173 RYAN QUINT - DRANESVILLE
39:07
2023 ANNUAL REPORT
2:41
3 ай бұрын
CWRT CONGRESS MISSION
1:22
3 ай бұрын
72 GRANT - WE THOUGHT HE WAS DEAD
33:39
Пікірлер
@eriknpf1
@eriknpf1 4 күн бұрын
Wonderful work, thank you
@eddielongo7770
@eddielongo7770 5 күн бұрын
Patrick Delaney and William Collins would have been an interesting people to meet.
@billherrick3569
@billherrick3569 5 күн бұрын
excellent!
@MiaRossi-lp7tb
@MiaRossi-lp7tb 6 күн бұрын
Is Reverand Kensey Johns Stewart mentioned on here?
@LarryDavis-r7j
@LarryDavis-r7j 9 күн бұрын
Perez Mark Hall Melissa Rodriguez Michelle
@MaryLong-f1b
@MaryLong-f1b 9 күн бұрын
Jackson Sarah Moore Edward Harris Daniel
@RobinBurke-tb9pd
@RobinBurke-tb9pd 9 күн бұрын
Fabulous! Thank you!
@baileyharrison1313
@baileyharrison1313 9 күн бұрын
Anderson Eric Brown Robert Jackson Barbara
@statuesdesigns4223
@statuesdesigns4223 10 күн бұрын
Love Grant and love your accurate portrayal Bravo!!!
@SandfordSmythe
@SandfordSmythe 19 күн бұрын
There are reports that things were not so cozy after they got liquored up at the local watering holes.
@gregorybrown4062
@gregorybrown4062 21 күн бұрын
Please do a book or video on General Henry Halleck. I can't find anything done well on him
@rutlandfuel2637
@rutlandfuel2637 26 күн бұрын
I love Sheridan too but it seems Shelby Foote doesn't not. Lots of passive aggressive descriptions of him and his generalship
@michaelhoffman5348
@michaelhoffman5348 28 күн бұрын
Nice job Scott - thanks for educating us on the fiery life of Extra Billy!
@scottmingus
@scottmingus 28 күн бұрын
Thanks for your kind words. Extra Billy was indeed quite a character!
@rc59191
@rc59191 Ай бұрын
This was really beautifully done. Both side of my family served the Union but I can't stand it when people say General Grant wore a dirty uniform just to be disrespectful that isn't in line with his character at all and is a complete disservice to his character.
@thayerthacker6858
@thayerthacker6858 Ай бұрын
Very well done! Thank you
@thomasfort2051
@thomasfort2051 Ай бұрын
Really, Really?? None of you Sherman admirers ever wore the blue, so saying “ We Did this or that, We really showed the Rebel Traitors” is stupid. What you admire is a psychopath leading a bunch of 18-20 year old arsonists, robbers,rapists and murderers against a helpless civilian population. The fairy tale of Southerners burning down their own houses, plantations and cities is a fantasy. Civilians were abused all along Sherman’s March. Foraging for food is just another word for stealing. Herding civilians down the road in front of the Federal column to be blown up by the equivalent of IED’s or then called torpedoes is a war crime. You also must be admirers of the atrocities in WW 2 on the Eastern Front. What a bunch of psychos. You ought to read what President Eisenhower said about secession and Robert E. Lee for some perspective.
@Alex-ej4wm
@Alex-ej4wm Ай бұрын
This is my Longstreet impersonation... 😡😡😢😪😭😭🤧
@robertbollard5475
@robertbollard5475 Ай бұрын
This is really interesting. Regarding the impact of 1848, as an Australian historian, it's been hard to avoid the involvement of "'48s" in the Eureka Uprising in Victoria in 1854 which was largely repsonsible for the Antipodean experiment in representative democracy (early adoption of manhood suffrage, the invention of the secret ballot and early adoption of female suffrage). This was a multicultural uprising with Irish, German, Italian, Canadian and American components (one of the "ringleaders charged was a former slave from Baltimore", but that's a different point from the one that I want to make here). The point is that there were young men from Europe fleeing the defeat of revolution to seek their fortune on a gold field in Australia. When they arrived there and were faced with "taxation without representation" their response was to rebel. In the early stages, the rebellion was respectable under English leadership. But when the authorities proved unresponsive the Irish in particular, with the other pre-mentioned nationaltiies backing them up, resorted to arms to resolve their grievances. They lost the battle but won the war. Eighteen "ringleaders" were acquitted by a sympathetic jury. The first of these was the aforementioned former slave from Baltimore. who was held on the shoulders os supporters in triumphant procession through the streets of Melbourne. After that trial, the colonial government held an "inquiry" which recommended a dramatic lowering of the cost of a "Miner's Right" (the tax in question) along with giving every holder of one the vote. They then proceeded to elect a new parliament which expanded the franchise and the democratic experiment began.
@DamienSullivan-hw4lq
@DamienSullivan-hw4lq Ай бұрын
Asia Booth Clarke lived in my home town of Bournemouth .
@authorlisasamia
@authorlisasamia Ай бұрын
How wonderful thank you for sharing!
@DamienSullivan-hw4lq
@DamienSullivan-hw4lq Ай бұрын
Thank you . Hardly anybody in Bournemouth knows it .
@peterpage7441
@peterpage7441 Ай бұрын
Thank you sir, for you work and love in putting this piece together. I am from Maryland, and during the 100th commemoration of the war, was taken by my dad to several battle sites and re-enactments. During the 1990's I made many trips to Gettysburg, sometimes to just go up Little Roundtop and just sit and meditate. My great-great and great grandfathers fought together in the war and I have many items which I inherited from Samuel Moore (great grandfather) from that era. One of such is a set of original bound volumes (chronicles) by the U.S. government published in 1866 and 1867 chronicling the war; which, as I was told as a child, were published and made available only to union veterans of that war. These large books are invaluable as an authorized written history of the Civil War produced by the "victors" of that war. Perhaps there may be some historical interest. My email address is '[email protected]'. Let me know.
@michaellillis2836
@michaellillis2836 Ай бұрын
I learned a lot more about history listening to this talk. I believe President Kennedy's "Profiles in Courage" describes the one senator who voted against convicting President Johnson's impeachment.
@kevingaffney9689
@kevingaffney9689 Ай бұрын
I am an American who has lived in Japan for 31 years. These first person history videos are excellent in both entertainment and information. Thank you, sir!
@gruntlima6845
@gruntlima6845 Ай бұрын
Longstreet did complain and disagree with Lee, that is a fact well documented by historians from the South and North. The complaints by Longstreet were in fact correct, this is supported by the events and the outcome of the battle. Lee was responsible for the heavy losses at Gettysburg not Longstreet. Your suggestions of are not supported by historians. Your opinion I respect but totally wrong.
@michaelhoffman5348
@michaelhoffman5348 Ай бұрын
Another excellent job Cory - thank you for the excellent research.
@bethbartlett5692
@bethbartlett5692 2 ай бұрын
Phil Sheridan is my favorite General of the Union Army and Nathan Bedford Forest of the Confederate Army. Their clear sheet determination and ability to recover their gaps, using experience as it should be used, to correct their direction.
@michaelhoffman5348
@michaelhoffman5348 2 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation. Well researched.
@xpress144
@xpress144 2 ай бұрын
I enjoy these tremendously. Thank you for taking your time. They give me deeper insight than other videos out there. Thanks again
@andrelindor1775
@andrelindor1775 2 ай бұрын
I hate when people smack their lips as they talk...other than that, brilliant!
@LanceStoddard
@LanceStoddard 2 ай бұрын
Lee had Gettysburg on June 26. He had Early march North, AWAY from the Union army. This mistake led to Lee being unable to fight the approaching Union Corps separately as they entered Pennsylvania. Later he kept his troops in a long arc, giving Meade time to get to the high ground. Lee had no qualms about sending Jackson on a flanking march at Chancellorsville but forbade Longstreet to execute the same maneuver. Lee also made the mistake of starting a battle with out Stuart on the field. Longstreet had only 15 to 20,000 men at his disposal. Not really sure why people think he should have beaten Meade's 80,000 on his own. Lee fought a battle he did not have to, and fought it in a hurry. Meade knew ho to fight on a hill, and Lee obliged him.
@Traveler7450
@Traveler7450 2 ай бұрын
You should wear war worn clothes as Grant did to make it look more real. I do enjoy your channel as I’m always studying Civil War.
@travisbayles870
@travisbayles870 2 ай бұрын
My great great great uncle Sergeant Thomas McCracken of the 16th North Carolina Infantry Penders Brigade of Hills Light Division fought at Gaines Mill
@akaJackLugar
@akaJackLugar 2 ай бұрын
Grew up in the county (Fairfield) next to the county (Perry) Sheridan grew up in. The Sheridan house in Somerset is open for tours on Saturdays.
@zooropa33
@zooropa33 3 ай бұрын
This would be more authentic if the narrator wasn't speaking with a southern accent - Grant was from Illinois. He sounds like an Alabami
@markfacemire8474
@markfacemire8474 3 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation on General Irvin McDowell.
@sstrykert
@sstrykert 3 ай бұрын
Is there a full original draft of the Lieber Code with Abraham Lincoln's full preamble(declaration/speech justifying it) attached? Doing some historical research, but can't find any government documentation of it, as if this piece was deliberately erased from history.
@josephwurzer4366
@josephwurzer4366 3 ай бұрын
-No purposeful yet still a delay on July 2. Riding in the middle of his marching columns a poor decision. -July 3 yes he resisted lees plan. The attack was not obstructed though & was done as planned.
@corypfarr3200
@corypfarr3200 3 ай бұрын
Hi Joseph, thanks for your comments. I wanted to address one thing you mentioned - Longstreet's riding toward the middle of his column during his two divisions' march to the right on July 2 - in hopes of bringing some clarity to that topic. First, it was not mandatory for a corps commander to ride at the head of his marching column - in fact, as the army's senior corps commander, it would not really have been the wisest thing for Longstreet to do. Second, Longstreet already had one of his senior subordinates, Lafayette McLaws, riding at his division's (and the column's) head with the guide, Captain Samuel Johnston. Third, and perhaps most importantly, Longstreet rode with Lee for some time during the beginning of the march. If Longstreet's location at that time was a concern, surely the commanding general would have expressed as much to his senior lieutenant.
@clarkbuckner4900
@clarkbuckner4900 2 ай бұрын
​@@corypfarr3200Love your scholarship on Longstreet ! Gotta wonder why historians have pillaged him,even in the modern era.
@corypfarr3200
@corypfarr3200 2 ай бұрын
@@clarkbuckner4900 Thanks very much, Clark. Glad to hear it.
@vm.999
@vm.999 3 ай бұрын
Team Longstreet ❤
@TomWakeman-ul7om
@TomWakeman-ul7om 3 ай бұрын
Lee was the best general the Confederates had, he was not perfect or a god.
@jackiemccool583
@jackiemccool583 3 ай бұрын
I have been researching antebellum Westpoint curriculum. I came across your video and you have confirmed my suspicion. Which is the blaring emphasis on engineering that was taught. This research began after noticing the engineering backgrounds mentioned in several officers' memoirs although I was looking for infantry tactics/strategy when I began. Very interesting. Thanks! I'll be watching more.
@gruntforever7437
@gruntforever7437 3 ай бұрын
West Point started out as a school for Engineering officers primarily. Over time it expanded its curriculum.
@mjford6152
@mjford6152 4 ай бұрын
Grant had a southern accent? He was a Westerner.
@CWRTCongress
@CWRTCongress 4 ай бұрын
Apparently you have no knowledge of Grant’s childhood. Read a couple biographies before making a judgement.
@mcfail3450
@mcfail3450 4 ай бұрын
I think the big thing historians ignore about the primary sources is they had reasons to lie or play politics. Many of the staff officers and generals were in their 30s or younger during the war. They had 30+ years after the war to live and try to make an income. In that time period a man's reputation was a huge factor in that and so many had very large incentive to flat out lie. I find it funny how with some generals, especially certain union generals, historians always discount or take their primary account with grains of salt but those same historians seem to think all the southern generals are telling the whole truth and nothing but the truth all the time. Col. Long specifically contradicts himself in his personal accounts of gettysburg a few times yet historians use his account more than any to criticize Longstreet. Specifically Long says Lee was bewildered when meeting with Ewell at around 10am why he didn't hear artillery and the attack starting on the right. But that's simply a clear lie. There is no reasonable way that Lee should have expected that or thought that. It's clear Long lied to further the "Longstreet delayed the attack" narrative. This brings up how many other people lied to further that narrative. It's interesting to me that Longstreet received letters from Taylor and Long saying they didn't know of a sunrise attack order but both men later criticized Longstreet along that narrative. Again these were young men who's family well-being relied on their untarnished reputation. Of course they'd lie to protect their reputation. Especially when you boil down to who really was at fault at gettysburg you find it was Lee's staff that was in the wrong many times and leading the failures. Lee himself in his resignation letter to Davis specifically mentions he over estimated the ability of his personal staff to convey his orders and bring him information. So Taylor, Johnston, Long, and the rest of Lee's staff were likely where most of the blame lay so they are the most active in blaming Longstreet later on after initially giving accounts that didn't blame him. Jubal Early and Penelton found and created a scapegoat that these desperate men then latched onto and laid into. As a side note historians do the same with northern general accounts. Meade is painted as truthful and Sickles as a liar. The reality is Meade was political too and likely lied some too. Historians often need to sell books and what sells books is romanticized stereotypic characters. Black and white situations. The liar and the good guy narratives. The victim and the persecutors. In reality almost everyone in society lays in the gray area between these stereotypic black and white realms of narratives. They both act in good intentions and bad. They both win and lose. Real people are complex and not simple.
@tomjones2202
@tomjones2202 4 ай бұрын
My daughter lives about a mile from Grant's Farm in St. Louis and I've been to Jefferson Barracks. I often wonder when I'm on streets around that place and Jefferson Barracks, did they really walk here??? RIGHT HERE? Maybe :)
@CWRTCongress
@CWRTCongress 4 ай бұрын
Remember that Grant was a superb horseman. So, walking was a rare occurrence.
@lawrencemyers3623
@lawrencemyers3623 4 ай бұрын
Surprised to hear that correspondents traveling with the AOP's Cavalry Corps armed themselves. Always thought they were considered to be non-combatants.
@edlowe7599
@edlowe7599 4 ай бұрын
Thank you
@sharonstout4957
@sharonstout4957 4 ай бұрын
I'm so impressed with the accurate Southern pronunciation of Lafayette!
@bloviatormaximus1766
@bloviatormaximus1766 5 ай бұрын
The ridiculous "Lost Cause" tiresome lie about a tragic doomed prideful disaster. Plenty of blame for all persons unnamed.A well defended position should be hailed. Is that time, and place?
@pops1507
@pops1507 5 ай бұрын
Effing Rebs
@WonderfulEagle-mm1vj
@WonderfulEagle-mm1vj 3 ай бұрын
They did what they thought was right the federal government was trying to en slavery and take away states brights that was the issue for the rebs. B the union was trying to keep slavery from stef inh to the New states they slaver states would lose power in Congress if they slavery was notable to grow. Think of it as the battles I'n Congress . Both sides fighting for control very much like the abortion issue today I truly hope it doesn't start a war today.
@Tmindful182
@Tmindful182 5 ай бұрын
Lee to Longstreet - I trust you more than anyone… but Im not going to listen to a word you say
@erik01270
@erik01270 5 ай бұрын
I'm a sheridan
@daver8521
@daver8521 5 ай бұрын
Logan was much more popular with the troops than Sherman. A reporter wrote "When Uncle Billy rides by, he receives a smattering of polite applause; but when Black Jack makes an appearance, the men cheer and throw their hats in the air." Logan performed magnificently at Atlanta, and his subsequent demotion is to Sherman's everlasting discredit.