Civil War 1863 - Gettysburg Pickett's Charge

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  • čas přidán 3. 02. 2018
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Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @laynehollis
    @laynehollis Před 3 lety +168

    You guys deserve millions of subscribers! I recommend you guys to everyone I know!

  • @richardpalen2327
    @richardpalen2327 Před 11 měsíci +34

    Respect to the reenactors who bring history to life. You all work hard to be period and to show the action as it actually happened. Thank you for making history alive and showing how it affected someone actually there.

    • @anna-gt2mu
      @anna-gt2mu Před 7 měsíci

      A

    • @christophera556
      @christophera556 Před 3 měsíci

      The movie studios could learn a thing or two from these re-enactors they managed to include a lot of the reality of the blood and gore of Pickets charge which would have been the same for every other large scale battle of the American civil war.The re-enactors even managed to include fake arms and legs with fake blood looking the real thing and they would had a much smaller budget than any Hollywood movie studio,the movie Gettysburg lacked the reality of war namely the blood and gore plus the bodies of thousands of dead soldiers. The Hollywood studios way too much sanitise their war movies when it comes to the American civil war .

  • @gerardlehane7477
    @gerardlehane7477 Před 3 lety +89

    Respect to all of the men who have fallen in this battle, from an Irish man from Co Cork. 🇮🇪 MAY IT NEVER HAPPEN AGAIN

    • @gerardlehane7477
      @gerardlehane7477 Před 3 lety +5

      Thank you for your reply to my comment. All the best to you From Co Cork Ireland 🇮🇪.

    • @OrbitFallenAngel
      @OrbitFallenAngel Před 3 lety +10

      There were alot of Irish men who fought in the Civil War...the most famous on the Union side was the New York 69th Infantry, but was later called the "Fighting 69th" 🇮🇪
      It comprised of 5 Regiments; 63rd New York Infantry, 69th New York Infantry, 88th New York Infantry, 29th Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry (formally) 28th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, 116th Pennsylvania Infantry...
      Years active September 1861 to July 1865 🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🍀🍀🍀
      The Irish Brigade was known in part for its famous war cry, the, "Faugh a Ballaugh", which means "Clear the Way ".
      Of all Union Army brigades, none suffered more combat dead than the Irish Brigade during Americas Civil War...😔🇮🇪🍀🇺🇸
      On the Confederate side was the 10th Tennessee Infantry Regiment, it was lead by Colonel Randall McGavock, an Irish-American. It was formed in Nashville on April 1861, it's the only known Irish Brigade in the Confederate Army during the Civil War..
      Also fighting for the Confederate Army was Irish-American Major General Patrick Cleburne, who was the highest ranking Irish born Confederate General...🇮🇪🍀 He was born in County Cork, he had served in the British Army before purchasing his discharge and emigrating to the United States in 1849.
      Those brave and courageous Irishmen who fought on both sides of the Civil War deserve our respect and our admiration for their sacrifices...💗💗💗

    • @chrissywalling4630
      @chrissywalling4630 Před 3 lety +7

      Agree hope it never happen again

    • @susanesquer1520
      @susanesquer1520 Před rokem +2

      amen

    • @EBLLC
      @EBLLC Před rokem

      Well, the liberals in this country are coming close to our country repeating a civil war! 😒🇺🇸

  • @fredrickmillstead6397
    @fredrickmillstead6397 Před 3 lety +43

    I have walked that terrain, and cannot visualize the courage and carnage that occurred. That day had to be the most incredible bit of history

    • @tomdynia9951
      @tomdynia9951 Před 3 lety +3

      Yes, anyone who visits Gettysburg will learn a lot from starting at the Virginia Monument of Seminary Ridge and walking over to the High Water Mark. Nothing beats walking the terrain for yourself.

    • @willoutlaw4971
      @willoutlaw4971 Před 3 lety +1

      Confederate dead were left on the field to be eaten by feral hogs. The remains were digested and excreted on the battlefield.

    • @hombreenojado
      @hombreenojado Před rokem +2

      When you look at the terrain, including the road and TWO RAIL FENCES that the Confederates had to negotiate, you have to wonder what Lee was thinking. I've always been amazed that they made it as far as they did. Realize it was only due to the number of troops massed in that Confederate advance.

    • @philkaseyewitness6912
      @philkaseyewitness6912 Před 10 měsíci

      All the blood that was spilled

  • @Wingatewasright
    @Wingatewasright Před 4 lety +524

    It's amazing to think tthat the last survivors of the Civil War, a war fought with sword, musket and cannon, died in the age of jet fighters and nuclear weapons.

    • @CaesarCassius
      @CaesarCassius Před 4 lety +3

      Who?

    • @brandonbentley4677
      @brandonbentley4677 Před 4 lety +22

      Stonewall died June 19 1863 or we would have won

    • @swirvinbirds1971
      @swirvinbirds1971 Před 4 lety +79

      @@brandonbentley4677 you make that sound like it would have been a good thing... He wasn't undefeatable and lost at Kernstown. In the end the BEST he could have done was delayed the inevitable.

    • @anjun2414
      @anjun2414 Před 4 lety +3

      Brandon Bentley
      I do believe he would have taken the high found.

    • @shawnoherron8810
      @shawnoherron8810 Před 4 lety +61

      @@CaesarCassius Albert Henry Woolson (February 11, 1850 - August 2, 1956) was the last known surviving member of the Union Army who served in the American Civil War; he was also the last surviving Civil War veteran on either side whose status is undisputed.

  • @slicko69ng
    @slicko69ng Před 3 lety +31

    Can you imagine being ordered to Advanced up a hill and knowing there's thousands of your enemy with their guns trained right on right on you. ? The courage these men had was unbelievable!!!

    • @verifiedufos2730
      @verifiedufos2730 Před 2 lety

      Courage? More like foolishness and blind devotion to stupid authority figures like Lee

  • @michaelnaretto3409
    @michaelnaretto3409 Před 4 lety +63

    That is one hell of a reenactment...

  • @wecandobetter9821
    @wecandobetter9821 Před 3 lety +47

    My great great uncle carried the Colors up and over the wall. Was very lucky to be captured.
    51st Va Infantry under Garnett , part of Picketts division. Both he and my great great grandfather last battle was Saylors Creek
    And were part of Lee’s surrender. They were actually a few miles from their homes when they laid down their arms

    • @StonewallTitlow
      @StonewallTitlow Před 3 lety

      56th Virginia.

    • @StonewallTitlow
      @StonewallTitlow Před 3 lety

      Garnett did not have the 51st Virginia under his command.

    • @robertschultz6922
      @robertschultz6922 Před rokem

      Lucky to be captured? There were horrible conditions in civil war prisons on both sides. I hope they were traded or paroled

    • @michaelvaughn8864
      @michaelvaughn8864 Před rokem

      @@robertschultz6922 Yeah, truth, Mr. Schultz. I've read some of the deplorable conditions both sides prison camps P.O.Ws had to endure😕

    • @stevedoll508
      @stevedoll508 Před měsícem

      Quite a background. You should be proud. Saylor's Creek was a real debacle, with the artillery being sent off on an alternate route. Perhaps if they had been available, things would have turned out differently and Lee would not have been moved to say, "My God, has this army been dissolved?"

  • @Stardweller1
    @Stardweller1 Před 3 lety +159

    People often talk about the courage of the Rebels for crossing that field, and I won't deny their bravery. But it feels like less attention is paid to the (in my opinion equal) courage of the Union soldiers, because it must have been unnerving to see the Rebels coming towards you like that without stopping even after taking that kind of fire.

    • @davidca96
      @davidca96 Před 3 lety +26

      The reason is because of the positions, the Confederates had no cover, the American troops did. Both sides were equally brave, but in this specific battle it took more courage to charge into the open like that.

    • @brucedeerhaven
      @brucedeerhaven Před 3 lety +10

      @@davidca96 Looking back at the battle, the Confederates might have been ‘brave’ but suicidal (charging your enemy in an open field)! Never could understand the Generals strategy of fighting this type of war (charging an enemy in an open field).

    • @mmm091000
      @mmm091000 Před 3 lety +7

      @@brucedeerhaven absolutely mad what was Lee thinking ? Should have concentrated on opening up the sea blockade.and fought a defensive war.

    • @brucedeerhaven
      @brucedeerhaven Před 3 lety +1

      @john Mullholand And then the Confederates in the open field were exposed to cannon fire. What kind of fighting strategy was that? Confederacy could have won the war if they won a few of the major battles & a lot of ifs!

    • @brucedeerhaven
      @brucedeerhaven Před 3 lety +3

      @john Mullholand Yes, you are correct! Always wondered why the Confederate army did not fight like the “Swamp Fox” - using guerrilla war tactics!

  • @PeterOkeefe54
    @PeterOkeefe54 Před 5 lety +47

    god bless all those re-enactors of history for bringing it to life for so many...I see alot of REAL civil war swords carried on the field in this film.

  • @rickonline777
    @rickonline777 Před 3 lety +49

    My Great Grandfather James McPeake volunteered for the 69th PA ( D company) and fought at Gettysburg and several other battles before returning to Co Derry in Ireland - Buried in Newbridge Co Derry he was one of only 2 of the 69th PA that actually returned to Ireland - God bless all that took part and God bless America and Ireland 🇮🇪 🇺🇸 🇮🇪

    • @eddiehoes8481
      @eddiehoes8481 Před 2 lety +1

      Sorry but it’s his fault if he volunteered. Going into a war zone then complain?

    • @MrGarvey7
      @MrGarvey7 Před 2 lety

      Nobody gives a shit.This is the internet not your family's dinner table

    • @rickonline777
      @rickonline777 Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@eddiehoes8481 Who said anything about complaining - learn to read

  • @henrico7962
    @henrico7962 Před rokem +29

    9:44 honestly one of my favorite scenes. A brave officer encouraging his men across the field, the rebel yell being screamed to the top of every lung, bullets snapping past, men dying all around. A beautiful and heartbreaking scene.

    • @hernanvaldebenitoleon
      @hernanvaldebenitoleon Před rokem

      Me embarga una infinita emoción al ver estás escenas,(09:44),...Me llena mi corazon y alma, de mucha admiración y respeto, por estos hombres.... ¡Dios mio..¡Que hombres tan valientes.!!...Que Dios les tenga en el mejor lugar de su descanso eterno....

    • @carolmowat699
      @carolmowat699 Před 6 měsíci

      This part of the civil war fascinates me

  • @shanktonlewis9408
    @shanktonlewis9408 Před 3 lety +12

    Robert E. Lee to George Pickett. " Return to your division sir."
    George Pickett to Robert E. Lee. "General, I have no division left."

    • @seanodwyer8691
      @seanodwyer8691 Před 3 lety

      sh- lee should hav been arrested there and then by longstreet and Longstreet should hav talken over Con army cause lee was sectretly trying too destroy Virginia army

    • @twilightparanormalresearch186
      @twilightparanormalresearch186 Před měsícem

      @@seanodwyer8691you mind not obnoxiously using spsces

  • @larryhavel7066
    @larryhavel7066 Před 3 lety +14

    Having stood on Little Round Top, it was the most moving experience of my life. I can’t imagine Pickett’s charge!

    • @HHCKY67
      @HHCKY67 Před 3 lety +2

      Yep, was just there this past 4th of July weekend standing on Little Round Top, looking down on the Devil's Den and the Slaughter Pen, and across at the field where Pickett's charge began, its a sobering experience, a place everyone should try to visit

    • @lasko24
      @lasko24 Před 2 lety

      @@HHCKY67 I remember being on little round top looking across the field aswell but the main thing I remember thinking about when I was up there was the movie Gettysburg and seeing how steep it actually was and thinking no wonder that attack failed.

    • @michaelvaughn8864
      @michaelvaughn8864 Před rokem

      @@HHCKY67 It certainly is an experience of a lifetime to stand on 1 of those hallowed battleground sites and comtemplate the mindsets of the men who fought there so long ago, sir

    • @avgjoe-cz7cb
      @avgjoe-cz7cb Před rokem

      @@HHCKY67 I did that several times up on Little Round Top. Being from Central Maine, Little Round Top is surely a special Place to me. Using my imagination I could see myself, From behind the trees firing my rifle as a Yankee down the hill and imagine as a Rebel from behind the rocks shooting uphill. It can really get to you with a little imagination. After the charge downhill, it's suddenly over. Our part anyways. The place still rings in my ears. The smoke still stings my nose. My eyes still see the wounded and the dead. I'm hungry. I'm tired. Thirsty and I smell. So sweaty from the humid air. Not sure where the blood on my pants came from, but it's not mine, I don't think so anyway. But I sure am tired. Now the Sargent is saying we got to take the prisoners up to the top of that other bigger, taller hill we just came from and hold them there. I'm not even sure where the Hell I am...but I got to help this wounded guy climb up there. Gonna be a long night. All I hear is groaning and crying in the distance and shots still being fired. The top of the hill is small and crowded with about maybe three hundred of us. Yankee and Southern boys. Lots of the Rebels ain't got no shoes. This Lieutenant walks up to me and says I got watch duty and to stay alert. I get a little coffee and an Alabama boy offers to trade some tobacco for a sip of my coffee. Hell yeah. Good chew it was. Anyways most folks from both sides was soon sleeping by then. I get relieved after a couple hours and get some sack time. I used a flat rock as a head rest. I was so tired it felt like a feather pillow. I looked at the stars through the trees, happy to still be alive, thought about my Mom and Then I was out. I don't like to think about the next day anymore...

  • @shirleyporter7608
    @shirleyporter7608 Před 3 lety +5

    I think this a marvellous historical film, timeless and watchable over and over again and from what I understand pure fact.
    I have watched it so many times and still find it amazing!!

  • @TaterChip91
    @TaterChip91 Před 4 lety +17

    I was really getting into the background music. Most videos you find, at least what I've found, are normally dubbed with the time period drums and flutes, which is cool and all, but the "modern twist " in this I think brings it up a level

  • @ericfenske4210
    @ericfenske4210 Před 2 lety +4

    I’ve visited Gettysburg many times, and it surreal to stand where these battles once took place

  • @indy_go_blue6048
    @indy_go_blue6048 Před 6 lety +78

    I love Lionheart films. They try hard to make as good a film as possible without a huge budget.

    • @joeythegoat233
      @joeythegoat233 Před 4 lety

      You need to watch ParalightWorx

    • @joeythegoat233
      @joeythegoat233 Před 4 lety +1

      Maybe they were given permission to record a re-enactment for this video.

  • @ringo688
    @ringo688 Před 3 lety +26

    Very realistic, very upsetting.Great piece of work.

  • @elisweatman522
    @elisweatman522 Před 6 lety +212

    I was at and fought at this reenactment showed as a flag bearer...it was something thatll never forget

    • @jakedusinberre8269
      @jakedusinberre8269 Před 6 lety +4

      i've done gettysburg many times. although 155th will be my last. i just can't stand gac.

    • @kennethparker6565
      @kennethparker6565 Před 6 lety +4

      I did the 154th and 155th. With 1st ANV Artillery. I may do a foot soldier next year. Cannon placement was bad this year. Couldn’t see nothing.

    • @brandonbentley4677
      @brandonbentley4677 Před 4 lety +4

      You know what flag represents it a battle flag not confederete

    • @robertsilva8097
      @robertsilva8097 Před 4 lety +7

      My sister and girl friend and me was in the movie Gettysburg my sister and girlfriend were in Confederate uniform all three of us was in Pickett's Charge but thank you for your Confederate service God bless the Confederate States of America

    • @ambergrisetti3438
      @ambergrisetti3438 Před 3 lety +2

      @@robertsilva8097 I don't agree with the Confederate States, but I admire your dedication. I have done some reenactment myself, and I hope that you felt the same sense of history.

  • @josephwolosz3205
    @josephwolosz3205 Před 6 lety +10

    There was some good combat photography in this reenactment.Ron Maxwell's film had some great combat photography.

  • @keiththomas3141
    @keiththomas3141 Před 2 lety +10

    I talked to a very credible local who drove past there one morning on the way to work. Something caused him to turn and look and the battlefield was full of soldiers killing each other. It was like a mirage.

    • @robertschultz6922
      @robertschultz6922 Před rokem

      Could you imagine looking and seeing that. Um theory ghosts fighting again

  • @lbn1188
    @lbn1188 Před 5 lety +12

    I visited Gettysburg for the first time ever this week. Made the 9hr drive down from MIchigan. Even though I only spent 3 days at this historic site I want to come back and stay for a month. There is so many monuments to read and other places I did not get to visit. I have always been a big Civil War buff since I was a kid. This past week when I was in Gettysburg it was very emotional and moving experience for me. To walk on the hollowed grounds of cemetery hill, little round top and walking through the wheat field. I could only imagine what the soldiers from both sides went through. Things I learned more about that were never taught in school. Things I learned not only what the soldiers went through but what the towns people had to endure once the battle there was over not only caring for the wounded but the smell of the rottting bodies that still lay out in the open. I am so glad I was able to visit such a historic place and look forward to doing it again.

    • @moonmunster
      @moonmunster Před 5 lety +2

      Yes, can you imagine the smell. Temperatures in the upper 80's or 90's. Dead horses and humans. Makes a person hungry.

    • @twilightparanormalresearch186
      @twilightparanormalresearch186 Před měsícem

      @@moonmunsterI found the disrespectful person

  • @aliasdyln33
    @aliasdyln33 Před 3 lety +10

    Many feel that the Union won Pickett's Charge decisively. But they did no do so easily. Imagine the fear in every Union soldier standing their in defense of Pickett's Charge when it began. Yes, I would have been a Union soldier in those times, but with the fear of death in my eyes every second of that bloody attack. Oh, and with that rebel yell raining on my ears, I would have peed in my pants standing at arms.

  • @roganmuldoon3357
    @roganmuldoon3357 Před 2 lety +28

    Something I wrote a few years ago...
    Ranks of butternut and gray stepped forward from the trees
    Regiments of southern men, drums throbbing arteries
    Nine brigades, twelve thousand men, some say even more
    Cemetery Ridge the goal of General Longstreet's Corps
    Keep straight the line and fill the gaps, step over friends who fell
    With general's sword to point the way keep marching into Hell
    Through solid shot and cannister, and rippling musket fire
    Ignore lost comrades, fear and wounds, prevail the one desire
    At last they reached a low stone wall, behind it men in blue
    Seething mass of howling gray, striving to break through
    But these men were made of flesh and blood, many watched in awe
    As shattered regiments recoiled, at last forced to withdraw
    Send us back again they cried, send us back once more
    Let us show that we can win, as we have done before
    But General Lee knew all was lost, too many good men dead
    Having thought to end the war, instead the south was bled
    Two more years the war dragged on, two more years of Hell
    Two more years of hopeless war before proud Dixie fell
    Picket's charge was meant to clear the road to Washington
    But southern dreams were crushed and dead when Gettysburg was done
    Ranks of butternut and gray stepped forward from the trees,
    Regiments of southern men, drums throbbing arteries
    Picket's charge was meant to clear the road to Washington
    But southern dreams were crushed and dead when Gettysburg was done.

    • @kevindecoteau3186
      @kevindecoteau3186 Před 2 lety

      but it keeps happening with deadlier weapons!

    • @donmcgowan2616
      @donmcgowan2616 Před 6 měsíci

      I have seen that bloody mile of ground and cannot begin to imagine the horror.
      My great great grandfather was a POW. May we never whence we have come.

  • @rickkephart5690
    @rickkephart5690 Před 5 lety +150

    I can't even begin to imagine the horror of walking into something like that.

    • @jaelynr8725
      @jaelynr8725 Před 4 lety

      Ya

    • @danielcline7413
      @danielcline7413 Před 4 lety +2

      The recreation is weak at best imagine a 22inch oak cut in half by small arms fire one of many that remain at the battlefield described as sounding like a swarm of bees this isn't counting any of the artillery war sucks

    • @vernonbrowne6127
      @vernonbrowne6127 Před 4 lety +2

      Neither can I.

    • @alitlweird
      @alitlweird Před 3 lety +6

      Daniel Cline
      Gee whiz. Sorry this doesn’t meet your impossibly high standards for a modestly budgeted short film Civil War re-enactment.

    • @danielcline7413
      @danielcline7413 Před 3 lety

      You missed the point why would you reenact the most horrid thing americans ever did to each other maybe we should get together with the japanese and the koreans and the germans and the vietnamese and act out some of that shit too reenacting murder is not learning from history

  • @RetireMarine
    @RetireMarine Před 3 lety +6

    I have walked this field of Honor. It was cool and drizzling and you can still feel the ghosts and smell the death in the ground.

  • @MikeEgypte
    @MikeEgypte Před 6 lety +215

    It's hard to imagine, but as bad as this makes the battle look, it was probably 10 times worse for those men who fought there that day.

    • @rickyricardo520
      @rickyricardo520 Před 6 lety +14

      MikeEgypte War is where hero’s are born and the innocent die, it is the best of us and the worst of us. It can wrap us within its grip of death and produce both a sense of awe and also despair. There are never any winners there are just those who have lost less. Death smiles when the drums of war beat for its lust for the blood of men can never be quenched and we seem to never fail to provide it. The true sign of insanity is to do the same thing over and over again with the expectation that the result will be different. Perhaps that is the reason that humanity has soaked this earth in blood and will continue to do it until there is not a drop left to spill!

    • @radrook4481
      @radrook4481 Před 6 lety +13

      Those involved in the charge were mostly just walking and getting cut to pieces by artillery and rifle fire instead of fighting.

    • @clarkewi
      @clarkewi Před 6 lety +3

      Those were the days of lead bullets.

    • @JamesJones-xi4np
      @JamesJones-xi4np Před 6 lety

      MikeEgypte ryyt

    • @JamesJones-xi4np
      @JamesJones-xi4np Před 6 lety

      MikeEgypte eeeeeeeertyuqwdg6it

  • @bonniepeterson9579
    @bonniepeterson9579 Před 4 lety +4

    Fearlessness on both sides! Picketts charge was the showdown!

  • @shizukamori6755
    @shizukamori6755 Před 4 lety +10

    This charge is madness.
    The Rebel infantry charged across an open field, without cover, hardly any coverfire, all the time under direct artillery and rifle fire from well-entrenched Federal forces.
    It's just madness. They wouldn't stand any chance at all.

    • @tobyoneil1969
      @tobyoneil1969 Před 4 lety

      Reynaldo Flores
      So the whole operation would start with a massive barrage.
      It was meant to dislodge the union and draw their fire.
      It only dislodged them. They held their fire until the confederates stopped, all because an artillery officer thought something might happen.
      Upon ceasing the firing (which was short as they didn't have enough ammo), the infantry were to "charge" whilst the artillery was coming back, and use the canon smoke as some cover for a bit.
      Well a few interesting things happened which actually caused this to fail.
      Lee thought Meade would reinforce the flanks, as Lee had attacked them the prior day. So the centre would be weak.
      Meade strengthened the centre because he that's what he thought lee would do.
      The artillery officer, at the start of the barrage went all down the ridge and commanded no one to fire back until he said to.
      This was essential in why the charge failed, instead of walking into unmaned and spent positions, the positions were ready to return superior fire before they even started out.
      The charge also started too late. After the Reb firing stopped, the men were called to charge but didn't start going until the union started firing back.
      Only one section I believe took the field, they were suppose to make the line and reinforcements would come behind.
      The reinforcements didn't take to the field.
      The Rebs made the line. And got over the wall and started fighting but at that time, union reinforcements that were called when the barrage started, arrived and pushed them out.
      With no reinforcements, they couldn't hold and they had to retreat.
      That plan wasn't crazy. It had been done to varying effect all throughout the war. This was no different except it caused close to 2,000 casualties in 50 minutes and it was Lee who commanded it.

    • @shizukamori6755
      @shizukamori6755 Před 4 lety

      @@tobyoneil1969 Wow. I'm real impressed. Are you a history professor? Or perhaps a military man? Anyway, I am neither, so thank you for your input. Very comprehensive.
      But to make it simple, why didn't the Rebel commanders, when confronted with the blizzard of Union fire, order their men to advance in successive waves, with one wave providing cover fire for the advancing waves?
      And when the enemy fire became almost intolerable, why was the order to get down and take cover not given. They just went on and on, literally just target practice for the Federal gunners and infantry.
      This would've at least increased their chances of survival and success, and made the charge less suicidal.

    • @tobyoneil1969
      @tobyoneil1969 Před 4 lety

      Reynaldo Flores
      I believe wave attacks would make it slow going and increase the casualties.
      It ties into your second point.
      It was open terrain, so nowhere to take cover.
      The force has to advance to at least 500 feet to have a chance of shooting the enemy, then stand there and provide cover for a wave out in the open.
      I don't see either tactic working.
      Also the Rebs were going up hill. So they might've eventually gotten directly in front of their covering fire.
      The best bet of it working was moving as one big unit and getting real close then breaking into shooing squads to cover those going over the centre. Get real close so the artillery couldn't hit. Then pin down the union behind the wall as the men break through.
      Those outside the wall could provide cover for a retreat if necessary.
      But alas that didn't happen as too many fell before that point, which all tied into lack of cover fire and being late to the field.
      I'm not an academic but I have spent a considerable amount of time looking at the civil war. And Gettysburg is very important.

    • @XxBloggs
      @XxBloggs Před 3 lety

      Walking in the open like that was negligent. The commanders didn’t have the creativity to do anything different.

  • @HistoryBoy
    @HistoryBoy Před 5 lety +14

    Amazing work LionHeart! This is almost as good as Gettysburg the movie! Please keep making these amazing civil war videos!

  • @BloodOath
    @BloodOath Před 3 lety +8

    Proud member of the 7th Virginia American civil war association my unit was in this battle we had 816 men and lost 314

    • @OrbitFallenAngel
      @OrbitFallenAngel Před 3 lety

      Such brave and courageous young men!
      God Bless them all and God Rest their Souls. 💗
      I pray that they have found peace..😔💗
      This charge should have never ever happened!!
      So many men obliterated because General Lee wouldn't listen to General Longstreet..

  • @raymondacbot4007
    @raymondacbot4007 Před 6 lety +33

    Has your studio considered a partnership with a Historical Tv Studio? This channel, like always; considers the best content I've ever seen.

  • @thetoysurgeon
    @thetoysurgeon Před 5 lety +24

    I was chosen out of my regt.(Palmetto Brigade) to go over the stone wall with Armistead in the 125th re-enactment of Picketts charge. I wore our regt. colors around my waist. Gettysburg was by far the most realistic of all the 125th battles.

    • @OrbitFallenAngel
      @OrbitFallenAngel Před 3 lety +2

      I have heard that Gettysburg's battlefield has an eerie feel to it..
      Did you notice that at all while there?? 😔

    • @southeasternindianaoutdoor9209
      @southeasternindianaoutdoor9209 Před 2 lety +2

      @@OrbitFallenAngel there has been paranormal activity associated with the battlefield.

    • @OrbitFallenAngel
      @OrbitFallenAngel Před 2 lety +1

      @@southeasternindianaoutdoor9209 I can only imagine...all those deaths...its no wonder...with all of the sudden and brutal bloody deaths of all those men!! 😞

    • @michaelvaughn8864
      @michaelvaughn8864 Před rokem +2

      @@OrbitFallenAngel There's much energy on the Gettysburg battlefield present to this very day, sir. So many souls of the men killed there are what's causing it with their perpetual unrest

    • @OrbitFallenAngel
      @OrbitFallenAngel Před rokem

      @@michaelvaughn8864 Do you think that those souls would want to cross over with some help from a medium or psychic?? 🤔
      Or do they simply want to stay there forever on the Battlefield...??

  • @patrickrose1221
    @patrickrose1221 Před 3 lety +3

    Excellent production throughout , thank you : )

  • @charlessaint7926
    @charlessaint7926 Před 4 lety +17

    One of my friends, Matthew, was a Confederate in this video. You see him briefly at 14:11 with his hands raised and a big smile on his face.

    • @dom5651
      @dom5651 Před 4 lety

      Charles Saint nice 👍🏻 that seems fun that probably why he had a simile

    • @Cybernaut76
      @Cybernaut76 Před 3 lety +3

      One of the very few bloopers of this reenactment. If they were not acting but it was Battle of Gettysburg for real, the poor b**tards would not be smiling.....and I mean both, bluecoats AND greycoats...(Yes, I say greycoats even if a lot of Confederates seem to be on civilian clothes for some reason)

    • @BigBravesFan1331
      @BigBravesFan1331 Před 3 lety +2

      @@Cybernaut76 the reason is actually pretty simple. The south may have had cotton, but they used most of their resources for guns, as a result many confederate soldiers were not given uniforms, and some didn’t even get rifles and shoes. Meanwhile the north had a massive industry and lots of iron and steel, as a result the north was able to purchase and produce rifles and in this case, uniforms far more then the south (the Union also produced more shoes). But with that being said due to how many people died during the battles, quite a few Union troops also weren’t given shoes and rifles; but with that being said not as much as the CSA, which had entire militias of troops without shoes and proper uniforms.

  • @Dav1Gv
    @Dav1Gv Před rokem +4

    "There was a shell-torn mile of broken ground to cross/With a low stone wall at the end./And behind that wall the men of the Second Corps,/And behind them another force, fresh troops who had not yet fought./They began to cross the ground. The guns began to tear at them. " John Brown's Body by Stephen Vincent Benet. A lot of very brave men in both armies died that - and many other days. Rest In Peace.

  • @kellynash4588
    @kellynash4588 Před 3 lety +12

    Cool ! I was at that reenactment right at the angle.

  • @kevindowling9270
    @kevindowling9270 Před 3 lety +1

    That was great battle scene thankyou to all those that took part in this brilliant re enactment and sharing your country's history with us all/ England

  • @melindaweasenforth1206
    @melindaweasenforth1206 Před 3 lety +2

    History with visual effects is way better than just someone reading about it...it sticks more in the mind. I've learned more watching utube than I ever did in highschool and college... my hats off to you and I have subscribed to your channel 💯 hugs Lynn Weasenforth 💯💜💛💙🌹☮️😘🦄🤩 Stay safe from this pandemic we're all going through

  • @drew23ish
    @drew23ish Před 5 lety +53

    Double canister is like a shotgun. Brutal

    • @patrickleahey4985
      @patrickleahey4985 Před 5 lety +4

      I saw a ghastly picture looking from the perspective of the canoniers. Hundreds of boots with legs cut off near the thighs and kneecaps. I dont want to imagine what lay further down.

    • @jkdm7653
      @jkdm7653 Před 5 lety +2

      Now we have the direct descendant of it, called "Bee Hive".

    • @hovanti
      @hovanti Před 4 lety +11

      Reading accounts of it by veterans describes the red mist of blood in the air, and the unspeakable horror of seeing all sorts of body parts flying. Sadly, the survivors were haunted by their memories for life, and some went mad. The psychiatric help for these men was nowhere near what it is today, poor fellows!

    • @johnmesser522
      @johnmesser522 Před 4 lety

      Each canister held 30 golf ball sized steel balls....
      Hell, unleashed..

    • @Dannyedelman4231
      @Dannyedelman4231 Před 3 lety +2

      @Golden Frog more like 12 gauge on steroids

  • @1Tomrider
    @1Tomrider Před 4 lety +5

    We've been to Gettysburg twice and I've got to say that the mile of Pickett's Charge looks longer and must have seemed like 10 to the men! Both sides added up, they were falling at a rate of about 4 per ~second~!

  • @scullcap357
    @scullcap357 Před 3 lety +2

    Fabulously well done , my hats off to all who were involved .

  • @RovingRegions
    @RovingRegions Před 5 lety +2

    Thanks! Love the enthusiasm!

  • @wspe61
    @wspe61 Před 5 lety +9

    Well I thought that was great work on this vid.... Reenactors did a great job. It was almost breathtaking.

  • @ITILII
    @ITILII Před 3 lety +6

    Why did the Confederates lost at Gettysburg ? "It is all my fault" - Gen. Robert E. Lee; "It is Gen. Lee's fault" - Gen. James Longstreet; "It was Longstreet's fault" - Gen. Jubal Early; "It took many mistakes to lose that battle, and I made most of them" - Gen. Richard Ewell; "I have never known Gen. Lee to bollocks a battle so badly" - Col. E.P. Alexander; "I've always thought that the Union Army had something to do with it" - Gen. George Pickett. Gen. Lee is the commander and the blame ultimately rests on him, he was too aggressive and should have listened to Gen. Longstreet and let the Union do the attacking, which political and military pressures applied to Gen. Gen Meade no doubt would have forced him to attack....the Confederates would have stood a good chance of victory then.....the only scenario in which they could have prevailed. This presentation is truly excellent and I've read and looked at many accounts of Gettysburg, the most famous battle in American history. LionHeart is also a term well applied to the Americans who fought in this and all battle of the Civil War !!!!!!

  • @hankfrankly7240
    @hankfrankly7240 Před 3 lety +1

    Gave me chills. Well done.

  • @Wando64
    @Wando64 Před 5 lety +5

    It's Amazing! Compliments!

  • @marc-emmanuelclement5403
    @marc-emmanuelclement5403 Před 4 lety +4

    I am French and, so, not especially interested in your Civil War, but, as i have just seen that video, i subscribe immediately ! High Quality video, "right to the point" commentaries and no political analysis...Magnifique, bravo !!...of course, this has been downloaded on YT 2 years ago...

  • @NardoVogt
    @NardoVogt Před 4 lety +8

    Interesting how this reenactment shows more blood, pain and gore than the Movie made for that battle.

    • @dakotabynum5137
      @dakotabynum5137 Před měsícem

      I've been to some reenactments this is the best I've ever seen personally

  • @doncook2054
    @doncook2054 Před 11 měsíci +1

    By far the most intense, most wrenching film on that charge......

  • @user-gl9sp1ir2g
    @user-gl9sp1ir2g Před 4 měsíci

    Have visited Gettysburg many times.Sacrifice Valor & Courage was beyond belief.Warriors all. REST IN PEACE ALL FOUGHT IN THIS BATTLE!😢

  • @horseman528
    @horseman528 Před 5 lety +39

    Some may hate the Confederate soldiers which is now popular in todays ninny winny culture, but those were brave men as were the Union soldiers at Fredericksburg. May they all rest in peace.

    • @joekraft0562
      @joekraft0562 Před 5 lety

      horseman528 this is Gettysburg but yee

    • @horseman528
      @horseman528 Před 5 lety

      Mr. Moleratucas man lll, Don't understand your comment, but best to you.

    • @brandonbentley4677
      @brandonbentley4677 Před 5 lety

      If stonewall lived nobody would know where Gettysburg is we wouldn't fit there

    • @brandonbentley4677
      @brandonbentley4677 Před 5 lety

      We would have won

    • @Thekennel177
      @Thekennel177 Před 5 lety +5

      horseman528
      No body hates the confederate soldiers. It what they fought for that is hateful.

  • @robbiesmile3
    @robbiesmile3 Před 6 lety +12

    Well done and very, very sad.

  • @schallrd1
    @schallrd1 Před 3 lety +1

    The reenactment is incredible and amazing to witness.

  • @I.lovemy_pets
    @I.lovemy_pets Před 9 měsíci +1

    Respect to all the men who fought this war. May they Rest In Peace. 🕊❤

  • @johnwayneeverett6263
    @johnwayneeverett6263 Před 6 lety +3

    WOW GREAT JOB NEVER BEFORE HAVE I SEEN IT SO REAL...

  • @WarReport.
    @WarReport. Před 4 lety +4

    Well done on this.

  • @ancientheart2532
    @ancientheart2532 Před rokem +1

    I have been to those hallowed fields of Gettysburg, and it is a haunting place, to say the very least.

  • @gary4645
    @gary4645 Před 2 lety +1

    Great Job! The realism was great. The camera work was excellent.

  • @jimbo5458
    @jimbo5458 Před 6 lety +32

    I LOVE THAT..............."A lingering pink mist." That poor 26th NC. Facing Iron Brigade on the first day and charged on the third. I'll never forget my first charge whilst reenacting....... seventeen years old back in 1996 at Gettysburg. I almost forgot it was a reenactment and I got my first black eye from a Texan. I'm From Pennsylvania and it was funny. Rolling on the ground with some Texan throwing rabbit punches. Few hours later he and I were drinking some beers together. What fun.

    • @neelmehta9069
      @neelmehta9069 Před 3 lety

      @Lefty Labeau ..... You're high on whatever crack they have in the South.

  • @billythekid.5576
    @billythekid.5576 Před 5 lety +5

    Me produce mucha emocion y tristeza a la vez;.. el ver de que forma enfrentaron nuestros muchachos, la muerte. por supuesto que en la recreacion, no se puede reproducir el horror al que debieron enfrentar...Sin embargo, se que dieron la cara a su adversario, el cual solo disparaba sobreseguro desde su posicion...Hoy puedo referirme a aquellos "Martires de la Confederacion."..A los Bravos y Valientes muchachos...Sus muertes nunca fueron en vano y menos han sido olvidados...Viviran por siempre en nuestros corazones y almas..Su legado jamas desaparecera..¡¡ Grito Rebelde...!!!

  • @1LSWilliam
    @1LSWilliam Před rokem +1

    Sobering. Nothing like this should ever happen again on American soil.

  • @googalacticgoo
    @googalacticgoo Před 4 lety +2

    I love this re enactment, its like you are really there

  • @aspectratiosYT
    @aspectratiosYT Před 6 lety +27

    Yo, this is one of the most badass history lessons ever. Wow. Subscribed.

  • @redwolf7929
    @redwolf7929 Před 3 lety +3

    Amazing reenactment very realistic

  • @jodihari5918
    @jodihari5918 Před 3 lety +2

    Wow. Disturbing... very. Excellent film that should be used as teaching tool. We love visiting Gettysburg and I believe that if our country could pull back together after that horrible war we can come together yet again.

  • @robertsilva8097
    @robertsilva8097 Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you for the Great video

  • @robertwallace786
    @robertwallace786 Před 4 lety +5

    now that takes more than courage to march in step right into the face of the enemy like that

  • @iamnoone5478
    @iamnoone5478 Před 4 lety +3

    Amazing 18 Minutes but i will watch it 18 Hours.

  • @nocturnalrecluse1216
    @nocturnalrecluse1216 Před rokem +1

    This was very well done!

  • @rufusleaking3934
    @rufusleaking3934 Před rokem +1

    Some of the bloodiest battles ever fought even brother against brother. The only victory in war is peace.

  • @amaree9732
    @amaree9732 Před 3 lety +6

    A cannon ball at Gettysburg missed my great grandfather's head by inches. It fell off the shelf in the giftshop.

    • @nowthisnamestaken
      @nowthisnamestaken Před 3 lety

      Wonderful comment

    • @amaree9732
      @amaree9732 Před 3 lety +1

      @@nowthisnamestaken I also had a great Uncle who lost a leg at Shiloh. He went back to the KFC for another one.

  • @docbailey3265
    @docbailey3265 Před 4 lety +5

    Rebs look pretty well fed there.

  • @ourv9603
    @ourv9603 Před rokem +1

    One of the soldiers at Gettysburg wrote in his journal that the most disturbing
    thing he saw & he saw it on all the battlefields after the smoke cleared was the
    gathering of buzzards. They would light in the trees & on the fenceposts waiting
    for the living to leave so they could commence with their feasting upon the dead.
    !

  • @chrisevans2726
    @chrisevans2726 Před 5 lety +2

    been there recently----saw this field and little round top.

  • @gggaryjon67
    @gggaryjon67 Před 5 lety +13

    If Lee's charge--it totally belongs to him--had happened in Europe or almost in any other war, it would be remembered as an incredible military mistake and disaster. This was a tragedy, Longstreet's view was completely correct. Even Napoleon would not have done this.

    • @Matt-sf9ky
      @Matt-sf9ky Před 4 lety +1

      Battle of Eylau - plenty of militaries at that time launched terrible frontal assaults that ended in slaughter to include Napoleon. What's even more surprising is how many times in the Civil War this actually worked. Entire divisions/armies would melt away under a charge (or threat of one) and then stand and fight it out on another day.

  • @AKAKDOG
    @AKAKDOG Před 3 lety +3

    These days we saw heroics in all candecy in all modesty of both sides. Great history should never be forgotten and Gettysburg burnt in the anvils of history. And brings me personal more respect too my ancestors who fought for the Union.

  • @williamsteele1296
    @williamsteele1296 Před 5 lety +1

    i must say that was a very good concise mini docu about pickets attack on cemetery ridge not bad at all

  • @JohnnyRebKy
    @JohnnyRebKy Před 4 lety +2

    The only thing missing is the screaming and whistling shells. Most people don’t realize just how much noise those low velocity shells made. They buzzed, whirred, screamed, and whistled. With 200+ guns on the field you can only imagine the sound from the shells alone

  • @nathanrodriguez4590
    @nathanrodriguez4590 Před 6 lety +10

    Lee was always a risk-taker and gambled with large casualties. You could even call him bloody minded.But he remains one of my favorite generals along with Alexander , Ceasar and Napoleon! Johnny Reb counts among the world's finest infantry of all time.

    • @faulltw
      @faulltw Před 6 lety +2

      "I can not spare this man... becuase he fights!" Abraham Lincoln

    • @bcwest56
      @bcwest56 Před 6 lety +5

      Lee was totally committed to his cause and he did not take unnecessary risks unless he had to. But this charge is his biggest mistake, he should have listened to Longstreet.

    • @mr.breeze8796
      @mr.breeze8796 Před 6 lety +1

      Nathan Rodriguez, there never was a more qualified, more dedicated,braver army in history than those boys that wore the gray

    • @dalejohnson4726
      @dalejohnson4726 Před 6 lety +6

      bcwest56 I dont think Lee respected Longstreets opinion, if Stonewall had been there it may have been different

    • @mr.breeze8796
      @mr.breeze8796 Před 6 lety +4

      Dale Johnson, if Stonewall would have been there it WOULD have been different, everyone agrees on that. It prolly would have been over on day one cuz he would have captured Culp's Hill...

  • @monumentstosuffering2995
    @monumentstosuffering2995 Před 5 lety +10

    This film should get an Oscar. It is pure art. The purest art.

  • @lawrencebittke8478
    @lawrencebittke8478 Před 6 lety +1

    I have been awed and fascinated with the Civil War since I was seven. To my knowledge, none of my family tree fought in that war as I have no records pre dating 1880. It was my first lesson in learning to appreciate different causes and viewpoints.

    • @garagedays4677
      @garagedays4677 Před 5 lety +1

      I was too lucky. Found two or three civil war vets, unionside and two revolutionary war veterans in mine. One is buried in Wooster Cemetery in Ohio.

    • @garagedays4677
      @garagedays4677 Před 5 lety +1

      Oh, personally, I'd be Confederate back then. Grey all the way.

  • @ThrottleUp_
    @ThrottleUp_ Před 2 lety

    This is really well done

  • @mikesopher556
    @mikesopher556 Před 6 lety +4

    One thing I love about re-enactments is that no one seems to get killed...lol

  • @jeffsmith2022
    @jeffsmith2022 Před 6 lety +9

    I have walked the field by myself at dusk...you must admire the courage of all those soldiers on both sides but for the Confederates to make that charge required something more...

    • @i.m.9918
      @i.m.9918 Před 2 lety

      Martial courage, to be sure. But a dog has that. Its actually more important historically to have ethical and moral courage not to pledge your life to selling of your fellow man, commerce of his/her children, the rape of your human property, the theft of your fellow citizen's labor. For if we forget about those things, how do we ever designate an evil man and evil man? Remember, these southerners claimed to be religious -- followers of a church whose Old Testament features the escape of enslaved men, women, and children from their Egyptian 'owners' such that even their god intervened to part a sea for their escape. Yet...the Southerners you praise so readily rejected this in the name of self-indulgence, ignorance, skin-color narcissism, greed, and thinly disguised depravity. Along with their martial courage, they must be identified as moral cowards and a national disgrace.

  • @marvwatkins7029
    @marvwatkins7029 Před rokem

    Thank you reenactors!

  • @user-be1zj7qe6x
    @user-be1zj7qe6x Před měsícem

    I couldn’t imagine being the boy playing the drums or the trumpet being like maybe 12-14 just witnessing everything

  • @jpa244
    @jpa244 Před 6 lety +140

    Courageous men, on both side, what a waste of lives!

    • @CaesarCassius
      @CaesarCassius Před 4 lety +1

      LOL Trump

    • @swirvinbirds1971
      @swirvinbirds1971 Před 4 lety +8

      @Doug Bevins although I agree with you we should never blame the soldiers.

    • @swirvinbirds1971
      @swirvinbirds1971 Před 4 lety +9

      @Doug Bevins And you don't think American soldiers have committed atrocities? It's easy to sit there and criticize when you have never been through the hell of Combat before. It's well known combat can break men down into animals.
      Blame the leaders, not the soldiers.

    • @swirvinbirds1971
      @swirvinbirds1971 Před 4 lety +10

      @Doug Bevins No. I stand completely against the Confederacy.
      But being a Veteran myself I know that soldiers don't get to chose what wars they fight for. I don't shit on Vietnam Vets for fighting an unjust war.
      But I will most certainly will shit all over the leaders that sent them into this butchery over a horrible Ideal.

    • @swirvinbirds1971
      @swirvinbirds1971 Před 4 lety +9

      @Doug Bevins Do you think the average southern soldier even knew what was in the constitution?
      They were fighting for their State. People held more loyalty to their State than the Union itself at that time. Many had no idea they were figthing for rich white slave owners and when they figured it out they deserted. Many more were conscripted.
      I am not excusing the cause they fought for or what the Southern States did but they were welcomed home as brothers of the same mother once again afterwards. That was the same men who shed their blood to save the Union.
      The problem is the South never really welcomed us back and instead have picked at the scab for 154 years.

  • @rickyricardo520
    @rickyricardo520 Před 6 lety +11

    So sad to look at the sheer waste of life throughout history. So many souls lost to the folly of so few. I lay there upon the ground as my blood pored out in vain. The grass beneath me once green was now red stained from my pain. I raised my head to God and in a loud voice shouted out why? But then my life drained away in one last final sigh.

    • @bcwest56
      @bcwest56 Před 6 lety +1

      And yet the people this war freed are still bitter against white people. Prejudice works both ways.

    • @linzierogers6227
      @linzierogers6227 Před 5 lety +2

      They aren't bitter at all white people, only the ones that espouse white supremacy

    • @2ezee2011
      @2ezee2011 Před 5 lety

      @@bcwest56 are you completely ignorant of what happens ESPECIALLY in the South but in the North as well for the time since for not only freed, and emancipated black people?? But Hispanics in Texas, NM, Nevada, California?? Jim Crow laws, segregation, persecution, lynching, burning, robbery of property? Even General Sherman despised black people. Most of Congress that passed the Amendments after the Civil War did so only to make black, Indian, and other non-whites EQUAL UNDER THE LAW. Not full equality in all matters. That is still in progress.

    • @2ezee2011
      @2ezee2011 Před 5 lety

      I have read and known soldier/poets that lament this so much and the only ones who seem justified are the ones forced to go. But those who joined willingly for whatever reason it would seem a hollow lament since in their hearts they looked forward to the grand adventure and had no doubt in their hearts. To look to the heavens and shout why? is a lie told by one who willingly went to inflict misery for his beliefs. It is a lament of one who failed in his fantasy.

  • @michaeldavis1609
    @michaeldavis1609 Před 3 lety +1

    Awsome documentry✌️

  • @KingQuakk
    @KingQuakk Před rokem

    this came out before it was on youtube. I had a dvd of it when i was little

  • @KADU46550
    @KADU46550 Před 3 lety +4

    It's hard to imagine, but as bad as this makes the battle look, it was probably 10 times worse for those men who fought there that day!

  • @don1985don
    @don1985don Před 3 lety +3

    i have been a civil war buff since I was 10 . I read every book I could get my hands on too. i sometimes think i was reincarnated and my pass life was a solder in that war. I finally got to see the Gettysburg battlefield 6 years ago in July it was same time as the battle decades ago. I stood atop Devils Den look back at little round top, and stood where picketts charge took place. I had goosebumps on me even though it was 90 degrees out. What both sides went through those 3 days was sad , so sad the human loss was so tragic. We should never remove the statues or history connected with it because both sides gave their blood and lives over 600,000 lives to be exact. Remember so as to not repeat

    • @don1985don
      @don1985don Před 3 lety

      @Megan O not here to argue with you or anyone about our history i'm just presenting my opinion about what I feel regarding our country's history. We can't change it only can try not to repeat it like I said. I do honor the poor souls that died in that horrible war BOTH SIDES.

    • @ClannCholmain
      @ClannCholmain Před 2 lety

      @@don1985don nobody honours Nazis.
      And slavery isn’t coming back.

  • @hippyjoe
    @hippyjoe Před 4 lety +1

    Great acting, beautiful film, if only reenactments could be that realistic :p

  • @moris7055
    @moris7055 Před 4 lety +1

    Please, do not forget the 10.000 italians who volunteered, fought and died for the Confederacy.
    The militia of Louisiana had an italian guards battalion, later renamed 6th Regiment European Brigade, and other companies within regiments from Alabama, Virginia, Tennessee and Louisiana.
    General William Booth Taliaferro served in the Confederate Army as well as the commanders of the 6th Regiment European Brigade, Lt.Della Valle, Captain Marzoni, Captain Santini, First Lieutenant Marinoni and Second Lieutenant Baselli.
    Thank you from Italy for remembering them.

  • @Harleylovinchelley1
    @Harleylovinchelley1 Před 5 lety +31

    Lee never intended to meet the union at Gettysburg. His intent was to make some daring victories close to the capitol and send word for a cease fire thereby preserving the confederacy. I'm not sure why he consented to the battle, he could have pulled back and marched around the troops he met there. Maybe one day someone will find a notebook where he explains his decision.
    I have lived in both north and south and have friends all over. There are good people in all the states. It saddens me that some still have hatred for the other side. What the hell, do parents poison their children with hatred?
    England ended their slavery without a war, why couldn't the US? the plantation owners couldn't bear the thought of losing their lavish lifestyle so they stirred up the poor and made them believe the evil north wanted to take away their rights. What rights? The right to own slaves. The really sad thing is the average southerner couldn't even afford one slave. they had become very expensive. The poor were dying to preserve the lifestyle of the wealthy.

    • @shaun5328
      @shaun5328 Před 5 lety +6

      Chelley Sometimes it does not matter what an average person might think. In the end, it is always the rich and wealthy who can influence the politics and guide the flow of the country, and in the case of the Confedracy, it is the slave owners who has the wealth to do so.
      That being said, I do believe that most of the soldiers and General Lee himself joined the Confedracy because they love their homeland and have the sense of duty to protect it. The Confedracy claim that they are fighting for their way of life, but when you really look at it, the lives of an average Southerner and a Yankee is not so different, even after the war. The only actual difference after the war is that slavery is banned throughout the US and the only people who would be affected are the slave owners. This war could have probably been avoided in the first place if certain individuals in the Confedracy did not grow to their power and wealth that made them who they are in the first place.

    • @trajan231
      @trajan231 Před 5 lety +4

      You are correct that Lee had no intention of fighting at Gettysburg. Neither did General Meade for that matter. However it was the result of (For lack of better terms) Union cavalry accidentally running into General Heaths Confederate infantry. It was Union General John Buford who decided to fight at Gettysburg.

    • @kennethscott1603
      @kennethscott1603 Před 5 lety +1

      I been there before back in 1974

    • @nora22000
      @nora22000 Před 5 lety +6

      @@shaun5328 Lee and other slaveowners who led the confederacy gave no thought to the people. Their love was for their power over the South rather than for the people or the land itself, as the land was largely spent and had been exploited, overfarmed. The war was for the ability to extend slavery and continue on to new, fresh land foist the Slave Codes for blacks and abysmally poor existence for poor whites, about 95% of the population.
      This is why there was no support from Britain for their effort; it would have been slash and burn agriculture of virgin soil in Cuba and Central America plus extension of slavery throughout.

    • @gregorymacdonnell7914
      @gregorymacdonnell7914 Před 5 lety +3

      Chelly, the poor will, and always have fought the wars that the wealthy have started ,to gain more power, money, land ,oil,name it. The poor are the pawns to the War Pigs.

  • @michaelvaughn8864
    @michaelvaughn8864 Před 3 lety +7

    Gruesome and atrocious and saddening

    • @chrisnewport7826
      @chrisnewport7826 Před 3 lety +1

      And humans at their best, and worst, - but cannot cannot get past my satisfaction and pride in those “Gentlemen of the South”. Whose son’s have carried the greatest part of our military burden since. Airborne!

    • @michaelvaughn8864
      @michaelvaughn8864 Před 2 lety

      @@chrisnewport7826 Amen to that, Mr. Newport👍 God bless The Airborne😇

  • @AJ-pc5ln
    @AJ-pc5ln Před 4 měsíci

    This is beautiful love the uniforms and history.

  • @wus6680
    @wus6680 Před 3 lety

    Very beautiful. My heart will go on.