The Battle for Marye’s Heights: 160th Anniversary of Fredericksburg

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • The famous battle for Marye’s Heights at Fredericksburg. Going from Marye’s Heights to the Sunken Road with Dr. Chris Mackowski, Kris White, Dan Davis and Sarah Kay Bierle. #FredericksburgTour
    This video is part of our series commemorating the 160th Anniversary of the Battle of Fredericksburg. Check out the full series here: • Fredericksburg: 160th ...

Комментарии • 81

  • @jasonwilliamson8416
    @jasonwilliamson8416 Год назад +17

    My great great grandfather served in the 7th West Virginia, which had the dubious honor of spearheading the attack on the stonewall. He actually survived the war unscathed and was mustered out of service shortly after Appomattox.

    • @andrewbowles65
      @andrewbowles65 Год назад

      How did that work out? West Virginia quitters

    • @andrewbowles65
      @andrewbowles65 Год назад

      Burnside didn’t cross for lack of pontoons, he was a coward. He created a slaughterhouse

    • @travisbayles870
      @travisbayles870 Год назад

      Salute from Alabama to the soldiers of both sides at Fredericksburg

  • @travisbayles870
    @travisbayles870 Год назад +5

    My great great great grandfather Corporal Richard Pierce of Co B 27th North Carolina Infantry Regiment fought at Maryes Heights at Fredericksburg

  • @frederictunaitis3172
    @frederictunaitis3172 Год назад +18

    It is because of videos like these that has rekindled my interest in American History and especially the Civil War. You guys are great at bring the past back to life and preserving our history. Thank you all so much.

  • @jimmyc3755
    @jimmyc3755 Год назад +5

    It is so sad to see how much of the Fredericksburg battle field has been lost to development. It is disrespectful. Since I was there almost 20 years ago I am stunned in how little is left. The sunken road is an afterthought today. What a shame.

    • @UAPReportingCenter
      @UAPReportingCenter 6 месяцев назад

      The Gettysburg site should be a model to every other significant Battlefield in America. These places need to be preserved. I am literally at the Fredericksburg site right now for the first time and it’s astonishing the difference between here and Gettysburg.

  • @teresawhite7563
    @teresawhite7563 Год назад +4

    My 3rd great grandfather Captain George Ruby was killed at Marye's Heights 12/12/1862. 18th Mass. Thank you for this and all your videos and efforts to promote and preserve our history.

    • @danjeys4999
      @danjeys4999 Год назад

      Almost 14000 I think never a more pointless stupid plan without a shred of cover

  • @lonewolf744
    @lonewolf744 Год назад +3

    This is my home town. Pretty cool. Been here my whole life.

  • @pshawhudson
    @pshawhudson Год назад +6

    Brewer Maine here. I look forward to you guys doing this every year. Thank you so much. It's nice that you are there during the same time period when the battle took place.

  • @columbaiona3081
    @columbaiona3081 Год назад +9

    Great vids guys! I was there on Marye’s Heights in September - very impressive. Came over from Ireland to see as many ACW sites as I could fit in!

    • @carywest9256
      @carywest9256 7 месяцев назад

      My ancestor Nathaniel West came from the Emerald isle in the 1760s.
      He's my 3rd.Great grandfather, his son John C. was born in Southwest Louisiana in 1816. He was 45 having to join the Confederate Army. He was a member of the 12th.Texas Cavalry Co. E. He survived the war,fighting the bluebellies in Louisiana, Arkansas and the bootheel of Southeast Missouri. That area including Texas and also the lndian Nations(modern day Oklahoma) was called the Trans-Mississippi Department.
      I will truthfully that as a young boy l went to Vacation Bible School one summer
      Then at about age 10 Mom and Dad and myself started going to a Catholic Church here in Texas.
      My Mom had been baptized when she was a young girl.
      The priest stated that it wasn't necessary for her to be baptised again, but Dad and l were in that Church.
      I know about the Troubles that started in the 1960s from seeing news reports on the T.V.
      Here in America, denomination is'nt a serious subject as in lreland and Northern lreland. I hope l did'nt ruffle any feathers bringing it up.
      I find it ironic though going from a Prod to being dunked a Catholic. I'm not a faithful going to mass Catholic either.
      If you are from The Republic of lreland, what is the percentage of non-Catholics are there in the Country?

  • @dadsongs
    @dadsongs Год назад +4

    I've got to tell you that this series might be your best effort, American Battlefield Trust. I don't mean to cast any shade on that Gary Adleburg guy (🙂), but I was spellbound throughout this entire three video series on Fredericksburg. You folks have heart, with no agenda other than to keep the memory alive. Funny note: About five minutes before the end I was thinking that Dr. Chris missed his opportunity to tell the northern lights story. But no sooner than I thought that than -- there it was! May each one of you, each in your own way, have a season of health, prosperity, love, and light. Thank you so much.

  • @mikejerrell1297
    @mikejerrell1297 Год назад +1

    Some of my ancestors served with Barksdales , Mississippians. I’ve been to Fredericksburg and like Gettysburg and Vicksburg. I can feel something special. Call it energy.

  • @stevenlitkey9354
    @stevenlitkey9354 Год назад +3

    Been to that battlefield as well as many others. I loved it !! Standing on the Heights, the sunken road, the southern end of the battlefield, and Chatham House. And the battlefield cemetery.
    Great Great treasures !!!

  • @buckappel6835
    @buckappel6835 Год назад +2

    We visited Fredericksburg while stationed at Quantico in 1969 but the only thing I remember was a cemetery and a small museum with a lot of firearms from that time. period. I’m sure a lot has changed in the past 50 years

  • @UAPReportingCenter
    @UAPReportingCenter 6 месяцев назад +2

    The Gettysburg site should be a model to every other significant Battlefield in America. These places need to be preserved. I am literally at the Fredericksburg site right now for the first time and it’s astonishing the difference between here and Gettysburg.

  • @delnunley7026
    @delnunley7026 Год назад +2

    Love these videos. I’m in Wyoming and don’t get back to these sites very often. I so enjoy these so much.

  • @tonyvirando6047
    @tonyvirando6047 Год назад +4

    Tremendous job ! Such an interesting battle and quite sad that modern structures now scar such historical areas such as Fredericksburg. Please keep up the great work to preserve our history!

  • @garoldjohnson361
    @garoldjohnson361 Год назад +4

    Missed it live but watched all the videos. They are great. You guys did a great job. I came there about 4 years ago. Man what a place. Thanks for all you do.

  • @joelandwehr6382
    @joelandwehr6382 Год назад +1

    Never been but feel like I have because ABT battle anniversery videos do such a great job of communicating the battlefield action. Been watching for several years. Thank you.

  • @thomaswilkinson3241
    @thomaswilkinson3241 Год назад +1

    I visited the sight in 2016. Was leaving quite the impression in my Memory.

  • @jimchumley7907
    @jimchumley7907 Год назад

    The conclusion of this video made me weep. I embarrassingly weep whenever I walk through the sunken road at Anteidam and in that field that's referred to as Picketts Charge and other Battlefield areas that stire my heart so much. I always wear sunglasses, even on an overcast day so nobody sees me weeping. The Lord gas given me a broken and tender heart for the masses of lives lost on those battlefields. I often weep too from the pain my Lord and Savior went through on that cruel cross for all mankind and the battle Jesus fought to free us all. Excelent job men and lady for this awesome presentation.

  • @jonrettich4579
    @jonrettich4579 Год назад +1

    Thank you. You have helped clarified Burnsides behavior. Field communication and the acoustic shadow are an all to frequent serious problem. I still think that Burnside’s generalship is open to serious criticism. The more successful Union generals would not budge from their decisions despite extreme pressure and the initial tardiness of the arrival of the pontoons though I don’t think his fault condemned the operation and it’s hoped for effects before it even started. Franklin’s actions during and after the battle deserve a long hard look

  • @01SOMWS6
    @01SOMWS6 Год назад +4

    I have 4 ancestors in the 53rd PA under Col Brooke. All were wounded. Two in the leg, 1 in the shoulder, 1 in the wrist/hand.
    Awesome video All....love the content. Thanks for your great efforts in preserving these sites!

  • @gat2asp919
    @gat2asp919 Год назад

    Visited Shiloh on the anniversary this year then hit The Battle Above the Clouds and finished it off with the Nation Civil War Museum and finally Fredericksburg. As a Civil War nut it was absolutely awesome.

    • @carywest9256
      @carywest9256 7 месяцев назад

      Your not a Civil War nut, but a War Between the States maven. Now don't that sound better?

  • @michaelmento1939
    @michaelmento1939 Год назад +2

    Great job!

  • @mjciavola
    @mjciavola Год назад +1

    Sarah....up and coming historian.👍

  • @Mis-AdventureCH
    @Mis-AdventureCH Год назад +5

    Thanks for keeping the ghastly condos they put up across from dead mans curve out of the frame. Tried to save that property but y'all weren't interested. Last attack of the day (Hawkins Brigade) came down that unfinished railroad. Only union unit that got close to the wall.

  • @lonnieparsons6068
    @lonnieparsons6068 Год назад +2

    I visited the site in November 2019. I was struck by the irony of all the Union Soldiers interred on the heights, a place they never were able to take while they were living.

    • @carywest9256
      @carywest9256 7 месяцев назад

      Yeah,that's funny HA Ha not funny quare!

  • @waynepurzner145
    @waynepurzner145 Год назад +2

    My Uncle Louis Weyand in a letter I have wrote how he got shot five times while charging the Marye’s Heights wall. His military record states he received five gunshots and two other wounds. Uncle Louis served in the Seventh New York stating how he was fighting twenty yards from the wall. In a NY Times article he commented how he laid in his own blood for half a day, afraid of rising and getting shot through the heart.

    • @carywest9256
      @carywest9256 7 месяцев назад

      No bluebelly came within 50 yards of the stonewall, it's well documented. So sell that story someplace else.
      Because Texicans don't buy New York yankee guff!

  • @bobbyblizzard8488
    @bobbyblizzard8488 Год назад

    Great video series, thank you for sharing!

  • @scottanderson6670
    @scottanderson6670 Год назад

    Thank you so much for all you do in preserving our history!

  • @dt8814
    @dt8814 Год назад

    I've lived here in FXBG and I find this series fascinating.

  • @10_a_see
    @10_a_see Год назад +1

    Take note of the stonework of the original wall; each rock is precisely placed. I can see how it is still standing.

  • @Brian-zp1df
    @Brian-zp1df Год назад +1

    If you look around the field you will see small patches all over where people have been getting away with digging up bullets etc. The park people there are rarely seen anywhere but inside the building doing who knows what

  • @jimwilson7824
    @jimwilson7824 Год назад +1

    Really enjoyed this video. I hope to visit this battlefield some day. It was closed when I came through several years ago because of a government shutdown. Is any part of the area near the river where Barksdale’s men harassed the Union engineers and fought in the city been preserved?

  • @chevy3gm
    @chevy3gm Год назад +1

    Richard Kirkland is a hero. I visited his grave in Camden, SC.

  • @larrystanley5370
    @larrystanley5370 Год назад +1

    Enjoy your videos here Hopewell VA

  • @sethmaxfield6658
    @sethmaxfield6658 Год назад +5

    I always find that story about Sumner confronting Burnside to be particularly poignant... it really puts into perspective how little Burnside could trust his senior subordinates even before the Jan '63 intrigues. Between that and Lincoln still finding his way as a commander-in-chief, it makes his uncharacteristic stubbornness when insisting that the attacks continue that much more understandable

  • @BenFaffler
    @BenFaffler Год назад

    A relative of mine, John Knap, 4th Ohio Infantry. He was on the far right of the Union lines, under Sumner. I dont know much about the regiments involvment other then they were engaged at Maryes heights. He went on to serve through almost every major battle of the war until after the first battle of Petersburg. Then his enlistment papers ran out.

    • @carywest9256
      @carywest9256 7 месяцев назад

      Do your research, it's not hard nowadays, lessen your just too damn lazy!

  • @johnmonroe7378
    @johnmonroe7378 Год назад

    My Great Great Grandfather- Daniel Wooten - 7th South Carolina - Kershaws Brigade, fought there.

    • @carywest9256
      @carywest9256 7 месяцев назад

      Hooray for South Carolina DEO VINDICE

  • @forwardobserver6441
    @forwardobserver6441 Год назад +2

    If things were different I wouldn’t be here today- I had family with company I 8 Alabama and 3 company Washington artillery. Deo vindice forefathers.

  • @luisvaldes1568
    @luisvaldes1568 Год назад +1

    There are James Monroe sites in the town.

  • @fredbrown3229
    @fredbrown3229 5 дней назад

    Richard Kirkland is my great great uncle. 12:06pm Az time.

  • @stevenwiederholt7000
    @stevenwiederholt7000 Год назад +1

    Right now I am reading Allan Nevins's "The Ordeal Of The Union" Volume VI and the political repercussions of this battle on the Lincoln administration (Spoiler Alert) it wasn't good. There were those in the Senate who wanted Lincoln to resign.
    "The Ordeal Of The Union" is really well worth the time (and money) to read.

  • @marvmattison5248
    @marvmattison5248 Год назад +3

    Who was at fault, you asked. Lincoln like you said, but mainly Halleck for blowing Burnside off regarding the immediate need for pontoons. Halleck was so hateful and politically wreckless with jealousy ,spite, etc. that he caused many unnecessary deaths there. Same as he did to Grant just before Shiloh and after. I know that Halleck was one of the South's best weapons, and they knew it yet Lincoln let him keep on as general and at this pt. Sec. in D.C.

    • @pimhoff
      @pimhoff Год назад

      Hard to say anything good about Halleck.

  • @buckappel6835
    @buckappel6835 Год назад +1

    Is this the battle that the term “Cannon Fodder” originated?

  • @ABeautfulMess
    @ABeautfulMess 11 месяцев назад

    I live in Fredericksburg ❤

  • @mbBoyce
    @mbBoyce Год назад

    There is no controversy on Richard Kirkland. He was witnessed and the event is recorded in similar fashion to other stories we accept as fact. He is a hero from Kershaw County, SC which 7 CSA generals called home, including James Chestnut whose wife wrote her famous civil war diaries. Camden, Kershaw County, SC, has a huge offering to US history. Come visit us.

  • @adhdoggo9614
    @adhdoggo9614 5 месяцев назад

    I call that tactic the Bowl of Death, it has a proper military name however I am unsure as to what that name might be.

  • @brt-jn7kg
    @brt-jn7kg 7 месяцев назад

    God damn those politicians for allowing that war to happen and damn then now for getting us close again!!!

  • @kaycox19
    @kaycox19 Год назад +1

    👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏

  • @hanssteiner4315
    @hanssteiner4315 Год назад +2

    I love the content of the stories but it could be a tad bit slower for me and a bit less hyperspeed. I love to listen to this while laying in bed. But its a bit too fast and hysterical for that. Keep it up and enjoying it. It was Napoleonic speed not Blitzkrieg ! ;)

  • @phaecops
    @phaecops 11 месяцев назад

    I just visited this park in August. My neice and her husband just bought a house a few hundred yards from it on Lee St.. I was enthralled with the historical significance and biked the sunken road north only to discover it dead ends into an athletic field near Mary Wash College.
    What you didn't mention that the cannon ball that killed Gen Cobb came through the attic of the whorehouse before it detonated next to the General. LOL

    • @carywest9256
      @carywest9256 7 месяцев назад

      Are you insinuating he was having a dalliance with a soiled dove? She would have been killed or maimed also, from my way of thinking!

  • @michaeldouglas1243
    @michaeldouglas1243 Год назад +3

    5 🌟

  • @bills6963
    @bills6963 11 месяцев назад

    Garry Appleton. I’ve heard of him, I think. 😂

  • @zandrbob
    @zandrbob Год назад

    Where can I get his PRESERVE sweatshirt?!

    • @AmericanBattlefieldTrust
      @AmericanBattlefieldTrust  Год назад

      shop.battlefields.org/product/american-battlefield-trust-pullover-hooded-sweatshirt-unisex/ABT106

  • @torycsummers7328
    @torycsummers7328 Год назад

    I was listening intently to Sarah, what happened??

  • @melissastokes8090
    @melissastokes8090 Год назад

    Sarah ❤ rules Garth 😊

  • @jimchumley7907
    @jimchumley7907 Год назад

    The Irish fighting the Irish really didn't happen? Darn and I cried at the particular scene in God's And Generals. LOL!

  • @Baskerville22
    @Baskerville22 8 месяцев назад

    Lose the 'hoodie', please, Chris

  • @Ugly_German_Truths
    @Ugly_German_Truths Год назад +2

    I wish you would stop to use this religious imagery to talk about a murderous battle. Nothing hallowed about being mowed down in fighting. Nothing sacrred about bloodsoaked ground and thus no desecration when the ground is used.
    This type of language creates a dangerous mindset that worships the idea of war as the true american heritage. You can do so much better.

  • @zz424
    @zz424 24 дня назад

    For a cried out loud you didn't give any good views of down the hill who wanna see down the hill, and you hardly show that at all major Fail

  • @UAPReportingCenter
    @UAPReportingCenter 6 месяцев назад

    Burnside the worst general in modern history

  • @generalbooger9146
    @generalbooger9146 Год назад

    Hindsight historians shusssh.