Hancock on Pickett's Charge | Eyewitness Account/Official Report

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  • čas přidán 2. 09. 2019
  • In this video, we hear the commander of the 2nd Corps of the Army of the Potomac, General Winfield Scott Hancock's, account of Pickett's Charge.
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Komentáře • 541

  • @kennkid9912
    @kennkid9912 Před rokem +8

    The UNION artillery under the command of Gen. Hunt was told to not reply to the CSA bombardment prior to Picketts charge. Hancock tried to get them to fire ,but they waited until the CSA infantry came forward. Most of the CSA artillery fire overshot the Union lines and landed in the rear areas. The CSA artillery ammo was frequently defective. The fuses were inferior .PIcketts charge was preordained to fail.

  • @mattmusselman5055
    @mattmusselman5055 Před 4 lety +68

    He was my favorite General..I live just 5 minutes from Gettysburg..its a beautiful and sacred place

    • @alienlife7754
      @alienlife7754 Před 4 lety +3

      He was never the same person after Gettysburg. That charge haunted him for the rest of his life. A classic case of PTSD. Sad.

    • @TheBargles
      @TheBargles Před 4 lety +2

      @@alienlife7754 If Gettysburg hadn't messed him up, Wilderness and Spotsylvania Courthouse definitely would have. It must have been horrible to witness.

    • @mikvermm
      @mikvermm Před 3 lety +1

      It is, have family there

  • @stevenmullens511
    @stevenmullens511 Před 4 lety +64

    Hancock is one of my favorite generals of American history 👮‍♂️

  • @wecandobetter9821
    @wecandobetter9821 Před 4 lety +29

    Longstreet new the charge was going to be a disaster as it truly was. He wanted to withdraw and find a good defensive position between the Union Army and Washington DC, forcing the Northern troops to attack them. Like most battles during that war missed opportunities, communication and leadership carried the day.

  • @barryervin8536
    @barryervin8536 Před 4 lety +24

    General Hancock is buried about 2 miles from me in Montgomery Cemetery in Norristown, PA. Union Generals Hartranft, Zook, Slemmer and McClennen are also buried here. This cemetery at one time had fallen into a sad state of neglect but it's been cleaned up extensively and is a fascinating place to visit.

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety +5

      I'd love to visit that cemetery and pay my respects to them.

  • @usfreight
    @usfreight Před 4 lety +87

    My great great grandfather died that day. He belonged to the 4th Va infantry under Picketts command.

    • @rubinsteve1
      @rubinsteve1 Před 3 lety +13

      My late Dad was a 6 yr WW2 Vet, Lieutenant in artillery, Australian Army, and he had a big interest in the Civil war, he had a soft spot for the Confederacy. The men who made that ill fated charge, like your relative, were very brave indeed. great courage to do what they did, their sacrifice for what they believed is admirable indeed. Sadly the lessons from that charge were not learned, and were repeated even worse again, in France in WW1, useless carnage and death, for no result. Grant was right, war is hell. It is.

    • @IloveJimiHendrix2009
      @IloveJimiHendrix2009 Před 3 lety +4

      Mine died from wounds incurred at the Battle of Chancellorsville, VA.

    • @jaywinters2483
      @jaywinters2483 Před 3 lety +8

      My great grandfather was flanked by Jackson’s men @ the Wilderness. Grandpa told me: “Dad said, ‘I invented running that day, only back then they called it “desertion”. 😀 true story.

    • @johnwheet7037
      @johnwheet7037 Před 3 lety +2

      Do you know of any other engagements for your grandfather? Respect to your family.

    • @howardsmith8453
      @howardsmith8453 Před 3 lety +16

      My Great-grandfather fought at Gettysburg in the peach orchards. He was 20 years old and belonged to the 62nd Volunteers of Pennsylvania. Fortunately for me, he survived the battle or I wouldn't be here today. He had a lucky streak. He fought at Antietam also and was wounded at Fredericksburg. Proud to say his name is on the Pennsylvania Monument with the rest of his unit. He passed in 1905. He was Issac Smith.

  • @drfranklippenheimer8743
    @drfranklippenheimer8743 Před 4 lety +12

    Hancock is one of my historical favs too, along with John Gibbons.

  • @headshotsongs9465
    @headshotsongs9465 Před 4 lety +47

    Longstreet knew this attack would fail. He only let it advance under Lee's orders.

    • @valeriegriner5644
      @valeriegriner5644 Před 3 lety +1

      This is known as "malicious obedience." It's well known that Longstreet didn't like Lee.

    • @lindencamelback2305
      @lindencamelback2305 Před 2 lety +3

      Which brings up a serious moral dilemma: What do you do if you know, or at least suspect, and order is impossible? Disobey and be Court-Marshaled?

    • @JonathanHStone
      @JonathanHStone Před 2 lety +4

      @@valeriegriner5644 that Longstreet undermined Lee is one of those great Lost Cause chestnuts that doesn't hold up to actual scrutiny.

  • @kirkmorrison6131
    @kirkmorrison6131 Před 4 lety +57

    I read a letter from a Virginian who was in Pickett's Charge" Mother, we were in a big fight yesterday, I am safe but many were hurt or killed" an understatement to be sure

    • @xotl2780
      @xotl2780 Před 4 lety +2

      Run! Run old hare! If I was an old hare, I'd run too!

    • @kirkmorrison6131
      @kirkmorrison6131 Před 4 lety +1

      Jennifer LePage yep but so many were life long friends and such that they were worried more about being seen as cowards than dying

    • @BELCAN57
      @BELCAN57 Před 4 lety

      @@kirkmorrison6131 How could you show your face "back home" if you ran and left your comrades in the heat of battle.

    • @kirkmorrison6131
      @kirkmorrison6131 Před 4 lety

      I agree and that explains so many retreats having men walking backwards so as not to be shot in the back. They didn't want to be shot in the back and thought a coward

    • @michaeldunne338
      @michaeldunne338 Před 4 lety +2

      @@kirkmorrison6131 Troops going AWOL, bolting, desertion, etc. was not uncommon in the Civil War with both sides.. That possibly contributed to a relatively sizable "missing" category for Civil War casualties from battles at the time.

  • @jeffsmith2022
    @jeffsmith2022 Před 4 lety +103

    I have walked on that field twice, one must admire the absolute courage of all these soldiers on both sides, of course, during the battle, especially the C.S.A. troops in Picket's failed charge. They all knew that a great percentage of them would die yet they still moved onward to Cemetery Ridge...that calls for more than guts...

    • @matthewmiller9526
      @matthewmiller9526 Před 4 lety +5

      Undoubtedly Lee had some of the greatest infantry in history but I think there are 2 things that you are not realizing, for one they were contemptuous of the Yankees, with good reason, the battle before Gettysburg, Chancellorsville, was Lee’s greatest victory. The rebels knew they were vastly outnumbered and outflanked yet they won. Second they thought the artillery bombardment would rattle them. It was until WW1 the greatest artillery bombardment in history, they underestimated the Union troops, I think there is no doubt of that. They also overestimated the bombardment, it was mostly an overshoot and did not have the effect they thought it would.

    • @paulwilfridhunt
      @paulwilfridhunt Před 4 lety +6

      Jeff Smith Here is another thought regarding Pickett’s charge.
      Let’s take into consideration that Lee’s only chance of winning the civil war was for the North to come to the bargaining table.
      And he knew that if he could inflict the north with heavy enough losses, even if the South was suffering just as much as the North, the North might decide to call it a day. That was his plan. But it failed.
      Lee wasn’t a traitor to the South but he knew right before Pickett’s charge that the North could not be beaten.
      Therefore why does he order the charge?
      We are meant to think that Lee lost the plot but I don’t think he did.
      If Longstreet knew the charge was doomed to fail, then so did Lee.
      So what’s the deal?
      What was that fiasco all about?
      Maybe this is the answer.
      When Lee knew he couldn’t beat the North he also knew that whilst it would be wise to surrender, and he’d like to do that, he couldn’t do that because the South didn’t yet want to give up. They needed a lot more punishment before they’d see the writing on the wall.
      Therefore Lee in order to bring the war to an end as soon as possible, he desperately starts the process of inflicting pain on the South with Pickett’s charge, knowing full well that it’s a suicide attack, all for the purpose of reducing the will of the south to fight.
      I don’t think Lee wanted to see anymore useless carnage. And although Pickett’s charge was carnage on an epic scale, nevertheless maybe it shortened the war, because without it the South might have still thought they could win.
      Herein is the summary of what I am saying.
      I am saying that maybe Lee ordered the charge to shorten the war because it would help the South realise that their cause is over.

    • @josephcockburn1402
      @josephcockburn1402 Před 4 lety +4

      @Doug Bevins You comment on everything don't you, Cornpone?

    • @elr.4780
      @elr.4780 Před 4 lety +6

      @@paulwilfridhunt at a cost of 3 divisions and over 12.500 men? That's too HIGH a price to pay to shorten the war. Besides the south was winning up to Getteysburg, Lee had chalked up victories , 2nd battle of bull run, battle of south mountain, battle of antietam, battle of fredricksburg, battle of chancellorsville, that may be why Lee had the character, he seemed unbeatable.

    • @josephcockburn1402
      @josephcockburn1402 Před 4 lety +6

      @JAG there was no opposition to slavery in Northern states. Why did you fail to mention that? Are you just dumb?

  • @evanmartinez2049
    @evanmartinez2049 Před 4 lety +5

    Thanks for all of your videos. Great content as always.

  • @dukeman7595
    @dukeman7595 Před 4 lety +11

    You did a fine job explaining Hancock's account.

  • @julianmarsh1378
    @julianmarsh1378 Před 4 lety +22

    A day so bad for the South that if written in ancient times we would hear about the 'cold hand of Fate'. Confederate cavalry was to attack from behind but was thwarted by Union cavalry. Subsidiary attacks on either flank were not carried out with any vigor by Confederate commanders who had no faith in the battle. Pickett's Charge simply could not succeed without support beyond their own battle lines.

    • @JBG1968
      @JBG1968 Před 4 měsíci +1

      The Union calvary that day was led by general Custer . With a smaller force he attacked the southern calvary and defeated them . An unsung hero of the battle

    • @rikk319
      @rikk319 Před měsícem +1

      @@JBG1968 No, Custer was a brigadier under General Judson Kilpatrick, who outranked him in the cavalry. However, it was General Gregg who directed Custer and his Michigan brigade to attack Stuart's superior force and broke them. Custer was one of the youngest generals in the war at only 23!

  • @brianashe
    @brianashe Před 4 lety +3

    Nice job. Always great to hear a first hand account

  • @user-nx8pe6pc3h
    @user-nx8pe6pc3h Před 11 měsíci +3

    I just finished reading The Killer Angels. I thought one of the most interesting thing were how the South got supplies. A British observer notice the wagons for cannon shot had a sign USA on it. A Confederate General said most of those cannons and shot came from captured USA supplies. The book is a great read.

  • @cbigb1000
    @cbigb1000 Před 4 lety +6

    I love this perspective. Thank you.

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you. I love it too. I want to do a few more from the union side.

  • @TheMeatCutter
    @TheMeatCutter Před 4 lety +5

    WOOHOO!!! Thanks again! Like many, Hancock intrigues me. I picked up "Sam" Hood's memoir as you recommended last week. Just joined up on FB and will take a look at the tee spring soon enough!!!

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety +2

      Thank you so much. I am truly thankful for supporters like you. Hancock was a great commander, very level headed. I would have loved to have seen what he could have done as commander if the Army of the Potomac.

  • @hancock63
    @hancock63 Před 4 lety +1

    Excellent video.

  • @1roanstephen
    @1roanstephen Před 4 lety +20

    Great episode, thank you for what you do.

  • @hannahthomas6835
    @hannahthomas6835 Před 4 lety +4

    Thank you so much for these episodes that you make! I look forward to them every week! I found your channel when I was looking up history on middlesboro KY since I now live in the area while going to veterinary school at Lincoln Memorial University. I appreciate how informative and factual your videos are and I especially appreciate how you look at both the Confederate and Union side. Thank you so much!

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety

      Thank you so much for watching and supporting the channel. I went to LMU for my bachelor's degree. I was born and raised in the area and still live here.

  • @zach7193
    @zach7193 Před 4 lety +1

    Fascinating.

  • @davidrasch3082
    @davidrasch3082 Před 4 lety +47

    I think it was Shelby Foote who said something like; this was a veteran army. They knew how to take a position from where they could do the most killing, and they weren't going to run away.

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety +15

      You are right. By 1863, the Army of the Potomac was a lethal fighting force and with commanders like Hancock, they were successful.

    • @markproulx1472
      @markproulx1472 Před 4 lety +17

      They remembered the effective positions taken by the confederates at Fredericksburg. Payback’s a bitch.

    • @randallwhite536
      @randallwhite536 Před 4 lety +3

      @@markproulx1472 - It wasn't rocket science!

    • @bigblue6917
      @bigblue6917 Před 4 lety +9

      @@randallwhite536 You would think that, and for the most part you are right, but history is full of armies and generals who never learned anything.

    • @sqike001ton
      @sqike001ton Před 4 lety +6

      @@markproulx1472 thats why they chanted Fredericksburg as the rebels retreated

  • @adamhonestyanddecency5054

    You never disappoint.

  • @elr.4780
    @elr.4780 Před 4 lety +3

    Enjoyed the video. There are historians who, including my University professors that say General Picketts divisions didn't stand a chance in taking that hill. They got close. General Hancock refusing to be taken off the field because he knew the impact it may have had on his men, bravery. To fight in this battle took courage, Union side , Confederate side, to stand and defend a position despite the gunfire, to march in advance to overtake a position. That LONG march on Picketts charge comming under cannon fire, long shot, a fence, then when in range solid shot, closer, cannister fire , not even counting rifle fire. (You want me to march WHERE??!!). It is said Longstreet knew what would happen and did not want to give the command to Pickett to start the charge. The cost of the loss of the battle was high for the Confederates. It is said General Pickett did not forget what happened to his divisions.

  • @safc76
    @safc76 Před 4 lety

    Great video enjoyed it

  • @kylevantassel7259
    @kylevantassel7259 Před 3 lety +4

    I , like many others here had family on both sides . This madness was one of the countrys darkest days and most disgraceful . I hope that people today can look back and get the message this sent to us all and never again let the wealthy coax us into killing our brothers for their gain.
    Most if not all of the men on this battle field had nothing to gain from any of this and most lost everything . More people should take note of this era and this war and then look at our current situation in that light....
    The rich will always have the poor do their bidding while they sit somewhere on a beach or a nice serene mountain top sipping a drink and talking about their own days events as if brothers werent tearing one another apart .
    Take note people and make the choice to treat EVERY AMERICAN as your brother in arms against the mostly unseen enemy we all have.

  • @AlGreenLightThroughGlass
    @AlGreenLightThroughGlass Před 4 lety +8

    A fine general but I think the two criticisms of his judgment at Gettysburg at the time are also still valid.
    1. His demand that Union guns respond to the cannonade left artillery short for Pickets charge - General Hunt wanted the union guns to preserve their ammo.
    2. Failure to entrench - Greene on Culp's hill entrenched and successfully defended with much fewer troops. Had the rebel artillery not overshot the union position, due to faulty charges, the casualties could have been devastating.

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety +3

      I agree to a point. I think the amount of infantry and interior lines made the Union line at Gettysburg under his command more stable than most people think, even without artillery.

  • @needsaride15126
    @needsaride15126 Před 10 měsíci

    I really enjoyed this video. The map and the way that you narrated the video.

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 10 měsíci +1

      Thank you very much! I've got many more videos. Please check them out.

  • @TennesseeHomesteadUSA

    Well done, Sir ! Well done !

  • @ajross311
    @ajross311 Před 4 lety

    Nice job with these videos

  • @ITILII
    @ITILII Před 2 lety +1

    Winfield Hancock is one of the greatest military leaders, of all time. He was close friends with both Gen. John Reynolds, killed on the 1st day at Gettysburg, and Gen. Lewis Armistead, mortally wounded at Pickett's charged, and died 2 days later. On the 2nd day, on the right flank of the Union Army, Hancock ordered the only troops he had available, the 1st Minnesota to charge and repel the Confederates, who outnumbered them 5 to 1. 1st Minnesota suffered a loss of 216 of 262 (83%) but held long enough for Union reinforcements to stem the assault. Of the actions of the 1st Minnesota, Gen. Hancock said "There has never been a greater display of gallantry, by any men, in any battle, at any time"

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 2 lety

      I will be doing a series on Hancock in the coming weeks. Please stay tuned for that. Please consider subscribing if you have not done so already and check out my other videos. I think you will enjoy them.

  • @SGTRIP-dh7fz
    @SGTRIP-dh7fz Před 4 lety +1

    Well done!

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety

      Thank you so much for watching and supporting the channel. Please check out my other videos.

    • @SGTRIP-dh7fz
      @SGTRIP-dh7fz Před 4 lety

      @@HistoryGoneWilder I have with exception of a couple (no reasons) I'll get to them. I also enjoyed your video on Gen. Hood explains Gettysburg....also well done! Keep'em going.

  • @Nick-wn1xw
    @Nick-wn1xw Před 2 lety

    Going to see both Gettysburg and Harpers Ferry next week for the first time. This provided some great perspective.

  • @robertthompson6346
    @robertthompson6346 Před 4 lety +6

    Many thanks from this English supporter for your contribution to try and understand the unbeleivable sacrifices of the American Civil War....(more difficult to comprehend is that the sacrifices of WW1 and WW2 were still to follow)

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety

      Thank you so much for supporting the channel. I try to help people understand the war better and I'm glad that you enjoy them.

    • @robertthompson6346
      @robertthompson6346 Před 4 lety +1

      @@HistoryGoneWilder Thanks for the response....you have taken on quite challenge.
      However, consider if your chosen path had been writing fiction, you could never have dreamt of the horrendous details of the American Civil War - or any war for that matter (20 million civilians in WW2). Best wishes

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety

      @@robertthompson6346 thank you so much. Stay tuned for more history videos.

    • @georgesakellaropoulos8162
      @georgesakellaropoulos8162 Před 4 lety

      People are stupid. They keep repeating the same mistakes under different circumstances.

    • @rikk319
      @rikk319 Před měsícem

      @@georgesakellaropoulos8162 Not quite stupid as ignorant. Each generation has a responsibility to teach the following generation the lessons they've learned, and no generation in history has ever done this to a satisfactory level. We're not born with wisdom--we need to be taught it, or else learn it through difficult experiences.
      Just remember that before you judge a younger generation harshly, that it was your responsibilityas their elders to educate them, and their faults partially lie on your shoulders.

  • @gettysburgbrian
    @gettysburgbrian Před 2 lety

    You maKe great videos fantastic narrative

  • @LanceisLawson
    @LanceisLawson Před 3 lety +27

    When watching the reenactments especially the Confederate troops often look too well fed. The South's army was starving and being short on food and marching all day would understandably lean troops.

    • @donb1183
      @donb1183 Před 3 lety +3

      They are also old, the reenactors seem to be 40-60 years old when the actual soldiers were teenagers or 20ish.

    • @jangiel3103
      @jangiel3103 Před 2 lety +2

      There were older soldiers on both sides contrary to what other posters say. And, they had surprisingly young guys in command positions. There was a 19 year old major in the artillery in Ewell's Corp wounded on Benner's Hill. The Union Army had a 19 year old artillery officer. Custer and Farnsworth were brigadier generals in the Union cavalry at 24 and 25 respectively. You're right about the re enactors being too heavy. There were no fat boys on either side. Keeping the troops fed was a constant struggle. To be fair, the Southerners had been eating a lot better for two weeks prior to the battle and had regained a lot of their strength. However, nobody was sporting a gut.

    • @wutzg.owenon5869
      @wutzg.owenon5869 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jangiel3103 You only have to go back to the 1970's to experience nobody sporting a gut. czcams.com/video/mfLFCrKhiHo/video.html
      Today at Walmart; most are way overweight. We have lost the healthy battle.

    • @MrFlossinlawson
      @MrFlossinlawson Před 2 lety +2

      @@wutzg.owenon5869 Welcome to the only time in human history where poor people are fat and rich people are skinny.

    • @selewachm
      @selewachm Před 2 lety

      @@MrFlossinlawson And the rich pay for gyms, trainers, Peloton bikes, etc . Not that there's anything wrong with that. :)

  • @slimpickins9482
    @slimpickins9482 Před 3 lety

    Perhaps the best account I’ve heard.

  • @pwb0511
    @pwb0511 Před 4 lety +19

    General Lee surely remembered the slaughter of Fredericksburg on that day, yet still he sent his soldiers, in the hottest part of the day, against superior odds uphill in better fortified positions. An impossible situation, a huge mistake.

    • @tommyturner6677
      @tommyturner6677 Před 4 lety +6

      wise1 Lee was over confident. If he’d listen to Longstreet.He was totally against it. He wanted to move to the right. So he could have the high ground. The Union would of had no choice but to attack .

    • @richardlahan7068
      @richardlahan7068 Před 4 lety +4

      No men ever made could take that hill.

    • @zanzibart3
      @zanzibart3 Před 4 lety +5

      Many civil war generals made this sort of mistake at one time or another in their careers. Grant's assault on Cold Harbor and some of his assaults on Vicksburg fall into this category, I think.

    • @vinsanity982
      @vinsanity982 Před 4 lety

      @@zanzibart3 doesn't make it any less dumb. That's an "everybody's doing it" argument. Besides, Grant could afford to make those mistakes. Lee could not. Lee unfortunately placed too much faith in god and destiny instead of listening to his brain.

  • @jameseubanks379
    @jameseubanks379 Před 4 lety +23

    The book killer Angels started me on this Trek to consume all info on the Civil War!

    • @HistoryBoy
      @HistoryBoy Před 4 lety

      You must read it Gardner Barnes!

    • @timgulstine2767
      @timgulstine2767 Před 4 lety +1

      ​@Gardner Barnes I'd say the events are historical, and the dialog is largely fictional, but the dialog is based on the views expressed by the men themselves. And it is one of the best books I've ever read. The opening chapters on the spy, Longstreet/Lee, and Buford are some of my favorite literature. I think it won a Pulitzer in '75 or thereabouts.

    • @samiam619
      @samiam619 Před 4 lety +1

      Gardner Barnes Another excellent book is “Hardtack and Coffee”. It is more in the line of the day to day life of a common soldier. The Southern counterpart would be “Company Aitch”.

    • @jamesphillips4836
      @jamesphillips4836 Před 4 lety

      @@samiam619 I read Company Aytch many years ago as a kid. It is still one of my favorites. I had been to Gettysburg many times growing up. But it wasn't until I read Killer Angels that I finally gained a basic understanding of the flow of the battle across the three days. Two of my favorite Civil War books.

    • @scullymj
      @scullymj Před 4 lety

      My maternal Grandmother was Ada Mae Eubanks born in Adams County Ohio around 1902. Wondered if you might be kin. I'm trying to trace her line for any Union veterans.

  • @lurahcsinclair9274
    @lurahcsinclair9274 Před 4 lety +7

    My 1st cousin 5x removed was in this battle. His name was Captain George Allen Gilreath, Confederate. Commanded 55th NC Regiment. He was killed 3 July 1863 in this battle.

  • @2ndarmoredhellonwheels106
    @2ndarmoredhellonwheels106 Před 4 lety +39

    Gen.hancock and Confederate gen armistead were like brothers. They were extremely close.

    • @tagreene06
      @tagreene06 Před 4 lety +1

      I liked how they always asked about each other when I watched Gettysburg. No greater love between to brothers in Bond

    • @alienlife7754
      @alienlife7754 Před 4 lety +4

      I believe they served together in Mexico.

    • @tagreene06
      @tagreene06 Před 4 lety +1

      @@alienlife7754 I believe they did as well

    • @calguy3838
      @calguy3838 Před 4 lety +3

      Before the war they were both stationed in a sleepy town in southern California called "Los Angeles."

    • @2ndarmoredhellonwheels106
      @2ndarmoredhellonwheels106 Před 4 lety +2

      @@calguy3838 there were actually 3.i believe union general Reynolds was the 3rd.

  • @mikeG-cw2gh
    @mikeG-cw2gh Před 2 lety +2

    Hancock was one of the true heroes at Gettysburg he haulted the union retreat on the first days battle and set up defenses on cemetery hill

  • @colerainfan1143
    @colerainfan1143 Před 2 lety

    On all sides, these were brave men, doing desperate work. The courage and valor displayed is awe inspiring.

  • @stever4181
    @stever4181 Před rokem +6

    As a re-enactor with the 1st Regiment from Minnesota Company A. We were at the 125th Anniversary. We slept on that battlefield. It was the best sleep I have ever had while re-enacting. Pickets charge had us all in tears both North and South! I still get chocked up when I talk about it.

  • @robertreisner6119
    @robertreisner6119 Před rokem +1

    There was a pink haze that was seen at Pickett's charge, it was the departure of souls. Many lost within minutes, men, officers and a few horses. It was a failure as Longstreet predicated, for he knew Hancock wouldn't run it was a doomed effort.

  • @stonesinmyblood27
    @stonesinmyblood27 Před 2 lety

    Love for you to do a series on Gen. Armistead

  • @kevinkranz9156
    @kevinkranz9156 Před 2 lety +4

    GRANT AND LONGSTREET WERE CLOSE FRIENDS AT WEST POINT MEADE MOVED HIS TROOPS CLOSER TO FRONT LINES SAVING THEM FROM LEES CANNONS SMART MOVE

  • @truckert9729
    @truckert9729 Před 4 lety

    Recall visiting Gettysburg as a child... There is so much history on those hollowed grounds which seen so much blood. Still brings me to silence when I think of it.

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety

      I couldn't agree more. Thank you so much for watching and supporting the channel.

  • @BemusedHumanist
    @BemusedHumanist Před 4 lety +1

    Excellent mix of maps, pictures, and drawings. So dramatic.

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you so much for watching and supporting the channel. Please check out my other videos.

    • @BemusedHumanist
      @BemusedHumanist Před 4 lety

      @@HistoryGoneWilder I have watched a half dozen or so in the last couple of hours. Chickamauga (I live in Atlanta any have been there many times); Hood at Franklin and Nashville (there are efforts to rehab his reputation, as the negative quotes about him are poorly-sourced); Barksdale's Charge; Jackson at Fredericksburg; and the other Gettysburg ones. I admire your use of primary sources. If I had one suggestion it would be dating the memoirs as opposed to the after-battle reports. I believe E.P. Alexander had a long, long time to think before he wrote his description of Pickett's Charge.

  • @scottriley1913
    @scottriley1913 Před 4 lety +4

    Certainly the courage and military strategy of this battle on both sides was far beyond detailed recorded history, it’s very hard for even hardened Civil War historians to characterize this particular fight from so many different perspectives. It was certainly a legendary battle no matter what perspective or lense you look at it through.

  • @MrMenefrego1
    @MrMenefrego1 Před 4 lety +7

    Greetings from, "The Kingdom of The Netherlands"! AKA, 'Holland'. I just happened to stumble upon this video, if all of your videos are similar in quality and fascinating historical detail as is this, I want more! Thank You! you just gained a new sub! (Sorry... I'm a "Damn Yankee!" lol)

  • @tigertiger1699
    @tigertiger1699 Před rokem

    Excellent bids🙏🙏 fascinating US history…,

  • @richhickman6863
    @richhickman6863 Před měsícem

    My great great grandfather, Pvt John Blair (fathers side) was in G Co 69th Pa and a great great Uncle Sgt Denis Loughery (my Mothers side) in H company of the 69th that day. The 69th Pa was an Irish Regiment.

  • @jbearmcdougall1646
    @jbearmcdougall1646 Před 4 lety +1

    Love these history videos.... Hancock was a good commander.. look forward to the next...

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety +1

      Yes he was. When you look at his actions in the Wilderness, you can tell he truly cares for his soldiers under his command.

    • @jbearmcdougall1646
      @jbearmcdougall1646 Před 4 lety +1

      @@HistoryGoneWilder I recall in the movie Gettysburg, Longstreet saying 'thats Hancock over there, and he won't budge' or something like that... Meaning even Jim Longstreet admired the man.. I think were they both Hancock and Amistead friends with Longstreet before the war...?.!

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety +1

      @@jbearmcdougall1646 the Army back then was so small that most prewar soldiers knew one another.

    • @jbearmcdougall1646
      @jbearmcdougall1646 Před 4 lety

      @@HistoryGoneWilder literally, brother against brother as it were.. it's also a great change to be able to speak with a CZcamsr.. :-)

    • @garyvandecar8554
      @garyvandecar8554 Před 4 lety +1

      @@jbearmcdougall1646 Yup and he even mentioned the Federal Army being behind the stone wall, Like the Rebs were at Fredricksburg meaning that it was futile to even suggest attacking that position.

  • @miguelservetus9534
    @miguelservetus9534 Před rokem +1

    My GG Grand father, James Devlin, was in the PA 69th, Company E, at the angle. His daughter, Sarah, my GGrandmother, born 1866. He was shot later at Spottsylvania. Odds were in my favor.

  • @amadeusamwater
    @amadeusamwater Před 3 lety +2

    People criticize Lee for his mistakes at Gettysburg, but they need to remember that before Jackson's death, Lee planned the strategy and left the actual battlefield work to Jackson. Gettysburg was his first battle in which he had to fight it himself, and he may have been rusty. Longstreet disagreed with him on tactics, something Longstreet had more experience with. Would the outcome have been different if Longstreet had run the battle instead?

    • @johngaither9263
      @johngaither9263 Před 11 měsíci

      Lee was in poor health during the battle. He was suffering from angina and fatigue from his heart condition. His back ached and getting around was difficult for him. His back and heart prevented him from climbing into the steeple of the Seminary where nearly the entire battlefield other than Culps Hill was visible.

    • @curious968
      @curious968 Před 21 dnem

      @@johngaither9263 And? You go to war with the army you have. Disease was endemic in war. If Lee was that sick, he should have either not commenced battle or temporarily turned over command to someone else. He did neither, so the fact he may not have been 100 per cent is on him.
      If we are to credit Lee's brilliance, let us also own up to his defeats. All generals in that war resorted to frontal assaults and nearly all of them were fruitless wastes of men.
      If we are to cry "butcher" when Grant does it, we must certainly do the same here when Lee does it and do so without making excuses.
      Otherwise, we aren't really celebrating Lee -- we are elevating him above his deserts. But he did his share of butchery and Pickett's charge should be the most infamous. It certainly was the most costly as his army never really could go on a sustained offensive ever again.

  • @johnpappone8610
    @johnpappone8610 Před 4 lety

    Bravely and heros pn both sides will never be forgotten

  • @kimberleyannedemong5621
    @kimberleyannedemong5621 Před 4 lety +6

    Hancock was a brilliant general. Thank you for another great video

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you so much for watching. Hancock was brilliant and a true inspiration to his men and that is what drew me to him as a commander. I can't wait to do a series on the Battle of the Wilderness and Hancock will take center stage in my videos.

    • @kimberleyannedemong5621
      @kimberleyannedemong5621 Před 4 lety

      @Chin Brumback you need to do some research on what hancock accomplished throughout the war i.e. no. Of battle flags no. Of prisoners etc. Also how he is still regarded by military historians today. After you have done that then I'd defend my answer. Until then I'm wasting my time

  • @Cuffski
    @Cuffski Před 3 lety +3

    This may be unpopular but I have been to Gettysburg' walked the field' been with friends and I'm never going to feel any sort of admiration for those traitors who took up arms against my country. History is fascinating and I enjoy this channel but will never honor, admire, or revere people who wanted to continue the enslavement of my ancestors. They were traitors and God blessed the Union troops fighting and ultimately defeating those insurrectionists. Slavery was vile, evil, despicable and their failed efforts to defend their fake right to own human beings was thwarted. Save that fake "Lost Cause BS" for others. Your videos are awesome !!!

    • @philiphales2109
      @philiphales2109 Před 29 dny +1

      Trite, facile, and ahistorical. Perhaps you feel the same way about Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Madison, and Monroe? By British standards they were traitors too. Perhaps you would have felt differently if you had grown up in the South during the Antebellum period.

  • @AudieHolland
    @AudieHolland Před 4 lety +8

    Back in the day, before Windows 7, I used to play "Sid Meier's Gettysburg" which had very decent graphics for the time.
    Playing as the Union, I was always disheartened whenever I heard the Rebel yell, because it was always heard when they had broken some of my lines.
    In contrast, the Union soldiers would should simply "Hurrah!" whenever they broke a Confederate line.
    In my personal opinion, the Confederates must have been inspired by the blood curdling yells from the Native Americans.
    It sure must have been a great psychological weapon.

    • @AudieHolland
      @AudieHolland Před 4 lety

      And even though I knew very little about the Battle of Gettysburg at the time, being the veteran wargamer I already was, I found that pressing on with Pettigrew's excellent brigade at McPherson's Ridge (I think) I would steamroller those Union cavalry and even the belated Iron Brigade couldn't do much.
      Playing as the Confederates, it wasn't that hard to win at "Sid Meier's Gettysburg" (the computer game, not the historical battle!). Playing as the Union, it was extremely difficult not to become utterly discouraged as my troops broke time and time again.
      Then later I found out that deploying masses of skirmishers on the Confederate flanks during an assault, would usually soften them up so they wouldn't always break through. To the regular Union soldier back then, in the midst of all this bloody firing and hand to hand combat (or bayonet and rifle stocks), it must have been utter hell. As a wargamer playing it on my PC, it was hard enough even with the excellent overall view. Knowing that most of my regular lines couldn't stand up against Confederate lines when going up against each other.

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety +1

      From all accounts it was very intimidating. I have an account of a north carolina soldier describing it that I will read one day.

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety +1

      @@AudieHolland I never played that game but I did play Civil War Generals 2. It was a really great game. Just never historically accurate.

    • @willoutlaw4971
      @willoutlaw4971 Před 4 lety +2

      The rebel yell was heard all over Gettysburg as the rebels were being shot in the butt as they ran from Union troops.

    • @johnnysunday402
      @johnnysunday402 Před 4 lety

      I've read somewhere a Scottish writer who witnesses and heard the rebel yell, equated it to the howling battle cries of the Scots in centuries prior.
      I've spent alot of time trying to find more on this, specifically who the Scot was, but as of yet I've only found anecdotal stories with little to no proofed references.

  • @tagreene06
    @tagreene06 Před 4 lety +5

    Hancock the Superb! "He's the best they've got. They don't make'em any better and that's a fact!" Gen. Armistead said it best

    • @skipper4126
      @skipper4126 Před 4 lety +1

      Sadly, Hancock would've been the commanding general at Gettysburg but being that he was replaced due to being put in charge of a beaten and resting army, that Jackson ended up routing, he wasn't trusted to do the job.
      Thing is, that wasn't his fault, Burnside screwed things up so badly any one taking over would've had the same kind of difficulty, but the newspapers see a terrible defeat it must be the man in charge to blame.

    • @j.chriswatson6847
      @j.chriswatson6847 Před 4 lety +1

      @@skipper4126 Burnside was horrible, as were most of the Eastern Federal commanders. Hancock, Chamberlain, and few other standouts were all that redeemed the eastern Federal. The Eastern War and the Western War was an exercise of opposites.

  • @math4U1234
    @math4U1234 Před 3 lety

    Any one know what music this is? Been looking for it.

  • @chetthebee1322
    @chetthebee1322 Před 3 lety +5

    The delay of Jeb Stuart caused by the resistance of a town militia he encountered and Stuart getting sidetracked looting supplies was what caused Lee the battle, IMO.

    • @chetthebee1322
      @chetthebee1322 Před 3 lety

      @Patrick Brinkmeier According to the video by the US Army War College it had plenty to do with it. Stuart was held up by a local militia

  • @rocistone6570
    @rocistone6570 Před 4 lety +28

    I have always wondered what course History might have taken had someone like Hancock been elected President in 1880, rather than Garfield thence Arthur.

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety +8

      Not sure, but that is something to ponder. Gilded Age political history is very complicated. I think Hancock would have made a good president. Thank you so much for watching and supporting the channel.

    • @Niel2760
      @Niel2760 Před 4 lety +1

      If his area of support came from the South, I’m glad he wasn’t elected.

    • @mikeh9242
      @mikeh9242 Před 4 lety

      He was one of the north’s best generals

    • @Niel2760
      @Niel2760 Před 4 lety

      That’s certainly true, but his politics sucked.

    • @j.chriswatson6847
      @j.chriswatson6847 Před 4 lety

      He would have been a more ethical president than Grant. Unfortunately, the Indian Wars were not kind to him.

  • @danwagner8432
    @danwagner8432 Před 4 lety +8

    That the Union found suitable ground was fortunate. Geography and discipline helped a lot.

  • @crashoverride4881
    @crashoverride4881 Před 3 lety +1

    What happened to General Pickett at seminary ridge at Gettysburg. Happened to General Hancock At marye's heights in Fredericksburg. A frontal charge is Fatal.

  • @oldgeezerproductions
    @oldgeezerproductions Před 4 lety +1

    At the 135 anniversary of the Battle, I attended as a mounted cavalryman in the 1st US Cavalry, Company A. The field that the main reenactments were on was topographically almost identical to Cemetery Ridge, as was the hillside that substituted for Seminary Ridge where my unit reenacted Buford's Stand. With my horse, we reenacted many of the cavalry engagements that had taken place at the East Cavalry Field too, but because there was no Union cavalry present for Pickett's Charge, we were only allow to watch from a distance. The reenactment was man for man, gun for gun, unit for unit true to the original. It was (by far) the most impressive sight I've ever witnessed and it was pulled off with a magnificence and accuracy that is impossible to describe if you weren't there to see it. I got the opportunity to see what "units melting away under the galling fire" actually looked like and finally understood something of the battle descriptions I had read so many years earlier.

  • @richardallgood815
    @richardallgood815 Před 4 lety +5

    My Gt Gt Gt Grandfather was there with the 56th VA. Infantry, Co. B He survived the battle and was eventually captured at Sailors (Saylers) Creek retreating with Lee to Appomattox after which he died as a POW at Point Lookout prison camp in Maryland. I often wonder what role he had during the battle. Was he in the charge, did he lay down, did he make it to "The Angle" or was he simply a spectator held back for other duties? Our family has over 100 letters he wrote to his family and I know on the march back to Va. he told his wife they were whooped. He said they had more civilians in PA that were ready to fight than Lee had left in the Army

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you so much for sharing that family history. I've got a video of an eyewitness to Pickett's charge coming out today or tomorrow. Please check it out. I think you will enjoy it.

    • @travisbayles870
      @travisbayles870 Před rokem

      Salute from Alabama to your Confederate ancestor

  • @charlesstuart7290
    @charlesstuart7290 Před 4 lety

    It seems, unlike almost any contemporary depiction of the battle, he doesn't seem to think that the artillery was particularly important in stopping the charge.

  • @ethanhoward389
    @ethanhoward389 Před 3 lety +1

    Hearing in his own words, hancock realize the power and importance of decentralized command a full century before it became common place is soooooo fucking fascinating

  • @Drew791
    @Drew791 Před 4 lety +9

    I love the portrayal of Hancock in the movie Gettysburg; and his laments on the strained friendships caused by the war.

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety +5

      Yes, Hancock was portrayed beautifully in the movie. It represented his military qualities well. Thank you so much for watching and supporting the channel.

    • @Drew791
      @Drew791 Před 4 lety +1

      @@HistoryGoneWilder Absolutely! I'm so glad I found your channel. Please keep doing a great job!

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety +1

      Will do. Thank you. I appreciate all the views. Please feel free to share the video to get the word out about the channel.

    • @garyvandecar8554
      @garyvandecar8554 Před 4 lety

      I truly love the account of the wonderful friendship between Lewis Armistead and Winfield Scott Hancock.

    • @garyvandecar8554
      @garyvandecar8554 Před 4 lety +1

      Detroit native Brian Mallon did a masterful job portraying Winfield Scott Hancock, He even bares some resemblance to Hancock.

  • @alienlife7754
    @alienlife7754 Před 4 lety +4

    Pickett’s charge was a rare mistake by Lee. But damn it was a costly one. It was a desperation move. Never really had a realistic chance of success.

    • @jamesmurray3082
      @jamesmurray3082 Před 2 lety

      Longstreet told him it would fail.lee wouldn't listen.

    • @curious968
      @curious968 Před 21 dnem

      Well, there was at least Malvern Hill.
      But Lee's biggest mistake is the one no one thinks about.
      After November 1864, with Lincoln safely re-elected, the war was 100 per cent hopeless. There was no victory possible. Lincoln was going to persist until it was finished, no question and no doubt. That's not hindsight. That is what everyone knew would happen prospectively.
      He should have told Davis to sue for the best peace he could get while he still had armies in the field and so some leverage, however slight, over the peace. War is not just for the heck of it. It needs to have a point. It lost all its point by November 1864 at the latest.
      Lee did nothing of the kind. He did the opposite. He fought and bled his army until they were on the verge of starvation. Even three days before Appomattox, he told his staff not to consider surrender. . .yet.
      Butchery, pure and simple. Pointless butchery.
      Every soldier in every theater that died after November 1864 was on Robert E. Lee and Jeff Davis for refusing to face the inevitable.
      Did they obtain better peace terms for all that carnage? No, they did not. Lincoln already knew what he would impose and he did exactly that. Every soldier died for absolutely nothing.
      People forget that had Lee held out even longer, Sherman was going to come right up his ass and do to North Carolina and Virginia what he did to Georgia. So, it was actually a blessing, of sorts, that Lee ran out of gas in April. Because it would have actually gotten worse than it already was for the south.

  • @frankmiller95
    @frankmiller95 Před 4 lety +6

    Hancock was from Pennsylvania. He did not have a southern accent.

  • @rogerhwerner6997
    @rogerhwerner6997 Před 2 lety +1

    Hancock is certainly an underrated Union general.

  • @RobertWF42
    @RobertWF42 Před 2 lety +1

    Intetesting that Hancock mentioned a line of skirmishers preceding the Confederate main battle line. Was that standard doctrine?
    Was the intent to keep Union troops heads down during the Confederate advance? Bait the Union soldiers to fire prematurely at long range and thus lose their ability to fire disciplined volleys at close range? Or were the skirmishers the best shots in their divisions, taking aim at Union officers and artillery?

  • @jaymuzquiz2942
    @jaymuzquiz2942 Před 4 lety +3

    "You want me to march into F@#$g what!" every single Civil War soldier

  • @Rockhound6165
    @Rockhound6165 Před 4 lety +2

    I've said this in other videos but the most underrated battles of Gettysburg were Little Round Top and Culp's Hill. And by underrated I mean their significance in winning Gettysburg. Most talk about Pickett's Charge but had the Confederates had been successful at LRT and Culp's Hill, Pickett's Charge not only might never had to happen but it would have been a moot point. Winning at LRT would have given the South much needed high ground and Culp's Hill would have exposed the Meade's right flank and would have allowed Lee to box them in for a slaughter. And had Lee won this battle, I still don't believe the South wins the war but what would have happened is that it would have demoralized Northern resolve and the Union would have pressured Lincoln into negotiating a cease fire. However, at the same time, Grant was splitting the Confederacy in half by taking Vicksburg meaning if Lincoln held fast and didn't negotiate peace, the war might have stretched longer than it did but eventually the South would still lose.

  • @azramey1164
    @azramey1164 Před 3 lety

    I live in southwestern Pa and periodically venture towards Gettysburg it is a beautiful and haunting place full of memory I only wish I could get there more often as it is a 3hr drive from where I live most people who live outside of Pennsylvania have no idea how large our state is its literally faster to drive from my location just south of Pittsburgh by leaving state dipping down into west Virginia and Maryland and then coming back up through the back hills then traveling straight across the state I can see why the north felt it had to hold this location at all cost as Washington is only about an hour or two away by car granted this would be much longer by foot but still it's way too close for comfort

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 3 lety

      Thank you so much for watching and supporting the channel. Please consider subscribing to the channel if you have not done so already. Also, please check out my other videos. I think you will enjoy them.

  • @dcash7018
    @dcash7018 Před 2 lety

    I had an ancestor in Stannards infantry

  • @louisavondart9178
    @louisavondart9178 Před 2 měsíci

    An interesting point to note. The Union soldiers firing into the flanks of the Confederates while moving into position. They just couldn't wait to get revenge for Fredricksburg.

  • @Atreus21
    @Atreus21 Před 3 lety

    Do the battle of Port Hudson.

  • @jamesricker3997
    @jamesricker3997 Před 4 lety +1

    The sad reason for Pickett's Charge what's that Robert E Lee thought his troops could accomplish anything he ordered them to do regardless of the risks , because they always had succeeded in the past.

  • @joycekoch5746
    @joycekoch5746 Před 2 lety

    Would be interesting to get General Hancock's take on America today if a time machine could give him a tour of our time.

  • @weaselworm8681
    @weaselworm8681 Před 4 lety +5

    Love the drama of Gettysburg, but the more I read and study Vicksburg seems like the more important victory.

    • @Putaspellonyou
      @Putaspellonyou Před 4 lety

      Historians will debate that for generations to come. Vicksburg had a definite strategic impact with Texas and Arkansas and Missouri (and all their resources) cut off, but after Gettysburg Lee could never take the initiative again, he could only react.

    • @TheBargles
      @TheBargles Před 4 lety +2

      Vicksburg was a great Union offensive victory, Gettysburg was a great defensive victory. Amazing that the two generals from these battles won arguably their greatest victories at the exact same time and then would work together in the Overland Campaign.

    • @Putaspellonyou
      @Putaspellonyou Před 4 lety +1

      @@TheBargles true. And that Grant had the vision to turn Sherman loose. I don't think he could've come east to deal with Lee did he not have confidence that whomever was out west didn't need hand-holding.

    • @Putaspellonyou
      @Putaspellonyou Před 4 lety

      @@TheBargles true. And that Grant had the vision to turn Sherman loose. I don't think he could've come east to deal with Lee did he not have confidence that whomever was out west didn't need hand-holding.

    • @calguy3838
      @calguy3838 Před 4 lety

      @@Putaspellonyou Part of the reason why Lee never really took the initiative again is that Grant never let him have it.

  • @AudieHolland
    @AudieHolland Před 4 lety +7

    Oh, forgot to mention I was hit and wounded but that's a minor detail.

  • @billw5823
    @billw5823 Před 4 lety

    I'm not sure that anyone could have done a better job with less than what Hancock did and his actions probably won the day for the Union. This is probably one of the very few battles in which Lee got a little ahead of himself and felt that the Army of Northern Virginia was invincible, which until this time was pretty accurate. I believe that Lee felt that this was his only real chance to strike hard and end the way and because of that he probably over committed himself to this battle. One of the biggest mistakes of the day was made by Stuart and his brilliant horsemen who got distracted and arrived too late to help, probably a turning point in the battle. I believe that because of this Lee started with a huge disadvantage where he thought he had an advantage. Plenty of heroes on both sides and I'm sure more than a few mistakes made on both sides. The Union could afford to make more mistakes while the south had very little room for even a stalemate here.

  • @frankgioia514
    @frankgioia514 Před 4 lety +2

    hancock's my favorite also. i firmly believe the union cause would not have been successful without him.

  • @tnt-hv6qw
    @tnt-hv6qw Před 4 lety +2

    go virginian!!!!!!!!! great stuff. thank you sir.

  • @cindycampbell4606
    @cindycampbell4606 Před 2 lety

    Have you found any information of Hancock's reaction at the loss of his friend armistied

  • @Northman1963
    @Northman1963 Před 11 měsíci

    It's difficult to understand how so many men could be persuaded to march slowly into a suicide mission. It was a mile of walking towards the union line under heavy fire most of the way. The artillery inflicted awful losses, yet they marched on into a wall of rifle fire. I think the average soldier in the ranks had no idea what they were in for, and were just placing all their trust in the leaders. Lee really blew it. A massive blunder.

  • @georgelindsey7370
    @georgelindsey7370 Před 4 lety

    Thumbs High!

  • @jimmyjams9036
    @jimmyjams9036 Před měsícem

    I don't see why Lee didn't keep trying to turn the left flank of the Union army even at the expense of depleting his own left flank. They could have ended up between Meade and DC. It can be argued that both of Lees northern forays were what cost him the war.

  • @RalphReagan
    @RalphReagan Před 4 lety

    Do a video on Fredericksburg.

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety

      I do have a video about Stonewall Jackson at Fredericksburg. But I will be doing others on Fredericksburg. Thank you so much for watching and supporting the channel.

  • @reloads223
    @reloads223 Před 4 lety +3

    What was the name of Gen Hancock's Book ? Or did he write a book ?

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety +1

      It is definitely worth a read. Most generals wrote something, whether small or large. Thank you for watching and supporting the channel.

    • @freakyold
      @freakyold Před 4 lety +2

      I though it was a report that he wrote to his superiors such as Gen. Meade, the Secretary of War, or even Pres. Lincoln himself.

    • @HistoryGoneWilder
      @HistoryGoneWilder  Před 4 lety +1

      @@freakyold this account I read was his official report.

  • @stevestringer7351
    @stevestringer7351 Před 4 lety +4

    Ahhhh, "Hancock the Magnificent". Didnt he and General Reynolds discover a ford downstream from where Burnside wanted to cross at Fredericksburg? They proposed the ford to take the town and heights before General Lee arrived with the army. This action could have probably been the death blow to the Confederacy right then.

    • @trippbloodworth4217
      @trippbloodworth4217 Před 4 lety +1

      Steve Stringer
      Probably so, don't remember who suggested it. But one thing was for sure, Burnside wasn't the sharpest knife in the drawer...

    • @springfield03sniper
      @springfield03sniper Před 4 lety +1

      Tripp Bloodworth he wasn’t dumb, he just had no confidence. He didn’t want to take chances. There were always options for audacious maneuvers when your force is larger, and better supplied. Burnside didn’t think like that, so a frontal assault it was.

    • @Putaspellonyou
      @Putaspellonyou Před 4 lety

      There was actually another bridge, unguarded by Confederates, further downstream.

    • @Putaspellonyou
      @Putaspellonyou Před 4 lety

      @@springfield03sniper considerin McClellan had en entire corps he didn't commit at Antietam and Burnside's bullheadedness later that year at Marye's Heights I'd say he was merely just not that inventive as a tactician.

  • @alsehl3609
    @alsehl3609 Před 3 lety

    Other accounts describe the Union artillery very powerful in decimating Picketts charge, however Hancock relates it was not much of a factor. Why the discrepancy?

  • @elr.4780
    @elr.4780 Před 4 lety

    Anyone see the 1993 movie Gettysburg? Lee wasn't always taking General Longstreets ideas under advisement. Before the Battle of little round top Longstreet was arguing with General John Bell Hood, he wanted to place confederate guns in place to support his men attempting to take the hill. Longstreet said it would take too long to cut down the trees and put cannon into place (half the day), his (Hoods) attacked had to take place along with other attacks in other areas to keep the Union busy and unable to strengthen areas under attack. in the movie he told Bell, hell I have been arguing with him this morning and the whole time we have been here. General Longstreet knew what General Picketts division were about to face from the Union forces if they attacked the Union center. I know it was a movie, but surely General Lee was not like the character portrayed in the movie, stubborn, indicisive. Longstreet pressed his artillery chief Col. Edward Alexander, to concentrate his artillery on the area they were going to attack, the center, cemetary ridge, Longstreet wanted to weaken the center before attacking it. General Pickett had 3 divisions under his command for the attack (march) , officers: Trimble, Hill, Pettigrew, Armistead. General Longstreet could give the order to attack because he knew what was about to happen. We know what happened. General Pickett was Bitter about what happened it is said he never forgave Lee neither.

  • @Brandon-ld2dn
    @Brandon-ld2dn Před 4 lety +8

    Pickett’s charge was an gigantic mistake by Lee, one of many in Gettysburg.

    • @Putaspellonyou
      @Putaspellonyou Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you, General. If only you had been there to set him straight.

    • @jamesphillips4836
      @jamesphillips4836 Před 4 lety +2

      Talk about hindsight being 20-20 lol.

    • @bonkersmcgee4356
      @bonkersmcgee4356 Před 4 lety

      Thanks for clearing that up chief.

    • @useyourbrain3765
      @useyourbrain3765 Před 4 lety

      All his decisions were made upon the information he had in hand, and of the accepted tactics of the day.

    • @curious968
      @curious968 Před 21 dnem

      @@useyourbrain3765 Oh, come now. Frontal charges had been done to death by that point and they uniformly failed no matter who did them. The only one I remember working was when Sherman had a 10 to 1 advantage over some small southern force or other in some minor battle.
      The rest all ended as they did in WW I -- with loads of casualties and no success. Generals in both wars kept at it, apparently unable to learn from their mistakes.
      What really won civil war battles, offensively, was to outmaneuver your opponent with various flanking maneuvers that compelled them to retreat. With or without battle. Charging into enemy artillery should have been retired as a tactic by 1863 at the latest.
      Look at Grant's underrated Vicksburg campaign. It is actually brilliant, but the bits that failed miserably were his frontal assaults on entrenched confederate positions. It succeeded where he surprised and outmaneuvered the rebs who didn't know where he was and couldn't see him coming.

  • @Josh-vg2lj
    @Josh-vg2lj Před 2 lety +2

    "Heaviest artillery fire I have ever known" ahh yes edward porter alexander. If only you knew him

  • @billbright1755
    @billbright1755 Před 4 lety

    Yet, when the smoke had cleared away, though now at a crazy angle, the sight of Old Glory could still be seen.
    Boys I’m afraid we’ve merely awakened a sleeping giant. Our artillery batteries are spent. It’s this day or never. That hill or fold the colors.