Chickamauga: Animated Battle Map

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  • Опубліковано 22 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1 тис.

  • @AmericanBattlefieldTrust
    @AmericanBattlefieldTrust  5 років тому +312

    For our returning viewers, these are the same productions as before, just with our new American Battlefield Trust opening. We wanted a more cohesive look moving forward as our audience continues to grow. As always we appreciate your support and look forward to continuing to share our passion for American history.

    • @demef758
      @demef758 5 років тому +19

      I truly appreciate the work that went into this presentation. It illustrates the troop movements very well. If I may offer one constructive criticism, it would be a simple one: what would help folks like me who are unfamiliar with a battle areas if you could put a very small scale at the bottom of the video, much like you find on a printed map: 1" = 15 miles, or something to that effect. It would help convey the distances involved. When I see red or blue lines moving, I ask myself "did they move 1 mile or 20 miles?" The scale would help put the distances involved in perspective. Thank you for hearing me out. I find your animated battle maps to be quite educational and fascinating. Thank you!

    • @midwestfresh2234
      @midwestfresh2234 5 років тому

      please make a video on Palmito Ranch

    • @dannyhardesty3692
      @dannyhardesty3692 4 роки тому +2

      Please do one on the Battle of Nashville. The remnants of the 26'th Alabama were crushed by George Thomas's troops and sent packing back south.

    • @eatshit2863
      @eatshit2863 4 роки тому +3

      All these battles make me so sad. Imagine the posterity lost to this senseless war. So many generations of true Americans lost. So many beautiful , wonderful , dedicated patriots this nation would have today if not for this war.

    • @allanwestcott3775
      @allanwestcott3775 4 роки тому

      MidwestFresh
      P

  • @EvanONS1
    @EvanONS1 2 роки тому +67

    I was born and raised in Chattanooga and I think what was so surprising to me about learning about the civil war is how much of it happened right around here. I grew up walking these battlefields.

    • @janesharp4341
      @janesharp4341 Рік тому +7

      I grew up in East Ridge Tn. We played in woods that had been part of the Confederate encampment. We used to find buttons and buckles in the dirt from soldier's uniforms.

    • @mattfaulk8724
      @mattfaulk8724 7 місяців тому +2

      Only place that saw more battles was Virginia, and Missouri is surprisingly 3rd highest in number of battles

  • @timothycunningham7352
    @timothycunningham7352 4 роки тому +567

    The live shots are from the reenactment in 1999. It took place at a National Guard training ground. It was so dusty we called it Chickadusty. Great memories.

    • @johnstebbins6228
      @johnstebbins6228 4 роки тому +22

      That is fascinating info ! Thank you ! Very realistic .

    • @randyphillips2263
      @randyphillips2263 4 роки тому +15

      Those where some great clips. Some of the best I can recall.

    • @billd.iniowa2263
      @billd.iniowa2263 4 роки тому +9

      Thank you for the work you and your friends put into your hobby! If circumstances would allow I'd be right there with you. Bringing history to life is a wonderful way to teach.

    • @LTrotsky21stCentury
      @LTrotsky21stCentury 4 роки тому +8

      I can always tell whether a photo is of re-enactors or a colorized version of an actual civil war photograph. It's not the equipment or uniforms (though far too many "spectacles"). It's the fat and the age. People who lived in that era were generally lean. Exercised. Re-enactors are fatter and older than real soldiers. No offense. This also ruins the battle scenes in Gettysburg, apart from the Little Round Top visuals.

    • @rsandrews8115
      @rsandrews8115 4 роки тому +2

      Gee, a national guard training ground. We did them on the original battlefields.

  • @lisamoore6804
    @lisamoore6804 3 роки тому +156

    My great-great-great grandpa was wounded at this battle. He was a Union soldier and was in the 4th Ky Infantry. He survived his injuries, thankfully.

    • @real_BryMan
      @real_BryMan Рік тому +10

      My 3rd G-GPA was there as well. He served with the 31st Indiana Infantry Co G, Crufts Brigade, Palmers Division, Crittendens 21st Corps. Planning to visit this year for the 160th anniversary and follow his footsteps.

    • @Casanovaelrey
      @Casanovaelrey Рік тому +16

      Shout-out to both of your ancestors for being on the right side of history.

    • @_Tanneerr
      @_Tanneerr Рік тому +6

      It’s crazy how little I know about this battle. I have always lived around this battlefield but they don’t teach about it in school. I only live about a mile away from the battlefield now and I’m just not learning more about it!

    • @lisamoore6804
      @lisamoore6804 Рік тому +4

      @@_Tanneerr He was also a POW, I believe he was at Andersonville. I do know it was really bad there. He did make it out though.

    • @reichserzmarschall
      @reichserzmarschall 11 місяців тому +3

      ​@@Casanovaelreywar happens because both parties think they're right, only when it end the victor will says they're the one on “right” course

  • @jmccallion2394
    @jmccallion2394 2 роки тому +55

    This series is perhaps, without a doubt one of the most addictive and informative military history projects EVER!!! We need more of this drug!!!

    • @friscodog
      @friscodog Рік тому +2

      Agree, agree, agree! If this is our tax dollars at work, I don't mind a bit.

  • @black_triton9264
    @black_triton9264 5 років тому +688

    This animated series is OUTSTANDING

    • @chasemurraychristopherdola7108
      @chasemurraychristopherdola7108 4 роки тому +5

      And the animated series a lot so much that they should make more like maybe the battles of second bull run perryvile stones river and maybe valverde and glorieta pass

    • @melanieenmats
      @melanieenmats 4 роки тому +3

      Indeed, even for non US people like me.

    • @ericthompson3402
      @ericthompson3402 3 роки тому +2

      You are correct sir!

    • @kfrausto
      @kfrausto 3 роки тому +3

      Agreed. This is most excellent.

    • @Babararoot55
      @Babararoot55 2 роки тому +3

      @@ericthompson3402 👋

  • @Tronpool99
    @Tronpool99 5 років тому +352

    Better than any show on Netflix

    • @happyfuntime8575
      @happyfuntime8575 4 роки тому +20

      Word. It's like old school History channel.

    • @acdragonrider
      @acdragonrider 4 роки тому +2

      Happy Funtime Can’t wait for the upcoming grant show

    • @blackwolf3274
      @blackwolf3274 4 роки тому +1

      @@acdragonrider I am watching it right now

  • @clockendfarm
    @clockendfarm 5 років тому +194

    This animated battle map is extremely useful in trying to figure out the troop movements. I'm not especially a Civil War buff and have struggled to understand them all until now. Thank you very much!

  • @fredhoupt4078
    @fredhoupt4078 4 роки тому +46

    Excellent production. That battle was so bloody it staggers the imagination even today.

  • @thomasrice4078
    @thomasrice4078 Рік тому +6

    These productions are really helpful to understand what happened throughout the days of battle. It even helps to understand the horror felt by the troops.

  • @AlexGonzalez-qy3vx
    @AlexGonzalez-qy3vx 2 роки тому +22

    Man setting the scene for this battle gave me the chills. Great job on the soundtrack

  • @jamesbednar8625
    @jamesbednar8625 5 років тому +75

    Great video!! Have been to this battlefield a few times: once as a kid in the 1970s; once in early 2000s; and again roughly 5 years ago. My first visit in early 2000s - the National Park Service offered BICYCLE tours of the battlefield. That was awesome for the tour guide was able to take visitors to places where the automobiles could not get to along foot paths and such. My next visit, I arrived early morning just before the Park opened up. There was a massive fog bank in the area and just seeing the artillery and monuments poking through the fog made for a better experience/perspective. One of my favorite battlefield parks to visit.

  • @janesmith4017
    @janesmith4017 5 років тому +99

    The National Park at Chickamauga Ga is beautiful and somber, humbling.

    • @michaelmbr365
      @michaelmbr365 3 роки тому +2

      Haunted as hell, too, so I hear.

    • @pearlpoint9838
      @pearlpoint9838 3 роки тому +2

      @@michaelmbr365 when I was around 10 I walked through the entire battlefield, and I can attest to it being somber and humbling. Not sure about haunted but I probably wasn’t paying attention

    • @artbagley1406
      @artbagley1406 8 місяців тому +1

      I like the many Union monuments at Chickamauga that are large and in the shape of an acorn; other smaller statues/monuments have acorn elements worked into their designs. Did the Natl. Park Service ever get Wilder Tower repaired? I seem to remember something structural was deteriorating. When I was there in 2000, there was a wasp infestation at the very top of the tower and got chased all the way down the stairs! Was privileged to visit Chickamauga a few years later with a contingent of Senior ROTC Cadets of the Spartan Battalion of The University of Tampa; this was the start of an effort to fulfill a U.S. Army ROTC goal of each senior class to visit a military museum or take part in a near-by field walk (quasi "battlefield ride") of any American conflict. Florida has few such Civil War sites, but there are several Seminole War battlefields close-by that could be visited; Georgia offers even more opportunities.

  • @robertjacobson3686
    @robertjacobson3686 4 роки тому +55

    After a 3 day reenactment outside Atlanta my sergeant and I in full field Union uniforms stopped at the battlefield on the way back to Indiana and visited the memorial to the Hoosier regiment that his great great uncle was a member of. It was dusk with the mist rising and folks still coming into the closed visitor center. We came out and the new arrivals thought initially we were ghosts of Yankee soldiers marching out!

    • @Babararoot55
      @Babararoot55 2 роки тому +1

      Rob 👋

    • @bluesuncompanyman
      @bluesuncompanyman 2 роки тому +1

      I also am from Indiana. Thank you for remembering our heroes of the 19th century who preserved the union. If you are ever in Indianapolis and can get to the cities center at monument circle, look to the top of the monument. You will a statue of "victory" a woman with a sword pointed down (for ended hostilities) and the important thing to notice is that she faces south. She is welcoming our Hoosier ancestors home. And that includes your Sgts Great Great Uncle.

    • @DelEast740
      @DelEast740 2 роки тому +2

      I own a Spencer Three band rifle used in this battle serial number 6339 17th Indiana Wilder brigade. Wish I could find out who it was issued to. My great grandpa found it in a barn wrapped in burlap inside a trunk

    • @motorbikekultofspeed1094
      @motorbikekultofspeed1094 Рік тому +1

      @@DelEast740That was a great find by your great grandpa!

    • @michaelwarren1538
      @michaelwarren1538 Рік тому

      My great great grandfather (Alonzo Prather) fought at Chickamauga with the 6th Indiana Infantry Regiment and was wounded during the battle. He had fought also at the Battle of Shiloh and was wounded there as well.

  • @JR-pr8jb
    @JR-pr8jb Рік тому +2

    Wow. Despite unavoidable data limitations, these "animated" maps provide an incomparable understanding of battle movements, how battles occur. Thanks.

    • @friscodog
      @friscodog Рік тому

      I grew up reading the Time-Life series, with the static battle maps. It was hard work, trying to connect up the different colored rectangles from one map to the next - but I did it for every single map they provided! How much easier would it have been, if we'd had UA-cam dynamic battle videos in those days!

  • @Mondo762
    @Mondo762 5 років тому +118

    My Great Grandfather was in the 58th Alabama. They were right in the middle of this battle. 52% casualties. Later, he and his brother were surrounded and captured on Missionary Ridge. Sent to Rock Island Prison, they survived 2 winters in that awful place.

    • @indy_go_blue6048
      @indy_go_blue6048 4 роки тому +17

      TY for your story. One often hears about Andersonville, but not much about how many rebel soldiers NEEDLESSLY suffered in Union POW camps. Seems they built them deliberately in the worst possible places to promote suffering then withheld food and medical supplies deliberately.

    • @christopherfranklin1881
      @christopherfranklin1881 4 роки тому +5

      @@indy_go_blue6048 Regarding Andersonville, I have been there and seen what the Union soldiers had to suffer thru at that wooden stockade. They were forced to build and repair that stockade. They had no shelters other than what they could scrounge up. While it doesn't snow that far South, it does get cold. And note that the only man tried for crimes against humanity was the Confederate commander, Captain Henry Wirz. He was hanged. Wirz wasn't even a native born American. He was a Swiss immigrant.Since I moved to the East Coast 35 years ago I have made it a mission to visit every major battle site. I have done most of the big ones.

    • @DrewSohl
      @DrewSohl 3 роки тому +4

      Bless Them Both.

    • @Mondo762
      @Mondo762 3 роки тому +15

      @@christopherfranklin1881 Yes Christopher, we have heard the Andersonville story many times over many years. What indy_go_blue60 was saying is that it is time for the stories about the many awful Union prison camps to be told.

    • @RayPendergast
      @RayPendergast 2 роки тому

      (to all...) This was war, not "make nice". The idea of the horrible prison camps was to demoralize as well as control the prisoners there. On both sides there were always more prisoners than guards so command had to be kept. Also, you wanted the prisoners to give up their morale, their fight, their hope so that when, if, they returned they would not take up arms again. Add to all that the fact that soldiers fighting got supplies not prisoners taking up space & sitting around. Sorry. But all of this is a fact of war, ANY war.

  • @JavierArveloCruzSantana
    @JavierArveloCruzSantana 4 роки тому +26

    I click. I give a like. I watch.
    That's how confident I am about this channel's content!
    Wonderful job ... every single time.

  • @christopherr.561
    @christopherr.561 3 роки тому +10

    Just donated at your website. Please keep up the great work and I hope you get the support you deserve. I have been to several battlefields such as Gettysburg and Shiloh but I also hope this helps save some smaller battlefields as well.

  • @michaeltubbs4606
    @michaeltubbs4606 4 роки тому +29

    Several of my ancestors fought at Chickamauga with the 41st Alabama, Helms Brigade, Breckinridge's Division. This video really helped put their struggle that day into perspective. Thank you American Battlefield Trust for producing this video.

    • @lawv804
      @lawv804 3 години тому +1

      Same here. My grandfather's grandfather and his two brothers were in the Louisiana 19th. They were at this battle. Both of his brothers died there. He survived and was the regimental color bearer during the Atlanta campaign, where he lost his leg and was taken prisoner.

    • @michaeltubbs4606
      @michaeltubbs4606 3 години тому +1

      @lawv804 May their names be a song in the mouths of their ancestors until the Stars burn out.

  • @terryeustice5399
    @terryeustice5399 Рік тому +5

    It was very good reenactment. Thanks for sharing! Enjoyed it! ❤️

  • @PhilbyFavourites
    @PhilbyFavourites 4 роки тому +106

    I’m a Brit and your country’s history is so interesting.
    We had a lot to do with it at first and then you took off on your own sweet way. Not always successful and the split of families of brother against brother shows the futility of war. Our country has done it as well. It seems a human foible we can never shrug off!
    As to the video, brilliantly executed and the famous names that pop out at the viewer with the realisation of where those names come from, I’m looking at you Fort Bragg!
    I’m sure Mother Nature has absorbed all traces of man’s futility in that region, but we will leave our mark in future days sadly.
    I wish you well with your country in its time of current crisis.

    • @robertferrin511
      @robertferrin511 4 роки тому +5

      Yes you did in fact your country had a lot to do in creating it, thinking that they could drag back under the crown and then the Russian fleet moved in. at that time you moved out.!!

    • @wyocowboynblue9011
      @wyocowboynblue9011 4 роки тому +6

      The British gave the United States the Constitutional form of government, common law principles, foundation for our Bill of Rights and ironically the Declaration of Independence.

    • @RoadhouseTitshaw
      @RoadhouseTitshaw 4 роки тому +14

      As an American I apologize and assure you that some of us appreciate your interest and are thankful for your well wishes

    • @WKRP187
      @WKRP187 4 роки тому +8

      Very well said sir, I've noticed alot of Brits on all the US History UA-cam channels and FB pages etc. It's really interesting to me to see you guys interested in our short history of being a independent country vs. the long incredible history of the British Empire and the control it had over basically every country on the globe at one point in time or another. Any ideas why??

    • @katekelly4502
      @katekelly4502 3 роки тому +5

      @@WKRP187 can't answer that, other than to say I'm another Brit hooked on your history!

  • @PeterSotosEPT
    @PeterSotosEPT 4 роки тому +16

    I live in Chattanooga. This was a great video! Thank you!

  • @classicrockforever9152
    @classicrockforever9152 4 роки тому +31

    Thanks to Henry Thomas one of the best Unions general, federal army wasn't annihilated. He saved Rosecrans army from total disaster. Than he proved that he is the best during Franklin- Nashville campaign against Hood.

    • @chrisproost7290
      @chrisproost7290 3 роки тому +5

      Tbf any commander with sense and a comparable force could have beaten Hood by that point. The man was not meant for army command, division definitely, corps maybe, but not that level of independence.

    • @oudude8770
      @oudude8770 2 роки тому +2

      @@chrisproost7290 I think it was said that he was too young to hold that size of command.

    • @Babararoot55
      @Babararoot55 2 роки тому

      @@chrisproost7290 Chris 🎈

    • @state_song_xprt
      @state_song_xprt 5 місяців тому +2

      Thomas has been largely forgotten in the popular consciousness (by his own intent) but at the time he was considered a national hero. The guy was on money!

  • @slartybartfarst55
    @slartybartfarst55 5 років тому +50

    Thank You! A really clear rendition of a complex Battle

    • @mgway4661
      @mgway4661 5 років тому

      Seriously complex. I've been to Chickamauga battlefield twice and still dont completely understand it. It really could have gone either way at several points.

    • @thethingreywall6520
      @thethingreywall6520 4 роки тому

      I agree. Chickamauga was a highly complex engagement and I think this video drastically oversimplifies this very important battle. Then again, how could it not? Everything is moving in smooth motion over the map so we get the gist of troop movements, but that is highly misleading. You cannot get a true sense of what it was like without being on the ground or ground similar to it and, of course, the battlefield itself has changed mightily over the decades. Still, the scale of the battle becomes real when you're on the ground and once you're there the complexity of the battle engulfs you again.

  • @brianattaway2474
    @brianattaway2474 3 роки тому +2

    Excellent video that helps to understand the dynamics of a battle not possible by looking at civil war battle maps. My 2nd great grandfather, Pvt John F. Barton (1839-1905), was in this battle. He was in Colonel W.F. Tucker's Mississippi 41st Infantry Regiment from 1862-1865. In this battle, the 41st was part of MG Hindman's Division under LTG Longstreet's corps on the confederate's left flank depicted in the latter part of the video. John wrote in his confederate pension application that he had been wounded at the Battle of Chickamauga; he was shot in the head but called it a flesh wound.

  • @HistoricWrath
    @HistoricWrath 2 роки тому +6

    We need more of these! Would be cool for some smaller battles such as Pea Ridge and Prairie Grove!

  • @claytonkaeiser6214
    @claytonkaeiser6214 4 роки тому +3

    I remember visiting the Chickamauga battlefield as a kid, the first Civil War battlefield I ever experienced. It made a lifelong impression on me. My dad also took us to Lookout Mountain, which is nearby. This video helps me understand the whole campaign a lot better.

  • @BigManPigMan628
    @BigManPigMan628 2 роки тому +3

    Thomas deserves mention. Instead of it being a significant Confederate victory that had little effect on the ultimate outcome of the campaign it would have been a total route that could have led to further defeats and prolonged the Civil War several years. Thomas rescued the situation and saved the army to fight another day.

    • @ComradeOgilvy1984
      @ComradeOgilvy1984 Рік тому

      Definitely. Thomas won a crushing local victory on his flank, but was basically abandoned as the Federal right collapsed. Bragg was in such despair over the shellacking the Confederate right suffered in its bloodily repulsed assault, that he was slow to react to the good news from elsewhere.

  • @patrickbaker2802
    @patrickbaker2802 5 років тому +9

    i read the standard texts about these battles, and with the visuals you offer i see and understand better.

  • @ronnietravis7972
    @ronnietravis7972 4 роки тому +8

    My GGGrandfather Alfred H Travis was killed on the first day of this battle. He was in the 4th Tn Prov. Army which was in Polks Corps Cheathams Div. Mandy’s Brigade.

  • @crquetzals
    @crquetzals 2 роки тому +1

    My G-G-G- grandfather was in this battle with the Ohio 31st VI and captured on the 19th. This really brought the experience he would have had to light for me. I got to visit there a few years ago and really appreciated it.b He ended up at Andersonville and then on the Sultana. He was a tough farm boy.

  • @leonidaslantz5249
    @leonidaslantz5249 5 років тому +216

    There are 2 generals who are so under rated: Geo.Thomas ( US) and Cleburne (CSA).

    • @NeoThomist-sd1ue
      @NeoThomist-sd1ue 5 років тому +18

      Leonidas Lantz Thomas is my favorite general of the entire war both sides

    • @BigRedRIP
      @BigRedRIP 5 років тому +17

      Seems to me Wood did a pretty darn good job preventing the total annihilation of federal forces, and allowing the safe retreat.

    • @spartanwarrior1
      @spartanwarrior1 5 років тому +8

      Tyler Smith yet he won battles for uncle sam

    • @Joseph-eh4rs
      @Joseph-eh4rs 5 років тому +42

      @@NeoThomist-sd1ue A southerner by birth, but refuse to betray his nation. True Patriot! His siblings never forgave him for it.

    • @Will-ys9gk
      @Will-ys9gk 5 років тому +14

      @@tylersmith8360 No. He understood modern war. He was just slow and cautious enough.

  • @marktottman4919
    @marktottman4919 2 місяці тому

    Visited this battlefield in June as I was staying in Chattanooga & was in awe as to the size of it. Took the tour which led us to all the important points of the battle. Definitely worth a visit if in the area. I’ve been to a few including the site of the Battle Of Hastings which can be walked around, but this will need a car to appreciate the scale. As a Brit I now have an understanding of the American civil war & so glad I took the time to visit this huge battlefield & visitor centre.

  • @ianbarry6146
    @ianbarry6146 4 роки тому +97

    My Great Grandfather died here, served in the army of Georgia

    • @frederickwise5238
      @frederickwise5238 4 роки тому +21

      Tho our ancestors were on opposite sides, I give a hand salute to your Great grandfather..
      I had a Great uncle (Warrington) with the 121st Ohio infantry. Injured here, died in Jan 64 at a federal hospital.. Buried at Chattanooga.
      May both of them - and all of the others - Rest In Peace.
      For what its worth I oppose and am offended by the removal and destruction of all the historical statues, plaques.and flags. Your Ggrandfather and his comrades deserve to be remembered.

    •  4 роки тому +3

      @@frederickwise5238 Slavers and traitors do not deserve honor for they lived with none.

    • @frederickwise5238
      @frederickwise5238 4 роки тому +4

      @ You dont know who or what the Ggrandfather was.
      A . L O T ,. of very young men joined to get off the farm.and bustin their butt in the hot summer sun. Be charitable, not a righard.
      And dont "all lives Matter" OR IS THAT JUST TALK?

    • @sloanchampion85
      @sloanchampion85 4 роки тому +5

      @ well that would include the whole country and entire world that participated in the trade....and continues on the continent of Africa this very day....know reality before you jump in

    • @TimothyCihal-pn7fm
      @TimothyCihal-pn7fm 4 роки тому

      Traitor!

  • @BOBXFILES2374a
    @BOBXFILES2374a 4 роки тому +6

    You don't seem to hear much about Chickamauga. That it was the second-deadliest battle was news to me. The graphics are great and make it very understandable. Thank you!

  • @jamesbranum1062
    @jamesbranum1062 4 роки тому +4

    Great video, I live just north of Chattanooga and I have spent a lot of time at Missionary Ridge, Lookout Mtn, and the Battlefield. Very interesting period of the war. Parents took me to Wilder Tower to see Haley’s Comet back in the 80’s. It’s hard to imagine all of the areas without all of the houses and trees like it was back then. Thanks for the video, I’m binging now.

  • @GuillermoChacon9
    @GuillermoChacon9 Рік тому

    I was at Chickamauga this past weekend a newfound appreciation for this video. After spending the weekend walking the battlefield I can truly visualize the battle! Next trip to Vicksburg I will see your video before I go on my trip! Thank you for a great video.

  • @internetstrangerstrangerofweb
    @internetstrangerstrangerofweb 3 роки тому +46

    Great video but- you should perhaps mention just how important Thomas’ rear guard action at the end of the battle was. It saved the entire Corps if not the army itself.

    • @Abdus_VGC
      @Abdus_VGC 6 місяців тому +2

      Perhaps the best rearguard in the face of absolute annihilation. Dude was just made of steel

  • @livefire5623
    @livefire5623 2 роки тому +1

    Just visited the battlefield yesterday 5/29/2022 for Memorial Day Weekend. There was so much to take in with the vastness of engagements, if you deeply want to understand it, you will need a few days there. Planning to go back later in the year when cooler weather. This animated battle map and history in this video is outstanding.

    • @livefire5623
      @livefire5623 2 роки тому +1

      Another tip for anyone visiting - watch out for ticks and snakes. Came up on a snake at Kelly's Field.

    • @aaronfleming9426
      @aaronfleming9426 Рік тому +1

      You were there about a week before me. It truly is a fantastic historic site. I spent three days, then came back a year later for more.

  • @alanyoung290
    @alanyoung290 4 роки тому +15

    I’m a Chattanooga native and have confederate ancestors who fought in this battle and the battle of Chattanooga. Thank you for this presentation. Deo Vindice

  • @waynerainey4324
    @waynerainey4324 Місяць тому +1

    Great job on this video!

  • @randallcooper4399
    @randallcooper4399 3 роки тому +5

    My GGG Grandfather was captured by the Confederates here, after seeing many battles on this campaign. Went blind from smallpox in a prison camp, and was released home to Ohio at the urging of Emily Mason. Had a son, lived a long life, and we still have his walking cain. I wear his son's wedding band as my own.

  • @declanoleary1
    @declanoleary1 3 роки тому +1

    What great telling and visualising of history, usually have to be watched multiple times to get it all in(if not (or even) familiar with events.

  • @benm5913
    @benm5913 5 років тому +14

    The story of the 21st Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry and their Colt 1855 Revolver Rifles is my favorite piece of history at Chikamauga.

  • @ohiogaming3463
    @ohiogaming3463 Рік тому

    This was my first time on a batllefield. You can feel a heavyness walking around it and how vastly big it was and the postions of the cannons and regimentes and brigades postions. Just amazing.

  • @trashpanda314
    @trashpanda314 4 роки тому +5

    I assume it's well known by this point, but the US Army still pays tribute and respect to this battle and the men that fought it. In basic and Infantry school(OSUT) at Ft. Benning, my unit was 2/19 Infantry(the rock of Chickamauga). The lineage of the unit is pretty impressive for anyone that likes Civil War history. The unit continued on to fight in the Indian Wars, War with Spain, Philippine Insurrection, WWII, and Korea before eventually becoming a training unit on Sand Hill.

  • @rayraudebaugh5395
    @rayraudebaugh5395 4 роки тому +7

    This was very interesting to me as my great grandfather, with the 65th Ohio Infantry was severely injured and left on the field for dead. He was taken prisoner by the Confederates and after about 10 days was exchanged back to the union as they didn't have enough medical supplies for their own soldiers. He was in hospital for 3 months and on convalescent leave for a further 6 months. I have wondered what happened there and I have looked at other battlefield portrayals but this is by far the best I have seen, Thanks.

  • @acdragonrider
    @acdragonrider 4 роки тому +135

    Love how it is always said that Longstreet favors defensive tactics but when he hits hard and on his own terms, his corps is one of the deadliest in US history.
    Second Manassas, chickamauga, wilderness

    • @DarklordZagarna
      @DarklordZagarna 4 роки тому +18

      Even at Gettysburg, his 18,000 men came within an ace of beating 30,000 crack Union troops on the second day. They in all likelihood would have done so if not for the fact that the terrain was so horrible for offensive operations. He got some help from incompetent Union generalship (hi there, Dan Sickles!) but still. Longstreet favored the defensive because he knew how Civil War-era combat worked (and that it hugely favored the defender), not because he was bad at attacking.
      Well, except Knoxville. We don't talk about Knoxville. :p

    • @omegacon4
      @omegacon4 4 роки тому +3

      Just ask any professional sports coach (NFL, NBA, MLB, etc) and they will tell you that DEFENSE wins games.

    • @AngryDogPerformance
      @AngryDogPerformance 4 роки тому +8

      @@omegacon4 Ask Saddam how well defense worked out. There's a constantly shifting balance between offence and defense. The results we witness from the civil war show that offensive operations are more likely to succeed than defensive ones when they are indirect. Whereas direct offensive operations are likely to fail.

    • @DavidSmith-ss1cg
      @DavidSmith-ss1cg 4 роки тому +10

      @@AngryDogPerformance - Saddam was like Hitler, or Trump - sure of his own genius. His real skill was keeping control of his subordinates by playing them against each other. As with Hitler and Trump. When he tried to actually run a real war, he was almost the MVP for the enemy. Saddam's army never really mounted a coordinated defensive campaign. As an Egyptian general admitted after the Six Day War, the Arabs had armies intended to look good on parade, and when they took to the field, they didn't look so well.

    • @tidefanyankee2428
      @tidefanyankee2428 4 роки тому +10

      @@DavidSmith-ss1cg Yeah, just like LBJ and Obama were great at micro-managing the commanders in the field, and if there was a failure, they would blame someone else. Oh, and Trump actually DID something against ISIS. If you recall Obama pulled U.S. troops out of Iraq AGAINST the advice of the American Generals, but Obama wanted to look good and be the one who brought the troops home. ISIS fulled the void, just like the Generals said it would and ten's of thousands suffered and died because of Obama's decision. Yeah, how did that one work out? But then, I guess it was Bush's fault that he (Obama) did that, because he blamed Bush well into his (Obama's) second term. When Bush sent General Patraeus to sell the idea of the "surge" to congress, both (then) Senators Obama and Clinton all but called Patraeus a liar. I believe you can watch those exchanges here on UA-cam if you care to look. But I've heard the recordings of the testimony Patraeus gave and Obama's and Clinton's responses. But who did Obama choose to command in Afghanistan? That liar Patraeus. In fact, Obama and Clinton were against a "surge" in Iraq. But Obama sent 30,000 troops to Afghanistan....hummm sounds like a surge to me. But what Obama didn't say was the surge in Iraq under Bush actually worked.....

  • @davidz8286
    @davidz8286 4 роки тому +7

    My great great uncle was a member of the Illinois 78th, wounded at Chickamauga.

  • @johnflanagan2684
    @johnflanagan2684 5 років тому +84

    That was excellent! Love seeing videos that show the underrated genius of George Thomas.

    • @ronaldshank7589
      @ronaldshank7589 5 років тому +4

      Rosecrans ran away, and total disaster could've been the result, if it hadn't been for General George Thomas. He became known as "The Rock of Chickamauga"!!!

    • @ronaldshank7589
      @ronaldshank7589 5 років тому +1

      General George Thomas became known as "The Rock of Chickamauga"! I'd of gladly fought under his command. If I'd of been in the Eastern Theatre of the Civil War, I'd of gladly fought under General U. S. Grant's command. These were two of the best Generals of the entire Union. Rosecrans tucked tail, and ran. Not even I could have spoken a word of defense for this guy. He turned out to be a coward! He deserved to be Demoted. You never act in cowardice, and leave any of your Army behind. That's called desertion! I'm not going to hate him, but I have no respect for him. I don't know which one is worse-General Rosecrans, or General McClellan, the Union General that commanded the Union Army in the Eastern Theatre of the Civil War from 1861-Late 1862. These two are two of the worst Generals that the Union ever had!!!

    • @pammullinsx6026
      @pammullinsx6026 4 роки тому +4

      It seems as if Grant and Sherman intentionally shunned Thomas, depriving him of any credit that he deserved for contributing to their success and glory. But Halleck did the same thing to Grant after Shiloh. Many petty jealousies, I suppose in all wars.

    • @generalfred9426
      @generalfred9426 4 роки тому +3

      @@pammullinsx6026 Actually Grant and Thomas had a decent time going Sherman on the other hand...

  • @JohnnyReb
    @JohnnyReb 3 роки тому +4

    Here's a little tidbit:
    "Chickamuga" is an old Cherokee indian word which loosely translates to ***River Of Death***.
    Fitting...

  • @billd.iniowa2263
    @billd.iniowa2263 4 роки тому +3

    The re-enactments are amazingly well done! The work by all is superb and much appreciated. Thankyou! -- I find these animated maps fascinating. I must in fact stop to remember that these red and blue lines are the representation of real men, real lives, real suffering. But the maps do offer me an insight into mid 19th century military tactics. A subject I hope to study further in the years to come. I have just subscribed to your channel.

  • @redcossack245
    @redcossack245 2 роки тому

    I'm probably like many of your viewers in that I have interest in this topic because I had ancestors who served and fought in this engagement. Now I know more of what they wet through. Thank you again for making it.

  • @Eazy-ERyder
    @Eazy-ERyder 4 роки тому +10

    Thomas --The ROCK of Chickamauga-- really saved the day with that stand going into the following battle of Chattanooga

  • @Kiangaf
    @Kiangaf 3 роки тому +2

    Another excellent video map by the American Battlefield Trust.

  • @WolfStrife
    @WolfStrife 5 років тому +14

    You guys are excellent! This channel is going to be freaking huge!

  • @donchichivagabond1578
    @donchichivagabond1578 5 років тому +29

    This was a courageously horrific battle. Even to this day it causes the viewer remorse and terror at such pain and suffering.

    • @marktwain368
      @marktwain368 2 роки тому

      Read Ambrose Bierce's shocking short stories such as 'Chickamauga' for a soldier's eye view of the carnage.

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 Рік тому

      Too little too late for the South.

  • @andygeary3531
    @andygeary3531 3 роки тому +1

    Everytime I watch one of these videos it reminds me of how amazing the game ultimate general civil war is. If you've never played it then you need to!

  • @savagesavant4964
    @savagesavant4964 5 років тому +103

    *Considering the CSA lacked so many provisions necessary for battle, the accomplishments of it's soldiers was truly amazing!*

    • @JohnP538
      @JohnP538 3 роки тому +11

      They did have the best generals and tough farm boys who would go into battle with little in their bellies but little else. Once the "King Cotton" myth fell apart, simple math proved the South would never be able keep it's armies provisioned for extended campaigns. That's why Grant sent Sheridan to burn out the Shenandoah and Sherman into Georgia.

    • @nicholasdriver6624
      @nicholasdriver6624 3 роки тому +2

      @@JohnP538 Cause the union was lying sorry scum that cheated was greedy over land and are the real terrorist for invading southern land

    • @nicholasdriver6624
      @nicholasdriver6624 3 роки тому

      @What you on about mate Put it this way if you’re in a group who’s killing, stealing land, raping and pillaging villages, would you stay?

    • @TheBabashee
      @TheBabashee 3 роки тому +3

      In this particular theater of war, the performance of the northern man in the ranks was equal or superior to that of his southern counterpart. Almost all soldiers on both sides were “hardy farm boys”. Turn off You Tube and do some reading!

    • @DaBeezKneez
      @DaBeezKneez 3 роки тому +1

      They accomplished the utter destruction of the South

  • @mencken8
    @mencken8 2 роки тому

    Got to visit Chickamauga Park two years ago; great visit.

  • @alwhiteelk1719
    @alwhiteelk1719 4 роки тому +1

    I had really enjoyed the video, especially the factual commentator's verbal details, thanks

  • @beverlygarten-johnson2744
    @beverlygarten-johnson2744 5 років тому +7

    My great x 3 grandfather lost his arm in this battle On 20 Sep 1863. He was in the 63rd Regiment, Company A, Virginia Infantry. In Buckner's Corps and Preston's Division. This video made it all seem more concise and understandable. I really enjoyed it. I would love to see a reenactment of this battle. Thank you.

    • @Banditomojado
      @Banditomojado 5 років тому +1

      My great great great grandfather was wounded in the hand on the same day at the battle. He was with Company G of the 36th IL regiment.

  • @YUMMYB823
    @YUMMYB823 2 роки тому

    Have to note how good the sound work is in this series, great practical sounds as well as conscious choices for music. Keep up the amazing work.

  • @billbright1755
    @billbright1755 4 роки тому +3

    That barren victory at Chickamagua seals the fate of the Confederacy.
    September 19 ~ 20 1863.
    The Chattanooga campaign with Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge breaking Bragg’s grip on the region a couple of months later. Sending the Army of Tennessee into a bit of disarray. Opening the way for W. T. Sherman’s march through Georgia in the Atlanta campaign.
    A fascinating history of our country. So many young people today haven’t got a clue what this history is. The carnage of those battle fields was indescribable.
    Men mortally wounded left where they fell sometimes through the bitter night and the next day before succumbing to death. By the thousands.

    • @LtBrown1956
      @LtBrown1956 4 роки тому +2

      bill
      could not agree more ....chickamagua showed what even the army of Tennessee could do, even w/bragg as commander, when NOT hindered by being badly outnumbered (only major battle of the war where CSA actually outnumbered fed forces) ....yet bragg FAILED to properly follow up the victory and, in your words, "seals the fate of the Confederacy.
      I actually believe it was more decisive than gettysburg and a lot more important than vicksburg ....just as you said, the fighting at chattanooga opened the way for the war winning battles associated with sherman's march thru georgia. those campaigns yielded the victory lincoln wanted, NOT the indecisive overland campaign.
      without rosencrans escaping to chattanooga, NONE of sherman's campaigns would have been possible ...and perhaps mcclelland becomes president

    • @aaronfleming9426
      @aaronfleming9426 4 роки тому

      @@LtBrown1956 to be a little more precise, Chickamauga showed what the Army of Tennessee could do...when it was reinforced by Longstreet's corps.
      After Chickamauga, Davis and Lee took their eyes off the ball and stripped away Longstreet's corps when they should have been pulling out all the stops to capture Chattanooga and Rosecrans' whole army. That wasn't Bragg's fault. Now, the improper positioning of his troops on Missionary Ridge, and the low morale of his army because of his abrasive leadership style...that was Bragg's fault, and he still might have been able to hold Missionary Ridge if he'd been a better general, but it's also likely that by the time Grant was able to open the supply lines to Chattanooga it was already a lost cause.

    • @LtBrown1956
      @LtBrown1956 4 роки тому

      @@aaronfleming9426
      lee only received longstreet back in VA barely in time for the EARLY may campaign that lee was anticipating being another powerful assault by a huge lavishly equipped fed army with overwhelming firepower. MORE BELOW
      I dont remember the exact circumstances but longstreet was stripped from bragg (maybe by his own request and/or at the authorization of davis) and sent to knoxville in an absolutely complete waste of time and resources ...and you are right, that issue can not be blamed directly at bragg's feet. but lee is NOT to blame as he wanted his formations back in VA where the feds had made all their most serious efforts to win the war quickly. one might say that lee was somewhat somehow shortsighted in this but knowing the magnitude of his responsibility to defend the capital and the govt and knowing what he had to face in the spring I dont think his wanting his 2 divisions back while bragg CAN be blamed for not utilizing them properly. MORE BELOW
      from a strategic point of view (I agree that cahattanooga was a lost cause virtually from the beginning) the south ALWAYS fared very poorly when involved in a siege ...either as a besieger or a besiegee (warning : made up word) ....it did not matter ....they should have NEVER voluntarily gotten involved in ANY siege as the side with few resources is always at a huge disadvantage in such warfare

    • @aaronfleming9426
      @aaronfleming9426 4 роки тому

      @@LtBrown1956 much to agree with in your comments...in my mind much of the blame falls on Davis, who was never able to settle on a clear strategic plan and ended up trying to defend everything poorly instead of defending a few things well. On the other hand, Lee doesn't stack up very well as a strategic general either...he was without a doubt and by far the most influential military man in the South, and as such he did little or nothing to help Davis focus and make hard choices. Lee was myopically concerned with Virginia and used his tremendous prestige to keep the Confederacy focused there when, as I believe we agree, the war would most likely have been won in Tennessee.

    • @LtBrown1956
      @LtBrown1956 4 роки тому

      @@aaronfleming9426
      your grasp of the the strategic danger obvious (obvious to you and I but NOT to many others) in the western theater are 100% accurate ....however, you must realize the strategic dilemma that the CSA was in ...yes, the blows that guaranteed a re-election of lincoln were delivered in the western theater (the idea of georgia being west is amusing) but the dangers in VA were equally real and this was the horns of the dilemma that davis and lee were ensnared on. MORE BELOW
      now davis exasperated the situation in many ways at different times (for instance: holding back the 2 largest brigades of Pickett's Division before the gettysburg campaign being just one example ...held back just as you described. guarding some deserted stretch of coast line somewhere out of fear of a yankee invasion). but you must understand that lee was only the commander in ONE dept (Davis had been a peacetime sec of war and he loved the dept system that was OK in setting up peace time outposts or garrisons armed against indian raids). MORE BELOW
      lee had influence with davis ...that is true, but he could NOT exert any and every influence with davis to get what he wanted because davis just would NOT respond to such treatment ....the above described instance with pickett's division is just one example ...that is lee wanted ALL five brigades (not the 3 that he got) but davis would release NO more. and this happened ALL of the time ...moreover, davis would promise some reinforcement or return of troops only to find an excuse NOT to keep the promise OR deliver the additional men much later than lee wanted and too late often to do the most good MORE BELOW
      dont forget ...it is NOT as if grant wrong footed lee and davis in the spring of 64 by prompting the return of 2 divisions to VA in may and then delivering the coup de grace somewhere else ....the feds were strong enough to go over to the offensive in MORE than one theater of ops at the same time ....Grant crossed the rapihannock river with an army of 119,000 men and countless weapons ...even with longstreet's return lee barely had half the fed numbers and, if longstreet had not arrived JUST in the very nick of time, the wilderness battle would have been lost and lee's army either destroyed or grant between lee and the CSA capital with richmond open to capture OR, most likely, both. make no mistake ...richmond is barely over 100 miles from washington and, as events were to illustrate, the fall of the CSA capital was the effective end of the war. MORE BELOW
      lee's PRIMARY responsibility was to defend richmond (and the CSA govt) and his formal authority only barely gave him enough clout to accomplish this highly difficult task. lee NEVER came close to the kind of military authority that little mac, halleck or grant had. MORE BELOW
      this strategic dilemma is the reason (along with the scarcity of resources) is why the csa lost ....they could NEVER really militarily crush the north the way the CSA was eventually crushed ....all the south could hope for was to inflict enough losses on the north that they would tire of the war and elect a prez who would nego peace ...southern defeat in georgia AFTER chickamauga is what delivered the re-election of lincoln and that was the beginning of the end ...however, a fed occupation of richmond would have accomplished the same thing

  • @kneedeepinbluebells5538
    @kneedeepinbluebells5538 3 роки тому

    Much Better Narrator: Crisp & Clear Diction, Enjoyable Speech Cadence And More Mellifluous - Please Keep Him !

  • @gleighteen7525
    @gleighteen7525 5 років тому +7

    Thank you American Battlefield Trust......this is a great tool as I'm headed over to the Battlefield today to put your video to use. You should do these for every major battle. Double thumbs up for your excellent work on this.

  • @kfrausto
    @kfrausto 10 місяців тому

    This was thrilling and most excellently produced.

  • @jetterofletcher5682
    @jetterofletcher5682 5 років тому +100

    We can talk about generals, and tactics all day. From what I've seen, the real victor in this campaign was the Spencer Rifle.

    • @quentinham5908
      @quentinham5908 5 років тому +5

      Yeah thats some serious fire power!

    • @jimnorthland2903
      @jimnorthland2903 5 років тому +7

      I seem to remember that was at Thomas' insistence that the spencers were provided.

    • @TheWarStoreMan
      @TheWarStoreMan 5 років тому +7

      No it was Wilder himself who co-signed the note to buy them for his men. Nearly half his brigade was supporting Minty on day one.

    • @PlateletRichGel
      @PlateletRichGel 4 роки тому +3

      @@TheWarStoreMan Money well spent

    • @brianthompson2280
      @brianthompson2280 4 роки тому +7

      "At this point it absolutely seems a pity to kill men so. They fell in heaps, and I actually had it in my heart to order the firing to cease in order to end the awful sight. But the merciless Spencer seven-shooter would not cease." -Col John T. WIlder

  • @nickroberts-xf7oq
    @nickroberts-xf7oq Рік тому +1

    I have been to the Chickamauga Military Park several times and still haven't seen it all ! 😮 It's huge and as well marked as Gettysburg ! Highly recommended, and be sure to allow time to see the Fuller gun collection in the visitors center. 🎉

  • @ethanhatcher5533
    @ethanhatcher5533 5 років тому +34

    Hood is the Black Knight from Monty Python. Repeatedly loosing limbs while insisting victory is in his grasp (see Nashville campaign)

    • @joelmoore3469
      @joelmoore3469 4 роки тому +1

      Hood led Texans and let me tell you Texans will loose every limb and still win

    • @joelmoore3469
      @joelmoore3469 4 роки тому

      at least the Texan Brigade

    • @DMS-pq8
      @DMS-pq8 4 роки тому

      Hood was a true warrior

    • @stevemccann4166
      @stevemccann4166 4 роки тому

      It’s only a flesh wound😀

    • @ethanhatcher5533
      @ethanhatcher5533 4 роки тому +1

      @@joelmoore3469 but they didn't

  • @David-ic4by
    @David-ic4by 5 місяців тому +1

    I’m a Thomas. When I was a kid, my family visited Missionary Ridge, and reading a plaque I saw Thomas’ name. “Are we related?” I asked my dad. To my surprise, he said, “Yes.” George Thomas is a cousin, the one southerner of our extended family who went with the Union. My grandfather has always used his name as a slur for his “traitorous” actions against the Confederacy, but I was proud of the Rock of Chickamauga. Rest in peace, cousin.

  • @koreyg7674
    @koreyg7674 5 років тому +6

    Outstanding documentary. Keep up the great work. I love learning history and your documentary is making me glued to it.

  • @MrWahooknows
    @MrWahooknows 3 роки тому

    Simply a wonderful production. Thanks so much.

  • @messano7
    @messano7 5 років тому +5

    Very well done!!!

  • @frankw7091
    @frankw7091 3 роки тому +2

    Two 3x grandfathers of mine fought with Company I, 13th Michigan Inf. One was wound and captured and later died at Danville, Va.

  • @Grizz-db4ui
    @Grizz-db4ui 4 роки тому +42

    Had a Uncle who died there he was in the 15th Alabama with all three of his brothers.

    • @sutlers2day
      @sutlers2day 4 роки тому +5

      MY GREAT X3 GRANDFATHER FOUGHT THERE TOO ... 34TH ALABAMA CO'Y 'D'. HE WAS FATALLY WOUNDED BY CANISTER SHOT AT ATLANTA IN A CHARGE ON THE YANKEE BREASTWORKS. DIED 3 DAYS LATER.... NO IDEA WHERE HE WAS BURIED. BUT HE MAY BE AMONG THE 3000 UNKNOWN CONFEDERATES AT OAK LAWN CEMETERY NEAR THE CONFEDERATE HOSPITAL CLOSEST TO THE DE GRASS BREAST WORKS.

    • @wallacebell4311
      @wallacebell4311 4 роки тому +2

      sutlers2day Not necessary to have the whole post in all capital letters!!!

    • @berlinfilms4417
      @berlinfilms4417 4 роки тому +2

      Wallace Bell he’s just making sure the folks in the cheap seats of the auditorium can hear him. Lol

    • @alanaadams7440
      @alanaadams7440 3 роки тому

      May they rest in peace

  • @roysimmons3549
    @roysimmons3549 Рік тому +1

    Having read many books on the American Civil War. I am impressed that the Confederates often heavily outnumbered held their own. Some of the best American soldiers and generals.

  • @bradkennett7504
    @bradkennett7504 5 років тому +6

    The first time I heard of the battle of Chickamauga was in the 1969 movie True Grit, the father of the young girl said his old side arm served him well in the battle of Chickamauga.

  • @reidturing9208
    @reidturing9208 4 роки тому

    Another great video! I think that these ones for the bigger battles are a perfect length at around twenty minutes. Thank you so much for putting these resources together!

  • @billkeane528
    @billkeane528 5 років тому +142

    can you imagine the shock of coming up against the spencer rifle for the first time wtf they must of thought

    • @TheAqeumini
      @TheAqeumini 4 роки тому +19

      I was just visiting and it said that those rifles dropped 300 men in around 3 minutes. People noted that all they had to do was hold up they hand and they could catch a bullet. That the air was filled with rounds.

    • @indy_go_blue6048
      @indy_go_blue6048 4 роки тому +18

      To probably misquote one rebel defending Atlanta, "with them guns they can load on Sunday and shoot all week." Many of these repeaters were captured, but the rebels weren't able to manufacture the appropriate ammo, so they were useless.

    • @DarklordZagarna
      @DarklordZagarna 4 роки тому +10

      If I remember rightly, they literally thought they had run into an entire corps of infantry, and were baffled how Rosecrans could have gotten the jump on them so badly.

    • @aaronfleming9426
      @aaronfleming9426 4 роки тому +3

      @@indy_go_blue6048the quote "load on Sunday and fire all week" is attributed to John S. Mosby and refers to the Henry rifle, not the Spencer.

    • @siraxolotl2634
      @siraxolotl2634 4 роки тому +6

      I remember seeing an account by a baffled confederate soldier who was captured. When told he had been fighting a regiment, he responded that he swore they had a full brigade from the volume of fire.

  • @DarthKieduss
    @DarthKieduss Рік тому +1

    9 of my ancestors fought here. 5 were in Longstreet's corps and had served in Gettysburg, 3 artillery, two infantry.

  • @fastsetinthewest
    @fastsetinthewest 4 роки тому +5

    My gg grandfather, William Macey Sullivan, was there at Chickamauga serving with Baxter's artillery. His stories are passed down through the generations. He described standing on his tip toes with fingers in his ears as the cannons were fired. He later surrendered to Sherman's troops near Macon, Georgia. I support the Battlefield Trust.

  • @MrDefreese
    @MrDefreese 5 років тому +2

    Who downvotes these videos?!? This is great production material.

    • @donupton5246
      @donupton5246 5 років тому +3

      People who believe the past is unimportant

  • @WilliamREason
    @WilliamREason 5 років тому +7

    Absolutely loved the video. Love straight from Arkansas 💗

  • @mossadagent1576
    @mossadagent1576 3 роки тому +2

    I used to watch the History channel's American Civil War documentaries on repeat when I was a kid. Thanks for bringing back those fun memories with this excellent series.

  • @patrickbush9526
    @patrickbush9526 4 роки тому +22

    With a name like bushrod Johnson that would make you tough on its own account

  • @redcossack245
    @redcossack245 3 роки тому

    Excellent video. Thank you for making this complex battle clearly presented.

  • @user-jq8wr8ru2s
    @user-jq8wr8ru2s 5 років тому +4

    Great vid. Thank you.

  • @jimeagle5509
    @jimeagle5509 3 роки тому +1

    These videos are well made, informative, and outstanding!

  • @Owen_Skye
    @Owen_Skye 5 років тому +4

    Quality content as usual!

  • @gentrystinnetti8277
    @gentrystinnetti8277 4 роки тому +1

    Great animation and the detail is superb

  • @mn4056933
    @mn4056933 4 роки тому +4

    War is very tragic to both sides, sons will never never to return to their families!

  • @mattmuller3756
    @mattmuller3756 Рік тому

    these are great... this one is one of my favorite. Imagine those fighting men and Hood whom had fought and fought hard at Gettysburg Hood's arm was destroyed but attached and those rebs went by train and were major engaged some in both days fighting. Hood was a tough man and great division commander. Thomas and his core and portions of the others fought so hard and secured a retreat and the uncontested grip on Chatt. Easy to see hero's on both sides why this war and there fights are so interesting. Thank you for these. Wish you do some more videos be awesome to see one on Kentucky invasion.

  • @allenbell3734
    @allenbell3734 4 роки тому +3

    I really enjoyed this

  • @JonRadtke-y7u
    @JonRadtke-y7u 26 днів тому +1

    I used to live in Atlanta, so I could come to this battlefield on a day trip.

  • @82mccord
    @82mccord 5 років тому +11

    I go to Chattanooga all the time. Lookout Mt. is steep! I couldn’t imagine fighting large armies on it.

    • @chadsimmons6347
      @chadsimmons6347 4 роки тому +1

      They say, take the high ground, but supplies come in from the hill bottom, surround the hill, starve them out, instead of fighting your way up

  • @nathancraig4480
    @nathancraig4480 5 місяців тому

    My great-great-great grandpa was in a Tennessee regiment and was wounded at Chickamauga. He was transported to Augusta, GA, to be treated at the hospital. He succumbed to his wounds and is buried right there in Augusta, GA.

  • @TheCarnivalguy
    @TheCarnivalguy 3 роки тому +3

    I am related to the widow Glenn, whose cabin was located near the current Wilder tower monument.

  • @39thala
    @39thala 4 роки тому +1

    Had a great grandfather and several of his brothers in this one as well as among many other battles. One great, great uncle was shot on the last day, Sept 20 and died 2 days later. Another one wounded but survived.

  • @happyfuntime8575
    @happyfuntime8575 4 роки тому +4

    Wow. That flickering coating of dust sounds eerily similar to mid east "moondust".