Very nicely done sir...historic accuracy and first hand information. Have you considered doin video's on the Indian Wars ? During and after reconstruction. ...some of the same players.
@BirdDogg3 жыл бұрын
Thanks G.W. That’s a great idea, I might take a look at that as I love Native American history as well. Thanks for the idea!
@markholbrook39494 жыл бұрын
Back in the day they were such masters of the english language.. Its really amazing...
@delcapslock1003 жыл бұрын
No, you’re seeing the exception, not the rule.
@shawnaron22513 жыл бұрын
My 4 great grandfather fought in the 11 and died at Gettysburg , he was buried there and after the war my grandmother went and retrieved his body and brought him home here to itawamba county, ms!
@cberry6751 Жыл бұрын
What an awesome post!! My great grandfather fought w the 55th Va & was captured after leaving Gettysburg while crossing the Potomac. He spent the rest of the war at the prison in Maryland. I’ve got little information on the prison bc I have no surviving letters. Your family suffered greatly and so far from home! My heart weeps. 🙏❤️🙏
@brianjett57184 жыл бұрын
Well, that made me cry. God bless our ancestors. I'm proud of them to my bones.
@BirdDogg4 жыл бұрын
I can only hope to do them some small degree of justice for there simply aren't men easily found of this caliber in todays world. I feel truly honored to share their stories, some of them largely lost or erased from history, I only wish more people cared to hear their stories. Alas, the modern world.
@brianjett57184 жыл бұрын
@@BirdDogg , You're doing an excellent job friend and deserve to be recognized for your work. I don't mind the modern world so much, it's just the people in it..... yuck. I'm not sure when victimhood and cowardice became virtues, but I'm sure communists had something to do with it 😉 If you have the time I suggest that on KZbin you look up the White Oak a museum. This is where I am from. This museum was founded by my grandfather's cousin D.P. It really is a tremendous collection all found in Stafford and Spotsylvania County Virginia. This is the best offering I have for you in thanks for your tremendous efforts. (Most particularly because I'm broke) I hope you enjoy.
@BirdDogg4 жыл бұрын
Ahh thanks so much Brian, I have actually had the privilege of visiting the the White Oak museum in days gone by. A truly amazing tribute to the war between the states and these brave men and women. I can’t thank you enough for the kind words of encouragement for they are more valuable than all the treasures of the world. Often times those with the most empty pockets have the most full hearts.
@ghostcityshelton93783 жыл бұрын
@@BirdDogg Fantastic job sir. I subbed today. The last bit in your comment here reminds me of the commies now in our government who just want money, power, and control. Reminds me of my Bible where it mentions about the uselessness of gaining the worlds riches, yet lossing one's soul. The United States will prevail in the end. Please what ever you do, do not take any covid so called 'testing' and no so called 'covid shots' they are bio-weapons. The puppetmasters Obama and buds control Biden/Harris. They have founded along with Bill Gates the bio threat/killer covid along with China, thr real killers are all the different 'shots'. Some change a person's DNA, by giving them a dead person's DNA Chromosome -16, it's an awful way to go. After the shot in 7 to ten days the tounge gets pointed and won't stop moving and your eyes bug out and your upper body slams into the legs over a short time the lungs fill up and death. Other shots cause fatal blood clots and many other medical problems as well. Other shots destory a persons emune system and so on. Big tech stole the video that showed China 1st trying out their covid on there on people, they'd spray the 'gem' in public places and you can guess the rest. I'm an Army Combat soldier and have seen some really nasty stuff but what China did to it's 'thrown away people', how they locked them up in buildings with bars on the windows and metal doors, no food, water, medical care, left to die, then they come back to get material for their DNA shots (plus way more, can't go into here) it all was beyond gross. The testing swabs are soaked in Ethaline Oxide which is used to clean medical equipment and causes all kinds of cancers and breathing problems and INFERTILITY and deaths. There are covid shots that produce glowing numbers inside the shot arms, can be see when the arm is scanned in a hospital. There are covid shots that contain Graphen Oxide which is used to make bullet proof vests and it distorys the lungs causeing deaths also with fatal bloodclots. I wasn't going to put the above in this comment but I'm not just some wackco type they call an 'antit vaxer'. My last jobs in the Army was ammo and explosives and taught bio-weapons and nuke warfare. There's another 'new thing' the clowns came up with...instolling the blue street lights all over our country they're popping up. The poor excues is they're 'defective lights', THOUSE LIGHTS ARE BEING PUT UP FOR A RESON. Do they scan a shot person's number, are they doseing folks with radiation? Sounds crazy? Well they all ready are doseing folks with deadly radiation with 5G towers. There was a You Tuber trying to warn folks of the 5G towers, how his meter would still be off the charts at 3 blocks away from the tower and his meter regs. the radiation couldn't be measured. Where the towers are a high cancer rate and deaths are recordered. His last video before You Tube took his channel down he was on some mountain where a huge 5G tower was, also a strange metal building was there. The vegetation was all dead, no sounds of animals, no birds, no nothing, just the loud humming of the tower. I'm sorry this is so long a comment but I thought it was important that this info got out. It's like we're all on a battlefield, with the commies in goverment BUT ! people are really starting to wake up ! There are 3 major dams in China, and the biggest one is above WoHan where the labs are and those dams are failing, they are no longer stright. Esp. if that biggest dam breaks then WoHan, the labs will be distoryed. BUT ! then what happens to all the bio--crap stored there?!🤔 I don't know. On a much lighter note, my great (whatever how many greats) grandfather Peleg Tilson was in the Civil War. He was courting a lady, exchanged his Army boots for dressshoes for some crazy reson. Before he could get into his other Army boots his company had to move out, in short they had to run through a freashly cut corn field, grandpa's feet got cut up and he and others were sent to Anderson Prison. If he haddn't made it I wouldn't be here. To honour him I joined the Army. I've had many encounters with ghosts on the Civil War battle fields, at the Jenny Wade house. What you are doing sir is very important and keeping alive what has gone down in our past history, be it Blue or Gay they fought for what they believed in and they ALL should be honnoured and not ever forgotten. Take a cammra, keep it with you, talk outloud to the folks that lived and fought and died there and while doing so please take a bunch of just ramdom pictures. You may think you're alone, but you just might find out that the fallen soldiers sprites are still around. Take day time, early evening and night time shots, that's how I get my ghost shots. Course it doesn't always 'work', but sometimes it does. Sorry for such a long comment but I thought I'd share some important covid info and such. The man in your video here, I like to think he and family are in heaven together again and happy. Maybe they are in another demention and are 'living' on their farm? One last thing in short : My friend had a birthday party, they lived in Gettysburg in a house from that time period, though the house had been inlarged at some time. We were upstairs and there was a Civil War looking soldier down the hall looking very sad. Music was playing it was on Halloween so we thought the soldier was a person in custume till he just faded way. The soldier had started to walk towards us, then stopped and looked very sad, then he faded. The way I figure it is that the soldier was standing in the older part of the house, and we were on the side of the house that had been built AFTER the Civil War. If we had walked toward him would we maybe then have been stuck in a time warp? Part of me wishes I'd have walked to him and part of me sadly is glad I didn't. I just hope that sprite and the others have found peace. Take care sir. I SALUTE you. 🤘👻💖
@FirsteMann1929 Жыл бұрын
@@BirdDogg They certainly were a different breed
@jamesmcmillian98963 жыл бұрын
That Pvt was more educated than most college grads now.
@carolinadog86343 жыл бұрын
I have my great grandfathers (x3) last letter home from June of 1864. He was with the 24th NC Company C in Ransoms brigade. He gets killed about a week and a half later in battle during the opening days of the Siege of Petersburg. He talks about Lee and Grant, trading tobacco for coffee. He wants to go home and is bothered by all the cannons being fired. He was buried in the mass grave in a Blandford Cemetery. It’s haunting to read it. Wish I had a picture him but I do have one of his wife when she’s old. I also have the news paper article listing him as killed back in 1864 in the Weekly Confederate. We still own a 100 acre portion of his farm. Love the channel!
@BirdDogg3 жыл бұрын
How awesome to know his history! Ransom’s brigade was in some of the thickest fighting in the war. Amazing to think any of them made it through. I appreciate all the encouragement and the support of the channel!!
@carolinadog86343 жыл бұрын
@@BirdDogg yes we are grateful to have it. Both his brothers served as well one of them didn’t make it either died of disease. The family farm beside ours the Brown Family Farm sent five of their sons to the war (one of them was married to my great grandfathers x3 sister) 3 of the five died in the war so between the two farms that touched 8 men went to war and only 3 returned alive leaving many widows and orphans.. most of which are buried on our farm (Bailey Farm) and across the road on the Brown Farm. I have several copies of their letters as well speaking about watching their brothers die. What a terrible and fascinating war
@jaydubbyuh22923 жыл бұрын
One of my paternal grandfathers, Ambrose W. West, Co.F, 26th Va. Inf. Vols., Wise's Brigade, Bushrod Johnson's Div., was k.i.a., Petersburg, 11 July, 1864, buried in the mass grave at Blandford Church Cemetery. My other grandfathers survived and were paroled at Appomattox.
@wildestcowboy26683 жыл бұрын
@@carolinadog8634 I wish I could go back and give a few of them some of ' my guns' an ur grandfather my AR 15 with all my rounds.
@herberthinton14993 жыл бұрын
What a priceless piece of history you possess.
@jerryburgess9773 жыл бұрын
How gallant and noble was that young man! Sorely missing in today's world.
@spg777773 жыл бұрын
I'm always inspired, and a bit saddened considering our present seeming lack of such skill, by the articulate and thoughtful way people composed their correspondence during this era. Thank you for your efforts to preserve and promote this part of our history.
@1980bwc4 жыл бұрын
Wow! A powerful few words he wrote. Those boys had more grit in their pinky finger, than 10 of us modern men have in our entire bodies put together. Another great video Chris!
@alexkalish82883 жыл бұрын
My friend , I was an infantry officer in Vietnam and I can assure you that the young men I served with were as brave and selfless as those civil war Vets. PS - my regiment fought at Gettysburg (12th Inf.).
@davidkreutzer47783 жыл бұрын
@@alexkalish8288 , that of i have no doubt ! These last 20yrs we've seen young men step up and serve and defend . As many of our young and grown men have done . I'd qualify that these letters from so long ago are just elegantly written that do true justice to they're personal feelings . That we have long forgotten . Thank you for serving our great nation
@travisclack47343 жыл бұрын
@@alexkalish8288 your the reason they sell them POW Mia hats and Vietnam vet hats at gas station everyone forgets it was chicken shit politics not men that lost that war or however you look at it thanks for your service sir I appreciate it
@richardswann53003 жыл бұрын
@@travisclack4734 "you're' the reason" ! Go back to English class, grade two !
@carywest92563 жыл бұрын
@@richardswann5300 Why do you have correct someone you don't even know? I reckon you can walk on water, eh ?
@herberthinton14993 жыл бұрын
What a poignant story. Not an isolated one, either. The grit and courage displayed by these men on both sides was truly remarkable.
@gingerninja4983 жыл бұрын
Letter stained with my blood. God that made a strong man cry
@stevestringer73513 жыл бұрын
You are right. Both sides were comprised of some of the bravest men America has ever borne.
@paul9745pdb4 ай бұрын
You do a great job with these videos. Since we no longer teach real history in school your work is vital. Thanks.
@heathernewman52723 жыл бұрын
The level of bravery and dedication is absolutely inspirational!
@alexkalish82883 жыл бұрын
The quality of these narrative is as professional as anything from Hollywood but far better quality. This is beautiful and haunting , Bravo sir -
@BirdDogg3 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much Alex, I appreciate it. I’m trying to improve every time.
@40rounds484 жыл бұрын
Incredible letter...such bravery in battle and death. Thank you for sharing Chris! One of my ancestors was in the charge with him and also was a casualty in the 26th North Carolina
@jaydubbyuh22923 жыл бұрын
Verily, I say: aside from the Holy Scripture & some of Wm. Shakespeare's words, never have I read of a such gallant, manly, tender, self-controlled, & heart-wrenching testimony. Superbly arranged, narrated, and delivered. To my fellow Southerners I say, how can ye stand-by, idly, & indifferent to the latest leftist cultural carpetbaggers who remove, desecrate, or deride our sacred memorials to our Christian Patriot heroes? Ye are not worthy to be descended from that generation. Damn the latter-day neo cons & collaborators and their self-hating treachery to our GOD, their forefathers, and their heritage & posterity.
@jaydubbyuh22923 жыл бұрын
If that did not run tears down one's cheek, it likely betrayed an innate or instilled indifference to the reality of the situation. GOD, I pray, shall greet him as a good and faithful servant, and stars shall be added to his crown for knowing the odds, yet unhesitatingly resisting the Anti-CHRIST/communist takeover of the federal government, unto death. Rest easy, my Confederate fathers. This generation is worn down enough that they let white-leftist led race hustlers & bolshevik rabble rousers tear down some of the monuments to our CHRISTian heroes. In fact, the next generation may be the one that will have to flee to the appointed place in the wilderness. But, ultimately, we will be regrouped, rallied, and our SAVIOUR will drive out the heathen & return us to a place from which, HE says, we shall not be moved, forever. The heathen will beg to be spared from hell to chop our wood and tote our water.
@michaelflores92203 жыл бұрын
I 'm a white and was born in Louisiana and if I knew back then that there were statues honoring the Confederacy I'd have been shocked and want them torn down. Some people don't deserve things built to honor them.
@jaydubbyuh22923 жыл бұрын
@@michaelflores9220 What does your physical race have do with monuments that a society erect & establish to honour their forefathers? You are correct, some people deserve no honor, and you are one of them. You ate a rootless, thankless, tumbleweed that takes all you enjoy, for-granted. You have no appreciation or regard for anyone's effort but your own. Go play your video game little boy.
@michaelflores92203 жыл бұрын
@@jaydubbyuh2292 Confederate monuments are obvious ha tips to white supremacist ideology. John Singleton Mosby admitted the secession was all about slavery.
@jaydubbyuh22923 жыл бұрын
@@michaelflores9220 Can you cite what Mosby stated, & in honest context? I doubt you can, or will. As to your allusion about "white supremacist": who ought to be "supreme" at the Flores house? The Jones's? The Wang's? The Kaminsky's? Street thugs and dope gangs? NO.! The Flores family should be supreme. Supremacy does not mean cruelty. In fact, white christians, whose thought, blood, sweat, toil, tears, treasure, & lives settled and built the nations on the North American continent, & have EVERY Right to be the supreme society in the lands that they have bought a paid for, many times over. The problem is that we have been too kind, hospitable, & tolerant of strangers. Now the guests want to lay claim to the civilization my people have built. As with most "Unions', be they national, trade, or otherwise, they are a fine & noble idea, so long as they are honestly governed by those whom they represent. Sadly, they are most often highjacked by a small clique of scoundrels, thieves, or degenerates. Such is what happened to the Union of States in 1860. The far left wacko party of "Republicans" won the presidential race on a plurality. They were, in effect, soft communists - tax & spend, big government leftists. They wanted to double the tax rate, which would have bankrupted the revenue producing South, which is why the first seven Southern States, exercised their rights to secede. Lincoln's crafty perfidy in not departing federal installations in seceded State's boundaries, ,i.e. Fort Pickens Fort Sumter, & Ft.Monroe, and giving them Hobson's choice to be invaded or resist and then having the temerity to call on the rest of the States to provide troops to invade, capture, and force those States to submit to their delegate subordinate federal government is what drove the rest of the Southern States to secede. Maryland, Kentucky, & Missouri had the pro-secession / pro-Confedetate legislators incarcerated or exiled, and buffalo any of the northern States into submission, that dared oppose him. What we gained at Yorktown was lost at Appomattox.
@user-et2fj8xm5l3 жыл бұрын
The vocabulary, eloquence, and cadence of these words are achingly beautiful. Descriptions are so vivid. I wish I lived in an era when the art of verbal and written expression were valued..
@CatalinaThePirate4 жыл бұрын
Hey, BirdDogg... This story is amazing and affecting. Beautifully presented. Well done! *Well* *done!* We should all attempt to draw more attention to this marvelous series. All your fine work deserves some recognition! 😊
@cynthiabradley-graziadei96933 жыл бұрын
Heart Breaking and valiant at the same time. Truly sad so many died on both sides of this bloody conflict. Here we are in 2021 still divided on many of the main issues. State’s rights over Federal over reach, other people trying to take away other folks way of life, and change their beliefs, slavery still abounds worldwide, and etc….
@mike86109 ай бұрын
All history must be preserved from both sides. It tells the America story and our bloody quest for a more perfect union. I know that makes people uncomfortable and they think tearing down statues is a solution but we are bound to repeat past mistakes without a clear unbiased conduit back to what got us where we are today. Amazing content on your channel
@BirdDogg9 ай бұрын
Thanks Mike, I appreciate it!
@nassermj76713 жыл бұрын
Eye witness diaries! A priceless treasure of the bayonet era.
@marycahill546 Жыл бұрын
Heart breaking. How terrible war is, any war.
@TXMEDRGR3 жыл бұрын
What a courageous young man. Thinking of his dear mother in his last moments.
@delcapslock1003 жыл бұрын
This is a beautiful , heartbreaking story about one young man's grace in the presence of his impending death. Please don't trivialize it as a vindication of your politics and prejudices.
@mcraig19692 жыл бұрын
A true gentleman and hero of our lost Cause. Heartbreaking.
@idigdaytona44784 жыл бұрын
So sad . RIP Pvt. Jeremiah Gage.
@fixedgearfever694 жыл бұрын
Everyone should read Captain Samuel A'Court Ashe book called A Southern View of the Invasion of the Southern States and War of 1861-65
@BirdDogg4 жыл бұрын
I'll have to give it a read, thanks for the tip!
@maryschetrompf41973 жыл бұрын
What's it about? How sad it was that they couldn't keep their free labor and keep beating and enslaving them? How touching.
@g.davidlawrence84713 жыл бұрын
@@maryschetrompf4197 You should read it. Keep an open mind... You might learn something...
@stevestringer73513 жыл бұрын
@@maryschetrompf4197 you really don't HAVE to be an irreverent bitch. Most southerners did not own slaves and actually there was more and more people that did not agree with slavery. This young man prob a my did not own slaves and I assure you he did not go to war for the purpose of extending or ensuring slavery. He and his companions went because their state called for them. Times were different then... people were loyal to their state (i.e. family, community) more so than a government so far away. Also, please do not lie to yourself by believing that business in the north did not find slavery advantageous.... they made a killing. I am not condoning the institution of slavery.... however.... I am not so disillusioned that I find myself understanding the times that they lived in. Also, sorry to break it to you.... but you aren't qualified to judge either.
@maryschetrompf41973 жыл бұрын
@@stevestringer7351 Kid yourself all you want, laddy boy. And classy of you to use the b word on me - tells me all I need to know about you.
@JohnnyBloodyJohnny7 ай бұрын
Amazing stuff here man. Well done. Keep this up. We (the world) needs to hear more of 'war' as not to forget nor forseek it. Johnny. From Ireland.
@RustyHaloMetalDetecting4 жыл бұрын
Honestly, I can't stop crying. I'm a mother of a son and this hit home
@BirdDogg4 жыл бұрын
The resolve of these men and women is unimaginable... I only wish I could do them the justice they deserve but feel honored to be able to try and share their stories.
@davidkreutzer47783 жыл бұрын
@@BirdDogg , as someone that just found your channel , let me say your doing outstanding ! From videos like this to the recordings of the veterans . I truly believe that your channel should be in schools history lessons . Maybe in depth US history in highschool
@BirdDogg3 жыл бұрын
@@davidkreutzer4778 thanks so much David, you are too kind
@davidkreutzer47783 жыл бұрын
@@BirdDogg , your very welcome ! And yes i think you should do diaries and letters , you put no spin , just the words of people that lived it and died for whatever side they stood for . It's history and it's our history . Again thanks
@susanr19033 жыл бұрын
@@BirdDogg this what they should teach in school.not the crap there push crt ...gender ..thanks for what your doing ..
@jacktownsend82603 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing Chris - great video man -
@whicker593 жыл бұрын
Thank u very much, Birddogg for this living piece of American history. As a historian, I often think of the huge amount of bravery every prior generation of young men exhibited for their country, especially Southerners who had very little relative to the Northern states industrial complex and much larger population centers. The 1 severe error Gen. Lee made was ordering the open field charge on July 3; I wished he had taken Gen. Longstreet's advice, a man and general I have the utmost regard for, and who lost 2 young sons to Scarlett Fever during the war. My great great grandfather, n his mid 40s with 4 children, was killed crossing the Emmitsburg Road high fence, as part of the gallant Gen. Armistead's brigade of Virginians. The enormous courage of the young Alabamians, Mississippians, Louisianians, and Texans so very far from their homes sticks n my fond memories of Southerners during this war.
@haroldrupert4957 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing this heart breaking video tribute .God bless these courageous men.
@jayuihlein16643 жыл бұрын
Wonderful history here. Thank you. After 22 years as a CW reenactor I have never heard such a story. Thank you.
@randyarmentrout42584 жыл бұрын
another great read thank you
@BirdDogg4 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much Randy, I appreciate the encouragement. I only hope to do them some small justice for they were men of absolute resolve whose stories deserve to be preserved and told.
@TaterChip913 жыл бұрын
I seriously could go on a bender and read every letter written by the soldiers in a single day. Starting with the farewell letters like this. The Sullivan letter, J.R. Montgomery, the young calvary soldier who wrote to his mother the morning of the battle at Antitem started then later that same day as he was left behind, dieing on the field. The stories of Sam Watkins, General Grant. I can't get enough of this stuff.
@MrRobingilliam4 жыл бұрын
another wonderful job thank you GOD BLESS YOU AND YOURS
@nonokodog6225 ай бұрын
Excellent production quality.
@ClaytonCountyHistoryHound4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing. What an personal look into the horror of war. Take care.
@randallf.4646 Жыл бұрын
Strange how even the uneducated back then wrote such articulate, well phrased sentences with an impressive unique vocabulary. How'd we lose that ability
@theophilhist64553 жыл бұрын
Excellent commentary. It will be shared
@carolbell80083 жыл бұрын
Wow, this is awesome and so very sad, thanks.
@BigDaddyCane7773 жыл бұрын
My first cousin four generations ago was Brigadier General William Barksdale.
@101stgrunt63 жыл бұрын
To hear the words of those of that time is like beautiful music to my ears. They used thier words in such a train and to convey what was on thier minds to which of like I could never emulate. The old South may be gone, but the Confederacy lives on in our hearts.
@sharonpeek45783 жыл бұрын
I'm sure it wasn't the same "recipe", but my Granny used to dose us with Black Draught for various ailments when we were young'ens. I miss the smell of it.
@elkhunterbill5087 Жыл бұрын
No words. Just admiration.
@gerryjones74853 жыл бұрын
You talk about the grit and the courage back in those days. And I cry all these tears for all the people that died for us and it makes me even cry more tears knowing that we are losing our country every day. My great-grandfather was in the Civil War his name was General Massey I never knew him and neither did my grandmother because I guess her mother was pregnant with my grandmother so she never met her own father. My aunt just died that was 96 years old and she had a picture of him in his uniform but she never left it to me. God knows how much I wanted that picture so bad when I first seen it. But somebody you'll get it it doesn't have the heart that I have for this country or for the people that died in it. I have a bleeding heart people for our country and for all the people who have died for it. Don't you people think that we should have a revolutionary war and save our country from these demonic Democrats that are destroying it we will never have an America again we will become a communist country people don't even realize that I study our government and do research on our government believe me people I say this in God's name they are all corrupt and evil both parties. I was so hoping that some way Trump would win again and bring us out of this horrible wicked things have been happening. Our president is the most wicked evil man him and Obama that I have ever known. Believe me people when I would look at Obama I would feel pure evilness coming from this man and I never felt that about anybody or anything in my whole life and I don't even know where it comes from. Pray people and repent and just maybe if there's enough of us that your lord God Will Save Our Country it's a horrible mess
@rustymebane826511 ай бұрын
It’s way worse today than 2 years ago. Your words are correct. God save our souls & our country 🇺🇸
@stacyblue19803 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your channel and what you share. 🌹
@robertbertagna16723 жыл бұрын
very good presentation.
@RandolphRelicRecovery4 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately those kind of stories happen all too often in wars.
@Eazy-ERyder Жыл бұрын
I love these!
@MrKnoxguy1013 жыл бұрын
You can hear a little Eastern Wood - Pewee in the background. Their call always seems to have a calming effect
@MrT8T3R3 жыл бұрын
“Sirs, you have no reason to be ashamed of your Confederate dead; see to it they have no reason to be ashamed of you.” Robert Lewis Dabney, Chaplain for Stonewall Jackson
@BTLFAEN3 жыл бұрын
Unbelievably great
@BirdDogg3 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@maryanne74145 ай бұрын
My Grandfather was a graduate of U. Miss./ Very proud to be his granddaughter.. & a Daughter of the Confederacy.🌹🕯+.
@JayTX.3 жыл бұрын
I do not invite you to drink with me, but I drink the toast to you....
@bigiron88313 жыл бұрын
R.I.P. my Confederate ancestors...... WAR ,WHAT IS IT GOOD FOR?
@petergleave78073 жыл бұрын
W = Waste (of) A = All R = Resources - of which the most precious is undoubtedly the lives of those who fight it and whose death robs the world of talent of incalculable value to Humanity. God bless and keep all those who fought, suffered and died during the desperately tragic fratricidal war which proved to be the birth pangs of a great nation.
@chrisnewport78263 жыл бұрын
Lost causes are the only ones worth fighting for.
@darrengilbert74383 жыл бұрын
Seems as though we are in a lost cause now. Liberals and Marxist have taken over our government and education system.
@darrengilbert74383 жыл бұрын
@@brucebostick2521 no, it's not ridiculous. Those who forget their history are bound to repeat it. We should remember our history, not sweep it under the rug. Remember it and learn from it....even the ugly parts, so we don't repeat it.
@gerryjones74853 жыл бұрын
This video has touch my heart and I have cried Many Tears by watching all of them how horrible how horrible that they could do that to their own brother in Christ I wish his words had been. to Jesus and his mother. For the Lord God was the only one looking 2 helping with his pain and I hope everyone of them Brave soldiers Are Up In Heaven for what they had to go through to make us free and now our country is in big big trouble big trouble and we may never be free again. But the men that are born now are all cowards they won't stand up and fight for our freedom and they won't stand up and fight for our forefathers that died for us for our freedom. I'm not talking about our soldiers I'm talking about Patriots I'm talking about militia because our government is so corrupt and so evil nowadays but the only thing that can save us is the Lord God. I'm not really think the Lord God will save us because he's angry at all of us here in America because we have turned away from him. People if you love this country and you love your children and you don't wish them to live in a communist country rise up and fight and pray 2 the Lord God and repent and turn from your wicked ways and humble yourself and just maybe just maybe with a lot of prayer and repentance God Will Save Our Country once more without a horrible war that I don't see that happening because he's so angry at us. I think it's up to the American people to rise up and I don't see that happening either because they're cowards. All they want to do is kill each other for no cause just crazy Satan himself has taken over America. And he's sitting there smiling at all of you and you don't even realize it
@ProfessorMurf3 ай бұрын
My ancestors served in the 51st Georgia in Semmes Brigade. They took the Wheat Field on Day 2.
@jaydubbyuh2292 Жыл бұрын
I visit this post & share with younger folks, presenting them with a true & noble example of that which is deserving to be memorialized. "There is no greater love than he that giveth his life for a friend." Thank you my friend & brother in CHRIST. Praise GOD to be represented & descended from such manner of men. DEO Vindice. GOTT Mit Uns. NoKingButJesus. SicSemperTyrannus.
@bswihart13 жыл бұрын
I've been through some bad times but I've nothing to bitch about, all the men and women that fought in all our histories battles really had it bad and kept going in the name of freedom. Thank you all.
@pcm94824 жыл бұрын
best show on youtube
@BirdDogg4 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much, too kind!! If you get a chance to share them, I’d sure love for history to be getting shared more!! Thanks again for the words of encouragement, I am doing my best to do these valiant men justice!!
@redtomcat17253 жыл бұрын
Very moving !!! Brave men all !
@edwardrodgerson67793 жыл бұрын
In death we are drawn together yet in life we stand on opposite sides.
@factsoftheconfederacy71517 ай бұрын
God Bless those Mississippians. My great x3 grandfather served in the 1st Mississippi confederate cavalry and I have no doubt he probably knew some of these men that served in the 11th Mississippi Infantry.
@gregorycowan57566 ай бұрын
RIP CONFEDERATE SOLDIER !!!
@Civilwarman4010 ай бұрын
I love this story
@carolinadog86343 жыл бұрын
Heartbreaking
@RobertBrown-fp9ht3 жыл бұрын
Often, the horrors of the civil war were romanticized by those who never saw combat. The men who endured the horrific battles of combat rarely wrote such poetic, romanticized prose describing their experience of real combat. More often than not, they chose not to re-live the unspeakable misery they lived through.
@notsosilentmajority1 Жыл бұрын
Very powerful. These men need to be remembered. They are Americans.
@johnday63923 жыл бұрын
What a man!
@karlbrady54533 жыл бұрын
GREAT intro music!!!
@jaylopes84893 жыл бұрын
If this poor man could see what would happen to 19 year old Jessica Chambers of Mississippi he would have fought harder . . . 👋🇵🇹
@seerstone89823 жыл бұрын
John Wilkes saw the future, and put a ball in the head of the snake.
@julymayflower30783 жыл бұрын
Made me think of when doves cry
@JayTee00073 ай бұрын
Ugh, that letter touched my heart. 😔
@BirdDogg3 ай бұрын
Hard to imagine the hell they went through
@ianryan7826 Жыл бұрын
What is the tune played before the induction?
@jerryumfress90303 жыл бұрын
University of Mississippi, Ole Miss, is having its southern history erased even as we speak
@darrengilbert74383 жыл бұрын
The whole country is.
@johnz88434 ай бұрын
Noble sentiments about which for a man to take pride.
@chrislee2683 Жыл бұрын
I’d love to read the narrating doctor’s account. Do we have his name, or primary sources he published from this incident and others?
I remember in Gladiator and Alexander they both had a method of dispatching the gravely wounded with a hammer and chisel device, this would have come in handy for these guys ripped apart.
@thescarletandgrey25053 жыл бұрын
Dear Lula Anne, as I was pondering the war and the battle which was about to commence, it occurred to me to question why I, an American, was about to engage in fierce fighting, to the death, other men, American like me. I thus conceived I would sneak around a crop of sturdy Pennsylvania cottonwood trees, at the end of which was the left flank of the Army of my State’s sworn enemy. Having reached thus, and being slightly winded from my purposeful stride, I stopped to regain my breath, afterwards reaching into my knapsack and taking out the last remaining morsel of wormy bread. Then, whispering in the ear of my sworn enemy, “do you know, sir, what is the purpose of the militant actions which we are soon to be ordered to undertake against one another, quite likely including the thrusting of my bayonet into your stomach, or vice versa?” To which my counterpart answered “nope. By the way, would you happen to have a morsel of wormy bread? (because anything tastes good when you’re hangry!)”. So we had a good laugh. I then returned to my lines, the yell was raised, and I and he in our respective armies fired our cannons, often at point blank range; the bodies torn in half and many stomachs were host to cold sharp steel. I found my counterpart, his blood forming a pool around my boot. I did my best to stanch his wound, he managed a quivering smile. I only had time to tell him, I hoped in heaven we would share good morsels of bread, the call then was given to break for the wood. I wished I had time to tell his compatriots, take good care of your young sergeant, for I know him to be a good man”,
@chrisnewport78263 жыл бұрын
Im crying
@TonyFreeman-LocoTonyF8 ай бұрын
Wow!
@kenclements30013 жыл бұрын
Great Music. What is it and can I get a copy of it?
@JT-vc5kw3 жыл бұрын
Wow. What an amazing sacrifice
@westcarter38623 жыл бұрын
This Channel is Better than Brad Metzler's Decoded and Lost History' put Together !!
@BirdDogg3 жыл бұрын
Too kind! I appreciate it, help me get as many subscribers so I can do it full time, share!! 😂
@westcarter38623 жыл бұрын
@@BirdDogg .. Book of Proverbs says'.. A Man's Gift Makes Room for Him'.. You have a Natch Vie Gift' on'a Sure True Summing Track'.. Do Catch My Bly Drift'.. For To You it's Coming Back' !! 👉🎁🙀🚂👈
@VIRGONOMICS Жыл бұрын
I remember this story - this same type of thing happened in WWI with German Students making a final stand . They got obliterated .
@johnsomebody17533 жыл бұрын
WHAT HAPPENED ? The doctor disclosed what was said, in the letter, and then told us it was, "unrevealed, except to herself ", with "herself" having been identified as the victim's Mother. Are we to believe that the Doctor, passed the letter on, to the Mother who returned it, for the Doctor to see ? That's surely unlikely.
@BirdDogg3 жыл бұрын
The letter was in fact returned to the family and is actually featured in the video itself. If it were not for the existence of the letter there would be no narrative. The narrative was submitted as an article by the doctor after the war. The letter shown in the video is the very letter he is speaking of. These units from the south during the Civil War were made up of local militias, of men from the same regions. This particular unit, the University Greys were all intimately familiar with eachother and so it is logical that this doctor, or someone else in the unit would have not only ensured that this letter reached it's destination but very likely knew the soldiers family as well.
@darryladams5192 жыл бұрын
@@BirdDogg so many doubters and haters, thank you for posting the videos you post. We need to keep history alive.
@284Winchester Жыл бұрын
Wow ❤
@diggersdentysonu.k.m.d88134 жыл бұрын
Sorry I have not been about brother you tube never giveing me updates dose me in hope your well amd family are safe will watch today your brother tyson fury ❤
@crosscountryman56423 жыл бұрын
I would choose one of the blacks who fought and served during the Civil War over the GD gangsta punks in the Bloods or Crips any time!
@calebjames74443 жыл бұрын
There are two statues that were placed in Oxford, MS. Each statue is a soldier who appears to be searching for the other. One is on the University’s campus and the other on the town square. 100% casualties. And the student body have voted to remove them. If only we could teach and learn why these statues are here. Rest In Peace Company A, 11th MS and Hotty Toddy
@calebjames74443 жыл бұрын
@@brucebostick2521 Why does history need to be told? So we do not repeat it. If you want to throw that term around, why stop there? The freedom of slaves was necessary and welcome. It was absolutely the right thing to do. However, it was done so quick and so haphazardly, it created a humanitarian crisis of people who could not read/write nor had the skills to find a decent job. This was yet another "pat ourselves on the back" moment for government that had no direction nor plan for success. These particular monuments were erected in 1906 to honor the student body and faculty who suffered at Gettysburg. It was not to intimidate, but to teach. Be glad you weren't placed into the moments of history where you were living the struggles of Gettysburg, Shiloh or Fredericksburg. Be glad you have the right of free speech.
@calebjames74443 жыл бұрын
@@brucebostick2521 You must not know about Auschwitz then. The Jewish people have embraced the history behind one of their darkest moments and preserved concentration camps. Why? So future generations do not have to endure that treatment ever again. Why should Civil War history be hidden from the public? Embrace it. It was a dark moment in US History. But we take it and learn from it.
@tubularfrog3 жыл бұрын
Sir, one small typo in your introduction above is that the year you have listed is 1861, it should be 1863. This is one of the most touching stories that I have ever heard from the WBTS.
@BirdDogg3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for pointing that out!! Things get jostled around sometimes, glad there are folks paying attention! Good eye
@lsxtmt49104 жыл бұрын
So sad
@BirdDogg4 жыл бұрын
Unfathomable tragedy and resolve. The matter of fact acceptance, the doctors blunt and honest answers, the uncensored truth within the letter to his mother, it is more than modern "sensibilities" are equipped to process. It was such a different world and time, such different sentiment. They laid the truth of the matter bare and yet were somehow more compassionate in doing so.
@lsxtmt49104 жыл бұрын
@@BirdDogg well said
@neilhilton3463 жыл бұрын
Fuck that really moving mate thanks.
@jimnoakes9394 Жыл бұрын
How sadly and elequently written.
@OSUex3 жыл бұрын
Is it possible to correct the misspelled word... It should read "Reminiscence of Dr Joseph Holt" not "remanences"
@BirdDogg3 жыл бұрын
Doh! Unfortunately I can’t adjust anything in the video at this point. That’s one thing lacking from these video editing programs is spell check, working in a hurry gets me in trouble with work almost every day 😳
@ThatLad6853 жыл бұрын
It’s weird to think that half these guys couldn’t spell yet people back than spoke English with so much more detail and attention to their words
@MrBobbybrus3 жыл бұрын
When I hear people say, that Confederate statues and monuments should be torn down and that this history ignored, I think to myself that even in a wrong cause that there was great nobility among young men willing to fight and die for what they believed to be right. Freedom has no meaning for anyone if some are not free to fight for something that although wrong, they feel to be right. That is the dilemma about liberty. If wrongs can not be overturned in courts and legislatures, then fighting even unto death must be the alternative. But even while defeating misguided evil, we must realize that an individual's right to think evil to be a good is a demonstration of our society's foremost ethos, that the individual is not required to submit to the authority of the whole whether that authority be righteous or unrighteous. Ultimately, the individual has the right to fight against state authority only to be guided by the dictates of his or her own conscience. That is true in any society, of course, but in our country in particular, we believe in the right of someone to believe and act by that standard above state control. And that idea is just as important in the abstract as equality of people before God and the law. They go together and you can't have one without the other. That is what cancel culture refuses to appreciate.
@johndorch23333 жыл бұрын
The flaw in your argument is, I think, that as has been shown recently, many people have the arrogant presumption to believe something is true without any sort of concrete proof. This sort of arrogance, and it is arrogance, is akin to madness. In essence, the difference between science and religion. Should we allow the inmates to run the asylum in the name of freedom? Should we allow a few to infect many in the name of individual liberty? Spock had it right: "the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few or the one". Man is a social creature, not a solitary individual. Further, in the realm of economics, the need for the ability to acquire wealth to the exclusion of all other considerations is, in fact, a character flaw. Greed or, even more insidious, the need to prove oneself better in order to justify one's position in the community.
@MrBobbybrus3 жыл бұрын
@@johndorch2333 Ultimately, an individual is not bound to be responsible to the collective, except by choice. Since you bring up the current science controversy, and I assume you are talking about Covid -19 vaccines, or refusals of many to get them, we should talk about the real science that everyone claims to want you follow, but only vaguely understand. The real science can not be definitively known, because we do not know how many of the 330 million persons in our society have had Covid-19 and either were asymptomatic or had minor symptoms and recovered quickly and have antigen immunity. I don't know this figure, you don't know this figure, Dr. Fauci doesn't know nor does the president of the United States. Some estimates have purported that as many as 35% of persons with Covid-19 infections were unaware they were infected. There has been 120 million confirmed infections in this country and just over 700,000 purported fatalities due to the illness. The rate of mortality thus is .00583 or 6 deaths per 1, 000 individuals with confirmed infection. Mortality it should be noted was mainly confined to persons age 65 or older, or to those immune compromised and/or with pre-existing conditions. Younger people in good health generally recover and with time achieve reasonable normalcy. Now, if we factor in the 35% (a conservative estimate it could be higher), or an additional 42,000,000 persons who have had Covid-19 and who were asymptomatic or didn't realize they had Covid-19, the rate of mortality falls to .004 or 4 out of 1000 infected individuals. As noted those four persons per one thousand are not the general public, not the young, not the healthy, but at risk persons that can get the vaccine if they feel at risk or can be protected in other ways with less intrusive medications, modalities and methodologies. I submit that our society is based on individual liberty and freedom. To be "social" in this society is to be respectful of others rights and right to choose what is best for their lives, more significantly to respect the choice of the individual to make his or her own healthcare decisions. .004% is not as significant a number that I would sacrifice a basic human right and set a precedent for continued state intrusion into the privacy and personal rights of the individual citizen. Some things are bigger than life and death. How we live before we die has greater importance. Is it not arrogance to claim empirical certainty about something or idea that allows state authority over the individual when no such certitude can be demonstrated or proven? Isn't that thesis then just a means to sublimate the individual and his God given rights to the self-defined authority of state or worse the "enlightened" despot that claims he or they know best? As for the greedy capitalists that you reference. I submit that the greatness of our economy only is possible by the creation of wealth. Our standard of living, our opportunities to better ourselves individually is a by-product of the profit motive. Investment, risk taking, innovation, inventiveness, the entrepreneurial spirit are responsible for our economic vitality and societal wealth that benefit us all. I don't envy the rich. They have as many problems as anyone else. How much better is their lives over the average persons? How much longer do they live? They have security above most persons, but it isn't perfect security. They can't spend all they have, they have to give away most of it. They are not immortal and they can't take their wealth with them when they die. They may have political influence and get things they want done over and above the average person, but what does that mean? Do they get to have advantages that limit the advantages of others? I dont think that is a major concern. Most seek to do good. Whether they do and how much good is done by whatever reasoning is open to scrutiny. But I have no doubt that is the motivation most wealthy people have when they achieve success. And in conclusion, the Marxian position that society is injured by way of class and position of capital holds no water. It is all part of a formula to divide one people on the basis of religion, class, race and wealth, and to invalidate a culture with selective references to historic and institutional wrongs, exaggerated to discredit it along those divisive delineations. It is a false premise, easily demonstrated to be false. But as Vladimir Ilyich Lenin once suggested, keep telling the lie until the people believe it to be true.
@johndorch23333 жыл бұрын
@@MrBobbybrus No one including you have the right to knowingly infect others with a deadly disease in the name of your liberty. This is why I think Trumpers should secede. If you do not believe in a commons then you do not belong in OUR society.
@MrBobbybrus3 жыл бұрын
@@brucebostick2521 Yes, I know Alexander Stephen's Cornerstone speech, and I have commented on it. Perhaps you may have previously seen my comment in another thread about this speech having been the prime argument for and apology for the institution of race based enslavement of those of African descent.. it explains the real cause of the Civil war in that the South demanded that the institution of slavery should be accepted as a moral good, a natural state and its continuance and even expansion into the territories not be restricted, because to be against that premise was to invalidate the whole system. I have no argument with you on that score. I only suggest to you that you can not make the infamy of the era when involuntary servitude and racial superiority of one people over another right by tearing statues. It doesn't change anything. Nobody believes that one race is inferior to another and that slavery was a natural condition and moral good. Even if someone wanted to make that case that such thinking was reasonable, it wouldn't gain any hearing in our society. So whether or not you like the statues on the basis that they represent an appeal for latent feelings of longing for our racist and unjust past, they in reality do no harm. They do not engender any fond nostalgia for a long ago way of life. It's done. It's as much a part of our past as witch trials and the Inquistion, a faint flicker of a history that few quite consider or remember beyond their high school history class. But it is a history worth knowing and appreciating if simply to show us how far we have come from those days, gone with the wind. So if you destroy statues, you are not changing things for the better, you are not striking a blow against racism, Jim Crow or slavery. Slavery has existed since mankind has been around on this earth. It exists today, even more so than when three million of African descent were enslaved in our country. Will taking down statues of Confederates free anyone in our times? No. it will continue and people will be victimized. So what is the point of taking them down really? It doesn't change what was and won't change what is. It would be an empty gesture by those that do it. Virtue signaling without any substantive good coming from the act. But if you want to wipe away history and all vestiges of our ignoble past so you may feel better and if you can get local people to agree with you and purge their tortured souls, you have my permission to go about the effort. They are not my statues and if locals don't want them in their communities, I am all for it. Just understand we won't know where we are going if we have no clue where we have been.
@idapullen8782 Жыл бұрын
It is disgraceful & totally disrespectful of the men, women & children who died for the Confederacy & what they believed in to destroy the monuments remembering their lives.
@0560243 жыл бұрын
If they went the farthest they ended overtook the men from Baldwinsville NY where they were short up by a firing squad .
@christophercole88773 жыл бұрын
Just a little edit needed: Gettysburg was fought in 1863, not 1861.