The Call to Duty - The Common Soldier in the Civil War (1861)

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  • Опубліковано 19 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 70

  • @carolinadog8634
    @carolinadog8634 Рік тому +19

    This is the very best Civil War channel on UA-cam.. period

    • @johnmartin7158
      @johnmartin7158 10 місяців тому +3

      Exciting for me and I love his tone and American accent.

    • @rc59191
      @rc59191 Місяць тому

      I wish Civil War Day by Day got more popularity he covered the war from start to finish like Indy Neidel

  • @AK-zw1re
    @AK-zw1re 10 місяців тому +2

    Fred's voice and stories are the memorial for the Civil War soldier. There bravery and suffering live forever in the stories you share.
    Keep up the good work Fred.

  • @travnickis1
    @travnickis1 Рік тому +7

    Wonderful work, as usual.

  • @carolinadog8634
    @carolinadog8634 Рік тому +7

    Fantastic as always! We are fortunate to still have our farm in Central NC. My Great Grandfather x3 who grew up on that farm died in battle at Petersburg. His brother died of disease as did his best friend.

  • @reallydarlings-se2xf
    @reallydarlings-se2xf Рік тому +2

    Outstanding presentation! I've had "hay foot, straw foot" in my head for over 50 years; parents were CW enthusiasts and explained the term. Thank you for this channel. Love to hear the colloquialisms, too.

  • @tomkoerner5137
    @tomkoerner5137 Місяць тому

    This channel makes my work day much more bearable.

  • @ABeautfulMess
    @ABeautfulMess Рік тому +15

    Wonderful absolutely from an ancestor of a Confederate..we just didn't want to lose our very tiny farm. Thank my family came home. RIP Soldiers Thank You

    • @travisbayles870
      @travisbayles870 Рік тому +4

      Thats awesome

    • @VivaSepulchre
      @VivaSepulchre 4 місяці тому +1

      Aren't you a descendent not an ancestor? Maybe it's over my head

  • @johnjay9404
    @johnjay9404 Рік тому +5

    I am delighted to hear this episode. It's important information on the common soldier. When I worked at the Manassas battlefield park, we learned all this and relayed it to all the tourists. It was fascinating for them to learn just how uneducated the common soldier was. How easy it was to convince them to come and fight for the cause. The most amazing thing, was the ambiguity of the standard battle uniform. Both sides were blue and grey, and an assortment of very colorful dress. I, myself often wore the elaborate Louisiana tiger Zouaves uniform.

  • @bugnamedVelma
    @bugnamedVelma Рік тому +2

    Great valuable and important information. Thank you.

  • @Joshtow167
    @Joshtow167 8 місяців тому +3

    That Shelby dude is pretty good also

  • @p.k.5455
    @p.k.5455 Рік тому +3

    A very well done and insightful look at the common soldiers that did the actual fighting, and what their actual motivations were for volunteering to do that dreadful fighting! Thank you! Best Civil War channel I've found!

  • @gladbandanna
    @gladbandanna 5 місяців тому +2

    I am always surprised by the disparity between education levels from the Frontline soldiers to the generals. Generals in their letters always spoke so eloquently and poetically almost, while soldiers seemed rather crass and kind of unintelligent (not to despair against the wisdom of farmers). Was education that far apart from the haves and the haves-nots back then?
    Absolutely fantastic thank you for this amazing podcast. Much love from a York county neighbor 😊

    • @Prfdt3
      @Prfdt3 3 місяці тому +1

      Read "company aych" it was written by a Confederate soldier.most soldiers on both sides were literate.

    • @cynthiaarrowsmith5709
      @cynthiaarrowsmith5709 Місяць тому

      Not always. Have you ever read of any accounts of William Bedford Forrest?

  • @stevemahoney6493
    @stevemahoney6493 5 місяців тому +1

    A fine video. It is hard to know what motivared any given soldier. My GGgrandfather, William Gartland, is a case in point. He and his brother came over from Ireland in 1842, first year of the Famine. His brother died, he married but most children died their 1st year. Still, at 42, he joined the 20th Mass, the Harvard regiment, and fought with them through all the major battles until being wounded, likely at Cold Harbor. He received no enlistment bonus but did become a citizen the day he mustered out.

  • @paulblanton1793
    @paulblanton1793 4 місяці тому +1

    I would have to believe that farmers would know their left from the right more than others back then because of all the work that had to be done on the farms, you had to have a good sense of direction on how to move work and pull things in different directions. Very interesting. You do a very good job and I enjoy all the videos! My family fault for the confederacy in a North Carolina regiment😃 i’m proud of my ancestors and how honorably they fought for their land and their families! It’s a shame that the war ever had to happen.

    • @jimplummer4879
      @jimplummer4879 4 місяці тому +1

      Paul they were fighting for what they believed in, the highest calling on both sides.

    • @FryingTiger
      @FryingTiger 2 місяці тому

      They would have thought those that didn't know or couldn't learn left from right "touched".

  • @jimplummer4879
    @jimplummer4879 4 місяці тому +1

    My Great ,Great Grandfather was in his 40s when he volunteered, He enlisted twice.

  • @mr.sherlockholmes6130
    @mr.sherlockholmes6130 3 дні тому

    Great Stories bravo ! I just went to the Sam Davis home with my daughter. We went on a haunted tour . His story was Amazing sadly you don’t hear a lot about his Heroic duties. To die at 21 and to be hanged was horrible especially when the man that General Dodge was looking for was right there in front of him . The Coleman scouts and Sam Davis was truly a hero !! Please do a story on Sam Davis and his heroism! Thank you 🙏🏻Scott Sgt USMC

  • @jarom676
    @jarom676 10 місяців тому +1

    I had a great grand uncle (brother of my great grandfather Patrick), Pvt Christopher Hussey who was in Co. B of the 27th Va infantry (Stonewall brigade). He was an Irish immigrant to the US in 1851. He went to Virginia from New Haven CT in 1853 and became a US citizen in 1855 in Virginia. In May of 1861 he was living in Covington, Virginia and joined up with other local largely Irish immigrants to form Company B 'The Virginia hibernians'. This company ended up fighting under Stonewall Jackson and later leaders of the stonewall brigade. Christopher died at Winchester Virginia in mid June of 1863, apparently of 'Heart Disease'. His brother, Patrick in Ireland was a tenant farmer and lived a quiet life and its likely that he never knew what happend to his brother in America.

    • @jon9021
      @jon9021 2 місяці тому +1

      Thank you for sharing this…very interesting.

  • @joeatyktc
    @joeatyktc Рік тому +4

    While 'things' have changed - the "Common Soldiers" has not, oh they may be better schooled, better read, better fed, and some may say better better bled - all in all they are still much the same - those who make war, do not fight them, they leave that up to others, for it is the 'others' that all most get thanks to, if only they would.

    • @carywest9256
      @carywest9256 10 місяців тому

      Your talking about the War Pigs?

  • @jlemaire9418
    @jlemaire9418 Рік тому +3

    I think Daniele Bolelli was a Reb.

  • @swarm6697
    @swarm6697 8 місяців тому +1

    Those boys didn't know anything about slavery. All they were fighting for was state's rights states rights And also would like to say I enjoy listening to you great video

    • @iwritechecksatthegrocerystore
      @iwritechecksatthegrocerystore 3 місяці тому

      Fuck off with your “states rights” bs. 😂 buncha young men died for what they always do: a buncha wealthy men decided they wanted more and weren’t willing to do the fighting themselves.
      That’s always been the case… and will always be the case.

  • @jlemaire9418
    @jlemaire9418 Рік тому +4

    like Shelby "fuckin" Foote over here.

  • @BodyTrust
    @BodyTrust 3 місяці тому

    All I can say is, "Wow!"

  • @danielpuckett7792
    @danielpuckett7792 8 місяців тому

    Thanks!

  • @jorrinn1995
    @jorrinn1995 Рік тому +1

    There are photos in Eastern Michigan University's (Michigan Normal Collage in 1860) colction of the volenters driling on U of M's diage. How they ended up in Easterns colection I dont know...but ive seen them! (Eastern and U of M are both in Wastinaw county. So no dought that had somthing to do with it...history yea!)

  • @FryingTiger
    @FryingTiger 4 місяці тому

    I'd be the forager among the troops. I'm skinny but always hungry. I'm a good shot, too.

  • @info_fox
    @info_fox 8 місяців тому

    Thanks for these!

  • @Prfdt3
    @Prfdt3 3 місяці тому

    That's Tom Dooley (Dula)standing on the right.

  • @jimplummer4879
    @jimplummer4879 4 місяці тому

    Shoes back then did not have a left or right.

  • @cynthiaarrowsmith5709
    @cynthiaarrowsmith5709 Місяць тому

    Please do a show on Davis

  • @toddmoney8921
    @toddmoney8921 Рік тому +3

    Excellent content AND delivery! However, that audio level indicator across the bottom of the screen is both distracting and annoying.

  • @kenneth-pc7mf
    @kenneth-pc7mf Рік тому +5

    I am so tired of hearing about how the Soviets defeated Nazi Cermany in 1945
    Our American troops were fighting on both. Sides of the World.
    OnlyAmerica could pull that off.

    • @alanaadams7440
      @alanaadams7440 10 місяців тому +3

      Hurra

    • @mattkeepingazoriustactical
      @mattkeepingazoriustactical 10 місяців тому +2

      If D-Day hadn’t happened, the Soviets probably would’ve been destroyed. Stalin begged for all the help he could get after getting backstabbed by Hitler.

    • @GaryEtheridge-d5n
      @GaryEtheridge-d5n 9 місяців тому +1

      AGREED!!❤

    • @GaryEtheridge-d5n
      @GaryEtheridge-d5n 9 місяців тому

      Our men were the best- hardest fighting overall ❤

    • @stevemahoney6493
      @stevemahoney6493 5 місяців тому

      ​@@mattkeepingazoriustacticalNo chance. After Stalingrad in Jan 1943 Germany never made it back to the Caicases. They just got mauled by the Soviets. When D Day happened Hitler had 11 months to live.

  • @Civilwar.relics
    @Civilwar.relics 6 місяців тому

    You should check out the video i did on the most rare cartridge box of the Civil War! The Manns created by a colonel of the Michigan 7th Cavalry

  • @thomaslawson7469
    @thomaslawson7469 8 місяців тому +1

    Dulce et Decorum est…

    • @sidd5938
      @sidd5938 5 місяців тому +1

      Ol' Winfred

  • @waynelayton8568
    @waynelayton8568 5 місяців тому

    The Northern Soldiers were not there because they wanted to be. Ask them?

  • @fett333
    @fett333 Рік тому +5

    “Why are you fighting?” “Cause your down here.” - true in 1861 in the American South and true in the Ukraine today

    • @waynelayton8568
      @waynelayton8568 5 місяців тому

      Now there everywhere, and there not even Americans. The civil war is what is happening now.

  • @jlemaire9418
    @jlemaire9418 Рік тому +1

    Dan Carlin was a Union volunteer prolly

  • @bobm7514
    @bobm7514 Рік тому +1

    I would challenge that Iraq and Afghanistan are the last conflict fought by volunteers

  • @notniloc8253
    @notniloc8253 9 місяців тому +1

    Odd that this video would purposely state that all volunteers in the South did not volunteer to preserve slavery (true) but then leave out that many did volunteer to preserve slavery or racial heirarchy.