Civil War author, Shelby Foote - Stars in Their Courses - The Gettysburg Campaign - 1994 Interview

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 3,1 тыс.

  • @dylanmcdermott1110
    @dylanmcdermott1110 Год назад +395

    My favorite part of the Ken Burns Civil War documentary was anytime Shelby Foote told a story; the twinkle in his eye and his smile was infectious. We should all be so lucky to be that passionate about something.

    • @atrent3732
      @atrent3732 Год назад +8

      Absolutely. I loved the entire compellation, but I wanted to be able to separate the Shelby Foote sections because of how much they stood out.

    • @meghanmisaliar
      @meghanmisaliar Год назад +9

      I love the "run old hare" story. He had a great laugh.

    • @Battleatchivamaugs
      @Battleatchivamaugs Год назад +9

      And that voice also!

    • @danielalexander8221
      @danielalexander8221 Год назад +3

      Having served four hazardous tours, I particularly liked the details he treated us to. It made it easy for me to imagine being there.

    • @meghanmisaliar
      @meghanmisaliar Год назад +2

      @@danielalexander8221 Thank you for your service!! You are appreciated.
      ❤️🇺🇸❤️

  • @JOHNDOE-gl2ic
    @JOHNDOE-gl2ic 11 месяцев назад +304

    You know the best thing about Shelby Foote? You can tell that he's always telling the truth without hiding things in his words. A man of humility and kindness.

    • @Cheesus4You
      @Cheesus4You 5 месяцев назад +4

      Shelby is awesome! I can tell the same with Trump, except he is usually lying.

    • @ronniebishop2496
      @ronniebishop2496 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@Cheesus4YouYou must be very young?

    • @lymanmj
      @lymanmj 5 месяцев назад

      Except he had a tendency to whitewash the insurrection of the South directed by Davis. A split in our United States brought on behalf of rich plantation owners and poor ignorant Whites who couldn't bear the thought of not having a class of enslaved people to look down on.

    • @citizenway
      @citizenway 5 месяцев назад

      amen to that

    • @lymanmj
      @lymanmj 5 месяцев назад

      A man who, also, IMHO, excessively romanticized Confederate generals.

  • @MarianneBuckley-s9m
    @MarianneBuckley-s9m 8 месяцев назад +70

    I could listen to him all day. So sad he's gone. The best thing about Ken Burns Civil War was listening to him

  • @brianskinner5711
    @brianskinner5711 3 года назад +434

    35 years ago I called the operator in Memphis and got his phone number, we spoke twice and he answered many questions. I sent him a beautiful bowl I turned on my lathe, and in turn I received a letter from him that I still have and treasure. A gracious man.

    • @sandraelder1101
      @sandraelder1101 2 года назад +15

      Wonderful story & a beautiful treasures for each of you.

    • @ThanksforcensoringmeYoutube
      @ThanksforcensoringmeYoutube 2 года назад +17

      That is awesome. I’m 26 and just discovered him a few years ago and I lament that I’ll never be able to speak with him. I’ve got a family connection to the Civil War and Foote’s work has been the best I’ve found in my research.

    • @ezragonzalez8936
      @ezragonzalez8936 2 года назад +12

      Lucky he never even signed autographs! very selective

    • @Benny2Steakz
      @Benny2Steakz 2 года назад +5

      Nice story

    • @mikerubin22
      @mikerubin22 2 года назад +9

      he was a man of grace and humility; thanks for sharing your experience with him👍👍💜💜

  • @haroldfloyd5518
    @haroldfloyd5518 3 года назад +1903

    For those who see Shelby as a confederate apologist, just read the damned books. There’s no bias, there’s no twisting of history, there’s no sense of “the south should have won”. It’s just really well written history.

    • @Billybob-bm7vt
      @Billybob-bm7vt 3 года назад +170

      @@haroldflashman4687 if you would read his works it's not your just that unopened minded that you refuse to do any research at all and only take other people's word for it

    • @americanmade6057
      @americanmade6057 3 года назад +94

      @@haroldflashman4687 then don’t watch or read the book.

    • @AmandaS18
      @AmandaS18 3 года назад +22

      @haroldfloyd exactly

    • @AmandaS18
      @AmandaS18 3 года назад +11

      @@americanmade6057 👍🏼

    • @glenchapman3899
      @glenchapman3899 3 года назад +219

      Yes he had the great ability to explain things from the South's perspective, from the North's perspective without once sounding judgmental. And as so many others have said - A true Southern gentleman.

  • @veritas6335
    @veritas6335 Год назад +209

    Shelby Foote was adorable. An accomplished storyteller, a vastly literate person and a charming man. I miss him.

    • @meghanmisaliar
      @meghanmisaliar Год назад +10

      He was the best of the best. We'll never have another civil war authority as knowledgeable as he was.

    • @micnorton9487
      @micnorton9487 Год назад +5

      ​@@meghanmisaliar.. it's possible,, but I think Shelby Foote was unique in his fascination with the subject and being a Southern intellectual,, if his father would have lived and his family would have moved to chicago, maybe he would have developed an interest in steel work,, or railroads, who knows.... Notice how he has a passion and memory for history, perhaps he was like Patton and considered that he lived before, he always seemed like he probably would have been an officer and probably in either Stonewall Jackson's or Forrests army...

    • @paulsnabb9914
      @paulsnabb9914 5 месяцев назад +2

      I would say admirable not adorable.

    • @jamesgee9738
      @jamesgee9738 2 месяца назад

      I would say a 'Gentleman' in its
      truest sense.

  • @sheilapasquini6232
    @sheilapasquini6232 3 года назад +647

    Mr. Shelby was a gifted speaker, teacher and author. He is still missed.

    • @Ergo8152
      @Ergo8152 3 года назад +12

      4 sure RIP

    • @Historian212
      @Historian212 3 года назад +6

      Mr. Foote.

    • @ebonkrieg
      @ebonkrieg 3 года назад +8

      I miss him.
      He was a perfect person to explain why black people are free.

    • @sheilapasquini6232
      @sheilapasquini6232 3 года назад +12

      @@Historian212 Thank you for bringing this to my attention, however in the south it is common to call someone Mr. or Miss Followed by their first name. For instance, Miss Alice, etc.

    • @Clancy192
      @Clancy192 Год назад

      He was a lying bag of shit trying to reinvent some mystical place that never existed.

  • @richardcutt727
    @richardcutt727 11 месяцев назад +80

    Shelby's 3 Volume The Civil War has been my constant companion now for over 30 years. The best military history book ever written. A joy to read.

    • @flparkermdpc
      @flparkermdpc 8 месяцев назад +2

      A joy to read his Civil War History because he became an accomplished writer with his novels before he was commissioned to write of real events where he was not in attendance. It's probably significant that he went to the battlefields on the anniversaries of the battles.

    • @silverstem2964
      @silverstem2964 8 месяцев назад +1

      Try Grant's Memoirs.

    • @normthompson923
      @normthompson923 6 месяцев назад

      I have read his series 4 times over and about ready for a fifth.So much to learn and hes a pleasure to listen to.

    • @ardshielcomplex8917
      @ardshielcomplex8917 5 месяцев назад

      I bought the set and had them shipped out to here in Australia, thats how highly theyre regarded.

  • @derbypiershipre9218
    @derbypiershipre9218 Год назад +311

    Shelby Foote was an American treasure.

    • @meghanmisaliar
      @meghanmisaliar Год назад +8

      Absolutely

    • @spiderlegs50
      @spiderlegs50 9 месяцев назад +7

      Absolutely.,,I loved hearing him talk. We truly have lost a Real American History Teacher.

    • @flparkermdpc
      @flparkermdpc 9 месяцев назад +3

      We still have these videos and an ocean of great words. Most won't even scratch the surface of what's available.

    • @cards0486
      @cards0486 8 месяцев назад +2

      Totally agree!

    • @mikedavis4427
      @mikedavis4427 5 месяцев назад +1

      Is

  • @stuartmuir3387
    @stuartmuir3387 3 года назад +514

    As a Scotsman can I say I absolutely adore this man, his matter of fact delivery on questions pertaining to the civil war is second to none, precise and concise ...no whatabootery...I will always miss his knowledge and perception...

    • @CAUSELESSREBEL
      @CAUSELESSREBEL 3 года назад +8

      Absolutely well said

    • @davidkoloc1313
      @davidkoloc1313 3 года назад

      Yeah, precise and concise... Grant was to blame for the atrocities committed at Andersonville.
      And Brits were responsible for Nazi death camps.

    • @davidkoloc1313
      @davidkoloc1313 3 года назад +1

      @@andymullins84
      First of all, I did not blame Grant for anything. Is it asking too much for you to know who’s writing what.
      Secondly... The availability of food has nothing to do with the south’s conscious decision to NOT construct one single building within the compound (essentially a dirt pit in the ground) in which over 9,500 Union prisoners died over just ten months. Plenty of lumber, operating steam powered saw mills within spitting distance and all the free/slave labor needed to build something/anything for them yet Georgia’s hot summer sun baked Union soldiers and her frigid winter rains gave them pneumonia. NOTHING TO DO WITH FOOD OR GRANT. Everything to do with being hateful, vindictive and despicable human beings.
      Besides which, That the south had trouble feeding herself after starting a war she had no business, and was warned against starting, is hardly the fault of her (self declared) enemy.
      Study Andersonville before spouting off about it will you? Examine the Confederacy’s own documents regarding it. Go there and have a look at it. see it. Read the diaries and journals of soldiers from both sides who were there and until you do, keep your ignorant opinions about it to yourself.

    • @davidkoloc1313
      @davidkoloc1313 3 года назад +2

      @@andymullins84 My apologies for jumping on you. I should watch my tongue.

    • @davidkoloc1313
      @davidkoloc1313 3 года назад

      @@andymullins84 Hope you’re well into your recovery. Two nephews of mine are Marines who saw action in Iraq, one in the West during the first elections. Wounded near the glass factory. His younger sister, Emma is now an RN on the TBI unit here at the Mpls VA Hospital. Be well and thank you.

  • @jackcook8613
    @jackcook8613 Год назад +95

    This man was a true genius in his field. He can make an audience mesmerized with his delivery. I could listen to him all day. A true American treasure.

    • @nyworker
      @nyworker Год назад +2

      A true testimonial to the genius of southern thought, language and heritage.

    • @paul-we2gf
      @paul-we2gf Год назад

      He was the Confederate equivalent of the Union s James MacPherson. Makes a good balance. Thank you both of you.

  • @crusader2112
    @crusader2112 10 месяцев назад +13

    A great man and the world is worse off without him in it. I have his book on the Battle of Shiloh and his Civil War Trilogy.

  • @w.herschelljamisonii9127
    @w.herschelljamisonii9127 3 года назад +317

    He was an American Treasure. North or South doesn't matter, he told the story of a nation on fire, like no one else.

    • @ardshielcomplex8917
      @ardshielcomplex8917 3 года назад +14

      In my considered opinion Shelby Foote is without doubt the finest and most meticulous Historian on the American War between the States than any other is, or has been in existence. And no I will not use the term "Civil War" because there was nothing "Civil" about it after Sherman committed to the Total War strategy.

    • @gailjarvis2592
      @gailjarvis2592 3 года назад +21

      @Brad Watson You are mad. Take your meds. All 666 of them.

    • @valeriegriner5644
      @valeriegriner5644 3 года назад +1

      @@ardshielcomplex8917 I have often pondered the same thing...what was "CIVIL" about this war?

    • @jamesrichardson3322
      @jamesrichardson3322 3 года назад +11

      @Brad Watson Seriously the people with the white straight coat and the white padded rooms are looking for you!!! Go take your medicine 💉. Donald John Trump is the greatest president we ever had in my life time. There is something very wrong with you!!!🤪 Maybe they should brick 🧱 up the door 🚪 to your padded room, with No food or water and No hope!!

    • @jamesrichardson3322
      @jamesrichardson3322 3 года назад +6

      @@gailjarvis2592 lol Brad lives on different planet then we do!!

  • @alp-1960
    @alp-1960 Год назад +86

    I miss Brian Lamb and his simple, direct but understated interviewing style. And I'm glad for all the video we have of Shelby Foote.

    • @scottsmullin171
      @scottsmullin171 9 дней назад

      Listen to his Booknotes+ podcast, Brian Lamb still at it 😊

  • @Chevy120
    @Chevy120 3 года назад +229

    What a fascinating man Shelby Foote is. He was the last of a dying breed, and one who will be very much missed. His honesty is so refreshing and his mannerisms are a thing of great charm.

  • @johnpolhamus9041
    @johnpolhamus9041 Год назад +91

    One of the most deeply cogent, reflective, and considered writers I have ever heard, in this and other interviews.

    • @pfdrtom
      @pfdrtom Год назад +5

      Yet people hated him for his part in the series. They called him a Confederate apologist, a racist, a senile old man. What a shame. As a 60 year old American I can say I am sad and ashamed that we, as a nation, have devolved to a point where that telling the truth or even one side of a many faceted story is considered being hateful. I have always listened to opposing arguments and people I disagree with but I would never have their opinions silenced or twisted to make them look stupid, as they have with this man.

    • @busterbiloxi3833
      @busterbiloxi3833 Год назад

      Pleasant and entertaining, but Foote's history is self-serving. He is a Southern White Man. Keeping America down.

    • @timothymeehan181
      @timothymeehan181 Год назад

      Not sure exactly who all the “people who hated him” are that you’re referring to. He was the breakout star of Burns’ Civil War documentary, and deservedly so-He was a great story-teller, made great copy, and consequently became famous, and wealthy because of the effect of the documentary on his book sales. So I suspect he was more than willing to put up with any mild criticism that may’ve blown his way from the far left extremists. Now, I do have to confess that I personally detected a bit of the “unreconstructed Confederate” to him, a bit of the “Lost Causer” to him. He could’ve analyzed how the average southern soldier boy was used(lied to) by the slave oligarchs to fight for a system that devalued their labor, caused the majority of them to slip further into poverty, etc. But I don’t hate him, rather enjoyed him. He’s an expert on the “worm’s eye view” of the Civil War, the life & experience of the average soldier, and the military tactics & strategy of the officers on both sides, but he’s no political philosopher or political scientist, and seemed almost neutral about the moral principles involved in the causes of the war, the extent to which Lincoln’s arguments were simply deeper, more profound, and more profoundly correct/true/accurate compared to the arguments made by the leading men of the south, the slave oligarchs, who were bent on growing, expanding & nationalizing slavery all over this continent, Cuba, the Caribbean, more of Mexico, Central America, etc. But that’s OK, there are other men whose job that is- Harry Jaffa, Joseph Fornieri, William Lee Miller, Lucas Morel, Allen Guelzo, Michael Burlingame, James Oakes, et al……🇱🇷🙏🎩

    • @thomasreid4063
      @thomasreid4063 10 месяцев назад

      SO I did appreciate his work on the Civil war documentary , BUT when anyone who points out his disdain for yankees in his youth and has beliefs that " slavery was a huge stain on all of us " even northerners of that time & today makes me even take that comment to task and then how he glorified the rebel movement gives me pause,....maybe that has some Americans goat, but you immediately pegged them as left wing extremists and as a Republican I find that odd...I married a cajun queen in `78 and have 3 bros.-in-laws who are just as much a southern gentlemen as Shelby BUT, I then came to learn that their upbringing was one where the Confederate gov`t was one that one to glorify as men like Shelby loved to do..... @@timothymeehan181

  • @slappyhinesarrangements
    @slappyhinesarrangements 3 года назад +343

    My late father, F.M. Hill, used to sell books to Mr. Foote. I went with my father to Mr. Foote's house on several occasions. I remember him as a true Southern Gentleman.

    • @HolgerRuneFan
      @HolgerRuneFan 3 года назад +17

      What a fabulous memory!

    • @larrybarber
      @larrybarber 3 года назад +14

      I truly enjoy this man's speech and knowledge. I really miss him I know he is with our maker

    • @boutiletteboutilette4782
      @boutiletteboutilette4782 3 года назад +4

      I always admired the man, outstanding historian and will be dearly missed

    • @Tupelo927
      @Tupelo927 3 года назад +2

      @TheJohnnyrat There's no reason to be unkind to the OP, sir.

    • @kingjoe3rd
      @kingjoe3rd 3 года назад +2

      @TheJohnnyrat You obviously are not very familiar with him if you think that he propagated the "Lost Cause" which I am assuming that you using that term means that you are saying that he would tell people that the American Civil War was not about slavery which is false, he would not do that. The US Civil War was 100% about slavery and he never shied away from that fact. You are just trying to get a rise out of people because you are miserable and hate yourself and your miserable meaningless life. There is also a strange sect of weirdos that want to rewrite history and equate the Confederates to that of Nazi Germany and will smear and slander anyone who doesn't frame the Confederates in that light whether it be truth or fiction is irrelevant to them for it is not "their truth" that they made up on their own mentally ill heads and that is wrong for them because their life revolves around their own personal brilliance. That is why people like TheJohnnyrat (a fishing lure company, related? we will find out ;) will call anyone who doesn't tow the revisionist line as being part of the Last Cause.

  • @MadMan07712
    @MadMan07712 7 месяцев назад +20

    Shelby Foote’s speech patterns and accent draws the listener in as if your grandfather was telling you a story about his youth spent in the war. Brilliant.

  • @jajanesaddictions
    @jajanesaddictions 3 года назад +254

    He has a sadness, in his eyes, about him until he relates something he really loves, and then a slight smile comes upon his mouth and, you can see the light in his eyes and how much he loves this subject matter. He is so insightful, so articulate. I just love him.

    • @williewaynewheelbarrowtoma4436
      @williewaynewheelbarrowtoma4436 2 года назад +5

      RIGHT AWAY I NOTICED THE SAME THING

    • @debrajarnagin7101
      @debrajarnagin7101 2 года назад +7

      I think that too. I wonder what has happened to him that makes him so sad

    • @andyroper5132
      @andyroper5132 2 года назад +7

      When I read his books on the Civil War I can hear his voice . When he tells a story it’s so convincing it’s like he was there. Shelby Foote is one cool dude .

    • @gmamagillmore4812
      @gmamagillmore4812 2 года назад +2

      He's sad that the South lost.

    • @chazmann108
      @chazmann108 2 года назад +7

      @@gmamagillmore4812 when trying to understand the Civil War and subsequent cultural changes I'll never forget Foote's sage comment when he said, 'you must understand that in the south, we come from a culture of defeat.' How simple and articulate these few words struck me at that time.

  • @franosborne8198
    @franosborne8198 Год назад +69

    ❤RIP Shelby. What an amazing man, author, historian. In every respect.

  • @pbrazor50
    @pbrazor50 3 года назад +277

    An hour-long interview that seems to pass in 5 minutes. I could listen to him for days. I grew up in Eastern Arkansas right across the Mississippi from Memphis and he sounds so much like so many Southern gentlemen I knew who were born early in the century. Accents like this are disappearing and it is a shame. It is a great treat to be able to see material like this on RUclips.

    • @marcusfrance3825
      @marcusfrance3825 2 года назад +18

      I could listen to Shelby Foote read the phone book

    • @tomjones2202
      @tomjones2202 2 года назад +9

      Arkansas here too! Yep,, that distinct voice is slowly fading away. It's a treasure when you can find someone who actually speaks that way and doesn't put on a phony accent.

    • @jimwright2795
      @jimwright2795 Год назад +4

      I possess this accent. What may I read for you on this youtube?

    • @tomasinacovell4293
      @tomasinacovell4293 Год назад +1

      I used to like him until I heard that he'd've fought for the CSA despite slavery, that's a real malefactor of a man in any nation, he'd fight for Putin just because he's Russian.

    • @jimwright2795
      @jimwright2795 Год назад

      @@tomasinacovell4293 Tomasina, I'mma give you a life-lesson right here. Please consider it--otherwise, I'm just casting pearls before swine (look that up too).
      Whether one "likes" a teacher is irrelevant. In fact, one can learn alot from one's enemies, both real and imagined.
      As for what you "heard," consider the source of that statement which you paraphrased--he or she hasn't done what I now ask of you, to wit: Read the man's books and listen to his interviews before you pass such shallow judgment. There's a very old saying..."Those who ignore history are DOOMED to repeat it."
      Come on girl, change your studying/learning/reading habits. I guarantee you'll thank me or thank someone. You've heard of the Age of Enlightenment? This is your chance at enlightenment for the rest of your lifetime.
      Peace out!

  • @nickpaine
    @nickpaine 3 года назад +149

    A gentleman and a scholar. History owes much to Mr. Foote. It is not boring in the hands of such a skilled storyteller.

    • @Rundstedt1
      @Rundstedt1 2 года назад

      And that's what he is, a story teller and not a historian.

    • @Rundstedt1
      @Rundstedt1 2 года назад +1

      @Talorc MacAllan
      He's actually not a historian in the academic sense. Foote did not write histories; he wrote narratives based on history. And there is a big difference academically. Foote's works are not footnoted, or really sourced and he uses much looser standards of evidence often employing hearsay and the obvious Southern apologetics from the post war period without question. Don't get me wrong, Foote was a great writer, and abundantly more honest about the war than most of the Southerners from his generation. He relates the military actions in a generally fair manner (but with errors here and there) with an exciting and readable prose, but that's all.

    • @flparkermdpc
      @flparkermdpc 8 месяцев назад

      Nuts to you.

  • @RetreatfarmFarmvilleVirginia
    @RetreatfarmFarmvilleVirginia 3 года назад +92

    I'm so glad Shelby isn't living now to see the horrendous things our Country has lowered itself into. One Fine honorable Southern Gentleman. RIP And may you "Cross over the Rivah and rest under the shade of the Trees"

    • @samhindle4646
      @samhindle4646 3 года назад +2

      With TJ Jackson 💞

    • @thomasspence307
      @thomasspence307 3 года назад +10

      He would be disappointed with how the confederate flag has been treated, monuments being torn down, obliterating history. It’s a shame.

    • @lymanmj
      @lymanmj Год назад +8

      @@thomasspence307 No way, my good sir. On the contrary. I aver Foote would want the flag and the monuments (most of which were erected by the KKK with the knowledge of local authorities) in museums, where they belong, not in our public squares or in the parks of our United States. Foote was a highly capable historian who, despite his tendency to romanticize the Civil War era, was a moral and ethical human being who would never favor the incandescently racist, bigoted message these artifacts convey.

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 Год назад +3

      Shelby would be disappointed in today's society.

    • @davewallace8219
      @davewallace8219 9 месяцев назад

      Well said!

  • @saxx001
    @saxx001 3 года назад +311

    This gentleman taught me the history of the civil war, I'm English, no other could relay the sensitivity of this brother against brother in his nation, I thank you for those lessons.

    • @vintagebrew1057
      @vintagebrew1057 3 года назад +20

      We are lucky to view the Ken Burn's documentary with Mr Foote on PBS America in the UK. I've seen it many times and thats how I first heard of Mr Foote.

    • @WyattRyeSway
      @WyattRyeSway 3 года назад +8

      He was amazing but was before my time. Great great man

    • @brianpeters7847
      @brianpeters7847 3 года назад +2

      You forgot Cromwell...

    • @StanSwan
      @StanSwan 3 года назад +7

      My great great grandfather served in the Union Army during the Civil War. His grave is just a few miles from me. He lived into the 1920s. He is buried in Springfield Massachusetts, they trained not far from my house for the war. We had the most black Union soldiers in the war. There is a good chance he trained with them.

    • @valeriegriner5644
      @valeriegriner5644 3 года назад +2

      @@Jj-gi2uv Yes! I have researched this and found it to be true. Judah Benjamin was part of the "tribe"...if you understand what I'm saying.

  • @stevecostello4278
    @stevecostello4278 3 года назад +140

    His three volume history of the Civil War is, in my opinion, the finest piece of military history of modern times. It reads like a novel and is almost impossible to put down

    • @poopstainhotdog1
      @poopstainhotdog1 Год назад +4

      Yes it is fantastic. Have you also read The Rising Sun by John Toland? It is also an astonishing piece of military history.

    • @stevecostello4278
      @stevecostello4278 Год назад +2

      @@poopstainhotdog1 I haven’t read that but I will take your recommendation on board and check it out. Thank you.

    • @davidkoplitz1969
      @davidkoplitz1969 Год назад +2

      Yes, fantastic ❤

    • @larryo6874
      @larryo6874 Год назад +2

      It was a great read.

    • @johndaarteest
      @johndaarteest Год назад +3

      They are quite meaty tomes.

  • @meghanmisaliar
    @meghanmisaliar Год назад +59

    We will never have another expert as well versed on the CW as Mr Foote.
    He had the most beautiful speaking voice and vocabulary.

    • @Baseballnfj
      @Baseballnfj 9 месяцев назад +2

      Dude... there's 20 people in gettysburg PA alone who know the war better than Foote ever did. And I love Foote... but nowhere near the best

    • @gregshirley-jeffersonboule6258
      @gregshirley-jeffersonboule6258 9 месяцев назад +2

      Oh please. There are historians at universities all across the country who are/were as good or better than Foote. They just haven't been on TV ffs.

    • @danielcrowe9324
      @danielcrowe9324 5 месяцев назад +4

      Mr. Foote was very clear when he said that he was not a historian. He described himself as a writer and as a novelist.

    • @meghanmisaliar
      @meghanmisaliar 5 месяцев назад

      @@gregshirley-jeffersonboule6258 name them

    • @meghanmisaliar
      @meghanmisaliar 5 месяцев назад

      @@danielcrowe9324 I never called him a historian.

  • @jeffreyjacobs390
    @jeffreyjacobs390 Год назад +30

    We LOST SHELBY some years ago now - Such a class act, down the earth intellectual with love of country, historical significance & decency .... a Southern Gentleman should have. Missed and grateful for his commentary and insights over the years !! God bless, jj

  • @watchful1168
    @watchful1168 Год назад +17

    This is one of the most brilliant interviews of Shelby Foote...it shows his true genius time after time. What a sweet American!!

  • @TomSmith-lf8tr
    @TomSmith-lf8tr 2 года назад +148

    All these years later his words and humanity still resonate. One of the greatest.

    • @thomasmcmahon9964
      @thomasmcmahon9964 Год назад

      @@talorcmacallan4268😊

    • @thomasreid4063
      @thomasreid4063 10 месяцев назад

      All these years ?...humanity ? just think if his beloved south held off until the `64 election and Lincoln lost his re-election this man`s family would be one of a slave owner singing the praises of Gen. Lee & Pres. Davis, because he admits to having disdain/hatred towards yankees as a child like all young boys of the south did in his time...

  • @erolegario
    @erolegario Год назад +13

    It's one of my favorite American accents. Educated, Southern, well versed, and completely American.
    Tacitus was of my people. You are a scholar and a gentleman.

  • @idleonlooker1078
    @idleonlooker1078 3 года назад +391

    Shelby's genius lies in his innate honesty underpinning his deeply perceptive mind and his eloquence of speech. The perfect historian and teacher!! 👍

    • @tedhinshaw3174
      @tedhinshaw3174 3 года назад +2

      Who would be caught dead yawning or catching shut eye in class? Labeled a dullard and a thief. Why thief? My how I'd love To've sat their in his stead, trade chairs out during his nap time. A thief to me forever!!

    • @stevenhaas9622
      @stevenhaas9622 3 года назад +9

      "perfect historian"? A man who never once entered an archive or used any original source materials? He's a good story teller but one thing he most certainly is not is a great historian.

    • @ebonkrieg
      @ebonkrieg 3 года назад +5

      The perfect apologist because he is the most intelligent person who may try to make a traitor look good.
      The most laughable historian and teacher I have ever heard.
      This is not history, it is butt hurt people trying to justify why they act this way today.
      Glorify this simple, human fraud and make yourselves feel good while you ponder the reasons why the traitors like Foote's heroes give you the courage to be idiots.

    • @michaelmcclure9350
      @michaelmcclure9350 3 года назад +4

      Actually he's a great lesson in not being cajoled by charm

    • @idleonlooker1078
      @idleonlooker1078 3 года назад +19

      @@stevenhaas9622 Then if he's that bad, then why do scholars hold his civil war history in such high regard?

  • @RubyMarkLindMilly
    @RubyMarkLindMilly 4 года назад +479

    I'm British and recognise Shelby foote as an American national treasure

    • @S_M_360
      @S_M_360 3 года назад +14

      No question of that

    • @1974jrod
      @1974jrod 3 года назад +14

      Amazing that he was almost 80 years old here.

    • @marcusalexander7088
      @marcusalexander7088 3 года назад +15

      Thank you, British cousin. God save the Queen!

    • @stevefowler2112
      @stevefowler2112 3 года назад +7

      Thank you and you are very perceptive and know quality when you see it.

    • @vintagebrew1057
      @vintagebrew1057 3 года назад +13

      Whenever I hear Mr Foote speaking on his subject It feels as if he was actually there. All the best from UK.

  • @robertc8134
    @robertc8134 3 года назад +121

    "I visited his grand daughter...and she let me swing the General's (Nathan Bedford Forrest) sword around my head a few times, which was a great treat". Shelby Foote had all the abilities of a great historian, and also the ability to translate his observations so that a non-historian would also find them interesting and valuable. A true historian in every sense of the word. RIP Shelby.

    • @kirk4086
      @kirk4086 3 года назад +4

      Sir...your comment is "Spot on"
      Thanks!

    • @joeblow4499
      @joeblow4499 3 года назад +2

      I loved that part as well

    • @alexprocyk8805
      @alexprocyk8805 2 года назад +7

      I do wish the interviewer had asked Shelby: "Nathan Bedford Forrest, one of histories greatest assholes, or THE greatest asshole?"

    • @markperrault5678
      @markperrault5678 Год назад +2

      Man gen. Forrest is my favorite

  • @rowdyyates8626
    @rowdyyates8626 2 года назад +39

    He’s a good honest man. Honorable,principled and high morals. He wasn’t apologizing for the South. He was being honest and factual.

  • @Tusk_III
    @Tusk_III 3 года назад +229

    I feel we’ll rarely witness a more genuine and passionate man. The authenticity of his voice and look in his eyes. RIP Shelby.

    • @bertvosburg558
      @bertvosburg558 Год назад +1

      He was very impartial also in his book regarding north and south, I thought that was very commendable.

  • @robertmillen2967
    @robertmillen2967 2 года назад +91

    A lot of us won’t have had the pleasure of hearing Shelby Foote if it wasn’t for Ken Burn’s documentary, I always looked forward for his stories, told in such a manner as if he himself was there.

    • @bobstone8667
      @bobstone8667 2 года назад +3

      Agreed, Ken Burns documentary on the civil war in my opnion is one of the greatest and so far the best decribing the trials and tebulations of Americas greatest and sadest times. Mr. Foote was a big part of Burns fine work on the American Civil War during this time. R.I.P. Mr. Foote, your work is very much appreciated.

    • @Clancy192
      @Clancy192 Год назад

      Foote lies and exaggerates the Southern virtue. Slavers suck

    • @busterbiloxi3833
      @busterbiloxi3833 Год назад

      "wouldn't have had"

    • @TheNightWatcher1385
      @TheNightWatcher1385 Год назад

      @@bobstone8667 And now Ken Burns considers the documentary an embarrassment to his career and believes all confederate memorials should be dismantled.

  • @fredbeach2085
    @fredbeach2085 3 года назад +209

    I`m English and I could listen to Shelby Foote all day long his accent is pure Southern drawl which I love, one moment in the TV series I enjoyed was when he described when he actually was allowed to swing Nathan Bedford Forrest`s sword above his head by Forrest`s descendent who owned it. RIP Mr Foote and God Bless You.

    • @mikewhitney8615
      @mikewhitney8615 3 года назад +27

      God bless you, Fred, and roll Britannia! Again and again some of the best comments are from our English brothers while so many of the most absurd are from my fellow Americans.

    • @fredbeach2085
      @fredbeach2085 3 года назад +18

      @@mikewhitney8615 Thank you Mike kind regards from Blighty and yes I agree we are brothers and more than that brothers in arms too, long may it remain so.

    • @mikewhitney8615
      @mikewhitney8615 3 года назад +9

      @@fredbeach2085 Indeed, long may it remain so!

    • @minerran
      @minerran 3 года назад +5

      Yes Fred, Foote is entertaining to listen to but his facts are way off the rails. He was a novelist, not a historian.

    • @fredbeach2085
      @fredbeach2085 3 года назад +6

      @@minerran To write his novels didn`t he have to study history ? Gone with the Wind was a novel based on history. Thanks anyway for your input.

  • @magiscichoam
    @magiscichoam 3 года назад +119

    An absolutely brilliant interview. Anyone who believes he’s a Confederate and/or a Southern apologist is simply devoid of any semblance of critical thinking capability or perceptivity. His 3 books on the Civil War are of the very highest order and should be required reading and rereading by every American. The books are profoundly balanced, scholarly and unbiased. Along with “Killer Angels” (by Michael Shaara) I consider “The Civil War: A Narrative” to be the best novels on the Civil War and its effect on the evolution of America.
    Pity those for whom knowledge and wisdom are of no benefit. Ignorance is bliss until it isn’t.

    • @ardshielcomplex8917
      @ardshielcomplex8917 2 года назад +4

      I have them here in Australia in my collection, cost me an arm and leg to get them but worth every dollar.

    • @nomdeguerre7265
      @nomdeguerre7265 2 года назад +5

      The Civil War: A Narrative is not a "novel" like The Killer Angels. It's history. However wonderful, Shaara's work is fiction, not history.

    • @magiscichoam
      @magiscichoam 2 года назад +1

      @@nomdeguerre7265 you are absolutely correct. For me, “Killer Angels” is what I read after revisiting “The Civil War: A Narrative”. “Killer Angels” is a surreal reading experience.

    • @nomdeguerre7265
      @nomdeguerre7265 2 года назад +2

      @@magiscichoam It’s a stellar novel. Some great stuff there. It’s the kind of fiction that brings to life our picture of what we believe the past was. Its awards were richly deserved.

    • @brentonyancheck4861
      @brentonyancheck4861 2 года назад

      @@magiscichoam My favorite is,High tide at Gettysburg!!!

  • @cgpapineau
    @cgpapineau Год назад +22

    Shelby Foote has one of the most beautiful speaking voices of all time. A very deep thinker and brilliant author.

  • @benreavely4891
    @benreavely4891 3 года назад +152

    When Shelby Foote spoke, I could not stop listening. Extremely well-spoken and a true gentleman. Wish I could have met him in person.

    • @roberthumphries862
      @roberthumphries862 3 года назад +8

      I had the honor of meeting Mr. Foote at one of his speaking engagements. There was a meet and greet and we spoke for about 20 minutes...it was a very special evening

    • @rocktown5014
      @rocktown5014 3 года назад +8

      I didn't realize until after his death in 2005 that he had been living in Memphis since the 50's -- just two hours away from me here in Little Rock. It would've been definitely been quite an honor to meet him, as I absolutely loved his contributions to the Ken Burns documentary.

  • @DrWBRogers
    @DrWBRogers 3 года назад +156

    Having been raised in Texas and Louisiana since 1951, I well understand what Shelby Foote means about having the Civil War in one’s blood. Listening to recordings of Mr. Foote reading from his histories is a bit like sitting at your grandfather’s knee while he recalls what he personally witnessed as a young man who fought in the War.

    • @TM-vq1bf
      @TM-vq1bf 3 года назад +3

      It can be in your blood so long as you accept the defeat

    • @ronniebishop2496
      @ronniebishop2496 3 года назад +5

      T M Well it took along time and in fact Vicksburg Mississippi didn’t celebrate the 4th of July again until 1967 I believe, people’s hatred of the Yankees and blamed blacks for the civil war and took out a lot of revenge on them through Jim Crow that came in heavy after the northern army pulled out 11 years later. Nobody had any idea what to do with millions of people that didn’t know how to do much of anything but farm and most couldn’t even read or write. Emancipation had no provisions in it for post slavery hardly at all and they just let them go. Unbelievable. Lincoln had a plan to send most back to Africa or something. He actually believed that a black man was about 3/4 of a white man at birth. But he didn’t hate them at all. And blacks not wanting to celebrate their liberation and their history is unfortunate. In fact they want to eliminate it.

    • @ronniebishop2496
      @ronniebishop2496 3 года назад +4

      T M Most people today in the South don’t know enough about it to accept it or whatever you’re talking about, accept it how? People in the North know even less.

    • @davidweinstein1861
      @davidweinstein1861 3 года назад

      @@ronniebishop2496 you

    • @ronniebishop2496
      @ronniebishop2496 3 года назад

      @@davidweinstein1861 You too.

  • @davidsmith385
    @davidsmith385 2 года назад +274

    Imagine having him as a Professor, you would never want to miss a class and show up early and stay late.

    • @NahmakantaCamps
      @NahmakantaCamps 2 года назад +5

      so true!

    • @richardbranton7396
      @richardbranton7396 2 года назад +1

      Imagine having Hitler Stalin or mussolini as a professor...... how it's said I guess can convince the easily lead

    • @wallacesmith7032
      @wallacesmith7032 2 года назад +2

      Exactly, 😆

    • @ablewindsor1459
      @ablewindsor1459 Год назад +2

      Yup had a couple of Profs like him in Virginia.... loved it and Them.
      One prof developed Lucite Paint.....
      Made Organic Chemistry Fanatastic

    • @ablewindsor1459
      @ablewindsor1459 Год назад +5

      @@richardbranton7396 You Could have had ObamA .......

  • @robertcleary8344
    @robertcleary8344 2 года назад +32

    This man is a personal hero of mine. His soft manner and obvious kindness bely his genious. Could listen to him all day...

  • @thelion6614
    @thelion6614 Год назад +33

    We sorely miss great historians like Shelby Foote.

    • @flparkermdpc
      @flparkermdpc 9 месяцев назад +1

      If you get his books he'll be right there with you! Pour some bourbon and sip and talk with him!

    • @brianhannan8030
      @brianhannan8030 Месяц назад

      @@thelion6614 Be glad there are amazing young historians coming into their own.

  • @stefancover5956
    @stefancover5956 10 месяцев назад +10

    Shelby Foote's Civil War History is spiritually akin to the great narrative histories of Antiquity: Herodotus, Thucydides, Polybius, Tacitus, Ammianus Marcellinus, and Procopius. There is nothing quite like it in modern historical writing.

  • @lutherpayne9957
    @lutherpayne9957 3 года назад +79

    He is the one man that would truly understand our country today and give an assessment of what should be done. He is sorely missed.

    • @pjpredhomme7699
      @pjpredhomme7699 3 года назад +4

      Interesting= I was thinking just the opposite - not anything against him - I have always really enjoyed him but i was thinking he might not understand this world today - but yeah definitely we would be better off if people like him were still with us either way

    • @tommyriam8320
      @tommyriam8320 Год назад

      @@pjpredhomme7699 You're 'thinking he might not understand this world today' i.e., the states vs. the feds ? The concentration of power into the tyrannical hands of an elitist few as opposed to the celebration and preservation of individual liberty ; those ''God-given" (natural) rights

  • @leefromda3135
    @leefromda3135 Год назад +15

    Remember hearing him in the Civil War by Ken Burns. Thought he was a very passionate storyteller who told stories with great emotion. Happy to have this pop up on my feed.

  • @mr.sherlockholmes6130
    @mr.sherlockholmes6130 Месяц назад +4

    Semper Fidelis Shelby You we’re a great man . Thank you for serving with the USMC . I am a honored to have you serving as a Marine being a Marine I wish I could have served with you. I love your Books on the Civil War . A true Legend . What a great writer and fellow Pipe Smoker ❤Rest in Peace Sir Scott Dickens Tenn

  • @navy7633
    @navy7633 Год назад +11

    I read the book, "Stars in their Courses" while I was a midshipman at the Naval Academy.
    I had a sense then that Mr. Foote has a wonderful way to tell a story.
    Outstanding work!

  • @cards0486
    @cards0486 3 года назад +56

    I would love to have had the opportunity to listen to him speak 8 hours a day for a week!
    He was so brilliant! And that accent was music to my ears. I’m Southern, and proud of it.

    • @flparkermdpc
      @flparkermdpc 8 месяцев назад +1

      I only spent 8 years of my youth growing up in the Shenandoah Valley, and I cherish those years above all the others. I'm nearing 90.

  • @bigtay522
    @bigtay522 3 года назад +42

    Oh man, I really didn't want this to end. I actually felt peace hearing this man explain the history I grew up in.

  • @sherlockholmes4461
    @sherlockholmes4461 3 года назад +41

    I'm German and a dedicated Civil War buff. Love his books an appreciate his work a lot. Thank for this interview.

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 Год назад

      Shelby was great. Have you read Allen Tate's biography of Stonewall Jackson?

  • @redthepost
    @redthepost 3 года назад +45

    This may sound silly, but this man’s voice is the voice of America, in my view. A dip pen! Wow! Masterpiece of an interview. Thank you CSpan.

    • @StanSwan
      @StanSwan 3 года назад +2

      America is the most diverse country on earth. From place to place accents change. Sure you heard a Boston accent. I grew up 80 miles west of Boston and I don't sound much like them but we do add R's like, idea = idear. Albany NY is 45 min from me and they have a different accent. Hartford CT different 40 min away. Montreal CA it is, hoose = house and every sentence ends with, eh.

    • @MatthewPoplawsk
      @MatthewPoplawsk 6 месяцев назад

      @StanSwan, here's an interesting story for you (not sure if you'll remember this man).
      When he was running for President in 1972(before he was shot), George Wallace made a campaign stop in Boston. He's listening to the people talk, and, after his stop was made, he quipped THESE PEOPLE HERE SURE DO TALK FUNNY (compare a Boston accent with a South Alabama accent).😅😅😅😅

  • @rssmdb1
    @rssmdb1 3 года назад +53

    I’m Scottish and I could listen to this fascinating man all day

    • @russcoleman2338
      @russcoleman2338 3 года назад +1

      I'm British and my roommate in Dallas was from Memphis, TN. Boy, he hated northerners (Yankees). Listen to this Confederate soldiers English accent. The Union Irish soldiers were straight off the boat.
      ruclips.net/video/KPiDqUB9k1I/видео.html

    • @williambagley5415
      @williambagley5415 3 года назад +2

      Amen...as a History major in school, I found that the storyteller was as important as the story. I really love Mr. Foote's Narrative. I'm in Volume 2 now 🙂

    • @rssmdb1
      @rssmdb1 3 года назад +1

      @Ac Tion and lucky for the world that we don’t quit. Look at the list of inventions attributed to Scots. You don’t get the tv right on the first shot, or the telephone, or penicillin or tarmac, or the pneumatic tyre, or RADAR, or MRI scans, or the modern model of economics, or the deep fried Mars Bar, or Irn Bru….We’re a really rather spectacular bunch considering the population of Scotland never topped 5 million.

  • @edmerritt8610
    @edmerritt8610 3 года назад +44

    It is amazing to hear this man talk about Ancient Rome. He was truly a well read and intelligent man. If listening to him doesn’t make you want to pick up a book you better just move on!

  • @msa4998
    @msa4998 3 года назад +90

    I could listen to Mr. Foote speak all day. Miss him.

    • @usmc-veteran73-77
      @usmc-veteran73-77 3 года назад +4

      Me too, love his Southern accent, and I have an Appalachian accent. Semper Fi from an old Marine Sergeant from Charleston West Virginia

    • @drthunder1143
      @drthunder1143 3 года назад +1

      @@usmc-veteran73-77 Semper Fi, Marine from an old Air Force flyboy. And yes, I could listen to Shelby Foote all day. What a treasure he was, we were blessed to have him for as long as we did.

    • @usmc-veteran73-77
      @usmc-veteran73-77 3 года назад

      @@drthunder1143 when I was on Okinawa at Camp Foster a lot of times we would eat at the mess hall (Dining Facility-USAF) on Kadena AFB. The USAF chow was delicious compared to USMC chow, there's a reason the USMC calls it a "mess hall." I was stationed on Okinawa back in Aug 74-Sep75. Stay safe Semper Fi from an old Marine

    • @jacobbricker4516
      @jacobbricker4516 3 года назад

      @@drthunder1143 , list George London recording of September song

    • @jacobbricker4516
      @jacobbricker4516 3 года назад

      INFO ON SEPTEMBER SONG

  • @maryanng6841
    @maryanng6841 Год назад +28

    I was born in the northeast but have been living in the South for nearly 50 years. I just loved Shelby Foote's accent. A true Southern Gentleman.

  • @anarchistatheist1917
    @anarchistatheist1917 3 года назад +32

    I believe that many if not most southerners were loyal to the united states, but their primary loyalty was to their own state. What an eloquent, intelligent and well spoken man Shelby Foote was, may he rest in peace.

    • @pjpredhomme7699
      @pjpredhomme7699 3 года назад +5

      I am not southern so i can not share the idea that all southerners grow up with a knowledge of the war but from what i have seen i believe that is true and yes every confederate that i have ever heard said they were defending their home. Not the least of all was General Lee he resigned from the US army saying he could never raise his sword against Virginia - his home

    • @richmondborn1
      @richmondborn1 Год назад +4

      True indeed... So many people barely left their county during their lifetime . Ties to home and land were extremely strong. But on the pointy cusp of changing dramatically over the 20 years after 1865., And definitely the 40-50 years after with explosion of travel, Communication, information,. Knowledge

    • @MsLane61
      @MsLane61 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@pjpredhomme7699 I would do no less.

  • @michaelh4154
    @michaelh4154 3 года назад +33

    I was born and live in the south and he is without a doubt a true southern gentleman. Love you

  • @invictus3598
    @invictus3598 3 года назад +24

    I have so much respect for Shelby Foote for his ability to take a reader into one of the most difficult periods in our history and bring it to life with the color of his experiences, prospectives, observations, and opinions. I find that I can listen to him without end for his honesty and insight. I'm eternally grateful for his life and the fate that brought him to his choice of career. May he rest in peace.

  • @mprest10
    @mprest10 Год назад +11

    What an incredible interview. Shelby Foote is an American treasure.

  • @Crookedroadpodcast
    @Crookedroadpodcast Год назад +7

    I spent many childhood weeks in Columbus GA, where my mother was from, with all the cousins, grandparents, aunts and uncles. Always during the summer during school break - just choking humidity and heat. I cherish those memories, just across the river from Phoenix, AL, in the 1960's and all that came with that period. What a fascinating time, a young boy experiencing first hand the vast differences between the North and the South and the worldviews created and separated by only geography. This is a fascinating place, the early '60's civil rights South. Shelby's voice transports me there again and without hesitation. What a time.

    • @flparkermdpc
      @flparkermdpc 8 месяцев назад +1

      I was there at the same time. And yes, it has stayed with me.

  • @SusieAnderson-ds7dq
    @SusieAnderson-ds7dq 8 месяцев назад +4

    Love anything with Mr. Foote, discussing it...he could make the instructions on the back of a cake mix box, and make it interesting!❤

  • @brandenrunyan1821
    @brandenrunyan1821 Год назад +8

    My all time favorite historian. I have learned so much about the Civil War from this man. His ability to recite actual conversations between men of that period is amazing. Every American should listen to what Shelby has to say.

  • @clarkthompson6964
    @clarkthompson6964 3 года назад +82

    Wonderful interview. I had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Foote in San Marcos, Texas shortly after this interview. He was every bit the kind and amicable soul that is captured in the Burns documentary and this interview.

  • @jward9637
    @jward9637 3 года назад +43

    I could listen to Prof. Foote speak all day. He was a National Treasure, and is sorely missed.

  • @mcnultyfp
    @mcnultyfp 3 года назад +56

    How graciously he navigates the dull questions. What a writer.

    • @jps0117
      @jps0117 3 года назад +5

      I think the "dull" questions are by design, to draw Foote out. It's Lamb's style, which contrasts with the awful "gotcha" journalism we see elsewhere.

    • @daviddawson1718
      @daviddawson1718 3 года назад

      @@ronniebishop2496 if you are saying what I think you are trying to say, fuckin stop.

    • @daviddawson1718
      @daviddawson1718 3 года назад

      &@@ronniebishop2496 you cry like a little girl with with a skinned knee
      :

  • @jerryduckworth4276
    @jerryduckworth4276 Год назад +26

    What a great historian. I could listen to this gentleman go on for hours. What an American treasure.

  • @volslover1504
    @volslover1504 3 года назад +193

    Gotta love this man. "I would have fought for the Confederacy cause I am from Mississippi they were my people". You can clearly see he gets its. He understands the pitch from that era. Great interview.

    • @psychobuzzard
      @psychobuzzard 3 года назад +16

      We can likewise render the same respect to all those soldiers who fought in the Imperial Japanese Army and Navy in WW II, the German Army and Navy inclusive of the Nazis, the SS, the Einsatzen Komanndos, the North Korean Peoples Army, The Chinese Peoples Army, North Vietnamese Army, the Viet Cong, the Iraqi National Army, the Taliban fighters, all of them....it doesn't matter that they killed US soldiers....they fought for their people.

    • @carolcraig2580
      @carolcraig2580 3 года назад +19

      @M Glenn Foghorn A very small amount of knowledge is a dangerous thing.

    • @volslover1504
      @volslover1504 3 года назад +18

      @M Glenn Foghorn you need to study history a lil more. Slavery was wrong I will give you that and yes it was about money but not in the sense you are talking about. Prior to the 1860s the government was not really centralized like today. Also study the Jeffersonian economy..very little national debt. Because the states made the decisions. Lincoln did not free the slaves unlike what they teach in high school. Most states had in their constitution they could leave at anytime. The South stood up to a form of government they didn't want much like the colonial did to Britain. Same principle. NOT TRAITORS.

    • @volslover1504
      @volslover1504 3 года назад +6

      @M Glenn Foghorn correct. Read past the high school level.

    • @volslover1504
      @volslover1504 3 года назад +12

      @M Glenn Foghorn he was never tried because the federal government knew the states had a right to leave. So without conviction no treason committed. Just the facts sir.

  • @oranculpepper9008
    @oranculpepper9008 3 года назад +355

    I could listen to Shelby all day.

    • @bassmangotdbluz3547
      @bassmangotdbluz3547 3 года назад +9

      As could I. He was a national treasure
      and I mourn the loss of him.

    • @maryanneparrish6089
      @maryanneparrish6089 3 года назад +11

      Yes, A true Southern gentleman and an honest scholar. One almost feels he lived thru that terrible & glorious time.
      .

    • @lowcountryantiques3696
      @lowcountryantiques3696 3 года назад +1

      @Westley Payton You are correct... We don't care.

    • @JB-uv4hm
      @JB-uv4hm 3 года назад +1

      @@maryanneparrish6089 He wasn’t a “scholar.” He was a novelist playing history.

    • @TermiteUSA
      @TermiteUSA 3 года назад +3

      Shelby was a wonderful writer and so insightful.

  • @kevinkinal9557
    @kevinkinal9557 3 года назад +190

    Had Burns not thrust him into the spot light he would have been just as amazing and none of us woudl eb the wiser... Think of how many other Footes are out there - undiscovered. Beautiful yet sad.

    • @timothysimpson1561
      @timothysimpson1561 3 года назад +9

      Shelby Foote came before Burns. So, if it weren't for Ken following the flow of Shelby's work, we wouldn't know Burns. Any historian would've known Foote before Burns made his collage.

    • @Tocqueville69
      @Tocqueville69 3 года назад +7

      @@timothysimpson1561 Especially his most powerful work about Communism: My Left Foote...

    • @darenkelly7810
      @darenkelly7810 3 года назад +4

      As much as I admired the Burns documentary and Foote's contribution, I missed Ambrose Bierce's perspective on the Civil War.

    • @stevefowler2112
      @stevefowler2112 3 года назад +7

      I read his three part Civil War trilogy long before I ever heard the name Ken Burns. Shelby was very well known to anyone who was well read long before burns used him to source his TV series.

    • @lronbutters5688
      @lronbutters5688 3 года назад +2

      @@Tocqueville69 that’s funny 👍👍

  • @fboussard638
    @fboussard638 10 месяцев назад +9

    J'ai acheté ses livres et j'ai découvert la culture du Sud des Etats-Unis à travers les yeux d'un grand écrivain. Un homme comme S.Foote était un trésor pour l'humanité. Ses livres permettent d'effectuer un voyage inoubliable et de parcourir des paysages oubliés. C'était hier il y a si longtemps...Frédéric Boussard (France)

  • @andrewjones4950
    @andrewjones4950 3 года назад +177

    He brings the subject to life , I'm from Wales and I know his importance to art . RIP Mister Foote 🙏

    • @mikewhitney8615
      @mikewhitney8615 3 года назад +6

      We love Wales! Thank you for your courtesy and intelligence in the face of so much American ignorance.

    • @andrewjones4950
      @andrewjones4950 3 года назад +4

      @@mikewhitney8615 thanks Mike 👍🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

    • @snowman3693
      @snowman3693 3 года назад

      Andrew Jones I love wales but Foote was lying pos. Gop freed the salves democrats like burns and Foote family fought a war to keep human slaves.

    • @andrewjones4950
      @andrewjones4950 3 года назад +5

      @@snowman3693 I don't disagree with you sir and Foote would also agree with your points . My point was he made the subject real and brought a sense of the time to the subject and no doubt if hed been in the civil war he would of fought to keep slavery. That's art ..... being true to yourself.

    • @knowsmebyname
      @knowsmebyname 2 года назад

      The Brits seem very interested in our Civil War for some reason. Recall Winston Churchill referencing it. Just an observation.

  • @ronalddeavy2657
    @ronalddeavy2657 3 года назад +23

    This is why I love youtube, to be able to listen to this great novelist and historian.

  • @germancoma1166
    @germancoma1166 9 месяцев назад +2

    And just like that an hour has gone by. I could listen to Mr. Foote speak all day. How fortunate are we that he honed his craft so well and shared his talents with all of us.
    Thank you Mr. Foote, rest well sir

  • @jeffvirosztko5241
    @jeffvirosztko5241 Год назад +15

    I'm 76 years old, I have developed a certain insight to life, I've commented on you tube several times and not many people reply to my insights but a select few, without giving me credit for the knowledge I've acquired in all me years on this planet, there are those of you who, challenged my thinking because I don't think like you, whoever you are. All that I have gleaned from Mr. Foote is that a person has to take into consideration were one was born and the time when they were born to have understanding of one's insight. Being an writer, not on his level of course but someone who wants to leave something of his mind if just for me. He educated me more in this interview about writing than I've learned in my entire life. Thank you Mr. Foote, and to those that think I'm talking out my ass, well you are entitled to your opinion...

    • @fredhall5038
      @fredhall5038 Год назад +2

      No Sir. I totally understand. At 73 my world is soon passing, but without history none of us will know it. Blessings.

    • @fredhall5038
      @fredhall5038 Год назад +2

      I was at Shilo, early morning, and the fog so thick off the river you couldn’t see the opposite shore. And yet, so oddly peaceful. How strange but yet memorable.

  • @DanielBrown-sn9op
    @DanielBrown-sn9op 3 года назад +55

    In my opinion, Ken Burns' The Civil War is the best documentary, ever.

    • @mitchellhawkes22
      @mitchellhawkes22 3 года назад +6

      It's good. It's real good. But as Shelby might say, "Something might come along that's a bit better."

    • @redstone5149
      @redstone5149 3 года назад +5

      Ken Burns is a WOKE fool writing revisionist history.

    • @RustyHeels06
      @RustyHeels06 3 года назад +6

      Burns is on record saying that he regrets featuring Shelby Foote so prominently in the series in view of the furtherance of "Lost Cause" mythology. I think Burns is a sniveling coward.

    • @ortho-g9826
      @ortho-g9826 3 года назад +1

      That series, the Civil War, was an amazing gut wrenching journey. By the end, you found yourself drained but filled with emotion and love of country.

  • @DaleKallio-jk9wo
    @DaleKallio-jk9wo 11 месяцев назад +8

    Gotta love when a father says; "gettin' to be a good one". We all should aspire to such

  • @jerrybracey19
    @jerrybracey19 3 года назад +20

    I am glad to see that we blacks are now grabbing hold of our slavery history and recognize that it was only part of our history and should be celabrated, because we have come a long way. Shelby Foote is a great American a great writer and such a great man.

    • @billydurham4143
      @billydurham4143 3 года назад +1

      well spoken. Where this country will end up remains to be seen.

    • @Kev01-i8r
      @Kev01-i8r 3 месяца назад +1

      @@billydurham4143the shitter is where it is

  • @leetexas3924
    @leetexas3924 3 года назад +49

    What a great interview with a famous novelist. Reveals the Civil War and truth and the thinking of those days then.
    Thank you for this pleasurable interview before he was gone
    God Bless

  • @pressf4896
    @pressf4896 3 года назад +94

    He was 78 in this interview. He really could pass for being in his 50s here.

  • @beausbargarage6213
    @beausbargarage6213 3 года назад +17

    This man made a massive impact on my life even as a little boy. I was mesmerized by the history and his telling it.

  • @KCODacey
    @KCODacey 3 года назад +30

    I saw the PBS series first & was hooked. I needed to learn more about my country’s history. It took me a while to find his 3 volume history but, once secured, I couldn’t put it down. I feel that I am a better person for having done so. I am trying to get my teenage daughters to read or listen to him. His message is so important that I shall keep trying.

    • @davidsmith385
      @davidsmith385 2 года назад +1

      I remember getting off work in time to watch this series on PBS, I had to rush back to my Apartment and hurry up, years later I watched again on Netflix, I could watch this series every day and still learn something new.

  • @EM-pp8gz
    @EM-pp8gz Месяц назад +3

    Growing up myself in the South, humility, kindness, honesty, and politeness are the marks of a Southern gentleman. Shelby Foote has them all.

  • @markfoster8110
    @markfoster8110 3 года назад +30

    I am English and have toured many American civil war battlefields this man drew me in and gave me the passion to visit them and experience the battlefields with boots on the ground. I thank you for your great perception of the period ! Very inspiring

    • @mikewhitney8615
      @mikewhitney8615 3 года назад +2

      Thank you for your discerning comment, Mark. Many of the most enlightened comments here are from my British kin, while many of the most inane are from fellow Americans.

    • @balancedactguy
      @balancedactguy 3 года назад +2

      I know your English Civil War took place in the 1640s with Cromwell against the Crown. 200 years later the Us Civil War took place. What I find interesting about the war 200 years later was the use of "modern" Photography. It's nice to see actual photos of the people who were the central, as well as minor players in the war. If you look on RUclips you can see actual film footage, with audio, of Civil War Veterans at a huge reunion in the early 1930s. All very old men of course!! If you tour any old towns in the Southern United States, stop in an old century and see how many Head Stones contain the names of Civil War Veterans!

    • @markfoster8110
      @markfoster8110 3 года назад +1

      @@balancedactguy
      The American civil war is the first war with such detail for the common soldier that photography covered. And it’s the stories that many people followed . When I came over and explored I went to many battlefields from Gettysburg to Nashville Richmond Atlanta to Vicksburg covering 3500 miles but to me it was the personal stories that you could follow I visited where Jackson was shot ,where his arm was buried where he died where he was buried and where his horse is buried for instance . I also loved the preservation of the battlefields and the excellent tour guides. And as a wargamer who has fought the period it was important to walk the ground and see why commanders made the decisions they did.

    • @balancedactguy
      @balancedactguy 3 года назад

      @@markfoster8110 Thanks for your reply. I guess you show great interest in the US Civil War. We have a term here for people who are fascinated by the Civil war and take time to study it in detail. You are considered a "Civil War Buff"! The house my Mother was born in , in Texas was built by Civil War veterans who fought for Texas in the Confederacy. They even started the town Newspaper that is still published to this day I believe. It's called the "Colorado County Citizen" There is even a small Civil War Museum in her hometown of Columbus Texas...the oldest incorporated town in Texas..I believe incorporated sometime in the 1830s...of course that time frame is nothing compared to the age of towns and cities in the UK! I hope you get to see more of the Civl War cites here in the US!!

    • @markfoster8110
      @markfoster8110 3 года назад +2

      @@balancedactguy I’m interested in all history my favourite is Roman history but civil war is my next favourite being a wargamer I have large collections in both periods. The uk has a long history and it is often the case you can put yourself in someone’s footsteps. I can trace my family history back to 1223 on my mothers side but the civil war is touchable for the reason you are talking about Texas enough survives for you to still touch the common soldiers. Thank you for your coments

  • @johndufford5561
    @johndufford5561 3 года назад +31

    I found an audio tape version of "Stars in Their Courses" that is read by Shelby Foote. Wonderful!
    I now read his works in his voice, was makes it even more enjoyable to me. A genuine blessing.

    • @johndufford5561
      @johndufford5561 3 года назад

      Not "eat was makes it

    • @danielhall3105
      @danielhall3105 3 года назад +1

      I try to read William Faulkner with Mr. Foote's voice. The accent is important of course, the sounds of the vowels and consonants, but even more important to my ear is the cadence, or cadences. Reading Absalom Absalom one picks up at times an almost funereal rhythm. Shelby Foote has the gift of conveying those expressions in his writing and speaking.

    • @garybarton3843
      @garybarton3843 3 года назад +3

      I to got a audio cassette of Stars in Their Courses while visiting Gettysburg in the 90s. remember driving to and from work. It made that trip so fascinating and worth while.

  • @MikeDindu
    @MikeDindu 3 года назад +15

    He was a good man who understood the nuances of both Southern and Northern arguments about the war. That kind of compartmentalization, the ability to look at things from a 30,000 foot perspective, without being affected by personal biases, is sadly gone these days. He was a great historian, who stands shoulder to shoulder with his inspiration, Tacitus.

  • @MichaelT199
    @MichaelT199 3 года назад +15

    What a pleasure to hear again the sonorous but delightful voice of a true American treasure. God’s speed Mr. Foote.

  • @postscript67
    @postscript67 3 года назад +40

    I'd just like to add my voice to the other British commenters below in praise of Shelby Foote. I too first encountered him when the Ken Burns documentary was shown in Britain in the 1990s and I bought and watched the box set a few years ago. Every time I hear him I learn something new and profound. In this video I was particularly struck by his comment on lives having a beginning, a middle and an end, and people living in a way that made sense when their lives ended. But in the Civil War series it was the depth of his feeling for and understanding of the people involved, and the sheer human poetry with which he expressed it that made a deep and lasting impression on me. This is what history should be about!

    • @vintagebrew1057
      @vintagebrew1057 3 года назад +1

      Well said...

    • @davidhollinghurst5572
      @davidhollinghurst5572 3 года назад

      English by birth American by choice Shelby Foote was such an inspiration to me in the early 1990s i emigrated to Alabama in 1995, due mainly to the British.

    • @crownprincesebastianjohano7069
      @crownprincesebastianjohano7069 3 года назад

      I had no idea that he had such a profound impact on the British. What a wonderful happenstance!

  • @keithallen7587
    @keithallen7587 Год назад +5

    I went to see Shelby in Hickory NC
    I felt blessed to hear him talk about the War and felt he let in all of the audience get a chance for great insight to the man.
    One of my favorite experiences.

  • @chrisbatten2432
    @chrisbatten2432 3 года назад +66

    I'm glad Mr Foote is not around to see the way things are today.

  • @raymondhummel5211
    @raymondhummel5211 Год назад +16

    I love Civil War history, and Shelby Foote devoted much of his life to preserving it in the content of his books. I am sure many people are enjoying reading his books around the world!

  • @mbgrocott7115
    @mbgrocott7115 2 года назад +9

    I read his 3-volume series immediately after my divorce. His volumes were my companions during dinner time for about 18 months. The first two of the series I was able to find in book stores easily. Took visiting a number of used book stores to find the third and I was overjoyed when I finally found it. Tremendous writer. Now I see he gives a great interview as well.

  • @alexkalish8288
    @alexkalish8288 3 года назад +16

    Shelby Foote was one of our american treasures. I have read the 3 volumes a few times, like shakespeare in his language. A great intellect and a fine interview here.

  • @fazbell
    @fazbell 3 года назад +13

    Shelby Foote was an amazing historian and a great speaker. His beautiful southern accent is classic.

  • @janupczak1643
    @janupczak1643 3 года назад +14

    I don't know which I love more, his voice or his brain...❤

  • @stevefowler2112
    @stevefowler2112 3 года назад +81

    I read the three volumes when I was in Engineering College in the early 80's as just a relaxing break away from the tough Engineering and Mathematics course work...they are a masterpiece and very well written.

    • @kurtgreaser988
      @kurtgreaser988 3 года назад +2

      Essentially the three volumes is the basis for Ken Burns Civil War .

    • @JB-uv4hm
      @JB-uv4hm 3 года назад +1

      @@kurtgreaser988 not really.

    • @jaed2630
      @jaed2630 3 года назад

      @@JB-uv4hm and you are?

    • @JB-uv4hm
      @JB-uv4hm 3 года назад

      @@jaed2630 well read. Burns now admits that the overuse of SF was a mistake btw. Another blow to the ‘lost cause’ loser narrative.

    • @johnpieratt1474
      @johnpieratt1474 2 года назад

      What an amazing interview of a wonderful writer. Foote’s humbleness and humanity comes through so well.

  • @vickibell5966
    @vickibell5966 3 года назад +24

    As a Southerner born and bred, I treasure that Mr Foote demonstrates the conflict within every Southerner of reason about our common history. There is no doubt I would have fought with my fellow Alabamians for my state even though we all know the cause was wrong. It’s in our bones and our blood.

    • @dgtwo3724
      @dgtwo3724 2 года назад +1

      @Ac Tion she clearly mentioned the cause was wrong and referring to oneself by the region from where they are from is harmless. Let's not overthink anything.

    • @tolivr
      @tolivr 2 года назад +3

      @Ac Tion 11th generation American Southerner here. Most all sons of the South fought for their homes and kin during the "Late Unpleasantness." Right or wrong, most would do so today if another Civil War commenced. People from other regions can never understand what being a Southerner means. Our roots are deep. A Southerner shares a unique and special culture with his fellow Southerners. Other regions of the nation cannot and never will understand it. I'm not stating the other regions are not good; rather, we're just different. Roll Tide.

    • @MsLane61
      @MsLane61 8 месяцев назад +1

      Bravo, vikibell5966. Bravo. I would do the same, then and now. But, I do not think the cause of states' rights was "wrong," especially in view of the corruption within the Federal government, one without Clue One about the cares and troubles of real people in various regions and states of The United States.

  • @MarkoWSelf
    @MarkoWSelf 2 месяца назад +1

    Shelby Foote was not only a great writer/ novelist but his infectious personality was spell binding and kept the listener glued to every word spoken. You know that every word spoken came from his heart as truism and never sugar coated. And that translated to every word written in his novels. With Shelby, you get the real deal and that’s refreshing in this world we live in. Many assume and associate because of his Mississippi accent, that he was a pro-southerner but he had no bias at all. He did say that being from the south, he would’ve fought for the confederacy but it wouldn’t have been because of the preservation of chattel slavery. But for his home, family and way of life. A genius of a writer and one of a kind. When he spoke I listened and hung on to every word. Remarkable and a very humble unassuming man. The best

  • @donaldakelly9732
    @donaldakelly9732 3 года назад +20

    Shelby Foote, admirable beyond words. Thank you, sir.