6131
      @collinsagyeman6131 3 роки тому +8

      @@asuperstraightpureblood slaves?? Willingly?? Do you even hear yourself??

    • @asuperstraightpureblood
      @asuperstraightpureblood 3 роки тому +1

      @@collinsagyeman6131 given the choice to remain on plantation or go out on cavalry raids they CHOSE....

  • @Strideo1
    @Strideo1 3 роки тому +292

    The timing of the ad break was perfect when talking about Nathan Bedford Forest:
    "... in 1875 he gave a speech to a black civics organization in which he said:" *points to camera and instantly cuts to an ad*
    "I RECOMMEND NATURE MADE VITAMINS!"

    • @PhycoKrusk
      @PhycoKrusk 3 роки тому +28

      You won't convince me that he didn't put the ad market there intentionally

    • @Strideo1
      @Strideo1 3 роки тому +34

      @@PhycoKrusk I suspect you're right because it's not the first of his videos where the ad break lines up perfectly with a setup like this.
      There's another video of his I was watching about Nazi crack pot archeology and he sets up a quote from Hitler and he's like "... Hitler told him:" *suddenly a car ad starts* "Question everything! We do."

    • @navonmyhand7999
      @navonmyhand7999 3 роки тому +5

      I got an ad break right as he repeated a quote twice. Lol I enjoyed that creative editing

    • @trevorminyard8885
      @trevorminyard8885 3 роки тому +14

      Mine was spa commercial. Made it sound like Bedford got up there and tried selling the crowd spa treatments.

    • @nolanwood99
      @nolanwood99 3 роки тому +4

      I got Grubhub with mine

  • @DU-ym6fs
    @DU-ym6fs 3 роки тому +282

    “Sherman is but the apprentice; He…He is the Master…” Perhaps my favorite line from all your videos.

  • @theduke7539
    @theduke7539 Рік тому +22

    "Naval Power? What board game were you playing?"
    You have no idea how badly I wanted to see a world of warships sponsor right there.

  • @feragosmyxixarashtra7948
    @feragosmyxixarashtra7948 3 роки тому +308

    Alternate Title: *"Two American Generals from the 1860's take Potshots at each other post mortem because their Spirits can't cope with their Death."*

    • @jamesgodwin7215
      @jamesgodwin7215 3 роки тому +1

      I see and hear, despite how entertaining your video is , that the revisionist have gotten to you too. I'm 60 years old and no I'm not even from the Southern U.S. so you cant say I'm biased. I've studied this war practically all my life. No doubt Grant and Sherman were competent but they are in no way in the same echelon as Lee or Jackson or Forrest. What about Belmont. What about Shiloh. Grant wired Halleck that he had no indication or the faintest idea of being attacked. Sherman was warned repeatedly but ignored it. The next day Sherman was wounded in the hand with buckshot while his aide was killed. Grant was forced back on the Tennesse River. If Buells fresh 40000 troops had not arrived that nite , it's almost a given Grant and Sherman would have been killed or captured. That would have changed everything. The South probably would have lost the war . You simply contradict yourself constantly. Grant lost more men in 30 days during the Overland campaign than all the Union Generals who had fought him before. What about all the European immigrants who fought for the North so they could receive Freeland in the homestead act. Poor Bobby Lee. He had smashed Army after army despite overwhelming odds. Even Bonaparte lost eventually. I've studied him for years. He had comparable numbers at Waterloo and look at the result. Only an idiot would invade Russia the way he did. He led 700,000 troops into Russia and about 30,000 made it out. Back to Lee. If Tredegar Iron Works in Richmond had fallen the war would have virtually ended then and there. But go ahead with your version of history and educate these young folks if you can. I'm sure you'd try to argue with me and I'd welcome it. No offense brother yank. It probably is well that this Nation was not separated permanently. I think we are now facing the gravest threat we have ever had to deal with and if you are half as intelligent as I think you are you know what I mean... God bless you. Enjoyed it. Peace Out...

    • @feragosmyxixarashtra7948
      @feragosmyxixarashtra7948 3 роки тому +11

      Mister, Please Stop taking Normal Pills before venting into Bed (In Susmogus?!?!! 😳😳😳). Because if you would do so without such input, you would realise that this is a Joke.
      I don't get how a 60 Year old Adult can't even discern this obvious Joke from some weird take, but here we are. I'm not even from the USA.

    • @jamesgodwin7215
      @jamesgodwin7215 3 роки тому +7

      @@feragosmyxixarashtra7948 You are definitely correct Sir. I humbly apologize. And I love this guys videos. Just been having a terrible couple of years. 🕊

    • @feragosmyxixarashtra7948
      @feragosmyxixarashtra7948 3 роки тому +8

      @@jamesgodwin7215 No Problem. Take care of yourself.

    • @paulbrockschmidt6405
      @paulbrockschmidt6405 3 роки тому +1

      @@jamesgodwin7215 god this is brilliant.I couldn't agree more

  • @TheWillage93
    @TheWillage93 3 роки тому +529

    *softly* "Didn't this beer used to be called 'Dixie'?"
    F*cking done lol

    • @royalewithcheese7
      @royalewithcheese7 3 роки тому +7

      12:56

    • @JinwooYoon1217
      @JinwooYoon1217 3 роки тому +1

      If I may confess, I don't get it. If someone would be so generous as to explain to me, I would be most grateful!

    • @TheWillage93
      @TheWillage93 3 роки тому +7

      @@JinwooYoon1217 for a while, Dixie Brewing Company operated out of New Orleans, brewing Dixie Beer. It recently rebranded as Faubourg this year. It is a bit if an inside joke.

    • @JinwooYoon1217
      @JinwooYoon1217 3 роки тому +3

      @@TheWillage93 Ah, I see, interesting! Thank you for explaining!

  • @benbovard9579
    @benbovard9579 3 роки тому +138

    Glad someone finally gave some recognition to George Thomas. What a badass with a badass nickname, "The Rock of Chickamauga".
    Also, I like the way my former Civil War professor put it: "Whereas Lee was the master tactician, Grant was the ultimate strategist. Tactics win battles. Strategies win wars."

  • @oharehatmancaleb7
    @oharehatmancaleb7 Рік тому +38

    I wonder how many military achievements Grant had where he was fighting a hangover during it. I can just imagine, “Just do it this way and win the damn thing, all this gunfire is killer on my headache and on soldiers’ lives so make it stop.”

    • @warlordofbritannia
      @warlordofbritannia 10 місяців тому +1

      Grant never drank when on duty, so never. He saved the urge to drink for downtime-when on leave or for a day or two during a long siege.

  • @ajshell2
    @ajshell2 3 роки тому +334

    For those interested: "Norman C. Francis Parkway, formerly named Jefferson Davis Parkway or Jeff Davis Parkway, is a street in New Orleans, Louisiana."

    • @cyberherbalist
      @cyberherbalist 3 роки тому +13

      Yes, I was wondering about that! Thanks for clearing it up!!

    • @jtofgc
      @jtofgc 3 роки тому +10

      Just renamed this year.

    • @DrTssha
      @DrTssha 3 роки тому +11

      Checkmate Davisites!

    • @maryaigler7651
      @maryaigler7651 3 роки тому +4

      My question: who is Norman Francis?

    • @jtofgc
      @jtofgc 3 роки тому +26

      @@maryaigler7651 First black president of Xavier University in New Orleans. He was a lawyer for civil rights protesters and chose to allow the Freedom Riders to stay at the university during his time as dean there.

  • @padaii
    @padaii 3 роки тому +427

    I really liked when the Confederate sympathizer said out loud he likes talking about military history divorced from other subjects because it's more comfortable and safe than the whole picture.

    • @thatcanuck5670
      @thatcanuck5670 3 роки тому +94

      Kinda gives the whole game away, huh?

    • @ScorpionViper1001
      @ScorpionViper1001 3 роки тому +77

      "Why do we have to talk about this whole 'religion' thing when discussing the Crusades?"

    • @Nunyo-Bizznez
      @Nunyo-Bizznez 3 роки тому +67

      ‘’Why do we have to talk about warcrimes? i just want to talk about the Roman Empire! And how cool the romans were!”

    • @Reagan1984
      @Reagan1984 3 роки тому +69

      "Why do we have to talk about the Holocaust or War crimes, I just wanna talk about the Wehrmacht and how cool the Tiger is!"

    • @thefilthiestofcasuals6565
      @thefilthiestofcasuals6565 3 роки тому +53

      Honestly at this point Johnny Reb makes me think of an abused child who convinced himself his parents were great and nothing was wrong but is now being told how shit his life was and can’t handle it… is that why lost causers are so scared to let go they don’t wanna be seen as ancestors of slavers and rebels?

  • @JohnSmith-fp9li
    @JohnSmith-fp9li 2 роки тому +512

    "General Lee was a better tactician, General Grant was a better strategist " - General James Longstreet in his book "From Manassas to Appomattox"

    • @ElCrab
      @ElCrab 2 роки тому +66

      That's pretty well right. Lee, for all his "brilliance", realized only too late that the way for his side to win is by digging in and inflicting casualties from a defensive posture. His victories were costly, and his side could not replace the numbers or equipment so easily. Perhaps the thought was smashing victories would end the war, but for all of the trouble Lee gave everyone before Grant came west, the war was being lost. The idea that Gettysburg was the turning point is overblown, after all. Not only was Vicksburg the key defeat, in both cases the outcome was almost certainly decided. Vicksburg was finished, whether it came on July 4 or sometimes after. And even if Lee had carried the day at Gettysburg, it would merely be a slightly higher peak before the decline that was already guaranteed by the war's years of casualties and destruction, which only one side could weather for years.

    • @warlordofbritannia
      @warlordofbritannia Рік тому +47

      @@ElCrab
      Even if Lee “won” at Gettysburg, it would have been such a tremendous cost that to call it Pyrrhic would be an understatement

    • @5552-d8b
      @5552-d8b Рік тому +24

      My problem with Lee is that his accomplishments were all in Virginia his home state. As soon as he left he got killed twice

    • @lawrence142002
      @lawrence142002 Рік тому +19

      @@warlordofbritannia It also doesn't really reflect well on him that he chose to come gallivanting up here to Pennsylvania while Vicksburg was desperately in need of help (and begged him to send it) and had far more strategic importance to the Confederacy's objectives.

    • @aaronTGP_3756
      @aaronTGP_3756 Рік тому +10

      ​@@warlordofbritanniaAlso, had Lee tried to engage Meade at Pipe Creek (which would be necessary to march on D.C.), his army would have been destroyed.

  • @The.Rooster
    @The.Rooster Рік тому +57

    I like how Billy Yank, whenever Johnny Reb says something bad the Union or Union general / politician did, doesn't argue nor does he say it was good, but rather fully accepts that it happened and even explains the events about it while trying to understand it, in contrast to Johnny Reb who whenever he's told the Confederacy did something bad, either justifies it, makes a whataboutism claim, or denies it

  • @PrinceJackTheFirst
    @PrinceJackTheFirst 3 роки тому +223

    "[Grant] believed that to wage war meant to bring it to a favorable conclusion as quickly as possible."
    Sun Tzu says hello.

  • @michaelsinger4638
    @michaelsinger4638 3 роки тому +806

    “Longstreet.”
    “We don’t talk about him.”
    And that’s The problem.

    • @kyleott6101
      @kyleott6101 3 роки тому +43

      Serous question why don't they? Longstreet seems like a brilliant commander and resourceful tactician from what I've read.

    • @italia689
      @italia689 3 роки тому +7

      He knew what was happening.

    • @1norselad
      @1norselad 3 роки тому +48

      @@kyleott6101 one of the best generals on either side, could even be argued that he was one of the best generals of the 19th century. i could go on im a big fan of Longstreet
      Beats lee, beats Jackson, beats Grant, Beats Sherman beats Sheridan etc etc

    • @petermarrocco7840
      @petermarrocco7840 3 роки тому +119

      @@kyleott6101 after the war Longstreet became a Republican Politician in support of Grant who was his friend from the army before the civil war. He was also very critical of Robert E. Lee’s performance in the civil war. He also lead the Louisiana State Militia against the White League in the Battle of Liberty Place. Basically he tried to distance himself as much as he could from the confederacy after the war and Lost Causers hate him for that

    • @Vampirecronicler
      @Vampirecronicler 3 роки тому +28

      @@kyleott6101 Because they wanna blame him for all of Lee's failures like the battle of Gettysburg

  • @wolfi9933
    @wolfi9933 3 роки тому +2849

    I actually think that it is interesting to see how comparable "clean wehrmacht" types are.
    Same arguments, same behaviour, its like you can simply swap them out.
    >superiority myth
    >they only "lost because the enemy was more numerous"
    >hero worship
    >racism/warcrime denial
    >"but the war was forced on us" arguments
    This is pretty spot on.

    • @nostur4984
      @nostur4984 3 роки тому +116

      Now that you mention it, these symptoms are found in all those who support some controversial side in a war. People wasn't kidding when they said history repeats itself.

    • @wolfi9933
      @wolfi9933 3 роки тому +320

      @@nostur4984 Yeah, i also forgot the weapon statistics fetishism.
      I also have a strong interest in military history and equipment (Though the cold war and bronze age are my favourites), but im always shocked about their encyclopedic knowledge of stats, but them not being to able to understand those systems in a context.
      The Sherman tank (Funny coincidence) is a good example of this.

    • @ArcAngle1117
      @ArcAngle1117 3 роки тому +153

      Do people try to claim that Germany was forced to go to war against litterally all of its neighbors.

    • @nostur4984
      @nostur4984 3 роки тому +303

      @@ArcAngle1117 you'd be surprised how often they do

    • @wolfi9933
      @wolfi9933 3 роки тому +100

      @@ArcAngle1117 Yeah, there are different revisionist narratives that claim that poland for example mobilized first, that poland forced germany to war because of the danzig situation, the Gleiwitz incident, because of the treatment of ethnic germans in poland.
      There are also narratives that proclaim that germany was forced to war by the british.
      Lots of stuff actually.

  • @AhintofChan
    @AhintofChan 11 місяців тому +24

    Good generals think about tactics, great generals think about strategy, the best generals think about logistics.

  • @britneyhochman5204
    @britneyhochman5204 3 роки тому +602

    I love how the relationship of these two started with one literally shooting the other to death, and now they’re close friends giving gifts, sharing drinks, playing chess, and occasionally debate each other over sometimes racist beliefs! What a pair!

    • @Abderian
      @Abderian 3 роки тому +24

      It's like a metaphor.

    • @Scrapmanluke1
      @Scrapmanluke1 3 роки тому +45

      Kind of like how the war/after war played out.

    • @fan9775
      @fan9775 3 роки тому +10

      They’re going to bang...hard

    • @heliveruscalion9124
      @heliveruscalion9124 3 роки тому +3

      @@fan9775 🤨

    • @fan9775
      @fan9775 3 роки тому +10

      @@heliveruscalion9124 Haaaaaarrrrrddd

  • @dutchvanderlinde5004
    @dutchvanderlinde5004 3 роки тому +209

    I wanted to say that as a Southerner you have changed my views on many subjects and I thank you for enlightening me with your fun and entertaining videos.

    • @rileyknapp5318
      @rileyknapp5318 3 роки тому +23

      Thank you for having an open mind to things that were probably quite hard to swallow.

    • @laciestein
      @laciestein 3 роки тому +16

      Thank you for understanding now you shall be granted enough money to go to TAHITI

    • @bullymaguire1087
      @bullymaguire1087 3 роки тому +6

      Doesn’t Dutch have a grudge against southerners because his father died in the civil war?

    • @tacoscatsandmangos512
      @tacoscatsandmangos512 3 роки тому +12

      @Leonard squirrel where did you get that atun shei is a commie? Is it because everyone that you don't like is a commie?

    • @rileyknapp5318
      @rileyknapp5318 3 роки тому

      @@laciestein I NEED SOME FAITH, ARTHUR

  • @elcidsnare07
    @elcidsnare07 Рік тому +18

    I stood up and cheered when Ben Grierson was mentioned. Was waiting for it and I was not disappointed. Great calvary officer despite having to overcome a lifelong fear of horses due to being sent to Narnia via horsekick as a kid. He's a commander who can claim a winning record vs Forrest (::meatloaf voice:: "because 2 outta 3 ain't bad..."). Additionally his postwar conduct was honorable towards the buffalo soldiers and the native Americans. A solid stand-up guy.

    • @Shaun_Jones
      @Shaun_Jones 11 місяців тому +2

      One thing that might have contributed to Grierson’s success in that raid was that he brought along a few extremely lightweight artillery pieces. They were 2-pounder guns, and only weighed 256 pounds; four strong men could pick it up, and 8 strong men could carry it some distance if needed.

  • @ObesetoBeast
    @ObesetoBeast 3 роки тому +527

    Best 4th ever

  • @Mr_Bunk
    @Mr_Bunk 3 роки тому +297

    If you ever feel like you're slacking, just remember that it took Billy Yank and Johnny Reb seven months to play a single game of chess.

    • @1brianm7
      @1brianm7 3 роки тому +20

      That is pretty quick for a correspondence game.

    • @Kaanfight
      @Kaanfight 3 роки тому +5

      @@1brianm7 especially for one in the 1800s

  • @thebrazilianhistorian6530
    @thebrazilianhistorian6530 3 роки тому +120

    "See you in hell Billy Yank.."
    "Cya in hell Johnny Reb"
    had my heart on tears god damn.

  • @ellerobinson8803
    @ellerobinson8803 8 місяців тому +6

    13:44 fun fact, middle tennessee state university has a building named Forrest Hall after this guy. there's been an ongoing effort to change it for years. historical commission is meeting soon, students are doing a lot to make it happen this year

  • @ChaseMcCain81
    @ChaseMcCain81 3 роки тому +245

    Billy Yank- “Longstreet.”
    Johnny Reb- “we don’t talk about him.”
    Lol

    • @khankrum1
      @khankrum1 3 роки тому +8

      If Lee had listened to Longstreet he would never have fought at Gettysburgh!

    • @possumverde
      @possumverde 3 роки тому +7

      @@khankrum1 Longstreet's idea to find better terrain, dig in, and fight defensively would have henged entirely on forcing Meade to attack just to have a chance at a favorable result. In such a situation however, Meade would have had no reason to oblige. He could have simply pinned Lee's dug in army to whatever spot they chose to defend and waited it out. Eventually, Lee's army would have either been forced to surrender once supplies ran out or to go on an even more suicidal offensive than Pickett's charge in an attempt to breakout.
      Personally, looking at the supply and morale issues he was dealing with, his essentially going all in at Gettysburg was pretty much forced. In poker terms, he was pot committed after the first day.

    • @jacklausch3517
      @jacklausch3517 3 роки тому

      Vist his headquarters in Wilmington NC

    • @kristaskrastina2863
      @kristaskrastina2863 Місяць тому

      @@possumverde Exactly. That's why you don't go deep into enemy's territory without sufficient numbers and supplies. Lee's 1863 offensive was... something. He could win only if Hooker (or Meade) would massively blunder. Meade did not - and Lee's army was doomed.

    • @possumverde
      @possumverde Місяць тому

      @kristaskrastina2863 Lee didn't have much of a choice on that. It was either hang around in the south fighting a slow, inevitable defensive loss, or try an all or nothing hail Mary in the North were he could potentially commandeer supplies and theeaten DC during an election year when Lincoln wasn't doing so well against McClellan. The latter being more inclined toward ending the war without necessarily bringing the south back into the fold. I may have taken the same approach myself given the circumstances. One of Lee's subordinates managed to raid within 5 miles of the White House at one point and temporarily panicked the city. Had Gettysburg gone differently, Lincoln would likely have lost the election, which was the only real "win" the south could hope for at that point.

  • @Ajc-ni3xn
    @Ajc-ni3xn 3 роки тому +155

    “Native Americans should have just prepared to get invaded”
    “WELL THAT’S NOT FAIR THE UNION WAS INDUSTRIALIZED THE SOUTH WASN’T PREPARED TO BE INVADED”

    • @warweasel2832
      @warweasel2832 3 роки тому +6

      Prepared by... developing immunity to a disease which emerged thousands of years after they were isolated before they knew the Old World existed. Yeah, fair bit more difficult than building a few factories.

    • @jeansmith4053
      @jeansmith4053 3 роки тому +2

      @@warweasel2832 And the South also started the war. Starting a war when you're unprepared and then whining about it really is something

    • @jeffreygao3956
      @jeffreygao3956 7 місяців тому +1

      Dang it! Pick a lane!

  • @Philistine47
    @Philistine47 3 роки тому +259

    *Approximately Everyone:* "Winners write the history books."
    *Lost Causers:* "We'll see about that!"
    The remarkable thing, to me, is the way Southern myth making and romanticization of the ACW took root even _outside_ the former Confederate states.

    • @Wasserkaktus
      @Wasserkaktus 3 роки тому +34

      Winners don't always end up writing the history books, this may be true when it comes to the Indian Wars, but all too often, the losers develop a huge part of their identity complex over memories of a lost war or battle. Look at how Serbs view Kosovo, or how German anti-Semites laid the groundwork for Nazi anti-Semitism with the "Stab in the Back" myth right after WWI, which was the myth that Germany only lost The Great War because of Jewish subterfuge assisting the Allies (Despite the facts that the Allies had clearly overwhelmed the Central Powers with far superior resources, and the fact that a disproportionate number of German Jews fought for Germany directly on the Front Lines.). Distorted war memories can be an extremely dangerous thing if they are not properly addressed.

    • @littleaqua32
      @littleaqua32 3 роки тому +4

      Unless you’re American, then the losers apparently get to write their own history lol

    • @tomasjakovac7950
      @tomasjakovac7950 3 роки тому +21

      @@Wasserkaktus not only that, but much of the popular understanding of the Eastern Front of WWII in the eyes of the West was directly shaped by the accounts various Nazi generals wrote in their memoirs, resulting in a lot of myths of Soviet "asiatic hordes" which still persist to this very day. The whole "clean Wehrmacht" myth is yet another example of this and is basically WWII's version of everything brought up in this video

    • @twotone3471
      @twotone3471 3 роки тому +4

      when your family loses a soldier to battle, you want to lionize the enemy, to make the loss more of a noble death, than admitting they died needlessly.

    • @jeansmith4053
      @jeansmith4053 3 роки тому +9

      @Leonard squirrel Sweetie, do you even know what genocide means?

  • @m15t3r_n8
    @m15t3r_n8 Рік тому +30

    Upon further review: you went with "Davisites" and I can't help but feel "Secessionites" would've rolled off the tongue more smoothly, even if its not exactly following the nomenclature conventions of "Lincolnites".

  • @HamSaladtv
    @HamSaladtv 3 роки тому +274

    George H Thomas married a woman from Troy, NY where I was born. His wife had him buried there over West Point. I visit it and John Brown's grave whenever I visit NY. Thomas is an adopted New Yorker, we claim him. We stan for Thomas and John Brown.

    • @danielcampion251
      @danielcampion251 3 роки тому +2

      John Brown was a Conneticuter though.

    • @HamSaladtv
      @HamSaladtv 3 роки тому +7

      @@danielcampion251 and his farm where he was buried is near Lake Placid NY. The township was bought by an abolitionist who wanted a community for liberated Blacks and White abolitionists.

    • @Qossuth
      @Qossuth 3 роки тому +1

      @@HamSaladtv I visited JB's grave in Lake Placid in the early 90s. It's practically in the shadow of the Olympic ski jumps and the high peaks of the Adirondacks (Mt. Marcy) are clearly visible. It is a beautiful spot and the grave itself is marked by a large plaque on a huge glacial erratic boulder. Highly recommended to any Civil War buffs who pass by, a great place to break a road trip and have a lunch or rest under the shade of the trees.
      Next door in W. Mass. we stan for John Brown as well, he spent a number of years hustling wool in Springfield, Mass. before heading out to Kansas.

  • @charlessaint7926
    @charlessaint7926 3 роки тому +226

    Why did your charge at Gettysburg fail?
    "I've always thought the Yankees had something to do with it" ~General Pickett

    • @AtunSheiFilms
      @AtunSheiFilms  3 роки тому +96

      I love that quote.

    • @burninsherman7196
      @burninsherman7196 3 роки тому +3

      Wait, what? Did Pickett actually say it was Meade's fault that Lee ordered a suicide charge?

    • @were-owlinwisconsin4441
      @were-owlinwisconsin4441 3 роки тому +40

      @@burninsherman7196 The point is that the Union Army decided to shoot back, rather than just allow Pickett to walk across that field undisturbed.

    • @burninsherman7196
      @burninsherman7196 3 роки тому +13

      @@were-owlinwisconsin4441 Ah yes, they can't shoot back because that would be unfair, instead they should just stand there and watch our army charge them. Of course.

    • @Ugly_German_Truths
      @Ugly_German_Truths 3 роки тому +11

      @@burninsherman7196 I'd read that more as "they were better than us on that day and in that scenario" and not as "well d'uh, Meade made us do this crazy stunt that could not win".

  • @jacktingey7886
    @jacktingey7886 2 роки тому +246

    Grierson is legit. He was not only an incredible commander, but he was known for his excellent reputation among his Black troops and sympathy with Indigenous tribes, at the detriment to the relationship with other white officers. He was unique among officers in either army.

    • @bocchithean-cap3404
      @bocchithean-cap3404 Рік тому +2

      There's a reason natives supported the confederacy

    • @tntsummers926
      @tntsummers926 Рік тому +53

      @@bocchithean-cap3404 Ah yes, because you can boil down the dozens of tribes that fought in the civil war (or adjacent to it) as "natives", different tribes fought for both sides, even individuals of the same tribe were split in support. The Dakota fought the Union, but they didn't fight for the confederates, weren't even allies. The five civilized tribes were somewhat split (despite them all having slavery), a majority of the seminole fought for the union, and sizeable minorities amongst the other 4 fought for the Union as well, and even a majority of cherokee and their leader supported the union despite the tribe fighting for the confederacy due to the support of the land owning elite. More neutral tribes would often use the war as an excuse to launch raids on and fight rival tribes, or even members of the same tribe using it fight local civil wars.

    • @TSmith-yy3cc
      @TSmith-yy3cc 11 місяців тому +3

      ​@@tntsummers926Seeing the profile pic, prior comments, as well as the tone of this one should tell you that the degen that you're speaking to doesn't care about native peoples... Or facts... Lol.

    • @Beanboy-og9zp
      @Beanboy-og9zp 7 місяців тому

      @@TSmith-yy3ccmy guy he doesn’t have a profile picture. He’s being truthful about the various tribes. They various tribes and nations were not a single bloc, and they reacted to the war as you would expect anyone to: they used it to further their goals.

    • @jeffreygao3956
      @jeffreygao3956 6 місяців тому +2

      I thought natives backed both sides.

  • @Wh40kFinatic
    @Wh40kFinatic 10 місяців тому +9

    NBF: "We have but one flag, one country; let us stand together."
    Ironic as *fuck* coming from an individual who actively fought to tear our country and flag apart.