Winter Lecture Series 2023: The Great Reunion of 1913

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  • Опубликовано: 4 июл 2024
  • In the summer of 1913, Pennsylvania invited thousands of Union and Confederate veterans to come to Gettysburg to observe and celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg, what many considered to be the "High Water Mark the Rebellion". The response from veterans of the Blue and Gray was overwhelming - over 54,000 old soldiers journeyed to a battlefield skillfully transformed by a government commission into a memorial park, where the armies of both North and South would forever be memorialized. Critics scoffed that old enemies could never get along, the divisions that caused the war in 1861 having not been forgotten. But America was changing at home and abroad and those who chose to ignore this commemoration were surprised at its outcome. Was this "Great Reunion" finally the signal of national reunification so many had hoped for fifty years after the final shot had been fired?

Комментарии • 17

  • @stephenhalley6964
    @stephenhalley6964 Год назад +7

    My grandpa's grandpa (Samuel Oiler) attended the reunion. He was wounded in the face and hip at Antietam. While recovering from these wounds at his father's farm in Cumberland County, PA, he travelled to Gettysburg to assist with burials and care for the wounded. Following his recovery, he enlisted in another Pennsylvania regiment and was again wounded at Petersburg in 1864-the same day Chamberlain received his grievous wound-and was transferred to the Veterans Reserve Corps. At the time of the reunion, he farmed in Iowa. The government declined his request for transport because he was not a combatant on the field. So he paid his own way to the affair. NEVER FORGET!

  • @bernardfogel7636
    @bernardfogel7636 Год назад +2

    Wonderful presentation!

  • @sicily7220
    @sicily7220 Год назад +5

    I watched some of the footage from 75 year reunion. I find it amazing the last soldier from the Civil war Passed away after WWII ended; and today we have about 150K-200K WWII vets still alive and kicking as of today.

    • @texasforever7887
      @texasforever7887 Год назад +3

      We lose about 230 of them a day.

    • @ellietobe
      @ellietobe Год назад +3

      A lot of Vietnam veterans are gone already.

  • @bullhead900
    @bullhead900 Год назад +3

    Very interesting, thank you!

  • @3251JOE
    @3251JOE Год назад +2

    Your account of the veterans asking each other for tobacco or coffee is better understood if one remembers that this is exactly what happened, in those exact words, during the Civil War. The Rebs asked for coffee because the naval blockade had cut them off from obtaining coffee beans and the Yanks asked for tobacco because most of it was grown in the south.

  • @jeffeason3599
    @jeffeason3599 Год назад +1

    Fantastic presentation. Thank you.

  • @blackbull0110
    @blackbull0110 Год назад +1

    A Brilliant presentation Thankyou

  • @akrish70
    @akrish70 Год назад +2

    What about the black American Why are they not mentioned in this presentation? Its important to to include them as it was their freedom they were fighting for.
    Just an honest discussion. We need to see all of it if we are to truly learn from it.

    • @marks_sparks1
      @marks_sparks1 Год назад +1

      Well we didn't really hear about the black representation here at this 1913 reunion because it was a JIM CROW reunion. No attempt was made to officially invite black union veterans by the government nor were organisers encouraged by the press to even bring in a token representation. And remember this reunion was taking place under Woodrow Wilsons' watch who had just re-segregated three federal departments that year. The only black members at the reunion were the servants & stevedores who erected the tented village for the veterans. The 1913 great reunion was all about remembering the war but not remembering why it was fought. And that meant excluding the black veterans and mention of slavery or reconstruction for the sake of national unity.
      #1913greatforgetting
      Reference: Race & Reunion, Prof David Blight

    • @MrThebirddog
      @MrThebirddog Год назад +1

      @marksandsparks1 It is sad, but you are correct. I wish we could change that but alas, history is history.

    • @robertdavenport5457
      @robertdavenport5457 Год назад

      From the soldiers point of view, a vast majority of the US Soldiers fought for the Union not the end of slavery, the Confederate soldiers if not fighting for slavery were not fighting to end it. Gettysburg was a battle not a debate. The commonality involved was the fighting. That is what reunions depend on for attendance.

    • @robertdavenport5457
      @robertdavenport5457 Год назад

      32:15 Still a problem in America. I wonder if there were post reunion repercussions due to this irritation.