Civil War Generals ( after the war )

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  • Опубліковано 18 лис 2024

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  • @kaesmith5164
    @kaesmith5164 9 років тому +58

    I showed this to my 9 year old son who never stops talking. After he watched it he was...speechless and moved.
    Well done.

  • @haraldernstkalt4239
    @haraldernstkalt4239 3 роки тому +58

    I’m not a US citizen, but my hobby is the civil war, it’s so pity that they want to destroy all monuments. My favourite is Lee and stonewall Jackson. I honour them. Greetings from Germany and a happy new year

    • @tc-up2yw
      @tc-up2yw 3 роки тому +8

      You honor people who love slavery i get if u honor them for there bravery but u honor them in general?

    • @funnyman7602
      @funnyman7602 3 роки тому +14

      @@tc-up2yw I'm sure they didn't love slavery nor even thought of it for longer than 1 minute within those 4 years of war.

    • @tc-up2yw
      @tc-up2yw 3 роки тому +6

      @@funnyman7602 your probably correct

    • @niccones
      @niccones 3 роки тому +17

      @@tc-up2yw Trust me man a good majority didnt fight solely for slavery, obviously confederate government did for economic reasons but individuals just fought for their land and property, a lot of them are misunderstood as people nowadays

    • @tc-up2yw
      @tc-up2yw 3 роки тому +7

      @@niccones i believe you

  • @JeffTheFutureJaros
    @JeffTheFutureJaros 15 років тому +4

    This is Dixie? No way? It don't sound like it at first, but it is, lol, this is tight. Nice post man, Love The Civil War, These men will never be forgotten. Thanks.

  • @cginsberg94
    @cginsberg94 14 років тому +45

    These men will never be foregotten in my eyes

    • @aircoolguy5218
      @aircoolguy5218 4 роки тому +4

      I know this is a 9 year old comment but...... same

    • @cjschoenmann2258
      @cjschoenmann2258 2 роки тому +2

      I agree

    • @indiana146
      @indiana146 2 роки тому

      Caleb we too in England fought a civil war ti's sad when brother fights brother tell me If I'm wrong but most soldiers had that haunted empty look about them like they'd nothing left
      A man from my town darwen lancashire fought for UNION ARMY
      I fear usa is a not far off civil war again
      There are dark forces at work
      The oppressed ie native indians and blacks were and still are tret like second class citizens
      I ain't a yank but dangerous times are coming again

  • @ChurchillCigar
    @ChurchillCigar 12 років тому +15

    @DrBlueBronco The American Civil War can be read as a novel. We'll always be wondering why the hell did Lee launch an attack on Cemetary Ridge, or why didn't Bragg bypass the Hornet's Ness at Shiloh, ...
    When you first hear about the Civil War, you think "ok, the Blue are the good people and the Greys the bad people" when you realize it isn't the case.

    • @mel577
      @mel577 Рік тому

      Lee would probably tell you why didn't you tell him this before the battle, as even a fool as himself in hindsight could see what a blunder Pickett's charge was.

  • @savanahmclary4465
    @savanahmclary4465 3 роки тому +10

    We should never allow these men to be forgotten.

  • @davidmurphy8364
    @davidmurphy8364 5 років тому +54

    Such a sad period in American history, all of them brave men on both sides.

    • @hillbelly1093
      @hillbelly1093 4 роки тому

      David Murphy
      Stupids on both side

    • @aircoolguy5218
      @aircoolguy5218 4 роки тому

      It’s my favorite war in American history but I am most influenced by the American revolution or Teas revolution

    • @savanahmclary4465
      @savanahmclary4465 3 роки тому

      AMERICANS! A Commodity the WORLD is in to short supply of.

    • @savanahmclary4465
      @savanahmclary4465 3 роки тому +4

      The Southern men swore they never cut their beards until the war was over, for them... Many went to their graves, in the 1930s, still wearing their beards. My great great Grandfather did.

    • @blessyourheart175
      @blessyourheart175 2 роки тому

      🙄

  • @robbiesmile3
    @robbiesmile3 5 років тому +10

    One thing should be pointed out about this excellent video is that John Singleton Mosby was a colonel, and not a gerneral.

  • @dilbertsresearch3960
    @dilbertsresearch3960 11 років тому +14

    You can't judge those that came before you at all. You weren't there so you can't appreciate the circumstances or the emotions of the era.

    • @southerngent8162
      @southerngent8162 5 років тому +3

      The hell you can't. When your freedom and Liberty are effected by someone of the past you absolutely can judge them.

  • @NewMadrid01
    @NewMadrid01 16 років тому +16

    Lee lived only 6 years after the war. that picture had to have been at least 3 years after the war. but it accurately showed what war does to you. five stars. good job

    • @kmslegal7808
      @kmslegal7808 4 роки тому +2

      Lee had heart issues and may have suffered a stroke in the war

    • @neilpemberton5523
      @neilpemberton5523 2 роки тому

      Some historians theorize he was suffering from chest pains during the Battle of Gettysburg. In a letter he mentioned experiencing them that summer.

  • @DJhuggo
    @DJhuggo 4 роки тому +4

    i love your hystory and country with special attention to this period of the civil war. Did you know that some relatives of the great general R. Lee immigrated to Brazil after the end of the war and founded a city named 'Americana'? hugs from Brazil !

  • @trajan75
    @trajan75 13 років тому +9

    @jimbowie09 Grant was swindled out of his money, but he took care of his widow by writing his memoirs while he was dying of cancer. It remains one of the greatest books of military history ever written.

  • @Shafeone
    @Shafeone 12 років тому +4

    Even Grant said he knew only two songs. "One is Dixie the other one isn't."

  • @jockellis
    @jockellis 11 років тому +22

    I used to live on land that had been John B Gordan's in the DeKalb County part of Atlanta. My father and I would ride over to where his mansion stood just off DeKalb Avenue and cut magnolia blossoms off the tree that was once in his front yard.

    • @rhdtv2002
      @rhdtv2002 7 років тому +2

      tee bartim well did you consider if they ever may have not liked being slaves? Lets put it this-way if the whites were the slaves and went through the same thing - would you celebrate or honor those who didn't want to free your people? I assume your not Christian since Jesus-was a Jew and did the complete opposite of what you are doing - meaning he was about love and you are about spreading hate..consider what I said about putting yourself at that time in their shoes..

    • @indy_go_blue6048
      @indy_go_blue6048 4 роки тому +3

      I'd never heard of him up to 37 years ago when I found myself a student at John B. Gordon Jr. College (now just JBGC) in Barnesville, GA. He later became my favorite Southern general. Quite a remarkable man.

    • @jockellis
      @jockellis 4 роки тому +1

      indy_go_blue60 And the Board of Regents should have its ass kicked for changing its name. It was just called Gordon Military college. Frankly, I never associated it with its namesake.

    • @sharonkraciuk9393
      @sharonkraciuk9393 4 роки тому

      That is a great story...

    • @jackherndon8245
      @jackherndon8245 3 роки тому +1

      @@rhdtv2002 The slaves that my great grand father owned were not worth a tinker's damn and hardly worth all the crimes their descendants commit today.

  • @Jersey2tall86
    @Jersey2tall86 12 років тому +7

    Recently visited Parker's Crosssroads battlefield in TN (Dec 23, 1862). There master cavalry General Nathan Bedford Forrest was defeated after putting up a good scrap, but fell into a Yankee trap sprung in the nick of time. Like Gettysburg, it was the Yankee infantry that rescued the cavalry which was the bait against Forrest's raiding force. Read at the visitor's center there that despite initially joining the KKK, in his last years, Forrest renounced his old ways and died a devout Christian.

    • @codieomeallain6635
      @codieomeallain6635 2 роки тому

      He was first leader of the KKK. His apparent change of heart occurred sometime in 1875 when he gave a speech to a crowd of blacks in which he said “live honestly and act truly, and when you are oppressed I will come to your relief”. Needless to say some of his former comrades were unhappy with this pronouncement and he was condemned as having lost his mind and of being an embarrassment (“and now to mar all the luster which is attached to his name, his brain is turned by the civilities of a mulatto wench” yeah, that was printed in a newspaper). I have no idea how sincere it was, I was not in his head, but at the very least he knew that people would react how they did and still chose to offer his protection to them from oppression.

  • @jimwalsh2001
    @jimwalsh2001 16 років тому +5

    Very powerful - shows the effect the war had on each man. Good work.

  • @Shafeone
    @Shafeone 12 років тому +6

    Dude, Hood was from Owingsville KENTUCKY. He wasn't a Texan. He was stationed in Texas in the US Army when the South seceded and since his native state didn't join the CSA he hooked up with the Texans and became affiliated with them as their commander.

    • @johnathonmounce2265
      @johnathonmounce2265 3 роки тому

      Kentucky joined the csa dumbfuck thats why they got a star

  • @caseyjones2222
    @caseyjones2222 15 років тому +5

    Nice video. makes me want to brush up on the history. Sherman looks so peaceful in his "after" photo.

  • @DrBlueBronco
    @DrBlueBronco 12 років тому +5

    @tranquilizedaz Sherman was averaging 1 mile per day and was paying for it in blood. Johnston understood what made Sherman tick. When the sacked him and replaced him with Hood (who was hooked an laudnum after an amputation), Sherman actually said: "Somebody up in Richmond is on my side." It was Bragg.

  • @graceandpeace4414
    @graceandpeace4414 2 роки тому +2

    Sherman looked relaxed after the war

  • @stashJ8
    @stashJ8 13 років тому +3

    Joseph Wheeler was an officer in the Spanish-American War if I'm not mistaken, which explains the army regala.

  • @Shafeone
    @Shafeone 12 років тому +17

    If I may quote General Lee: "Texans always move them!" What a magnificent force of shock troops your state produced.

    • @brt-jn7kg
      @brt-jn7kg 3 роки тому +4

      My 7th Great Grandfather was apart of Gen Lee's Texans. He some how fought all thru the war till Appomattox courthouse. If anyone every wanted to know how bloody that damn war was when he came home he NEVER picked up a rifle again. They only two things he had on him was a small how to dig young trees out of the Brazos River bank and plant on his homestead and a fishing pole. He fished 6 days a week. He founded two towns in Central Texas his homestead is still there as are many of the trees that he planted. There's one pecan tree there that has almonds walnuts cashews and another nut besides the pecan tree it originally was. He was a judge and a deacon in the church. His father fought for Texas Independence at the Battle of San jacinto. Now here we are repeating 1858 and 1859 all over again. I shutter when I think of that thought!!

    • @alexdaunoy9678
      @alexdaunoy9678 3 роки тому +2

      @@brt-jn7kg You my friend have an excellent heritage. However, I think we are unfortunately beyond even the mistakes of '58-59 and are in the throes of '60.

    • @0BRAINS0
      @0BRAINS0 3 роки тому +2

      @@brt-jn7kg my great great grandfather was sam Houston jr. , Sam Houstons son. He was a Confederate general.

  • @fightingbear8537
    @fightingbear8537 8 років тому +31

    Many great men here North & South!

    • @870Rem12gauge
      @870Rem12gauge 5 років тому +1

      Don't add Sherman to that list. He was a demon. Hated the Bill of Rights.

    • @kallekonttinen1738
      @kallekonttinen1738 4 роки тому +1

      Many of those southern guys were KKK men after war so no respect for them. James Longstreet is maybe only one from south you can call great.

    • @unknown-dq6df
      @unknown-dq6df 4 роки тому +1

      Kalle Konttinen No respect to those Yanks killed 1 to many un armed combatants for my taste

    • @kallekonttinen1738
      @kallekonttinen1738 4 роки тому

      The rebel George Washington mistakes hapen, but good and evil side of that conflict is clear.

    • @unknown-dq6df
      @unknown-dq6df 4 роки тому

      Kalle Konttinen no there both grey yanks wanted to stop slavery and confederates wanted to take a unfair government that forced them to become slave owners in the first place

  • @jaysenst.charlesthelakehea9327
    @jaysenst.charlesthelakehea9327 5 років тому +4

    Excellent video. For clip that's only a couple of minutes long, it says more than some 2-hour documentaries. The choice of music was both emotional and haunting. As I watched these great American military leaders from both the north and the south, I pictured the trials and tribulations they must of faced during each of their own commands, that I felt my throat begin to tighten and my eyes begin to show signs of watering up. People need to appreciate the fact that the North and South came back to Union where leadership strength begets strength, not only for the USA but for the free world. Otherwise, if division became the states quo on the North American continent, then there is no way the United States Of America ascends to the very top of world military power, in order to defeat the most potent enemies of the 20th century, the planet had ever seen.

  • @CosmicFork
    @CosmicFork 13 років тому +3

    @AUG351 Yes, it's very sad that Major General Patrick Cleburne was killed in the assault on those heavily fortified Union Lines at the Battle of Franklin. From everything I've read about him, he was a man of unusual and sterling character. What is even more tragic is that he had just recently become engaged to a lovely young woman, named Miss Susan Tarleton from Mobile, Alabama. It's just not fair that he didn't survive the battle and get to marry her... What a horrific battle Franklin was!

  • @JeffTheFutureJaros
    @JeffTheFutureJaros 15 років тому +8

    I don't think Sherman was ever Peaceful, lol, but what a great mind for War he had.

    • @kevinbrown4073
      @kevinbrown4073 4 роки тому +1

      Can you imagine a battle between uncle Billy and stonewall Jackson

    • @JeffTheFutureJaros
      @JeffTheFutureJaros 4 роки тому

      @@kevinbrown4073 That'd been Epic.

  • @nancycrayton2738
    @nancycrayton2738 2 роки тому +6

    As to Robert E. Lee dying within a relatively short time after the war, he had lost everything. He is quoted as saying he was penniless. Confederate leaders, military and civilian, had to apply to have their citizenship approved and restored. Lee's application was "lost" and he died a man without a country as far as the occupying government was concerned. He still encouraged his friends and acquaintances to move on and pick up the pieces of their lives. At the same time, I have read that he told someone, I can't remember who, that he wished he died on the field of battle. He was offered command of the Federal forces and resigned from the US Army rather than go to war against his friends and neighbors and his native land, Virginia. He died of a broken heart. IMHO.

    • @bsb1975
      @bsb1975 Рік тому

      Could have ended his story at the end of a traitor's rope, too. Washington University gave him a job after the war. Don't feel too bad.

    • @kentuckylady2990
      @kentuckylady2990 8 місяців тому

      I don’t recall if my gg grandfather ever took the oath of allegiance or not but I do have a record where a gg uncle did.

  • @waynesigmon5628
    @waynesigmon5628 4 роки тому +33

    And now they're trying to destroy our Our Heroes monuments across country wake up all good Americans and stop these people from doing the damage to our Monument wake up America wake up America before it's too late

    • @larrygreen8912
      @larrygreen8912 4 роки тому +5

      Wayne Sigmon It won’t be long before one of the mobs take ropes to Lady Liberty 🗽

    • @waynesigmon5628
      @waynesigmon5628 4 роки тому +5

      @@larrygreen8912 what we really need to do is take a rope around their necks and I'm not even kidding low life ever comes knocking at my door I'm not going to let them in I'm going to defend my house with any means necessary

    • @tomheisler9940
      @tomheisler9940 4 роки тому +2

      Confederate monuments belong in a museum, not out in public perpetuating a blood curse on all African Americans. Most of these monuments were erected from 1900-1920, at the height of Jim Crow.

    • @larrygreen8912
      @larrygreen8912 4 роки тому +3

      Tom Heisler These monuments are a testament to Democrats and the sins Democrats perpetrated on our society. Jim Crowe was a Democrat , slave owners Democrats, Klansmen Democrats the stains on our nation are from a group of people that call themselves Progressive Democrats.

    • @clevermcgenericname891
      @clevermcgenericname891 4 роки тому +6

      @@tomheisler9940 lol Antifa just got done pulling down statues of old Abe in Seattle. Comment did not age well.

  • @Shafeone
    @Shafeone 12 років тому +6

    A wonderful slice of history. Thank you for posting.

  • @TheSaintjohnguitar
    @TheSaintjohnguitar 8 років тому +65

    why aren't you listing their names/

    • @fireball1322
      @fireball1322 5 років тому +14

      because you should recognize most of them..but only if you're a true Southerner..........

    • @michaeljones4216
      @michaeljones4216 5 років тому +5

      @@fireball1322 Not all were Southerners. Some were Federal soilders.

    • @JD-mv8tl
      @JD-mv8tl 5 років тому +3

      No shit wouldn’t that have been nice

    • @stevestringer7351
      @stevestringer7351 5 років тому +6

      I knew them all.... first middle and last names.

    • @waynesigmon5628
      @waynesigmon5628 4 роки тому +5

      @@fireball1322 I know all the Confederate generals I didn't know all the union but I didn't want to know their names anyway God bless. Confederate heroes from North Carolina

  • @FrumpyLumps
    @FrumpyLumps 13 років тому +5

    @tranquilizedaz The progress Johnston had made in rebuilding and restoring morale to the AoT that General Bragg had starved and mismanaged. Not to mention his steady whittling down and hinderance of Sherman's advance with his victories at Kennesaw, New hope Church, etc. rather than holing up in Atlanta to be choked out in a siege like Grant had done at Vicksburg. As long as the AoT was intact and mobile it posed a threat to Sherman's larger and slower army, Johnston understood this Hood did not.

  • @Tellgryn1
    @Tellgryn1 12 років тому +4

    Meade didn't out Geeral Lee at Gettysburg, Lee is put in a bad spot by poor leadership by A.P. Hill and Heth....both were told not to get into a major fight....
    Heth piece mills his division in to attack.
    Ewell fails to send a divsion to Culp's Hill when his troops arrive on the field of battle, and then compounds it by not letting Harry Hays attack Cemetery Hill the evening of the 1st day. Hays asked Early and Ewell....
    When Lee got to the field the battle line of the hook was in place.

  • @Shafeone
    @Shafeone 12 років тому +2

    You are talking about July 1. It was a chatic meeting engagement and mistakes were made on both sides -- Howard did not exactly help Meade's cause any more than Lee' subordinates helped his. But from July 2 on Meade anticipated Lee's every move and had contingencies. And when his own generals bungled like Sickles he was quick to react and stave off disaster. Meade was everywhere, missed nothing, put the right men like Hancock in charge over lesser generals with more seniority and owned Lee.

  • @karenschwartz1146
    @karenschwartz1146 5 років тому +9

    A salute to you ALL.

  • @Tiger74147
    @Tiger74147 6 років тому +3

    The ones that survived, at least. Also, I would've laughed if Custer's "after" picture was his grave with an arrow in it or something.

  • @Shafeone
    @Shafeone 12 років тому +4

    Johnston and Sherman were quite close. Johnston attended Sherman's funeral and refused to don his hat despite a torrential freezing rain. "Sherman would do the same for me," he said. Johnston would be dead from pneumonia within the month.

  • @chasejohnson6827
    @chasejohnson6827 4 роки тому +2

    May all these men from both sides know peace war is cruel but sometimes it dose sort things out but at a major cost!

  • @thomasmenk3601
    @thomasmenk3601 6 років тому +4

    Pictures show more than words. The obvious sadness of most southern officers on the after war photos is very impressive. But we also see, that these fine Gentlemen and heroes did not loose their honor and pride. By the way, it is a shame, that a most commendable general as John Bell Hood, who had bravely fought for his conviction and lost an arm and a leg, had to finish his days in isolation and poverty! The victors were not merciful.

  • @sheldonone
    @sheldonone 14 років тому +5

    A great video. Thank you for the time you took to make it.

  • @DrBlueBronco
    @DrBlueBronco 12 років тому +2

    @ChurchillCigar At Shiloh, Albert Sidney Johnston getting wounded and dying after the first day was the biggest single factor. Beauregard gets criticized for pulling out aftr the 2nd day, but it was a graceful exit given they were out number by a 5 to 1 margin which was getting worse by the hour. Johnston had the charisma and intuition but his lost had a dramatic impact on the men. Some wonder why he was down front, but he felt the need the divisions were inexperienced.

  • @graant71
    @graant71 16 років тому +2

    Really an interesting historical document, very good work!

  • @nicholaskreider9728
    @nicholaskreider9728 6 років тому +6

    Really cool video. Wish you had included the names, I know almost all of the faces and it's great to see them as older men but there were a couple I couldn't remember just from photographs. Cheers

  • @dragonriderjt
    @dragonriderjt 15 років тому +3

    Chamberlain was a General and Divison commander at the end of the war.

  • @jeffsmith2022
    @jeffsmith2022 10 років тому +30

    God bless them all...

    • @jonathansparks7558
      @jonathansparks7558 4 роки тому

      God bless all the generals who fought in the Civil War. George McClellan can kiss my ass though. His inaction extended the war and got that many soldiers killed on his watch. From a bleeding heart liberal

    • @paulsmith8212
      @paulsmith8212 4 роки тому

      Remember, A Brigadier Generals rank was like a one star general usually in command of up to 4000 troops or so. The Brigadier General was one notch above a full Colonel. For the most part I’ve noticed many of the Brigadier Generals of the Civil War era to be quite young and smart on both sides . God bless them all for their courage.

    • @aircoolguy5218
      @aircoolguy5218 4 роки тому +1

      @@jonathansparks7558 yeah McClellan was stupid

  • @DrBlueBronco
    @DrBlueBronco 12 років тому +3

    Plus, Lee no longer had Stonewall Jackson and also lost J.E.B. Stuart along the way. Grant wouldn't have fared so well against Jackson.

    • @stevestringer7351
      @stevestringer7351 5 років тому

      I disagree. The war was always going to end the way it did. Generals like Grant, Lee and Jackson were real "killers". They would press the attack up tonthe last man standing. Most other generals did not have the instincts that these guys did. However, that instinct was actually more detrimental than helpful to the southern cause because the south had such limited resources. However, with the limit less supply lines of materials and men that the north had.
      The biggest difference was that there would have been a lot higher body count on both sides had Jackson lived.

  • @DrBlueBronco
    @DrBlueBronco 12 років тому +2

    @Podaboba That is lost on many people. The also turn around and gripe about Joe Wheeler who was left hind with 2000 to 3000 cavalry troopers to block 65,000 men under Sherman and their drive to Savanah. If he could have slowed them down for 1 more week, Sherman would have ran out of food. However, Davis and Bragg ignored his wires for help. I always will believe Bragg was a double agent working for the Yankees.

  • @colindominy
    @colindominy 15 років тому +2

    Dear willhoit63 (Bruce ?) , this montage comprises a terrific gallery of Civil War Generals. Many of them .. indeed most of them .. are no doubt recognisable to most CW history fanatics. But those of us CW buffs who live outside the USA may not know of them all, by name. A small and humble request, for future thought : if possible, could the names be provided along with the still photos. Thanks for this posting. Great work !!

  • @360Nomad
    @360Nomad 13 років тому +5

    @jimbowie09 Actually soldiers did pensions back then. I got into Sons of Confederate Veterans because I found a widow's pension for the wife of my great, great, great, grandfather, Thomas Michael Blackwell.

    • @waynesigmon5628
      @waynesigmon5628 4 роки тому

      I am a proud member of the Rocky Face Rangers in North Carolina son sound of Confederate Veterans we got to stand together against these people are trying to take down our monuments God bless you my friend take care stand up be proud

  • @Shafeone
    @Shafeone 12 років тому +5

    Lee was responsible for as much carnage as anyone. He was the commanding general for the South at the bloodiest battle (which he lost) and the bloodiest day in American history (which he never should have fought thus having the blood of the dead of Antietam on his hands). His "victories" were either from standing behind breastworks and slaughtering the enemy or butchering his own in horrific attacks that produced enormous casualty lists that the South could ill-afford. Longstreet was CSA's best.

    • @codieomeallain6635
      @codieomeallain6635 2 роки тому

      Longstreet was the greatest proponent of the tactical defensive, standing behind breastworks and slaughtering the enemy as you put it. He thought to offset the Union numerical advantage by taking a strategic offensive and then digging in and forcing the Union to attack them on ground of their choosing. Fortunately for the Union Lee and Jackson were great believers in frontal charges with massive casualties that, like you said, they could not afford otherwise there is no telling what might have happened. One of the few battles that Longstreet was allowed to prosecute in accordance with his ideas (I cannot recall the name) was an absolute massacre for the Union and he was able to report without hyperbole that if given enough ammunition he could kill them all.
      What really makes Major Longstreet the best of the Rebel generals in my opinion was his conduct after the war. He urged southerners to accept a peaceful reunification, became a Republican and endorsed his friend General Grant for President, he literally fought for the rights of the freed slaves at the Battle of Liberty Place where he led badly outnumbered black militiamen against the White League being wounded in the process, he was willing to criticise Colonel Lee, and he made what I think is a very important quote, “if it wasn’t about slavery, then I don’t know what else it was about.”
      You are right about Lee as well, in that he caused as much death as anyone. He had the highest number of men killed or wounded under his command of any general in the war, over 120,000.

  • @chuckhunter6098
    @chuckhunter6098 6 років тому +2

    The Hart ake these men had to live with. You can see it in there eyes. Thank you gentleman.

    • @indiana146
      @indiana146 2 роки тому

      Brother against brother and my country england had its fingers in many pies

  • @oreally8605
    @oreally8605 6 років тому +6

    They lived and died so long ago..

  • @didierroux1547
    @didierroux1547 4 роки тому +2

    Robert E. lee, Ulysses S. Grant, Nathan Bedford Forrest, ....., ......., William T. Sherman, Jubal Early, ......., ......., Burnside, Custer, Pickett, ......, Mosby, Hood, ......., ......., Mc Clellan, Johnston, . Sorry for the unknown generals I do not know, and my apoligises to their souls.

  • @pennjd1
    @pennjd1 12 років тому +3

    You mistakenly added NSA to your list. By the 4th Amendment and Presidential Order 12333, the NSA is hands off in regards to U.S. property and persons.

  • @royjacobson5561
    @royjacobson5561 8 років тому +10

    There no names under photos.

  • @KnightOwl2006
    @KnightOwl2006 14 років тому +1

    Great job.

  • @CosmicFork
    @CosmicFork 13 років тому +3

    J.B. Hood was a Butcher! He made Franklin a slaughter pen. "The wails and cries of widows and orphans made at Franklin, Tenn. Nov 30Th, 1864 will heat up the fires of the bottomless pit to burn the soul of General J.B. Hood for murdering their husbands and fathers! He sacrificed those brave men to make the name of Hood famous; when the history of Franklin is written it will make him infamous." Hood's actions "can't be called anything else but murder."(Diary of Capt. Samuel T. Foster. C.S.A. TX.)

  • @Less1leg2
    @Less1leg2 4 роки тому +1

    ah the stories these men could speak. Bless all of them.

  • @InnocentFormalities
    @InnocentFormalities 4 роки тому +12

    The only army to ever beat us in kill counts, was our selves.

  • @brighamcook3853
    @brighamcook3853 6 років тому +4

    Stonewall Jackson before and after the war? *sarcasm*

  • @DrBlueBronco
    @DrBlueBronco 12 років тому +5

    @tranquilizedaz Lee had the flu and he made catastrophic decision on day 3 and he should have listened to Longstreet and made the Yankees cross the field. He still hadn't come to grasp the fact that Stonewall was gone either.

    • @willoutlaw4971
      @willoutlaw4971 4 роки тому

      Southern excuses for Lee getting his ass whipped at Gettysburg:
      Lee had the flu. Lee had diarrhea. It was JEB Stuarts fault. Lee ran out of cannonballs. It was Longstreet's fault. The weather was too hot. Southern troops suffered sunstroke. The rebs started the battle too soon on day one. The attacks were not coordinated on day two and three. Stonewall Jackson got himself killed several weeks before and could not attend the party. The smoke on the battlefield was so thick Lee could not see the whole welcoming committee organized by Union General Gordon Meade.
      Are there any more excuses?

    • @psilvakimo
      @psilvakimo 4 роки тому

      @@willoutlaw4971 It sounds like you are making up most of this BS with a vindictive attitude. The answer is probably not complicated. The South was agrarian and the industrial. Much more resources.

  • @wade43671
    @wade43671 8 років тому +8

    What a great video! It's amazing the transition each of the generals went through after the Civil War. I thought I read somewhere that President Grant was somewhat of an alcoholic and had a corrupt during his term at the White House. His physical appearance of an overweight, pudgy bureaucrat is somewhat sad, given his appearance and accomplishments in his younger days. Aside from that, I think he was an outstanding general.

    • @khalilmason
      @khalilmason 2 роки тому +2

      His cabinet was wholly corrupt; He himself was righteous to the core. Brilliant strategist, and an even better politician.

    • @jasonc2334
      @jasonc2334 2 роки тому

      @@khalilmason General Order No. 11 was a controversial order issued by Union Major-General Ulysses S. Grant on December 17, 1862 expelling all Jews from Grant's military districts.

  • @Shafeone
    @Shafeone 12 років тому +17

    YOu should respect Grant because: a) he beat Lee in eleven months when other Union generals (other than Meade) couldn't do it in three years; b)he was never drunk during combat operations; c) he was no less involved in the front than Lee. A Lt. Genl. should NOT be humping a pack in a skirmish line; d) most important his terms at Appomattox were so generous that when he was dying of cancer he received hundreds of letters from former CONFEDERATE soldiers wishing him well.

    • @tommartinez7194
      @tommartinez7194 6 років тому +5

      Shafeone. Grant should have been removed from West Point because. he was a student under the name Ulysses S Grant. He also received his commission as an officer under that name. His actual name was Hiram Ulysses Grant. His congressman made the name error. He put Ulysses as the first name and Simpson as the middle name which was Grant's mothers maiden name. Grant never bothered to have the name corrected which is in violation of the honor code of the military academies regardless if its West Point, The Naval Academy or The Air Force Academy. What's done is done. It also should be noted Lincoln violated the constitution on multiple occasions by having the Union Army invade and occupy another country without going through congress for a formal declaration of war. Lincoln also suspended Habeous Corpus. The Union Army also committed atrocities on Southerners who were not soldiers of the Confederate Army. It is also noteworthy that the war's name should not be referred to as the Civil War as a civil war is a war against two enemies fighting to overthrow and change a form of government that is currently in existence. That didn't happen. It should be referred to as the War of Northern Aggression, The Great Southern Rebellion or President Lincoln's War

    • @cj_m2477
      @cj_m2477 6 років тому

      tom martinez its my understanding that Ulysses changed his name legally to Ulysses S.Grant so he would not be in violation of that code.

    • @tnlaw2004
      @tnlaw2004 6 років тому +2

      He is widely regarded as one of, if not the worst, US presidents because of the graft and corruption which were rampant during the reconstruction under his administration.

    • @stevestringer7351
      @stevestringer7351 5 років тому

      @@tommartinez7194 grant realized the error when he got to west point. If he reported as Hiram Ulysses then he would have been disqualified... sonhe went tonthe courthouse and changed his name to legally reflect the name that was listed on the appointment. Nope.... you are wrong on this one. This was completely legal.

    • @1spitfirepilot
      @1spitfirepilot 4 роки тому +2

      @@tommartinez7194 Legalism, eh? of course the South was going to defend and even extend slavery if it had won. That makes all other points of law moot, IMO. And on the subject of aggressive war, the south needn't get too indignant. Y'all were happy enough in both north and south when President Polk launched a war of aggression against Mexico to seize California etc.

  • @willhoit63
    @willhoit63  11 років тому +7

    Thats Lee and Joesph E. Johnson

  • @SuperBigblue19
    @SuperBigblue19 5 років тому +1

    Was born in the early 60's and feel fortunate. Life was becoming better & no wars during the years government likes killing their young men. Now I wonder what all the previous death was for? Look what is growing up now & into what kind of a society. I once thought how great technology was going to make the future. But now ? No way. It's gonna get bad, real bad.
    Without some kind of culling of the herd the future will be something I'm glad I'll miss.

  • @robinrodriguez480
    @robinrodriguez480 6 років тому +3

    It would be nice to know there names!?!?!?

  • @DavidSB1950
    @DavidSB1950 12 років тому +2

    Very true. Only 3% of the Confederate army (the officers) had slaves. Half the remainder were too poor to buy boots, how the heck anyone with a lick of sense could believe these poor guys were fighting for rich men's slave's is beyond me.
    Burnes series was very pro north. The most tragic casulaty of the civil war was the effective death of the tenth amendment.

  • @mikelheron20
    @mikelheron20 11 років тому +4

    Proves one thing: war (for all it's evils) keeps you thin.

  • @tranquilizedaz
    @tranquilizedaz 13 років тому +2

    @CosmicFork He was trying to win a hopeless situation. Do you consider lee a butcher for his decision at Gettysburgh??? Hood was put in charge of an army that was demorilized and told to do the impossible.

    • @codieomeallain6635
      @codieomeallain6635 2 роки тому

      Yes, I do consider Lee a butcher for Gettysburg. He ordered a frontal charge on the entrenched Union centre over an approach of flat ground with no cover, and he did so under not only the protestations of Major Longstreet who was commanded to order this attack but under advisement of an alternative strategy proposed again by Longstreet which was far more sound and had proven in the past to more than adequately nullify the Union advantage of greater numbers and keep casualties low in an army which could ill afford them. Just in raw numbers Lee lost more men killed or wounded under his command than any general in the war, over 120,000.

  • @martyluttrell1631
    @martyluttrell1631 3 роки тому +2

    dan sickles looks like an old grandpa

  • @ThegamingEnforcer487
    @ThegamingEnforcer487 5 років тому +4

    "The South will never forget " right now in are country we are divide and one day either sooner or later we will have a 2nd civil war and the South my home will win this time but just like my great grandfathers i had 14 family members fight thay where all officer's and believe in the Union but a great duty too there Southern home's and when that day comes again i will fight for my home and it will come again

    • @waynesigmon5628
      @waynesigmon5628 4 роки тому

      And I'll be standing right beside you God bless the South God bless our Confederate Heroes

    • @tomheisler9940
      @tomheisler9940 4 роки тому

      Jacob, your entire family fought for the Union and now you want to fight against the Union for some kind of southern secessionist cause? You should learn from your family.

  • @robertbush7290
    @robertbush7290 3 роки тому +2

    A horrible time in American history but brave men on both sides fighting for what they thought was right. To bad you didn't put names to the pics.

  • @harryfox3139
    @harryfox3139 4 роки тому +1

    Mustache wax saleman must have made a fortune.

  • @JRobbySh
    @JRobbySh 12 років тому +2

    Lee was suffering from congestic heart disease. A great athlete but he was too old to be in the field. His health also cost the South later when in 1864 he fcaught Army Grant’s astraddle the North Anna. But he was to ill to lead and none of his lieutenants--the ones left--was capable.

  • @GentlemanBystander
    @GentlemanBystander 12 років тому +2

    Hood always had this haunted look to him.

    • @willoutlaw4971
      @willoutlaw4971 4 роки тому

      Hood was just another southerner fighting to preserve and expand African American slavery. As were all who fought against the U.S.A.
      Every one of those Southern "generals" should have been hung or shot for treason.

    • @johngreen3543
      @johngreen3543 4 роки тому

      @@willoutlaw4971 I disagree, Only those who violated human rights such as that disgusting General Forrest. He deserved to be hung

  • @DrBlueBronco
    @DrBlueBronco 12 років тому +1

    Why? Grant simply used attrition and stated that he could put 10 men in the field for every man the Union lost. He new Lee couldn't replace men lost. That was Grant's strategy.

  • @whereskim89
    @whereskim89 12 років тому +2

    It is easy to say Grant had more cannon fodder but eventually the people might''ve got tired of sending their men as fodder to preserve a "union" with people who didn't even want to be part of the USA

    • @stevestringer7351
      @stevestringer7351 5 років тому +1

      Sort of. Had Lincoln have lost the election of 1864 this scenario would have had a higher chance of success for the south. But with the fall of Atlanta General Sherman assured Lincoln's victory at the polls. With that said, he was never going to surrender and that's why he had his bulldog Grant in charge. Grant had the killer instinct to latch on to the enemy and never let go.

  • @willhoit63
    @willhoit63  11 років тому +2

    That's awesome!!

  • @nunyabizness9045
    @nunyabizness9045 8 років тому +4

    Thought the Grey Ghost Mosby was a colonel?

    • @stevenpilling5318
      @stevenpilling5318 5 років тому

      He was promoted to Brigadier General near the war's end.

  • @DuPuieproductions
    @DuPuieproductions 14 років тому +2

    My great great great grandfather was General Thomas L. Rosser of the Confederacy. I support the union though.

  • @whereskim89
    @whereskim89 12 років тому +4

    after learning of Chamberlain I am suprised he never became President

    • @johngreen3543
      @johngreen3543 4 роки тому

      Was governor of Maine for several terms. went back to Boudwin college

  • @tammyfields801
    @tammyfields801 6 років тому +4

    This men are great men for what they did for our country, both north and south, God bless Lee, Grant, Chamberlain, Sherman, Custer, Longstreet, Hancock, Pickett and every general/colonel/major/lieutenant/commanding officer of the Union and of the Confederate.

    • @johnnybowers8459
      @johnnybowers8459 6 років тому

      David Tucker Sherman was not a war criminal and he just follows orders and burn through Georgia and had a march called march to the sea.

    • @davidherb8224
      @davidherb8224 2 роки тому

      would any black citizen in America call any former Confederate general "a great man for what he did"?

  • @colinlowry7233
    @colinlowry7233 3 роки тому +1

    God bless Forrest

  • @whateverwhatever9104
    @whateverwhatever9104 5 років тому +6

    God Bless The Confederate States of America for they were my beloved kin.

  • @1950cappie
    @1950cappie 12 років тому

    Nice video and music. Thank you.

  • @serpentarius51
    @serpentarius51 12 років тому +4

    AMEN !!!

  • @c3542
    @c3542 12 років тому +3

    Haskell, Your right On! When I retire, I'm heading Southeast when I get that Old, the West Coast is starting to Suck Big Time. And no telling how it's going to get in the year 2020 for the Old. Hell, You should see how the old folks homes are running now, you can't even understand the nurses what their saying. I'm outta here!!!!

  • @robdean704
    @robdean704 3 роки тому +1

    Brave men on both sides. Would be disgusted by the state of America right now

  • @European_mess
    @European_mess 11 років тому +4

    darn you custer>:(

  • @sueperb2452
    @sueperb2452 4 роки тому +3

    Some of them look uuuuuupp set 😂😂

  • @Hiramab1
    @Hiramab1 12 років тому +3

    Have you thought about running for president ? you have my vote and all of us southern Blue dog democrats will follow you, freemasons also !

    • @aircoolguy5218
      @aircoolguy5218 4 роки тому

      I’m running for president I’m in the south (Texas)

  • @fredvaladez3542
    @fredvaladez3542 Рік тому

    How come there are no captiona? I do not recognize all the Civil War generals on sight, unfortulately.. I am old but not THAT old.

  • @Shafeone
    @Shafeone 12 років тому +3

    Lee lost 1/3 of his men and he withdraws afterwards. Please tell me what he gained by slaughtering so many of his own troops before a retreat that you (falsely) claim he was planning anyway. He outfought McClellan completely and his officer corps behaves superbly. BUT he NEVER EVER should have given battle out-numbered as he was with his back to the swollen Potomac River. He was lucky he faced McClellan and not Sherman, or Grant or any number of AoP generals. He'd have been slaughtered.

  • @Michael-zz2xp
    @Michael-zz2xp 3 роки тому

    Dan sickles can’t forget him... his leg is still in a museum

  • @nevillereimers6336
    @nevillereimers6336 3 роки тому +1

    What a tragedy that it had to come to a civil war countrymen against countrymen we all hope and pray it doesn’t happen again war solves nothing only makes the fat cats richer ,and destroys the youth of a nation .

  • @jsalas329
    @jsalas329 3 роки тому

    Great video! Thank you for sharing.

  • @pvtcartman
    @pvtcartman 12 років тому +2

    I like to see all the quotations from The Civil War by Ken Burns. Shafeone I hope you plan
    on actually reading a civil war history book at some point. The Ken Burns series left alot out
    and was generally biased tward the north. It also basically left out Stonewall Jackson altogether and made him seem like an eccentric nut case. It did not give a good representation of what the ordinary southern soldier was fighting for, IT WASN"T SLAVES. Burns made it all about slavery.

    • @miltonroberts7948
      @miltonroberts7948 6 років тому +1

      Most of the secession acts specifically stated it was to preserve slavery that they were seceding.

  • @Shafeone
    @Shafeone 12 років тому +4

    On the night of the first day, with the dead and wounded all around, Sherman searched out Grant and found him off alone. "Well Grant," he said. "We've had the devil's own day haven't we?" Grant nodded and then replied: "Yes. Lick 'em tomorrow though." And he did. Grant was wonderful.

  • @cvcoco
    @cvcoco 3 роки тому

    I really liked this, thank you. For those complaining about the names, i think names would have taken away from the whole point. I got 2/3 of them right anyway. What a time of our lives. In the context of 2020 its hard to believe we actually went through this. We are scared of this happening, we americans killing each other over ideals and wouldnt believe it could be done, yet there they were and it did happen. Heady.

  • @Hinkel84
    @Hinkel84 14 років тому +11

    God bless General Lee!
    He was a true gentleman and a hero!

    • @GentleBen02
      @GentleBen02 6 років тому

      why do you speak such hatred over an 8 year old comment? He's right, and no Le didn't fight to keep slavery in America. Slavery wasn't an issue in the civil war until Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation. If the Union fought to end slavery, why did Kentucky, Maryland, West Virginia and Missouri keep their slaves throughout the entire war, yet fought for the Union? Yeah that makes sense, lol. Lee was a traitor? So was Washington. He fought against the Crown. Washington was a hero? Tell that to the King of England of 1776 that Washington was a hero.

  • @lucabrasisleepswiththefish77

    Great pictures, thanks for posting! Names w/ photos would be helpful...a few left me guessing.