Surrender at Appomattox Courthouse

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  • Опубліковано 27 гру 2024

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  • @MisterTutor2010
    @MisterTutor2010 3 роки тому +350

    Lee was dignified in defeat.
    Grant was gracious in victory.

    • @chaosXP3RT
      @chaosXP3RT 3 роки тому +1

      So sad Lee shit all over Grant. He was a man with no honor and a sore, pretentious loser

    • @imbigtom.lifeisanamazingjo2602
      @imbigtom.lifeisanamazingjo2602 3 роки тому +2

      @@chaosXP3RT another Pathetic Nasty Mean and Arrogant Liberal no wonder your kind is hated so much

    • @canon07
      @canon07 3 роки тому +6

      @@imbigtom.lifeisanamazingjo2602 did even grant order his men to stop cheering?

    • @gazza2933
      @gazza2933 2 роки тому +11

      He should have been more dignified in defeat at Gettysburg and surrendered his Army then. Instead of sending thousands of men to their deaths for a lost course.
      What you people see in this guy as a leader, beggars belief!

    • @rc59191
      @rc59191 2 роки тому +6

      @@canon07 he did President Lincoln even ordered the band to play Dixie back in Washington.

  • @Teleman01
    @Teleman01 7 років тому +282

    I grew up 20 minutes from this house. They have preserved this area amazingly. Lets hope some ass clowns don't desecrate this spot for God's sake.

    • @matthewcreech8259
      @matthewcreech8259 6 років тому +11

      Little does anyone it's not the original house. All of Grant's generals stole the furniture inside where the surrender took place and the house was demolished to rebuild it as a war memorial near Washingtom. However all of the pieces were lost over time.

    • @robertrock8778
      @robertrock8778 3 роки тому +7

      @@matthewcreech8259 the original house was disassembled and the plan was to reassemble at the Chicago Worlds Fair. The was never done and the original house was left in a pile.

    • @aarongranda7825
      @aarongranda7825 3 роки тому +5

      Yeah put up a strip mall with a Chinese buffet and a video arcade.
      Call it grant mall.

    • @pgastar05
      @pgastar05 3 роки тому +3

      It’s a wonderful place to visit. A true treasure

    • @jhonyermo
      @jhonyermo 3 роки тому +1

      HAHAHA Why desecrate it? This is where the TRAITOR LEE surrendered. If anyone would desecrate it, it would be FOOLS that can't admit LEE and the SOUTH LOST Just like the Orange cockroach LOST

  • @davechristian7043
    @davechristian7043 2 роки тому +286

    Davis was enraged when Lee surrendered but Lee knew the war was over and did it to save lives on both sides. He was a warrior and a gentleman.

    • @rc59191
      @rc59191 2 роки тому

      Was President Davis one of the people that was advocating for a guerilla war and setting up a government in exile?

    • @harleylawdude
      @harleylawdude 2 роки тому

      Lee caused the whole damned war. There’s a lot of blood in his hands. I submit that if Lee had not joined the south then the war might not have taken place or lasted nearly as long.

    • @robertisham5279
      @robertisham5279 Рік тому +5

      Wow I didn't know that.

    • @d.owczarzak6888
      @d.owczarzak6888 Рік тому +17

      He should have surrendered after Sailor's Creek. He lost most of his supply wagons and his rear guard was routed.

    • @johnbennett757
      @johnbennett757 Рік тому

      He fought for a vile cause, the cause of slavery and the goal to destroy our great Union. I give him no respect.

  • @keithbishop9759
    @keithbishop9759 3 роки тому +80

    The only accounts that I have ever heard of the surrender say that the Union soldiers removed their hats as Lee passed. I believe that Lee was truly respected.

    • @taternater7495
      @taternater7495 3 роки тому +15

      it doesn’t matter what side you were on, you respected Lee as a mastermind general and soldier

    • @chaosXP3RT
      @chaosXP3RT 3 роки тому

      @@taternater7495 It's too bad Lee wouldn't have given those Union soldiers a lick of spit. General Lee was not worth any respect. He shit on Grant and massacred prisoners of war. Lee had no honor and deserved to be hanged for crimes against humanity.

    • @taternater7495
      @taternater7495 3 роки тому +8

      @@chaosXP3RT well i don’t think the union boys were too nice to captured confederates either. if you knew the things that Lee accomplished and the military strategy he used and is still being used to this day, you’d piss your pants if you saw him in real life

    • @mdcclxxxi8509
      @mdcclxxxi8509 3 роки тому +5

      @@chaosXP3RT You do realize the North stopped prisoner trades in 1863

    • @KibuFox
      @KibuFox 2 роки тому +4

      @@mdcclxxxi8509 The irony is, that while many point to Andersonville as being an example of horrible treatment of prisoners of war, honestly it was on par with what the Union was also doing at their own prison camps.

  • @flyer1658
    @flyer1658 5 років тому +301

    The respect even the union troops had for Lee says it all about the man and the way Grant dealt with the surrender changed the course of history

    • @andrewl6899
      @andrewl6899 4 роки тому +28

      he was the most respected man by both sides. He was a brilliant General. The union wanted him to be their General before the war kicked off.

    • @raygrenade1697
      @raygrenade1697 4 роки тому +1

      @@andrewl6899 lol no he wasnt, Battle of Antietam
      , thats why they flew the white flag

    • @andrewl6899
      @andrewl6899 4 роки тому +21

      Ray Grenade Huh? I’m guessing you haven’t hit fifth grade history yet.

    • @flyer1658
      @flyer1658 4 роки тому +7

      @@raygrenade1697 are you 5 years old? Ha ha

    • @raygrenade1697
      @raygrenade1697 4 роки тому

      @@andrewl6899 he was brilliant he would've won

  • @mosesaron5555
    @mosesaron5555 3 роки тому +128

    I have been to this place many times. You can still feel the emotions
    in the very ground, and in the air. I grew up in Lynchburg Va, about
    23 miles away. Lynchburg was where Lee was trying to get, because
    we were a supply and hospital town, but they were cut off at Appomattox. Had Lee made it to Lynchburg, the war probably would have lingered on longer. This place in Appomattox Va is hallowed ground.

    • @tomshea8382
      @tomshea8382 2 роки тому

      So when did Lynchburg become a haven for fuckheads like the Falwells?

    • @haraldisdead
      @haraldisdead Рік тому +8

      You're lucky to live in Virginia. I'm two hours from Gettysburg, and I know know the feeling.

    • @robertdigby4504
      @robertdigby4504 Рік тому

      Where at in Lynchburg. I lived in Bedford Hills when I worked at Appomattox. A bit of a drive every day but beautiful scenery

    • @apr8189
      @apr8189 9 місяців тому

      I'm in Chattanooga, not too far away from Northern Georgia where Chickamauga was fought. I know the feeling as well

  • @2009Berghof
    @2009Berghof 2 роки тому +48

    I was there, my first day on set. As a member of Company C, 7th Illinois Cavalry. Filmed near Natchez, MS, said to be the same local where the John Wayne movie, HORSE SOLDIERS, was filmed. The house is a facade. The scene is from the TV miniseries, NORTH SOUTH II. I am the bearded close up waving as General Grant arrives. Our re-enactment commander is riding a white Arab and follows Grant up the steps. Those were the days, a line I oft steal from another old cavalry flick.

    • @matthewjahnke6956
      @matthewjahnke6956 10 місяців тому +1

      OK. Thanks for the info.

    • @vincentwhitehorse
      @vincentwhitehorse 3 місяці тому

      Nobody gives a flying fuk. Suck it! Merca!

    • @dubaiedge
      @dubaiedge 2 місяці тому

      Oh my gosh, you're cute 😆. That must have been a great day watching them film & acting in it. Cheers.

    • @2009Berghof
      @2009Berghof 2 місяці тому +2

      I am now in my mid seventies! It was an experience. I recall asking myself is this fun? Would I prefer spending my vacation time from work doing something I would prefer doing rather than doing each scene over.

    • @dubaiedge
      @dubaiedge 2 місяці тому +1

      @@2009Berghof oh that's great. I'm 62, I get it. But I bet now you're glad to have done that film instead 😄

  • @Temujin1991
    @Temujin1991 Рік тому +53

    I was a reenactor once and when we did the surrender of Appomatox, i saw grown men crying as they 'pretended' to lay down their arms and flags. Even today, emotion runs high at those things.

    • @hi_wifi_guy
      @hi_wifi_guy Рік тому

      @@JoezVendetta Completely stupid remark. Trumpies are idiots.

    • @TravisLoneWolfWalsh
      @TravisLoneWolfWalsh 11 місяців тому

      @@JoezVendettayou’ll always lose as long as there is good in this world People like the confederacy and you MAGA cultists will always lose

    • @matthewjahnke6956
      @matthewjahnke6956 10 місяців тому +1

      I know. I've been to the Texas re-enactment of the battle of San Jacinto.

    • @DanBeech-ht7sw
      @DanBeech-ht7sw 5 місяців тому +3

      That's pathetic, pining for the confederacy

    • @allanchurm
      @allanchurm 4 місяці тому +2

      @@DanBeech-ht7sw you got that wrong it was the emotion at realising the war had come to a end ..if you ever do any aciting you will ..act the part..

  • @TheMrPeteChannel
    @TheMrPeteChannel 4 роки тому +96

    Idiots in San Francisco just tore down Grant's Statue.

    • @Anonymoususer44569
      @Anonymoususer44569 3 роки тому +32

      You shouldn’t call them idiots. They aren’t even smart enough to know what that means

    • @humbertoflores2545
      @humbertoflores2545 3 роки тому +5

      Why they did that?? What Grant did to them??

    • @TheMrPeteChannel
      @TheMrPeteChannel 3 роки тому +13

      @@humbertoflores2545 He helped free slaves so they tore him down I guess.

    • @TheMrPeteChannel
      @TheMrPeteChannel 3 роки тому +2

      @@Anonymoususer44569 ha ha.

    • @Anonymoususer44569
      @Anonymoususer44569 3 роки тому +14

      @@TheMrPeteChannel @Humberto Flores apparently, the reason was because he married a slave owner and ended up owning one slave. It should be noted that Grant happily freed his slave in 1859 and was the one of the most successful generals in the war against the slave-holding traitors, although the protesters in SF seem to be ignorant to these facts

  • @maconescotland8996
    @maconescotland8996 6 років тому +56

    Impossible not to notice George Custer at 1:53 (and later) - he certainly liked the flamboyant uniform.

    • @robertsilva8097
      @robertsilva8097 4 роки тому +2

      I have a uniform like a general Armstrong Custer gold braid on my uniform and a hat like his hat

    • @Trek001
      @Trek001 4 роки тому +6

      Custer almost bought it at Appomattox - during the truce, he rode by himself up to Longstreet's lines and ordered the Army to surrender. Longstreet basically told him to either piss off or be shot and then turned to an aid and ordered another division brought forward. Longstreet was bluffing but Custer didn't know this and he apparently galloped back to Union lines as quickly as possible

    • @Arbeedubya
      @Arbeedubya 3 роки тому +3

      @@Trek001 Makes me wonder what "Old Pete" thought when he learned of Custer's fate at the Little Bighorn.

    • @jamesgollan8602
      @jamesgollan8602 3 роки тому +4

      Custer was a fool

    • @iwritechecksatthegrocerystore
      @iwritechecksatthegrocerystore 3 роки тому +2

      @@jamesgollan8602 you clearly don’t know a thing about the man.

  • @roberdink
    @roberdink 3 роки тому +37

    This was the 2nd time Grant and Lee met. The first time was during the US-Mexican War.

    • @Kenorak66
      @Kenorak66 3 роки тому +7

      Wow brothers fighting side by side then becomes civil war.

    • @edwardburchins5102
      @edwardburchins5102 3 роки тому +1

      Did they know each other at West Pointe?

    • @roberdink
      @roberdink 3 роки тому +1

      @@edwardburchins5102 no.

    • @vintagebrew1057
      @vintagebrew1057 3 роки тому +1

      Did Grant ever meet General Jackson who also served in the US-Mexican War?

    • @roberdink
      @roberdink 3 роки тому +1

      @@vintagebrew1057 No, as far as I know.

  • @lovelandfrog5692
    @lovelandfrog5692 6 років тому +222

    Even as a Yankee, I would definitely take my hat off in front of Robert Edward Lee.

    •  6 років тому +9

      And use it to cover your nose. He's gotta be pretty ripe by now.

    • @lovelandfrog5692
      @lovelandfrog5692 6 років тому +2

      I spamsalot Nice one!

    • @jamesgollan8602
      @jamesgollan8602 6 років тому +5

      why was there not a firing squad convened?

    • @MichaelKallelisOn2Wheels
      @MichaelKallelisOn2Wheels 6 років тому +18

      Because, Lincoln and Grant discussed this day. Lincoln instructed Grant that there would be no revenge. Grant, takes pen to paper and writes, "...your men may return to their homes where they will remain, undisturbed, unless they take up arms agains the US again..." This simple sentence gave the ALL amnesty. The terrible civil war was over and it was time to reunite and heal. Brilliant.

    • @jamesgollan8602
      @jamesgollan8602 6 років тому +7

      @KoiBoi 1113 they were not prisoners of war, they were treasonous secessionists and should have been shot

  • @Sannyboy45
    @Sannyboy45 3 роки тому +11

    Don’t think this is mentioned anywhere but this scene is from 1986’s North and South: Book II Episode 6.

    • @matthewjahnke6956
      @matthewjahnke6956 10 місяців тому +1

      Thanks. Now. I know it's on the History Channel, but when does or did play? I'd love to see it.

  • @rc59191
    @rc59191 2 роки тому +27

    General Lee and General Grant showed more respect and honor towards each other than Union and Confederate supporters do nowadays when just discussing the war. Those guys tried to kill each other and yet still behaved civil now each side attacks the other just for wanting to remember and honor their ancestors that fought.

  • @swewunna
    @swewunna 6 років тому +32

    I think Robert E Lee was a brave soldier and capable General. He underestimated the defences in Gettysburg which was his downfall. Even then he managed to cross the river and retreated with what was left of his army after defeat partly to do with George Mead being too cautious and doesn't want to fall into trap.

    • @donniecarter2873
      @donniecarter2873 6 років тому +7

      THEY HAD ALREADY LOSS THE WAR WHEN THEY LOST STONEWALL JACKSON IN VA. IF HE HAD BEEN THERE IT WOULD HAVE BEEN A DIFFRENT BATTLE!

    • @gazza2933
      @gazza2933 2 роки тому

      I think Lee was a blundering old fool and a butcher!
      After being advised not to fight at Gettysburg, he not only went on to lose the Battle but prolonged the war by a further two years. Then lost again.
      There were much better and capable Generals in the Confederate Army.
      I am not an American.

    • @kennethbiebighauser7984
      @kennethbiebighauser7984 2 роки тому +2

      HISTORIAN Stephen Sears would disagree with the second part of your segment sir ....yet it is good to see so many comments on this awful struggle ..lest we forget......

    • @timengineman2nd714
      @timengineman2nd714 Рік тому

      That was Lee's reputation, so General Meade did want to turn a victory into a defeat. Also, a large number of units force marched into Gettysburg on a very hot and humid day, fought, and were severally depleted in Men and Ammunition as well as other provisions....
      So to engage General Lee's Army could have easily been a victory for the Army of Southern Virginia!

    • @Pushforward2404
      @Pushforward2404 11 місяців тому

      Lee ( the south) didn't have a chance. Once an aggressive commander to over the union army and made a plan to attack at all fronts - it was over. The north had cowards and non fighters before Grant came along.

  • @theRappinSpree
    @theRappinSpree Рік тому +2

    What movie or tv series is this from?

  • @dondee5439
    @dondee5439 7 місяців тому +6

    This scene is from the miniseries North and South: Book II (1986) It is Episode 6.

  • @silvereagle4903
    @silvereagle4903 7 років тому +20

    Interesting that the surrender papers Lee signed were drawn up by Grant's aid General Elly Parker of New York, who just happened to be a full blooded Seneca Sachem.

    • @SantomPh
      @SantomPh 4 роки тому +3

      Lee considered the natives "real Americans" despite ill feeling towards black people.

    • @chaosXP3RT
      @chaosXP3RT 3 роки тому

      @@SantomPh Lee massacred black POW's and sent them back to slavery. He refused to exchange them in prisoner exchanges because "the white soldier is not worth useless property"

    • @brandonk8948
      @brandonk8948 2 роки тому +2

      A lot of Cherokee fought with the Confederacy. There's a few books out there on it

    • @MarvelousSeven
      @MarvelousSeven Місяць тому

      ​@@brandonk8948for some counterfactual history, read "The Wild Blue and the Gray" by William Sanders.

    • @joshlight6892
      @joshlight6892 8 днів тому

      @@SantomPh he didn't really have ill feelings towards black people, like most people at the time, he just considered them to be of an inferior race.

  • @aleksandryoung2213
    @aleksandryoung2213 7 років тому +144

    There truly couldn't have been a better way for the war to have been concluded. It speaks well of General Grant to show the Army of Northern Virginia such compassion and mercy by allowing General Lee and his Brave and Valiant troops to finally surrender with honor and dignity. Once the terms of surrender were met, Lee and his men were free to go home and live the rest of their lives in peace, safety and comfort as all Americans should. The Civil War truly was the Greatest war of our times, the Generals who led us in battle, both the North and South were the greatest Generals of our time and the Soldiers who fought all it's battles and endured all it's hardships were the greatest Soldiers of our time.

    • @carltonreese1804
      @carltonreese1804 7 років тому +26

      Then they pissed it all away with a repugnant reconstruction that destroyed any common ground and good will that this scene should have forged.

    • @rpryce2140
      @rpryce2140 7 років тому +24

      Thanks in large part to John Wilkes Booth.

    • @aleksandryoung2213
      @aleksandryoung2213 7 років тому +1

      Yup, my Great Great Great Granduncle did his part too.

    • @tomw7912
      @tomw7912 7 років тому

      Aleksandr Young i

    • @sammylong3704
      @sammylong3704 7 років тому +28

      It's a pity that many of those "brave and valiant troops" didn't extend that same level of compassion and mercy to their black neighbours and political opposites when they got back home, and instead chose to murder many innocent and defenceless American men and women, as if the war never ended. These men were clearly undeserving of the mercy Grant showed them and proved as much by how they conducted themselves during the reconstruction era and the values they chose to install in their children.

  • @paulgodbey304
    @paulgodbey304 Рік тому +1

    Which movie or series is this taken from?

  • @jonathanziegler8126
    @jonathanziegler8126 2 роки тому +22

    Grant was the one man who undertsood what Lincoln wanted. As stated below, Grant changed the course of history.

    • @shelbyseelbach9568
      @shelbyseelbach9568 8 місяців тому

      No he did not, he set the course of history. The only way to change the course of history is to time travel.

  • @ianluetkehans7822
    @ianluetkehans7822 3 роки тому +2

    What movie

  • @rawfoodwriter
    @rawfoodwriter 2 роки тому +4

    What movie is this?

    • @humbertoflores2545
      @humbertoflores2545 4 місяці тому +1

      It is a TV series from the 80s, North & South.. starring Patrick Swayze and other known actors..

    • @rawfoodwriter
      @rawfoodwriter 4 місяці тому

      @@humbertoflores2545 Thanks!

  • @dhoover5480
    @dhoover5480 3 роки тому +16

    As Lee prepared to surrender, his main support team said, " we are ready to turn this into guerilla warfare, to continue this fight. We'll do what ever you want General". Lee said, "let's not do that men. It's time to lay down our arms". That's the depth of this man, who was torn by this war, and it showed on his face. One of my kin married his first cousin, Anne Harriotte Lee, way back, and I read everything I could find about him as I grew up. Another of my kin, Lt. Charles Mallory Harper from Georgia, in his memoirs stated how his men gave Lee the Rebel yell as he trotted past them on Traveler, following this surrender. Then they ate cracked corn the Union soldiers horses missed, and it was the fist thing they had to eat in days. Desperate times for sure.

    • @canon07
      @canon07 3 роки тому +1

      Man you have a lot of descendants.

    • @roberthaworth8991
      @roberthaworth8991 Рік тому +1

      At a low point during the Revolution, George Washington considered converting the Continental Army into a guerrilla force and taking to the hills. He didn't do it b/c he knew civilians would suffer the most in such a war.

    • @curious968
      @curious968 5 місяців тому

      I think Lee understood something else: Guerilla war would have literally been pointless.
      Was the confederacy going to re-emerge from a guerilla fight? No.
      Was slavery going to be restored? Certainly not. Not after that much blood. Even northerners indifferent to slavery wouldn't sign up for that for any reason.
      So, literally, what was the point other than to provoke an even harsher reconstruction than the one they actually got?
      Guerilla war would have been the equivalent of the spite check in chess, but much more harmful. A lot of soldiers in the south had, by then, lost the plot. It would never have achieved any political aim they had any interest in.

  • @randomtraveler9854
    @randomtraveler9854 3 роки тому +13

    Even as a Northerner (Pennsylvania) I can't help but wonder what was going through Lee's mind as he rode into the house. Probably wondering if he's doing the right thing or if victory was still possible. Add feeling he let Virginia down too.

    • @brunothepug8807
      @brunothepug8807 3 роки тому +9

      A North Carolinian here. Lee knew the war was substantially lost at Gettysburg. The South could never overcome the capacity of the Union especially with the Naval blockade of Southern ports. This is why Lee gambled. A war of attrition was never in favor of the Confederacy. I recommend some of Shelby Foote's interviews. We Southerners new a lot more was lost than the war and the end of slavery. We have the giant leviathan of the Federal government reaching into every aspect of our lives and perpetually widdling away our freedom as a result of the Union winning the war. I think sacrifice of his men and the loss of his country was on his mind that day. The war was likely inevitable when slavery was not abolished in some way with ratification of the Constitution. In that time and still to this day in a minor way, Northerners can not comprehend our devotion to our land and family being superior to devotion of country.

    • @michaelf4563
      @michaelf4563 3 роки тому +3

      The son of Revolutionary War Hero, and George Washington's closest friend, Richard Henry Lee III, aka, Lighthorse Harry Lee.
      One of the top graduates of the new U.S. Military Academy at West Point, Class of 1820.
      Mexican War hero and one of the top aides on General in Chief Scott's staff.
      The man who captured John Brown at Harper's Ferry who was himself leading an insurrection. The man who was considered the finest soldier in the pre war army and who both Lincoln and General Winfield Scott wanted to lead the Union armies. A first son of Virginia, having to go and accept terms from General Grant.
      It truly had to kill him inside to do this.

    • @PeteyGunn
      @PeteyGunn 3 роки тому +2

      maybe he was worried about being hung for treason?

    • @actioncom2748
      @actioncom2748 Рік тому

      The war had gotten to a point where things were beginning to get ridiculous. I think the thing that was going through Lee's mind was "Let's get this over with and move on."

    • @matthewjahnke6956
      @matthewjahnke6956 10 місяців тому

      I think he had an idea it was ending soon, but didn't want to admit it to himself. He didn't want to think that he'd lost. He didn't want to admit Grant was a bigger general than he was. A better one. And. If you look at a picture of Grant, you'd see him in that picture with that bottle of whiskey in his hand, Lee? I don't think so. According to that picture of Lee we all see, he doesn't have a single thing: Cigar. Whiskey bottle. Anything.

  • @ack3145
    @ack3145 5 років тому +32

    U.S Grant is the man!

    • @erictimber5849
      @erictimber5849 3 роки тому

      The most corrupe president in history

    • @jhonyermo
      @jhonyermo 3 роки тому +2

      @@erictimber5849 NO TRUMP is the most corrupt and cooked president. Worst than Warren Harding also.

  • @AwesomeGamingEntertainment
    @AwesomeGamingEntertainment Рік тому +2

    what show or movie was this?

  • @neil18AA34
    @neil18AA34 5 років тому +21

    Yes, I would have taken my hat off in salute to that great man. Though I'm for the Union, General Lee was a true patriot for his state of Virginia. We must remember that before the Civil War there were no Americans but citizens of the several states. You belonged to your state, not to the federal government. The Civil War changed things around to where today we are Americans and states are secondary. That's why I hate to see how history is being revised.

    • @SantomPh
      @SantomPh 4 роки тому +1

      It depends on what state you were in and where you came from. Places like Massachusetts and Pennsylvania already felt like parts of a greater union while others like Texas and Virginia felt like their own place. The Northern armies also had huge numbers of new immigrants from Europe, which did not easily identify with any state but the idea of "America".

    • @Polostar79
      @Polostar79 Рік тому

      Lee took up arms against the United States. That doesn’t make him a patriot it makes him a traitor.

    • @curious968
      @curious968 5 місяців тому

      That is literally nonsense. You might have said such a thing during the period of the Articles of Confederation. But, those failed. The US Constitution specifically gave the Federal government a lot of power, including the supremacy clause. The practical necessity of Federal supremacy and therefore a Federal Government was not lost on the observant.
      It is undoubtedly true that a lot more people identified with their state in those days than today, but the war itself did a lot to undermine that, particularly in the north.
      Jefferson might be regarded as someone akin to your way of thinking, but Hamilton thought in national terms and that struggle began log before the Civil War and was part of the politics from the day the constitution was ratified.

  • @reynaldoflores4522
    @reynaldoflores4522 2 роки тому +3

    I think this was taken from the TV Miniseries " North and South. " Starring Patrick Swayze and James Read.

  • @MikeB071
    @MikeB071 7 років тому +94

    Robert E. Lee was a capable general, a brave soldier and an honorable man, and I'm a Yankee saying this.

    • @jimlaguardia8185
      @jimlaguardia8185 6 років тому +5

      MikeB Lee demonstrated gross incompetence at Gettysburg. Study your history.

    • @humbertoflores2545
      @humbertoflores2545 6 років тому +2

      Jim LaGuardia, I think he was sick during the battle, and some Generals of his staff did not follow his orders, do not blame Lee for Gettysburg. However, it was very interesting that he won more battles in defensive position than attacking to the Union.

    • @gfoot9916
      @gfoot9916 6 років тому +3

      Humberto Flores only because the Union generals he was fighting were somehow less decisive

    • @darkhighwayman1757
      @darkhighwayman1757 6 років тому +1

      the trouble with Lee is he never improved during the war.

    • @chrisflaherty8991
      @chrisflaherty8991 6 років тому +1

      MikeB At one time the same thing was said of Benedict Arnold.

  • @crazyman8472
    @crazyman8472 2 роки тому +17

    Fun Fact: The house belonged to a retired Major in the Virginia Militia, and at the time a sugar broker and wholesale grocer, Wilmer McLean.
    Ironically, the First Battle of “Bull Run” (First Battle of Manassas, July 21, 1861) took place on the grounds of Mr. McLean’s *former* home; Yorkshire Plantation in Manassas, Prince William County, VA. The poor guy just couldn’t get away from the war. 🤦‍♀️

    • @markross2124
      @markross2124 Рік тому +3

      True McClain said the war started in my backyard and ended in my front parlor.

    • @billkea7224
      @billkea7224 Рік тому +2

      @@markross2124 And he moved to Appomattox from Manassas specifically to get away from the war.

  • @donallally4892
    @donallally4892 3 роки тому +9

    Indeed so folks, what a man

    • @matthewjahnke6956
      @matthewjahnke6956 10 місяців тому

      OK, well explain this: Why is his name being dishonored? His statue being broken? His street name being changed? His name taken off of the college?

  • @milenkovicmarija91
    @milenkovicmarija91 2 роки тому

    Is this a film or some series? I would like to know the name?

  • @williamdavidson5818
    @williamdavidson5818 Рік тому +3

    IT AINT OVER

    • @matthewjahnke6956
      @matthewjahnke6956 10 місяців тому

      OK, how isn't over? Look. They changed both Georgia and Mississippi flags. Look. Somebody should write a email to both the Governor of Georgia, as well as Mississippi to bring the flags to the original forms.

    • @buckeyewill2166
      @buckeyewill2166 3 місяці тому

      Still.Fighting.The.Civil.War.

    • @jtl-en4yx
      @jtl-en4yx 19 днів тому

      And it isn't going to be gentlemanly next time th ey co me do wn he re!

  • @TennesseeHomesteadUSA
    @TennesseeHomesteadUSA 2 роки тому

    From David L. Wolper's production ?

  • @outdoorlife5396
    @outdoorlife5396 3 роки тому +6

    I wonder if he thought about all the teenage boys he had in his army that would live now. And the ones he sent to their deaths for the Confederacy

    • @claymore806
      @claymore806 3 роки тому +2

      Don't think any teenage boys in 1865 Will be actually live un 2021

    • @outdoorlife5396
      @outdoorlife5396 3 роки тому +3

      @@claymore806 They didn't live to 65. It sickens me to think of the Confederate Government not to accept reality. Lee, just like Jefferson sent these kids to their death. So did the congress who made these draft laws. Just like Nazi Germany

  • @sandyhinderliter6146
    @sandyhinderliter6146 3 місяці тому

    who are the actors playing Lee and Grant?

  • @nole8923
    @nole8923 3 роки тому +14

    Grant was a solid intelligent strategist with good common sense and knew how to use his assets to gain victory. However, as a student of history the generals I’m most impressed with are Napoleon and Genghis Khan. Genghis Khan wasn’t just a marauding barbarian. His tactics were such that even today’s generals could learn from. Absolutely a genius strategist and tactician and knew how to pick the best subordinate generals as well. If you study his battle tactics I promise you would be thoroughly impressed. And everyone knows about Napoleon so I don’t need to go into detail about him.

    • @iwritechecksatthegrocerystore
      @iwritechecksatthegrocerystore 3 роки тому +2

      What tactics exactly? Because honestly I don’t think you have the slightest clue what you’re talking about. 😂😂

    • @nole8923
      @nole8923 3 роки тому +1

      @@iwritechecksatthegrocerystore
      The reason why you think that is because you yourself haven’t studied Genghis Khan in the slightest. His feigned retreats is only one example. Do some research before criticizing.

    • @iwritechecksatthegrocerystore
      @iwritechecksatthegrocerystore 3 роки тому

      @@nole8923 soooo what you mean is “I don’t know”

    • @LordWyatt
      @LordWyatt 2 роки тому

      The best Generals promoted based on merit not familial ties, the inevitable downfall of all empires

    • @Vsm426
      @Vsm426 Рік тому +2

      ​@@iwritechecksatthegrocerystore Lazy af

  • @winchesterchua3311
    @winchesterchua3311 3 роки тому

    From what movie or show is this?

  • @mole389
    @mole389 Рік тому +8

    God bless Robert E Lee.

  • @TheLordofWar1969
    @TheLordofWar1969 7 місяців тому

    What series is this from?

  • @willielittle9301
    @willielittle9301 Рік тому +3

    What may be lost in American history is that General Lee was the very first General to be offered the Supreme leadership of the Union Army in 1861 by President Lincoln but he refused and resigned his federal military commission because he did not want to fight against his native Virginia...His ancestrial mansion home...Arlington House...was later confiscated by the Union which eventually became the immortal and hallowed Arlington National Cemetery which is now the eternal resting place to American sons and daughters of both the North and South who have fought in American wars since then...

    • @jamesgollan8602
      @jamesgollan8602 10 місяців тому

      according to trump, the fallen were losers, yet looking at the polls the south is prepared to pee on the graves of the fallen and vote for a draft dodging disrespectful fool..Strange really, there is no true patriotism in the Southern States even today

  • @healthquest4823
    @healthquest4823 3 роки тому +1

    You spelled Court House wrong. It wasn't a courthouse as in a building. It was Appomattox Court House as in a town that was the county seat of government. That was common back in those days. I noticed a place in a northern state called Washington Court House designating the town where the county courthouse was.

  • @htw9594
    @htw9594 Рік тому +3

    Lee was a gentleman. However, he took an oath of the parade ground at West Point. The same is taken today. Lee was a tailor to that oath. He was lucky to have lived back then when Grant took the long view.

  • @ronaldrosales7225
    @ronaldrosales7225 Місяць тому

    Is That Edwin V. Sumner Part Of The Union Cavalry During Appomattox?

  • @j.d.peppmeier9041
    @j.d.peppmeier9041 3 роки тому +20

    Excellent re-enactment of Gen. Lee's honorable surrender. It was a time when gentlemen led armies and fought hard but with honor. While Gen. Lee's surrender effectively ended the war, other Confederate armies were still in the field and yet to surrender. At least one Reb general, Jo Shelby's Iron Brigade of Missouri, never did surrender and instead took his brigade to Mexico, though that didn't end well.

    • @davido9080
      @davido9080 Рік тому

      Fought with honor to defend the freedom to enslaved and traffick other human beings. These men had no more honor than the 3rd Reich.

  • @minerran
    @minerran Рік тому +1

    it should be stated in the title that all the dialog is in Spanish, thank you.

  • @tommytfaa
    @tommytfaa 3 роки тому +12

    Didn't happen this way... to bad. Sherman said no cheering when he rode up. And Lee was saluted on way out for respect

    • @michaelbarnett2527
      @michaelbarnett2527 3 роки тому +7

      Uh.. Sherman wasnt there . He was in NC burning something.

    • @tommytfaa
      @tommytfaa 3 роки тому +1

      @@michaelbarnett2527 yeah meant grant...my bad

  • @lucw1556
    @lucw1556 4 роки тому

    Wat movie is this

    • @2274brian
      @2274brian 4 роки тому

      North and South Book 2............it was a miniseries

  • @PeterOkeefe54
    @PeterOkeefe54 Рік тому +3

    ‘You’re mistaken, sir,’ he said. ‘You may forgive us, but we won’t be forgiven. There is a rancor in our hearts which you little dream of. We hate you, sir.’“ CSA Gen. Wise

  • @yomtobgrazi5746
    @yomtobgrazi5746 4 роки тому

    From what movie is this from

  • @butcharmstrong8275
    @butcharmstrong8275 6 років тому +22

    Dignified and Honorable always. Brought tears to my eyes, such a gentleman, under the circumstances of Appamattox. God go with him always and may he RIP.

    • @iangascoigne8231
      @iangascoigne8231 Рік тому +1

      Shame he was a slave holder.

    • @WayneTaylor-v8w
      @WayneTaylor-v8w Рік тому

      Damn they gave u hope bothers them that they waisted his money we don't flash

    • @TakKeith
      @TakKeith Рік тому

      RIP? Lol nah I hope he’s burning in HE🔥🔥 for what he did to my people

    • @matthewjahnke6956
      @matthewjahnke6956 10 місяців тому

      @@iangascoigne8231 They all were.

    • @iangascoigne8231
      @iangascoigne8231 10 місяців тому

      @@matthewjahnke6956 And does that excuse Lee?

  • @markbrown-bk1lr
    @markbrown-bk1lr 2 роки тому +2

    0:32 Sergeant Mulcahy from Glory

  • @digitaldistancerecords736
    @digitaldistancerecords736 3 роки тому +7

    "Sir, we are all Americans."

    • @Jonascord
      @Jonascord 3 роки тому +6

      Not any more. There are Americans and Democrats.

    • @digitaldistancerecords736
      @digitaldistancerecords736 3 роки тому +4

      @@Jonascord Geez, real edge lord aren't you?

    • @Jonascord
      @Jonascord 3 роки тому +2

      @@digitaldistancerecords736 Explain how I'm wrong.

    • @jtl-en4yx
      @jtl-en4yx 19 днів тому

      The ironic thing is that the Confederate government had more provisions for Native sovereignty

  • @bgardiner24
    @bgardiner24 2 роки тому

    is there a video of the scene when the truce flag is brought out

  • @rickheady2298
    @rickheady2298 2 роки тому +4

    Lee and Grant both military heroes of mine

  • @jmacdouglasr
    @jmacdouglasr 5 років тому

    What movie is this??? And is the movie really in Spanish?

    • @brianevans6328
      @brianevans6328 5 років тому

      North and South Book 2.....no it wasn't, this is dubbed over

    • @humbertoflores2545
      @humbertoflores2545 5 років тому

      Yes it was produced in SouthAmerica.. Argentina and Uruguay

  • @AweShiyte
    @AweShiyte 7 років тому +55

    English title, spoken in Spanish...
    ----____----

    • @roycoxe7870
      @roycoxe7870 7 років тому

      AwesomeShite Gaming v

    • @tktru
      @tktru 6 років тому +1

      [Cries in Spanish]

    • @kapitan19969838
      @kapitan19969838 6 років тому +4

      Oh well, time to learn Spanish then

    • @davidbowling5361
      @davidbowling5361 5 років тому +1

      @Mayan Empire That will never happen. You come here, you learn our damn language.

    • @traviseastland1380
      @traviseastland1380 5 років тому +2

      Blasphemy. As a southern man my blood is boiling watching this. Not due to my ancestors who died but in Spanish? _-_- that. Who whipped the shit out of General Santa Anna! I'm with @ David Bowling

  • @DrAcula-mv6kb
    @DrAcula-mv6kb 9 місяців тому +1

    One of the saddest moments in world history

    • @Jake-rs9nq
      @Jake-rs9nq 9 місяців тому

      🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲

    • @jtl-en4yx
      @jtl-en4yx 19 днів тому

      Correct! Put us on the path to where we are as a nation and a people today, and so many people are too blind to realize it!

  • @FalconRS
    @FalconRS 7 років тому +3

    I wonder if Grant would be able to personally surrender and go away with remains of his dignity, if the opposite situation happened.

    • @marks_sparks1
      @marks_sparks1 7 років тому +6

      FalconRS i think so. the CSA wouldve had to trade with the North anyway postwar, so humiliation would've been rather short-sighted political strategy and Lee, being a honourable soldier, would not have tolerated it towards Grant (unless the North had resorted to acts outside the Articles of War on a grotesque scale).

    • @priscillabouffant9515
      @priscillabouffant9515 10 місяців тому

      Lee was a traitor. There isn't a shread of dignity in that.

  • @zepticREAPER
    @zepticREAPER 5 років тому

    What movie is this from

    • @MZeki-gw2xg
      @MZeki-gw2xg 5 років тому +2

      Chris Bearden it’s from a tv series called “North and South” filmed during the mid 80’s

  • @berthalloway9953
    @berthalloway9953 6 років тому +5

    Wonder what General Lee thought seeing all those union soilders trying not to shoot him?

    • @randomtraveler9854
      @randomtraveler9854 3 роки тому +1

      There was a white flag behind him, that's a sign not to shoot. Probably thought these boys are just obeying commands.

  • @jazminearceneaux7452
    @jazminearceneaux7452 4 роки тому

    Is this from a movie??

    • @randomtraveler9854
      @randomtraveler9854 3 роки тому +1

      North and South TV mini series

    • @matthewjahnke6956
      @matthewjahnke6956 10 місяців тому

      @@randomtraveler9854 When was that on?
      I would've loved to have seen it.

  • @podsmpsg1
    @podsmpsg1 6 років тому +8

    He was a great strategist and tactician, one of the best. I would bow my head to him.

    • @roberthaworth8991
      @roberthaworth8991 Рік тому +1

      OTC, while his tactics were good (Gettysburg and a couple of other encounters excepted) and his grasp of the operational art excellent, his strategic sense was poor; neither of his two invasions of the North should have been undertaken. And as soon as Stonewall fell, his operational prowess fell off as well, since he was left with the likes of Longstreet and Early and Ewell adn Stuart, none of whom could be trusted for long with an independent command.

    • @matthewjahnke6956
      @matthewjahnke6956 10 місяців тому

      @@roberthaworth8991 OK. Then who would've been called up?

  • @CarloMagnoMusica
    @CarloMagnoMusica 7 днів тому

    Great series

  • @Gods2ndFavoriteBassPlyr
    @Gods2ndFavoriteBassPlyr Рік тому +3

    General Lee was an honorable man and a gentleman. Unlike Cornwallis, he had the self respect and decency to be present during the proceedings.

    • @stevecarew7281
      @stevecarew7281 2 місяці тому

      He was a slave owner who abused people and engaged in human trafficking based on skin color. Arrogant to the core.

    • @Gods2ndFavoriteBassPlyr
      @Gods2ndFavoriteBassPlyr 2 місяці тому

      @@stevecarew7281 - I do not presume to justify the life he lived as a Man of his Time. However, it is slightly more than naive to judge someone living over 160 years ago by today's enlightened standards.

  • @OneLastHitB4IGo
    @OneLastHitB4IGo Рік тому +1

    And over 600,000 thousand Americans, Blue and Grey, died to reach that point at Appomattox The most incredible waste in American history.

    • @DaliborPerkovic-sw8mh
      @DaliborPerkovic-sw8mh Рік тому

      In reality, that act of surrender was not the end of American civil war. Fights continued in Texas until 26th of May, 1865. Like on the Pacific theater in ww2: Japanese surrender on 2nd of September, 1945, but last Japanese soldier really surrender in April, 1974. So, that is real end of ww2 and of American civil war. The historians really trick us with wrong facts.

    • @jtl-en4yx
      @jtl-en4yx 19 днів тому

      WWII was worse.

  • @markjohnson9455
    @markjohnson9455 4 роки тому +6

    I am a southerner who respects Grant and his terms of surrender because they were extremely generous.

    • @randomtraveler9854
      @randomtraveler9854 3 роки тому +1

      Lincoln wanted to quickly and peacefully bring the USA back together, Grant knew harsh terms and executions would only enrage the South and prolong reunification.

    • @DavBlc7
      @DavBlc7 3 роки тому

      @@randomtraveler9854 Yep but the assassination of Lincoln changed everything and new president put some harsh term on the South as punishment for his murder and prolong reunification but less executions and Grant knew this but can't do anything.

    • @iwritechecksatthegrocerystore
      @iwritechecksatthegrocerystore 3 роки тому

      Yea.. I’d say so. Since they all deserved the noose at the very least. Probably wouldn’t have half the issues we do today.

    • @randomtraveler9854
      @randomtraveler9854 3 роки тому +4

      @@iwritechecksatthegrocerystore Hanging the Southerner leaders would have just caused more hostilities. Reconstruction was about reconciliation, not punishment.

    • @iwritechecksatthegrocerystore
      @iwritechecksatthegrocerystore 3 роки тому

      @@randomtraveler9854 I know what it was about. It was a mistake. I’m reminded of Ben Franklin, who famously stated, after signing the declaration: we must all hang together, or we I’ll most assuredly... hang separately.
      Also do you honestly think John Q reb would’ve given a shit about seeing Jeff Davis or Lee swing? The cruelty and inhumanity that the south would go on to perpetuate towards their fellow man, would have been stamped out had Johnson, or even the Grant administration had the gall to do so. In fact, I’d go so far as to say, had this insurrection, this traitorous movement, by a bunch of wealthy, racist, capitalist lying sons of bitches who stirred the pot to send 250,000 American boys to their deaths for the lie of “states rights” been punished instead of allowed to continue that myth: our country would be a better place today

  • @scottkew6278
    @scottkew6278 2 роки тому +2

    The reality was there really wasn t much to celebrate. The country at that point had SO much healing to do just to survive. I am GLAD I WAS NOT THERE...but what an amazing moment in history. The whole tumultuous country...for moment...froze and heald it s breath...unable to breathe in the presence of such an overwhelmingly Enormous historical action. WOW!!!!

  • @ErichLRuehs
    @ErichLRuehs Рік тому +6

    To take down the monuments of Lee is to take down what forgiveness and reconciliation is about. It's to take down our history, and what it took to get to where we are today.

    • @roberthaworth8991
      @roberthaworth8991 Рік тому

      Every Black American who has had to walk within sight of those monuments on the public square has felt a chill -- just as was intended when they were erected. Crash 'em.

    • @matthewjahnke6956
      @matthewjahnke6956 10 місяців тому

      oK. Good. But, it's also used to erase history too. Think about it: A 5 year old kid asks who is General Lee, they'll think, or maybe not, think of the car, not the man.

    • @priscillabouffant9515
      @priscillabouffant9515 10 місяців тому

      There are no statues of Benedict Arnold or Hitler anywhere.

    • @priscillabouffant9515
      @priscillabouffant9515 10 місяців тому

      @@matthewjahnke6956 That 5 year old is likely smarter that you.

    • @matthewjahnke6956
      @matthewjahnke6956 10 місяців тому

      @@priscillabouffant9515 What makes you think so?

  • @stevenconnolly7907
    @stevenconnolly7907 3 роки тому +1

    I'm not sure this was accurate. Historical records say after the signing. Grant immediately departed for Washington while Lee stayed to begin the discharge process for his surrendered troops.

  • @moserr11
    @moserr11 6 років тому +5

    Robert Eustace Lee walked into the house a Confederate, and came out an American.

    • @brianevans6328
      @brianevans6328 5 років тому +4

      his middle name was Edward

    • @jamesgollan8602
      @jamesgollan8602 3 роки тому

      he walked in as a treasonous loser, and walked out as a treasonous loser

    • @rickyj5547
      @rickyj5547 3 роки тому

      @@jamesgollan8602 what happened to unity and forgiveness.

    • @jamesgollan8602
      @jamesgollan8602 3 роки тому

      @@rickyj5547 USA is not United, and treason should never be forgiven

    • @jamesgollan8602
      @jamesgollan8602 3 роки тому

      @@rickyj5547 that is why you have gutless cowards running around with pillow cases on their heads..real unity it seems

  • @madelynterreri2834
    @madelynterreri2834 Рік тому +2

    That's so true that Lee was a warrior and a gentleman. Both Lee and Grant are great Men

    • @matthewjahnke6956
      @matthewjahnke6956 10 місяців тому

      yes. And Grant was President. Robert E. Lee? On his deathbed. I forgot what he died from.

  • @haroldgaffney246
    @haroldgaffney246 3 роки тому +9

    Abraham Lincoln respected Lee. Ulysses Grant respected Lee. I think we should ALL do the same.

    • @richardkrilljr.8711
      @richardkrilljr.8711 3 роки тому +3

      He was a fine General but at the end of the day he was little more than a traitor

    • @robertisham5279
      @robertisham5279 3 роки тому

      @@richardkrilljr.8711 no he wasn't

    • @richardkrilljr.8711
      @richardkrilljr.8711 3 роки тому +3

      @@robertisham5279 - he took up arms against his country.....what would you call him?

    • @alexamerling79
      @alexamerling79 Рік тому

      I don't think black people would lol

    • @priscillabouffant9515
      @priscillabouffant9515 10 місяців тому

      No respect for traitors.

  • @ianluetkehans7822
    @ianluetkehans7822 2 роки тому +1

    How accurate is it where lee starts riding his horse in front of the Union almost as though he's inspecting them

    • @matthewjahnke6956
      @matthewjahnke6956 10 місяців тому

      I think it's real. As a matter of fact, I've got that same picture on my wall right now.

    • @jtl-en4yx
      @jtl-en4yx 19 днів тому

      He was a US army officer for years, accurate enough

  • @scotthedrick5736
    @scotthedrick5736 7 років тому +7

    At least they didn't ruin it with a lot of damn fool talking.

    • @googoo-gjoob
      @googoo-gjoob 6 років тому

      thats because all the talking was done the previous day. terms of surrender were arranged just down the street in a private home owned by Mr. Wilbur McLean

    • @odysseusrex5908
      @odysseusrex5908 5 років тому

      @@googoo-gjoob The building you see there *is* McLean's house. For whatever reason this does not show the meeting between Lee and Grant.

  • @DanBeech-ht7sw
    @DanBeech-ht7sw 5 місяців тому +1

    That's not general Lee. That's colonel Sanders

    • @fredhall5038
      @fredhall5038 4 місяці тому +1

      Did you know that Col. Sanders spent the last years of his life living in Toronto, Canada? I am eating his chicken today! Well not really cause that chicken would be rather tough. But I am munching on the modern Col.’ Chicken. Thanks America.

  • @jorgecaraballo8963
    @jorgecaraballo8963 3 роки тому +2

    I'm not sure what is the name of this movie, but George Armstrong Custer's uniform and vibe ~ 100& badass and on point!

  • @01Mary02
    @01Mary02 Рік тому +2

    Very touching that the 'enemy', all took their hats off in respect to General Lee, at no doubt was the lowest point in his career.

    • @matthewjahnke6956
      @matthewjahnke6956 10 місяців тому +1

      It was a sign of respect they all had. I guess of love, although I'm not sure. However. He was a respected general. They had to thank him at some point. They probably knew he'd sign the surrender papers.

  • @Synthetic-Rabbit
    @Synthetic-Rabbit 3 роки тому +3

    "A dust covered man on a dust covered horse"

  • @scottaznavourian3720
    @scottaznavourian3720 Рік тому +1

    Grants terms were basically throw down your guns and go home. Lee asked that grant feed his soldiers cause they were starving. Grant granted it. There were no arrests or trials for treason although Lincolns assassination made president johnson and Secretary of war stanton want to recind the agreement. Grant refused.

    • @wernerschneider4460
      @wernerschneider4460 Рік тому

      This was, because the radicals in the Republican Party suspected Jeff Davis to be behind the assassination. He was not. None of the Confederate leaders had any idea about the plot, and none of them were celebrating when they heard about the assassination while on the run after being forced out of Richmond.

    • @jtl-en4yx
      @jtl-en4yx 19 днів тому

      Also allowed the men to keep their horses, and officers to keep their personal weapons

    • @jtl-en4yx
      @jtl-en4yx 19 днів тому

      The reason there were no trials was the Lee would have been found innocent, and the whole war would have been shown to be unconstitutional on the part of the Union

  • @alejandromaringutierrez7323
    @alejandromaringutierrez7323 2 роки тому +6

    General lee was the best officer of the entire war!

  • @thombienaturlich6830
    @thombienaturlich6830 3 місяці тому +1

    Letztendlich zog er vor Lee den Hut.........was die große Leistung die Lee all die Jahre vollbracht hat zum Ausdruck brachte!

  • @mphineas1
    @mphineas1 3 роки тому +4

    What this TV Series did to John Jakes' classic trilogy was a downright travesty. George Hazard following General Grant up the steps at Appomattox? Lol, Oh my.

  • @stephensczurek6286
    @stephensczurek6286 6 років тому +1

    Why is this in Spanish?

    • @DaliborPerkovic-sw8mh
      @DaliborPerkovic-sw8mh Рік тому

      They drunk too much Brandy and they decided to doing that staffs on Spanish language. Brilliant!

  • @frederickgreen3665
    @frederickgreen3665 6 років тому +3

    I didn't realize Lee and 'Grant spoke Spanish at Appomattox.

    • @jamespascarella2028
      @jamespascarella2028 6 років тому +2

      Keep letting illegals in, and we will all be speaking Spanish.

    • @DaliborPerkovic-sw8mh
      @DaliborPerkovic-sw8mh Рік тому

      Idea was that Grant will surrender to Lee, but how they spoke Spanish at the end Lee surrender to Grant at Appomattox and South lost the war.

    • @matthewjahnke6956
      @matthewjahnke6956 10 місяців тому

      Me either. But, of course, that was 150 years ago in Virginia.

  • @RK831
    @RK831 Рік тому

    I think this was from the ABC Miniseries "North & South Part II," first broadcast in 1986. I recorded it on VHS.

  • @mikehunt3810
    @mikehunt3810 7 років тому +67

    Even in Spanish the south still lost 👍🏻

    • @blmetal65
      @blmetal65 7 років тому +3

      chuckle....

    • @shadowalker28128
      @shadowalker28128 6 років тому +1

      You should go back and read up on your history.. Grant was ready to surrender until Lee invaded the north. If he had stayed south of the Mason Dixon line another 6-8 weeks . The surrender would have been completely opposite.

    • @lsarenkir
      @lsarenkir 6 років тому +3

      doesnt change the fact that lee surrender and the south lost, mate

    • @shadowalker28128
      @shadowalker28128 6 років тому +1

      Reof Never said it did mate... Invading the north was a tactical era on Lees part.
      He was as tired of the war as anyone. Had the Confederate army stayed south the war would have turned out different.

    • @TheLAGopher
      @TheLAGopher 6 років тому +1

      Grant was never ready to surrender. He was frustrated during the Vicksburg campaign, took to the bottle again, and at one point even considered resigning his commission because he felt he was being thwarted by Union Army leadership because of his drinking.But Grant never considered surrendering because of enemy action.Lee should have never crossed the Mason Dixon line. He should have assumedcommand of the defense at Vicksburg realizing the threat Grant was to the CSAif he split it in two by seizing the town. At the very least, Lee should have dispatchedthe defensive genius, Longstreet, with his brigade and orders to assume commandof Vicksburg's defense.Lee lost sight of the true objective of the South which was that it should not have been trying todefeat the North on the battlefield. It just needed to prevent the North from defeating them.They should have fought like Washington did in the Revolution with the objective of preservingthe Army at all costs until the enemy put itself into a bad position that could be exploited in a brash sneak attack.

  • @wcg19891
    @wcg19891 8 місяців тому

    Funny thing. The confederate military didn’t finally surrender in Virginia. Or North Carolina. Or even Texas. Final surrender by a Confederate general was in June. In Oklahoma.

    • @curious968
      @curious968 5 місяців тому

      History still has it right, here. The other armies didn't amount to much and were going to be rolled up by the victorious north. In the 19th century, wars did not usually come to an immediate, screeching halt. Nobody cared then and it's a footnote now. Even the faintest illusion of victory ends for the south at Appomattox. The rest was just mopping up.

    • @wcg19891
      @wcg19891 5 місяців тому

      @@curious968history is that Appomattox wasn’t the end. Just like Yorktown wasn’t. Plenty of people killed after.

  • @jesselewis5699
    @jesselewis5699 4 роки тому +3

    Lee wore a red sash that day. This is so inaccurate

    • @captainflowers748
      @captainflowers748 4 роки тому +1

      It’s a movie, impossible to be dead set correct

  • @ScarFlame
    @ScarFlame Рік тому +1

    Don't understand why Black slaves were portrayed in the ending scene of this movie giving the fact that historically, there were no Blacks present of the surrender at Appoxmattox Courthouse..........................

    • @DaliborPerkovic-sw8mh
      @DaliborPerkovic-sw8mh Рік тому

      That is a propaganda trick of winners of that war. They not doing that for the Blacks. They doing that for destroying of the CSA and all South. And they do that well. Even today!

  • @odysseusrex5908
    @odysseusrex5908 7 років тому +4

    Oh, for the love of Pete, it's dubbed in Spanish!

  • @dianamarquez4774
    @dianamarquez4774 Рік тому +1

    This is a well done reenactment. It has such pathos.

  • @petesuntrup2095
    @petesuntrup2095 Рік тому +1

    Gen Ely Parker was one of Grant’s chief of staff who wrote the terms of surrender that Gen Lee signed….he was a full blooded American Seneca Indian who was educated by my 3x grandfather in upstate New York….also saved Grants life once on a nighttime maneuver when riding into a Confederate camp, warning them to turn back

  • @leronictronic3435
    @leronictronic3435 2 роки тому +4

    My family still has journals from when my ancestors heard the cruel news of the surrender at Appomattox courthouse

    • @PumaTwoU
      @PumaTwoU Рік тому +1

      Cruel? The war was lost. Lee knew it, and he spared the nation a time of guerilla warfare.

  • @iangascoigne8231
    @iangascoigne8231 Рік тому

    Where’s the surrender?

    • @DaliborPerkovic-sw8mh
      @DaliborPerkovic-sw8mh Рік тому

      No where! That was just propaganda trick for the North that Civil war was over. But, really never finished. Until today! True! And South is still today under Yankee occupation. Last 158 years.

  • @RealDapperDude
    @RealDapperDude 6 років тому +3

    The Lee actor looks like Carl Ballentine, Lester Gruber in McHale's Navy, Anthony Zerbe doesn't look like Grant and his glue-on beard looks crappy. Plus, Grant wore a private's blouse with shoulder boards and muddy boots to Appomattox, but no production ever has the grit to show it that way. Looks like hell, in any language.

    • @Mark-pp7jy
      @Mark-pp7jy 3 роки тому

      I believe the actor who played Lee, was William Schallert. He was also in the movie, "In the heat of the night".

    • @RealDapperDude
      @RealDapperDude 3 роки тому

      @@Mark-pp7jy It is he. He was in the 1968 movie and an episode of the tv version in 1990. My comment had to do with the atrocious make-up and hair. And if you imdb Carl Ballantine, you'll see what I meant. This clip was from North and South, Book II, Love and War, from 1986 when Schallert was 63.

    • @priscillabouffant9515
      @priscillabouffant9515 10 місяців тому

      Boots get muddy after a 20 mile ride you clown. This is inaccurate. Lee picked the place of surrender. He knew the family and he was there long before Grant. He took a bath and changed uniforms. You red necks are morons.

  • @emameyer
    @emameyer Рік тому +2

    General Lee riding under a French flag.

    • @vanveen74
      @vanveen74 8 місяців тому

      You should have seen the poilous fighting the germans in 1917 and you won’t say that…

  • @stephaniejaniczekssmugglerscan
    @stephaniejaniczekssmugglerscan 7 років тому +7

    Hows about remove the Spanish? Its ridiculous

    • @humbertoflores2545
      @humbertoflores2545 7 років тому +4

      No es ridículo, porque así los hispano hablantes pueden aprender y entender la historia de tu país. (It´s not ridiculous because the Spanish speakers can learn and understand the history of your country).

    • @stephaniejaniczekssmugglerscan
      @stephaniejaniczekssmugglerscan 7 років тому +1

      Humberto Flores LEARN ENGLISH! Most of us wont learn not do we want to learn spanish. This had nothing to do with you people at all. I had to learn German to study WWII history.Learn English!

    • @stephaniejaniczekssmugglerscan
      @stephaniejaniczekssmugglerscan 7 років тому +1

      DaTurdburglar moron

    • @DaTurdburglar
      @DaTurdburglar 7 років тому +1

      Stephanie Janiczek Fuck off already imbecile.

    • @stephaniejaniczekssmugglerscan
      @stephaniejaniczekssmugglerscan 7 років тому +1

      DaTurdburglar yes you uneducated fing dolt if you are doing research in Germany of primary sources.

  • @nickroberts-xf7oq
    @nickroberts-xf7oq 7 місяців тому +1

    At Appomattox, Lee told his men to "Fold the flag and put it away, or else it will be devisive." ✅️
    He was right ! Lee also said, of civil war statues, "Best to not leave open the sores of war." 🎯