The Terminator of Antietam at THE BLOODY LANE | History Traveler Episode 251

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  • Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024
  • The Bloody Lane of Antietam stands out as a spot where some of the most horrific violence of the battle occurred. One of the Confederates who found himself on receiving end of that violence was a man named John B. Gordon, who was the regimental commander of the 6th Alabama Infantry Regiment. And when you see the volume of injuries that he sustained, you'll be shocked that this man survived.
    This episode was produced in partnership with The Gettysburg Museum of History. See how you can support history education & artifact preservation by visiting their website & store at www.gettysburg...
    Check out ‪@VloggingThroughHistory‬ to see the other side of the collaboration that we did at Antietam here: • Bloody Lane at Antieta... .
    Battle maps in this series provided courtesy of ‪@AmericanBattlefieldTrust‬. Check out the full battle map here: • Antietam: Animated Bat...
    Support the effort to expand history education on PATREON: / historyunderground
    Set yourself up with a 10% DISCOUNT on all Origin gear and nutritional products by entering the code "history10" at www.originmaine.com!
    Other episodes that you might enjoy:
    The Dunker Church: Antietam's Epicenter of Violence (w/ GARRY ADELMAN!) History Traveler Episode 249: • The Dunker Church: Ant...
    "Dead on the Field": Walking Antietam's Bloody Cornfield | History Traveler Episode 248: • "Dead on the Field": W...
    Where the Battle of Antietam REALLY Started History Traveler Episode 247: • Where the Battle of An...
    The LOST ORDER That Led to ANTIETAM!!! | History Traveler 245 Lost Order: • The LOST ORDER That Le...
    HIDDEN JAPANESE GUNS IN THE WWII JUNGLES OF GUAM! | History Traveler Episode 238: • HIDDEN JAPANESE GUNS I...
    All drone flights conducted by a Part 107 licensed pilot outside of the park boundaries

Комментарии • 594

  • @TheHistoryUnderground
    @TheHistoryUnderground  Год назад +29

    ⭐ If you've watched a few episodes and feel like I've earned it, be sure to subscribe so that you don't miss any new content when it comes out.
    Also be sure to check out The Gettysburg Museum of History and their store at gettysburgmuseumofhistory.com.

    • @charlesfritz7131
      @charlesfritz7131 Год назад +2

      JD each and every video you share is deserving of praise. Your neutrality in each presentation is what is so remarkable. You bring history through an unbiased eye. Thank you.

    • @James-po6ib
      @James-po6ib Год назад +1

      That tower gives a full picture for sure wow that's a huge battlefield I couldn't imagine what it must have been like to live it the lane was sort of like a perfect natural trench

    • @charlesfritz7131
      @charlesfritz7131 Год назад +2

      @@James-po6ib it was hot as hell in those thick wool uniforms is one thing to remember as well as the heavy rifle you carried. This is from my reenactment experience.

    • @James-po6ib
      @James-po6ib Год назад +3

      @@charlesfritz7131 wow it's unreal I've always wanted to go to a reenactment, but yea that battlefield is insane and then factor the heat I could not imagine being new in the army and being thrown into that sort of combat the ones that survived that were well seasoned after the fact im sure. I would love to see that act out on that feild I bet it's fun to watch I could almost imagine when he showed the view from the tower and then I watched the other video and saw the map of how the federals marched in, that was an insane flank couldn't imagine it looks a lot like a D day type battle

    • @charlesfritz7131
      @charlesfritz7131 Год назад +2

      @@James-po6ib also figure in that they actually stood shoulder to shoulder when marching into battle.

  • @WoyLad
    @WoyLad Год назад +119

    I got to visit Antietam a few years ago. Midweek, no one around. A crisp fall morning, with some fog wafting gently, everything damp and soft. I walked the fields and trails with interest, and then I found myself upon Bloody Lane. I'd seen the images of that day, and they came to me, true and immediately. I was astounded by the overwhelming feeling of sadness, horror, and loss in that ditch. It was like I could feel every soul lost on that field within myself. It was all I could do to not weep openly. I could not stay longer.

    • @indy_go_blue6048
      @indy_go_blue6048 Год назад +8

      I remember my visit there in 1993, especially looking up at the field to the east. Do you really march your brigade blindly until they can be slaughtered?

    • @DATo_DATonian
      @DATo_DATonian Год назад +13

      You're not alone .... In 'The Making Of Gettysburg' (the movie) the actor, Warren Burton, who portrayed Major General Henry Heath of the Confederacy confided that many of the re-enactors in the Pickett's Charge scene were openly weeping as they marched toward the Union lines. That story affected me more than all of the other stories I have ever heard about this movie.

    • @WoyLad
      @WoyLad Год назад +2

      @@DATo_DATonian Thank You.

    • @tomservo5347
      @tomservo5347 Год назад +4

      I've read from various people that the hair on their neck stands up when they visit Bloody Lane at Antietam. It's charged with terrific energy from the unspeakable slaughter that happened there.

    • @michaelvaughn8864
      @michaelvaughn8864 Год назад +3

      @Unbroken Yeah, I saw his interview on the DVD extras box set when he talked about his 2 adjutants openly weeping to his rear, sir. He just passed away within the last few weeks😕 R.I.P. Andrew Prine😇

  • @michaelnaretto3409
    @michaelnaretto3409 Год назад +79

    “It is well that war is so terrible-we would grow too fond of it!” Robert E. Lee

    • @keithrelyea7997
      @keithrelyea7997 Год назад +8

      Well Bobby Lee sure was fond of it. If he wasn't he could have let his slaves go and not rebelled agnist his oath to the United States. He was in large measure responsible for this horrable slaughter.

    • @peggyscott66
      @peggyscott66 Год назад +25

      @@keithrelyea7997 you know nothing about Robert E. Lee.

    • @tinfoilsombrero1439
      @tinfoilsombrero1439 Год назад +1

      @@keithrelyea7997
      Your public school education has failed you. Again.

    • @benitagrattan193
      @benitagrattan193 Год назад +4

      @@peggyscott66 exactly

    • @tennesseebrigadeanv1523
      @tennesseebrigadeanv1523 Год назад +10

      @@keithrelyea7997 Such a simpleton.

  • @jasonwilliamson8416
    @jasonwilliamson8416 Год назад +79

    My great great grandpa served in the 7th West Virginia of French's Division at Antietam. He was one of three ancestors that participated in the battle, two Union and one Confederate. He was initially reported as KIA at Bloody Lane but was actually alive and well and served with the regiment all the way to Appomattox.

    • @TheHistoryUnderground
      @TheHistoryUnderground  Год назад +3

      👍🏻

    • @rodmcdonald5662
      @rodmcdonald5662 Год назад +11

      I had five Great Great Uncles that also served in Company B of the 7th West Virginia of French’s Division at Antietam. They were the five Mallow Brothers. Abraham,Isaac,Jacob,and Moses were killed at Bloody Lane. One of the five,Isaac,is buried in the National Cemetery. I’m not sure where the others are buried, my guess is in a mass grave. Daniel Mallow survived and went on to serve at Gettysburg. He died of his wounds at The Battle Of The Wilderness. I have his medal.

    • @supernaut649
      @supernaut649 Год назад +4

      Those are awesome stories. Especially the last one.

    • @historyandhorseplaying7374
      @historyandhorseplaying7374 Год назад +3

      @@rodmcdonald5662 I just voted for someone named Mallow in the WV election last night. Probly a descendant.

    • @historyandhorseplaying7374
      @historyandhorseplaying7374 Год назад +2

      Were any of your 7th WV ancestors involved in fighting during the Jones-Imboden Raid?

  • @getoffmylawn8986
    @getoffmylawn8986 Год назад +19

    I'm a direct descendant of John B. Gordon, and share the last name. Loved this video. Thanks for giving my ancestor the respect he deserves!

    • @sanchezbaggett4375
      @sanchezbaggett4375 Год назад

      Do you know of Beechwood plantation?

    • @getoffmylawn8986
      @getoffmylawn8986 Год назад +3

      @@sanchezbaggett4375 I'm not familiar with that one, but if it has any history with the Gordons I'm sure my sister in law knows of it. She's made a career out of studying our genealogy for nearly 40 years now.

    • @Aranck-kcnarA
      @Aranck-kcnarA Год назад

      ​@@sanchezbaggett4375 .. Which Beechwood Plantation are you referring? Ohio, Virginia, Tennessee, Georgia or Florida? And what is your point here asking Mr. Gordon if he knows of Beechwood Plantation? He gave you a very kind and sincere response, to which you've yet to acknowledge

    • @Aranck-kcnarA
      @Aranck-kcnarA Год назад +2

      ​@@getoffmylawn8986 .. Gen. John Brown Gordon was a great and honorable man who will never be forgotten. Thank you for posting here

    • @sanchezbaggett4375
      @sanchezbaggett4375 Год назад +2

      @get off my lawn, I don't get on here often, and when I do, it is because of intermittent notifications...Like the one from someone who believes he should inject his unwarranted opinion into a personal inquiry. My ancestors, the Amersons, and Tuckers were well acquainted with the General and I'm sure your sister has that history, as they were all from the Upson County/Taylor County area of West Central Georgia. I hope that your day has been as pleasant as mine!

  • @c.m.r.artifacts84
    @c.m.r.artifacts84 Год назад +186

    As a youngster I had the pleasure of metal detecting the farm of Mr. Miller the owner of the Roulette farm. My Father was a very good friend of Mr.Miller and we were given exclusive permission to detect the farm. In the mid to late 1970's we detected there. I know every inch of that farm. I was about 12 when we started. Mr Miller told us about a area in front of the tower, that when he would plow a certain section he could feel a hollow section in the field. He told my father and older brothers while I was standing right there about his thoughts of soldiers being buried there. We all decided not to detect that area, we didn't want to disturb any graves. It was a conscious and ethical decision not to dig or disturb any soldiers remains if there. In later years after we stopped detecting as much because I was pursuing a baseball career, my brother was diagnosed with brain cancer and my father had a heart attack and double bypass surgery. A person from Ohio detected that area and dug up those graves. There are articles describing the find from that person and the park service. Mr Miller and my family knew there were graves there but we had morals and standards not to disturb a man or men's gravesites. I also know some facts about the barn that Mr Miller told and showed us. To this day I really don't know if these facts are known about by anyone else. These facts are real and amazing and i hold them dear to my heart and can be proven. I have every artifact that we found documented, I can remember by heart where most of these artifacts were found. We spent countless hours and hard work doing what we loved. I took special pride in the collection and I was in charge of cleaning and documenting each find from each hunt at the age of 12 till we stopped detecting. There are many great memories of those times with my father and brothers in those fields of the Roulette farm. My oldest brother took many photographs of the farm and of us detecting and of some of our finds. We have some amazing photographs from the 70's. There are lots more facts I could tell but not enough time to do so on here. From one history lover to another. God Bless and Take Care!

    • @carlbruhn1772
      @carlbruhn1772 Год назад +15

      Thank you for sharing. What an incredible experience.

    • @c.m.r.artifacts84
      @c.m.r.artifacts84 Год назад +10

      @@carlbruhn1772 Yes, sir. I cherish those days with my father and brothers, learning history and to be able experience facts that aren't in the history books and could only be experienced first hand. I remember them like it was yesterday and I hold those artifacts we found dear to my heart. We also detected a private farm near Burnside Bridge and have many cool experiences there also, South Mountain was also a place my Dad to us. My Father was a great Dad, he took us on many excursions. We did pretty much everything you could do outdoors that you can do. Plus my brothers and I were exceptional athletes, we all played college football or baseball. Three of us out of 4 played professional sports also. We were lucky to have such great parents. Believe me my parents instilled a great work ethic in all of us. Thank you and Take care!!

    • @michaelvaughn8864
      @michaelvaughn8864 Год назад +5

      Sorry to hear about your father's and brother's misfortunes, sir. I hope they both made it thru👍😇

    • @jaritclouse7547
      @jaritclouse7547 Год назад +6

      AMAZING FRIEND! My Dad and I used to hunt and find arrow heads together and cherish those memories! He passed when I was 14 and those days and times together are some of my favorite memories so I can only imagine how much you hold this experience close to your heart. Thanks for sharing your story!

    • @UnknownUser-fe5zu
      @UnknownUser-fe5zu Год назад +3

      Wow, I love listening/reading stories from older generations. Back when most people worked hard, knew right from wrong, and as you say…had morales.

  • @warrengoss7547
    @warrengoss7547 Год назад +4

    I was in the movie about the Battle of Antietam that's shown in the visitors center. I'm the Confederate soldier who is shooting the Union soldier on the cover of the movie. It's narrated by James Earl Jones. We filmed on the actual battlefield park.

  • @reznerPTV
    @reznerPTV Год назад +84

    I hope you understood what you do for people with these videos. Not only are they super educational but you take us to places a lot of us don’t have time/money to go to. I can totally relax and allow you to take me back in time and for that I can’t thank you enough . Thank you

    • @allandavis8201
      @allandavis8201 Год назад +6

      I couldn’t agree more SaberWagon, and these videos from JD and Erik also get to those of use who are outside the United States 🇺🇸 and couldn’t travel even with the money to do it, people like myself who are disabled and not allowed fly, yup, I can really relate to your feelings. 😀👍🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇺🇸🇺🇦

  • @marcwilliams2504
    @marcwilliams2504 Год назад +14

    we visited there in 2002 while I was finishing the US Army War College. I had parked the car and began walking down into the sunken road when I realized I was alone. My wife was standing next to the road refusing to move. I walked back and asked what was wrong. "What happened here" she asked. I pulled out my history book and showed her pictures of the carnage of this battle site. She said "I smell blood and death. Blood and death." So we got in the car and drove back to the visitors center. Antietam was a massive battle, and the Bloody Lane is arguably the hardest part of it. Thank you for this video.

  • @stephennickles7389
    @stephennickles7389 Год назад +7

    Watching your videos is like being immersed in a good book, it took me a second to emerge into present day. Fascinating work, thank you

  • @jameshood1928
    @jameshood1928 5 месяцев назад +1

    I visited Antietam years ago. Of all the Civil War battlefields I have seen, it was the most beautiful. A relatively small area that can be toured in a day if you are familiar with the history. The rangers were very helpful in explaining the battle. The heavy casualties for this day, approximately 25,000, were the result of the large number of men in a compact battleground with a large amount of artillery firing continuously from both sides. A real hellscape.

  • @jamesgang6206
    @jamesgang6206 Год назад +4

    General John B Gordon was absolutely tough as a titanium plate. Horribly wounded at bloody lane but survived .What a great general..

  • @91Redmist
    @91Redmist Год назад +30

    Unbelievable what the men on both sides put themselves through. Such heros.

  • @ProjectPast1565
    @ProjectPast1565 Год назад +6

    The History Underground channel is top notch.

  • @Jerry-fn5nx
    @Jerry-fn5nx Год назад +27

    Completely crazy about John B Gordon getting hit that many times and still survives the war. I love how they still put up those old-style rail fence lines along the sunken road. Really gives an authentic feel

    • @TheHistoryUnderground
      @TheHistoryUnderground  Год назад +3

      Very much so.

    • @michaelwall2304
      @michaelwall2304 Год назад +3

      and they actually stacked it properly...I was in colonial Williamsburg a few years ago and some of the split rail was stacked wrong.

  • @devilsden2283
    @devilsden2283 Год назад +4

    John Gordon was a stone cold badass!....love your fantastic videos....👍

  • @1psychofan
    @1psychofan Год назад +22

    I’ve read about the sunken road in many soldier memoir’s ….really cool to see it! And the story of General Gordon? WOW! Hopefully he was thanking God for the rest of his life!

  • @bobbyricigliano2799
    @bobbyricigliano2799 Год назад +16

    I've read quite a bit about Gordon, and the fact that he was grievously wounded over and over in combat, yet survived the war and lived on for nearly 40 years after the war. He wasn't just unlucky, he was aggressive and audacious in command, leading from the front. Modern historians tend to pan the famous stories about Gordon's interactions with Francis Barlow and Joshua Chamberlain, but none of the three ever refuted them. All 3 men were wounded severely in different battles and lived to tell of it.

  • @LindaGuy-yg6ju
    @LindaGuy-yg6ju 7 месяцев назад +1

    That story is awesome. What a tough man. Gordon is really one to rember.

  • @milt6208
    @milt6208 Год назад +3

    I remember climbing that tower and looking on the Battlefield. Goose bumps moment it was so cool.

  • @jerryprovencher2047
    @jerryprovencher2047 Год назад +2

    Y'all are really, really good at presenting complex events in an understandable and empathetic way.

  • @davewoodmancy5124
    @davewoodmancy5124 Год назад +31

    I remember in high school history was my absolutely favorite class to take. The thing I love about your videos is you explain very well and it's more in depth than what you would get in a book. You actually go to the sites where history was made.

    • @SoCal780
      @SoCal780 Год назад +1

      Mine too, and you are correct. This is a whole new perspective for sure.

  • @williambabbitt1204
    @williambabbitt1204 Год назад +4

    When we honor our war dead regardless of what war it is or who fought in it, we should try to remember that each of those men are human beings not a collective enemy. The loss is a human one. Reasons for the battle remain, the honor and the loss of the human Carnage should not be forgotten. Neither should it be carried into the future to take future generations. Isaiah says come let us reason together.. that is pound our swords into plowshares and make war no more.

  • @noragibson5293
    @noragibson5293 Год назад +7

    Being a history and civil war nut I think the research you do is amazing. I am learning a lot about the Civil War.

  • @TheCatBilbo
    @TheCatBilbo Год назад +11

    Having visited lots of historical sites, the feeling of standing in a place & only being separated from the event by time, can be profoundly moving & surreal.
    A place just exists for all of these years afterwards, peaceful & unchanging. Without historical knowledge & the memorials, you wouldn't realise such terrible events happened there. Just another country lane...

  • @iamryanallen
    @iamryanallen Год назад +25

    After finding one of your videos a few months ago, I jumped in and have just caught up on all 250 of them( as well as all the American Artifacts)
    I want to thank you deeply and sincerely for what you are doing, JD.
    These videos have taught me so much that I never learned in school. Walking around the actual spots where history happened brings a whole new level of, well, realness to it all and gets me emotional. It’s so important we don’t forget history or the immense sacrifices so many have made. I love your level of humbleness, excitement and reverence for these places and the history that still lives there, not to mention the humor you add when appropriate.
    Once again, thank you so much, can’t wait for more! 🙏🏻

    • @TheHistoryUnderground
      @TheHistoryUnderground  Год назад +4

      Oh wow! Thank you. I really do appreciate that.

    • @donwood-gmail9953
      @donwood-gmail9953 Год назад +3

      Thought the same rmallez5 but you said it perfectly. Keep on historying JD sir.

  • @Bobby-ot2ft
    @Bobby-ot2ft Год назад +2

    Very informative thank you

  • @terribethreed8464
    @terribethreed8464 Год назад +1

    It's sad that my birthday is on such an historical sight.
    I'll be 70 on September 17th 2023.
    I also share my birthday with the ratification/signing of Our Constitution.
    I'm always amazed when I find historical events that have happened on the same day as my birthday.
    Guess that should have been a warning of my love of history & Democrate & Democracy mind set & Patriotisum.
    Thank you JD for this video.

  • @MrBradleyDavid
    @MrBradleyDavid Год назад +5

    A spectacular presentation. I can see why the US Army would bring us to these battle parks for training. I have to get back there to walk it again. The bloody lane was a classic reverse slope defense.

  • @johnshackelford5610
    @johnshackelford5610 Год назад +4

    Hey....
    You are my favorite facilitator of civil war places and battles.
    Thank you for your hard work and dedication to telling the story.
    Yours truly, John Shackelford.
    Columbia Tn. south of Franklin Tn.
    Sons of the Confederacy !!!

  • @owenparkerjr.6588
    @owenparkerjr.6588 Год назад +6

    “One is left with the horrible feeling now that war settles nothing; that to win a war is as disastrous as to lose one.”
    ― Agatha Christie

    • @biondna7984
      @biondna7984 Год назад

      I think she nailed it. The horror of human slavery, including the systematic rape of girls and women to produce babies to raise and sell for profit, was bound to cause a drastic moral awakening. The hateful divisiveness that #45 has pumped up, shows me that the Civil War never really ended. The need of some whites to cling to a resentful belief in their inborn supremacy, remains. Which says that the suffering of soldiers on both sides is still in vain, to some degree. That's a great part of this tragedy, to my mind.

    • @panzerlieb
      @panzerlieb Год назад

      That’s a slightly different take on what Wellington said-
      “Believe me, nothing except a battle lost can be half so melancholy as a battle won”

  • @shereemccoid7012
    @shereemccoid7012 Год назад +2

    I am always humbled to learn something new about the Civil War. I had ancestors who fought on both sides, and I inherited some of their letters to family, which describe their day lives and some of their experiences on the battlefield. Thank you for your in-depth videos.

  • @iangraham6351
    @iangraham6351 Год назад +5

    I can't believe someone in that day and age could survive that many wounds. Not just because of the volume of injuries, but because of how dirty the tools and everything used to treat the wounded. There weren't any sterile hospitals on the battlefields. Im just amazed. Thanks for keeping history alive on this channel. I'm from Pennsylvania, and Ive only been to Gettysburg. I'm definitely hoping to visit Antietam some day.

  • @skimmer8774
    @skimmer8774 Год назад +2

    Good reporting. I'm glad you show maps they really help. Thank you

  • @titanuranus
    @titanuranus Год назад +2

    Thank you for your efforts. Despite the abject insanity of the war, the courage and determination of the individuals involved is very stirring and well worth remembering.

  • @travisbayles870
    @travisbayles870 Год назад +3

    My Great Great Great grandfather Private Richard Pierce of Co B 27th North Carolina Infantry Regiment fought at Bloody Lane at Sharpsburg

  • @ChristyD067
    @ChristyD067 Год назад +7

    Thank you for telling this story. I now have an idea of what my ggggrandfather went though in the 26th Alabama. What an amazing story.

  • @raysecoy6689
    @raysecoy6689 Год назад +1

    great job you can tell you have done your job on getting great information I really like the way you let the information speak for itself and you don't choose sides this was father against son and brother against brother Semper Fi USMC retired

  • @jeffpalmer8335
    @jeffpalmer8335 Год назад +1

    George Anderson is buried in Oakwood Cemetery in Raleigh, NC.
    Great video!

  • @tubularfrog
    @tubularfrog Год назад +2

    Thank you for this narrated tour. This is a place I'd like to go visit someday.

  • @scottnelley7439
    @scottnelley7439 Год назад +2

    Excellent video. Antietam was one of my favorite battlefield visits.

  • @GlennWeller-yf8rs
    @GlennWeller-yf8rs Год назад

    My wife's great, great grandfather fought with company H, 132nd PA. They were part of French's Brigade of 2nd corp. Their monument is the one you see in front of the "clump of trees" seen from the observation tower. (The soldier cradling the stars and stripes as along the sunken road). He survived Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville and the siege of Petersburg, and is buried here in the little town of Catawissa, PA.

  • @speakupriseup4549
    @speakupriseup4549 Год назад +4

    Absolutely love these Civil War videos, you present such a tragic period of American history so well.

  • @samkangal8428
    @samkangal8428 Год назад +5

    Wow ,John B.Gordon really was a hero .

  • @phyllishershkowitz3806
    @phyllishershkowitz3806 Год назад +4

    The Antietam terminator, my gosh, and to survive that! Thanks so much for making me feel like I was there myself!👍

  • @ChrisRobinson16
    @ChrisRobinson16 9 месяцев назад

    JD you’re so lucky! To travel to all these places, the battle grounds of the WWI and WWII, this has been one of my biggest dreams, to see places from the war, where the men and women put their lives on the line for us. Another great video! I can’t wait for the new video today!

  • @jesterboykins2899
    @jesterboykins2899 10 месяцев назад +1

    Your thoughts and perspectives and info are very informative. You get close, and go to the spots and speak about what happened there specifically. Thank you.
    Even having been to the Antietam battlefield, you showed me places I didn’t go. I now know things I didn’t. That’s huge. Shows me I’ve got some more learning to do. Places again I need to go. As you’ve shown me, and others certainly. I will show someone else. My children. That’s the important thing. Informing correctly for generations coming to know the truth. To not forget. Even the music hits home. I appreciate you and what you do bud. Thanks again.
    Joshua Boykin member SCV David O. Dodd camp #619
    Deo Vindice

    • @jesterboykins2899
      @jesterboykins2899 10 месяцев назад

      Going to the battlefields on the dates they happened for me is another way of relating and getting closer to maybe how it was then. Wilson’s creek is a cool one to go to. I hadn’t been there yet. I didn’t get to see it all either. But was there in the dates it was fought. Idk. Just makes it more interesting.

  • @grantv2313
    @grantv2313 Год назад +2

    Nice presentation. I visited this site a few years ago. My wife and I were the only ones there. I climbed the tower and walked the lane imagining what it’d be like fighting hand to hand. Truly amazing part of our history.

  • @dietrichgw
    @dietrichgw Год назад +2

    Thank You for sharing knowledge with US , you’re viewers. I along with so many others, Learn a lot from you’re videos . 🙌

  • @jameshimes3657
    @jameshimes3657 8 месяцев назад

    Visited Antietam many times. On my first visit to Bloody Lane, I walked down and into the western center of the Lane. I could sense men dying in the Lane, and reaching up and touching my feet and legs as I was walking East toward the tower. Never experienced that again despite the times I've visited there. So powerful it was almost real.

  • @Worthrhetime
    @Worthrhetime Год назад +2

    Can’t get enough of your presentation. Outstanding work…. Always. Thank you.

  • @bngbraz2
    @bngbraz2 Год назад +2

    Very good. I hope others will value your material and see the sacrifices that have shaped our land and people.

  • @corbinbacon9043
    @corbinbacon9043 Год назад +2

    I almost missed this one. I'm glad I clicked save right away when I saw it posted for the first time. Iv been I'll the last few days and I was smart, I automatically gave it a thumbs up in support of your channel and I saved it to watch later. And then I was I'll again all yesterday. I'm glad I did a Smart, I always enjoy your uploads

  • @jetsons101
    @jetsons101 Год назад +2

    JD after watching you Civil War vid's I really want to go to Gettysburg again, and also Antietam now thanks to you. My first stop will be the Gettysburg Museum.....

  • @alecl4767
    @alecl4767 Год назад +3

    Thank you for this series. I have been to other battlefields many times but I found Antietam to be an exceptionally beautiful battlefield in terms of terrain and foliage when I was there. A fitting place to remember the sacrifices made by all of our forefathers.

  • @RecoverOutloudPod
    @RecoverOutloudPod Год назад +3

    I loved this. Antietam is my home, I grew up in Dargan, just 15 minutes away. I’ve been waiting to see you do Antietam. Thank you

  • @adamkinnaman6889
    @adamkinnaman6889 Год назад +3

    Love your videos man! Thank you!

  • @NickSwigart
    @NickSwigart Год назад +2

    Great job. That was awesome. You bring the weight of the event every time.

  • @stevenpatriquin4640
    @stevenpatriquin4640 Год назад +2

    Thanks for the info. Antietam a great place to visit and close to Gettysburg. Wild flowers on the battlefield of Antietam were some of the most beautiful I have ever seen. Beauty and carnage, all mixed into one. God Bless our soldiers.

  • @normahird9059
    @normahird9059 Год назад +7

    JD..... yet another fantastic vlog. The Civil War is my favorite historic event to research. I have researched the battle at Shiloh. At that site is a Sunken Road mentioned also. Thank you for taking your viewers on this historic trek

    • @mr.pickles810
      @mr.pickles810 Год назад

      One of the greatest fields ive ever visited. Even had family fight their. Wallaces zouaves 11th indiana.

    • @TheHistoryUnderground
      @TheHistoryUnderground  Год назад +1

      Seems like a lot of battles have a Sunken Road, a Blood Angle and a Peach Orchard. 😅

    • @gibwest4968
      @gibwest4968 Год назад

      I have been to Shiloh and highly recommend you visit. What struck me was how close cannons were to the poor souls being fired upon. Bloody pond is also quite small and the bluffs of the Tennessee River are steep and high. Grant was literally driven to the brink by Johnston.

  • @SoCal780
    @SoCal780 Год назад +5

    Another fascinating video, JD. I’ve learned more from these videos than I ever did in history textbooks. Thanks so much! 👍

  • @marinewillis1202
    @marinewillis1202 Год назад +9

    And just think that Gordon ended up being arguably Lee's best Corps commander by the end of the war. He was also the general that led the remaining rebels to surrender their arms at Appomattox. Surrendering to Chamberlain there, where as they were marching up to dress their lines and stack arms Chamberlain called his troops to present arms to the rebels in a show of respect and Gordon barked out present arms back. Both sides showing respect to the other at the end of over 4 years of murdering each other. The amount of respect and iron the men of that was had was truly unbelievable.

    • @ronwallace6273
      @ronwallace6273 Год назад +1

      now the south gets insults and lies told on them by people who don't care about history or anything. they are told lies and they run with them , no pride of anything not even there own country just want free money and everything erased

  • @raindog8684
    @raindog8684 6 месяцев назад

    Thank you. I was there last week and now it makes so much more sense.

  • @tigereye517
    @tigereye517 Месяц назад +1

    Thanks! I am enjoying all your videos.

  • @tommymagnusson
    @tommymagnusson Год назад +2

    Great story love it. I would love to visit those battle field one day especially this one. A Swede who used to live in good ol USA in Utah

  • @KevinCave-rj8eq
    @KevinCave-rj8eq 11 месяцев назад

    Man your videos are great almost everybody's forgotten about that war 👍👍👍

  • @MichaelLloyd
    @MichaelLloyd Год назад

    I haven't made it to Antietam yet. I've been to Shiloh quite a few times, Appomattox Courthouse once, Gettysburg once, and a few different sites in Louisiana and Texas. Shiloh seemed to be the most reverent to me.
    I'm looking forward to watching this video

  • @indy_go_blue6048
    @indy_go_blue6048 Год назад +2

    I'd never heard of John B. Gordon until I happened to go to the college he established in Barnesville, GA in the late '70s. He's been my "favorite" CSA general ever since. Only he and Dan Sickles rose to corps command without having a West Point education.

  • @stephenrrose
    @stephenrrose Год назад +5

    Loving the Civil War Series! I love learning even more and you bringing History Alive! Partnering up with Vlogging through History, priceless, shows you both care about History and a great way to present it! Thank you for introducing me to VTH! Enjoy his presentations of History as well! Thank you JD for all you do! Appreciate you!

  • @davidking6172
    @davidking6172 Год назад +2

    Great view from that observation tower 👌 what a slaughter house bloody lane was.

  • @patrickbush9526
    @patrickbush9526 Год назад

    Man, that's insane Never a disappointment.
    Time always well spent.
    Thank you much appreciated

  • @supernaut649
    @supernaut649 Год назад +2

    Thanks for this Antietam series! Great stuff and very informative. Just this past year I started reading more about General Gordon. What a life he led. Started in law school, went in the mining business. Elected captain of the raccoon roughs with no military experience. He has to be one of the most over looked generals of the war. I think(?)he went to PA before Gettysburg and was instrumental in capturing the city of York and on to Wrightsville where the Union burned down the bridge over the Susquehanna. I’m making my way through his memoirs now. Great read

  • @misterbaker9728
    @misterbaker9728 Год назад +2

    Once again another very well done video. Keep it up!!

  • @marthakrumboltz2710
    @marthakrumboltz2710 Год назад +2

    I’ll listen to most people who understand that a ball cap is not a fashion statement and the bill to be worn forward, as it was designed to be used as a sun shade (unless you’re a catcher). Excellent content as always. Perspectives from both sides.

    • @TheHistoryUnderground
      @TheHistoryUnderground  Год назад

      👍🏻

    • @historyandhorseplaying7374
      @historyandhorseplaying7374 Год назад

      Haha. I grew up in the 70s and 80s when people rarely wore ball caps in public, other than during baseball games. In college in the 80s and early 90s, guys rarely wore ball caps. And if you did, people assumed you were on the way to play in a ballgame. I don’t get the fascination with wearing them, and the comment is very far afield, but I get your sentiment!

    • @amain325
      @amain325 Год назад

      @@historyandhorseplaying7374 What part of the country did you live in? The only parts I can think of where "guys rarely wore ball caps" would be New England or the Pacific Northwest, and that's only an impression since I've never lived in either one. Living in the South and the West in the 70s, 80s and 90s (and the 2000s), I can tell you guys and girls did and still do wear ball caps everywhere, all the time. No "fascination with wearing them", they are very practical headgear, although admittedly they are widely used to advertise one's interests or loyalties.

    • @amain325
      @amain325 Год назад

      I've often wondered where and why this wearing of ball caps backwards started and why it became such a thing. I doubt it's because millions of people are obsessed with catchers, so WTF is it? And while I will admit I've seen people who I know are intelligent doing it, I still can't help but attribute the same level of foolishness to this that I do to the idiots who wear their pants hanging half way down their ass.

    • @historyandhorseplaying7374
      @historyandhorseplaying7374 Год назад

      @@amain325 I grew up in South America, Europe, and the Washington DC area. Baseball caps were not nearly so prevalent in the 70s and 80s as today. Men mostly still wore fedoras in the 60s and 70s, less so in the 80s. Take a look at photos, candid films or movies from the 60s, 70s and early 80s, and you won’t see many gentleman (adults) wearing ball caps, that was considered low class, childish, or you were actually playing baseball. Partly because people dressed up more, wearing T-shirts out was not as ubiquitous, and you wouldn’t wear a ball cap with a nice shirt and pants. I don’t remember seeing many wearing them until I went to college in the late 80s, and even then it was just other college kids, not middle aged men. Even today I am hesitant to wear them because I feel like a kid wearing it, not a grown man in my 50s. I certainly never saw my father wear them, and he grew up in the 1930s and 40s. Maybe it’s a generational thing.

  • @emilefoxhall3155
    @emilefoxhall3155 Год назад

    Man I'm so glad I found this historical channel. Love history ❤

  • @JackFlemingFan1
    @JackFlemingFan1 Год назад +4

    As always thank you for not only giving a history lesson of where you're at but for posting yet one more excellent video of the Civil War. It's been years since I've been to Antietam and watching your video I got a whole new perspective of this battle and the feeling like I could actually see the fighting which took place and the carnage which took place afterwards. Keep up your excellent work of keeping Civil War history alive for all to see and learn.

  • @juliavaughn7053
    @juliavaughn7053 Год назад +2

    I’m a descendant of n.c. Veteran great great grandfather charnick Cox company g 34th n.c. Shot twice at Gaines mill va and lived people were cut from different cloth back than thank you for keeping our history alive

    • @historyandhorseplaying7374
      @historyandhorseplaying7374 Год назад

      Wait, do you possibly mean Charnock Cox….? That’s a very unusual name. I’m descended from a Charnock Cox who lived in Virginia in the early 1700s.

  • @gusbuckingham6663
    @gusbuckingham6663 Год назад

    I was at Sharpsburg in the early summer of 1994. My grandmother took me to quite a few battlefields that summer. I walked the sunken road.
    It dawns on my less young mind now that the excitement and "action" is much outweighed by how much respect I have for both sides (having traced my family's roots) & the eye for the ground has grown.
    Heavy place.

  • @rodneyhunter4241
    @rodneyhunter4241 Год назад +1

    Excellent as always, My great -great grandfather with the 130th PA fought at the Bloody Lane.

  • @panthercreek60
    @panthercreek60 Год назад

    So many heros at Sharpsburg.
    The Georgia and South Carolina boys across from the bridge. Hood's brigade All the brave men who fought there. And above all John B Gordon and the boys from Alabama.

  • @terryeustice5399
    @terryeustice5399 Год назад +2

    Thanks for sharing the Sunken Road battle. I always enjoy your perspective on your videos.

  • @ERICCalverley-ci5im
    @ERICCalverley-ci5im 6 месяцев назад

    Hi - i live in sydney and will never more than likely visit the sites - but watching your videos and channel makes feel like i am there - keep up the good work

  • @mikeheavener2510
    @mikeheavener2510 Год назад

    Spent some time here as a kid. Amazing place wild story

  • @brianduffy4682
    @brianduffy4682 7 месяцев назад

    You go to
    all of the best parts of the best battles. Love thinking of a battle and seeing you have a film on it already. Keep up the good work fellas. well researched and ample geographical explanations throughout. Huzzah

  • @Roadglide911
    @Roadglide911 Год назад

    My GGGrandfather fought in Longstreet’s command. He was in Company K 3rd SC. He became a preacher and died in 1924. He named one son after Longstreet and one after Anderson.

  • @andygossard4293
    @andygossard4293 Год назад +13

    I guess a lot of us could never understand the carnage that happened there in full but Gordon's 5 wounds including in the face should tell you something.

  • @forwardobserver6441
    @forwardobserver6441 Год назад +1

    The sunken road was definitely a hot place to be. If I remember right my gg grandfather was on the far right. Comp I 8 Alabama emerald guards

  • @mickbgb5254
    @mickbgb5254 Год назад +3

    Thank you, these are among the most enjoyable and informative narratives that I have seen regarding the American Civil War.
    I'm looking forward to watching more of them.

  • @neilwilliams5173
    @neilwilliams5173 Год назад +2

    Great video I was there this past July and walked the bloddy lane it is a most intriguing place to visit and think of what took place there.I will be going back next spring they should have the visitors center open and the grounds around it finished by then.Thank you for making these videos.

  • @benjaminrush4443
    @benjaminrush4443 Год назад +1

    Another great Video. Great how you split up the Battle of Antietam.
    The Confederates got wiped out in two places to give the North a needed major victory. Thanks.

  • @ricknagle6980
    @ricknagle6980 Год назад +1

    Thank you for all your videos.🙏

  • @danreger8924
    @danreger8924 9 месяцев назад

    Great detailed video of the battle. I would love to go there again. The last time I was there was in 1997 for the 135th anniversary of the battle reenactment.

  • @GhostofSicklesleg
    @GhostofSicklesleg Год назад +2

    Bravo, JD Bravo! Loving this series and looking forward to more……. heading too Vlogging through History’s channel to see Chris’s contribution

  • @davidensign5172
    @davidensign5172 Год назад +2

    JD, you make it all so interesting, so personal, indeed so human. Thanks for another good 1! I'm learning so much!

  • @reloadncharge9907
    @reloadncharge9907 Год назад +1

    Enjoyed yet again….a visit might be forthcoming in the spring. Thx, Andrew

  • @ace34473
    @ace34473 Год назад

    I've been trying here twice it really brings the battle into prospective.

  • @01SOMWS6
    @01SOMWS6 Год назад +1

    Awesome collaboration. Two of my favorite channels! Keep up the great work, gentlemen.

  • @kathyevans3251
    @kathyevans3251 Год назад +1

    It was a great tour.thank you

  • @asweettooth1288
    @asweettooth1288 Год назад +2

    You guys are the perfect pair man. Keep it up. Thanks so much for what you do.
    I stumbled on this place few yrs back, took a picture wearing an Irish t shirt, at the Irish brigades monument. Lol happenstance. . Keep on keeping on. 🤙

  • @kathrynryder9620
    @kathrynryder9620 Год назад

    So informative ....bringing history to life. Well done