When Sherman Rode Into Columbia, S.C., an Escaped Union POW Handed Him a Note. Here's the Words.

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  • Опубликовано: 28 авг 2024
  • Major General William T. Sherman's forces entered Columbia, the capital of South Carolina, on Feb. 17, 1865. As Sherman rode through the conquered city he met numerous individuals, including escaped Union prisoners of war. One of these bedraggled men handed him a note. Sherman stuffed into his pocket and read it later. The words on the piece of paper were the lyrics of a song written by the man pictured here.
    "Life on the Civil War Research Trail" is hosted by Ronald S. Coddington, Editor and Publisher of Military Images magazine. Learn more about our mission to showcase, interpret and preserve Civil War portrait photography at militaryimagesmagazine.com and shopmilitaryimages.com.
    This episode is brought to you in part by Frohne's Historic Military: Authentic history you can trust! Visit modoc1873.stores.yahoo.net for more.
    Image: Mahaska County Historical Society, Oskaloosa, Iowa
    This channel is a member of the RUclips Partner Program. Your interest, support, and engagement is key, and I'm grateful for it. Thank you!

Комментарии • 592

  • @lakemurray7239
    @lakemurray7239 25 дней назад +69

    My great-grandfather was a 14 year old guard at the POW camp in Columbia. He died in 1943 and was one of the last surviving veterans in SC. I wish I could have known him.

  • @brianmcfarland4854
    @brianmcfarland4854 2 месяца назад +222

    Byers was a first cousin of my great-grandmother, they were both born in 1838 in western Pennsylvania. My father remembered when he was a young boy an elderly man came to visit relatives in the area. This was Byers come to visit family where he had been born near Pulaski, PA, probably in the mid- to late 20's.

    • @georgeborkenhagen4281
      @georgeborkenhagen4281 2 месяца назад +10

      Amazing!

    • @alanaadams7440
      @alanaadams7440 2 месяца назад +14

      Thanks for sharing your story

    • @joellenbroetzmann9053
      @joellenbroetzmann9053 2 месяца назад +20

      As a person who had folks on both sides of the war, including a slave owner, an abolitionist, a slave, and a POW in Andersonville, every one of them a grandparent in my lines, I full well know war IS hell.

    • @smcm4588
      @smcm4588 Месяц назад +1

      Allowing 20 years family growth..
      1838, 58, 78, 98, 1918, 38, 58, 78, 98, 2018.. =180 years. A grtgrand (and grt1st cousin) ma born in 1838.. ... you would have to have been born in 1898.. and you would be 126 years old today.
      Please re-calc the quantity of 'Greats' you refer to in your family.

    • @Gimmee3Steps
      @Gimmee3Steps Месяц назад +5

      Cool! I grew up just north of Pittsburgh and used to fish the river near Pulaski. It’s not a very big town at all.

  • @cpklapper
    @cpklapper Месяц назад +38

    My paternal grandmother’s maternal grandmother’s maiden name was Caroline Maria Sherman, a distant cousin of the General and his brother, the Senator. Thank you for this touching story of our Cousin Cump.

  • @HarryWHill-GA
    @HarryWHill-GA 2 месяца назад +73

    Thank you for that video. The American Civil War was, mercifully, the last conflict where I know I had relatives on both sides of a battle.

    • @jonncockrell3606
      @jonncockrell3606 29 дней назад +2

      Lucky. I had relatives on both sides of the World Wars as I, an American, am a mix of English,Irish and German. Some had come to America by the time I was born. But I didn't understand the stories until much later in life and they were gone.

    • @HarryWHill-GA
      @HarryWHill-GA 29 дней назад +2

      @@jonncockrell3606 We all get here by different paths. I only have to live another 10 years or so to have both sides of my family here for 400+ years. We were the original EuroTrash, thrown out before the rush. The only good thing was that land prices were low when they arrived.

    • @PAMELAPORTER-ci7mr
      @PAMELAPORTER-ci7mr 16 дней назад +1

      ​@@HarryWHill-GA Same with my father's side, but I prefer to view them as explorers & entrepreneurs. ; )

    • @barbarataylor8101
      @barbarataylor8101 10 дней назад +1

      And so the U.S. chooses to take down the Confederate Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery. We will never forget.

    • @HarryWHill-GA
      @HarryWHill-GA 9 дней назад +1

      @@barbarataylor8101 Not the US, the current US administration. Elections have consequences. Vote like your life depends on it. It may. Your freedom certainly does.

  • @jimdecamp7204
    @jimdecamp7204 2 месяца назад +86

    The lesson here is, if you can't be useful, at least be pleasant company.

  • @ukulelemikeleii
    @ukulelemikeleii 2 месяца назад +96

    Scraps and bits of paper were the emails of the 1860s!

    • @jonncockrell3606
      @jonncockrell3606 29 дней назад +1

      The telegraph had made it possible for information to travel much quicker than before.

  • @timswope8423
    @timswope8423 Месяц назад +62

    Confederate states burned cotton bales when union forces entered southern cities to prevent union from confiscation and sale of bales (10k).

    • @TerryV06
      @TerryV06 9 дней назад +1

      With disastrous results…. Aka Atlanta and Richmond

    • @hubertwalters4300
      @hubertwalters4300 6 дней назад

      ​@@TerryV06 Well that's war,when the enemy is advancing into your country, you destroy everything that could be of use to the enemy.

    • @TerryV06
      @TerryV06 5 дней назад

      @@hubertwalters4300 very true.. somehow the blame has been shifted to ravaging Union troops though.

    • @thomasfort2051
      @thomasfort2051 4 дня назад

      That’s BS . Atlanta and Columbia were occupied by Federal troops and were burned as the troops left. Troops were also sent out to burn surrounding civilian homes. Funny how you twist that the Southerners burned their own cities and homes.

    • @thomasfort2051
      @thomasfort2051 День назад

      @@TerryV06 Foraging = robbery , What do you think the civilian population had left to eat when the Federal Troops robbed or destroyed all the food, plus the shelter?

  • @mikemcmanus116
    @mikemcmanus116 2 месяца назад +75

    Great story. I love learning of the personal accounts of those who participated.

    • @inyobill
      @inyobill 23 дня назад +1

      Sherman's (and even more Grant's) memoirs are well worth reading.

  • @abelincoln3261
    @abelincoln3261 Месяц назад +37

    I can't help but wonder how easily insanity and criminality and valor are easily combined in war !

    • @mandoguy726
      @mandoguy726 16 дней назад +2

      If you mean that Sherman was a traitorous horrible person and a war criminal then I agree.

  • @kevinpritchard3592
    @kevinpritchard3592 Месяц назад +43

    WOW, that is an excellent piece of history brought back to us. Thank you for your excellent work.

  • @billgrewe8340
    @billgrewe8340 Месяц назад +21

    Great story. It traveled well. All the way to to 2024 with its magic intact.

  • @user-fc1gq5xd9e
    @user-fc1gq5xd9e 2 месяца назад +30

    great reading Ron, you took us there...

  • @DavidBenner-cy4zl
    @DavidBenner-cy4zl 2 месяца назад +66

    One of my great great grand fathers marched with Sherman to the Sea. Indiana artillery attached to an Ohio infantry regiment. Wounded five times.

    • @utoobia
      @utoobia 28 дней назад +5

      How many civilian homes did he burn?

    • @mulvey0731
      @mulvey0731 19 дней назад

      That’s too bad

    • @mandoguy726
      @mandoguy726 16 дней назад +4

      Are you proud of this?

    • @DavidBenner-cy4zl
      @DavidBenner-cy4zl 16 дней назад +1

      @@mandoguy726 he did what any "good" Democrat or progressive would do.

    • @michaelfritts6249
      @michaelfritts6249 15 дней назад +2

      My gg grandpa lost his eye in the Battle of Perryville. One brother died in Resaca. Another was with General Sherman to the end.
      They beat the traitors to our Great Nation!!

  • @markharwell8793
    @markharwell8793 Месяц назад +32

    One brother wore blue
    One brother wore gray
    One brother went
    One brother stayed
    One brother's here
    One brother's there
    Oh, where shall I fight
    Oh, what shall I wear?
    I'm gonna wear my tight blue pants
    And my gray sport jacket
    And stay at home with the girls
    Now, now, now
    I don't want to get to Gettysburg
    No, no, no, no
    I got a protest sign
    And a bottle of wine
    And my baby and I are gonna
    Go, go, go, go
    Now, Grant and Lee
    Don't mean nothin' to me
    And fightin's nothin' but a bore
    I'll wear my tight blue pants
    And my gray sport jacket
    And to hell with the Civil War

    • @gabet945
      @gabet945 20 дней назад +4

      Figures that a guy wearing tight blue pants would write this.

    • @anotheryoutubechannel4809
      @anotheryoutubechannel4809 15 дней назад

      @@gabet945😂😂😂😂

    • @billmcghee7680
      @billmcghee7680 7 дней назад

      ​@@gabet945cut off the blood flow to a couple places, too. Oh well, he was able to hit all the highest notes, for sure.

  • @JayTee0007
    @JayTee0007 2 месяца назад +67

    My great great great grandfather fought in the battle at Gettysburg. I am in my mid sixties and found this out through geneology a year ago. I am originally from and grew up in Western Pennsylvania.

    • @mikelouis9389
      @mikelouis9389 2 месяца назад +5

      We western Pennsylvanians definitely represented in the civil war. I to am in my very late sixties was told how my great great grandfather was in the south purchasing horses when the war broke out. He basically traveled the underground railroad back north and became a Captain of Cavalry and was a noted marksman even from atop horseback. He got his commission from his stables, he earned it with accurate lead.

    • @jguenther3049
      @jguenther3049 Месяц назад +1

      My grandfather was 7 years old at the time of the Gettysburg battle. My youngest son was born 120 years after my grandfather.

    • @cliffpage7677
      @cliffpage7677 Месяц назад +3

      My mother's mother's side of the family defended their homes and churches at Brabams Bridge in the Low County below Orangburg on the Edisto. Sherman burned the Baptist Church to the ground and the homes of the five klans that made up the community. Sherman was a monster! South Carolinians and other Southerners have an oderous regard for Sherman that can only be surpassed by that of the Sioux, Crow, Cheyhan, and other Native Americans that came under the treatment of those who learned Sherman's practice of total war, Sheridan, Crow, Custer and others.

    • @mikelouis9389
      @mikelouis9389 Месяц назад +4

      @@cliffpage7677 And Y'all were such saints. If you hadn't started it, Sherman wouldn't have needed to finish it.

    • @houstonvanhoy2198
      @houstonvanhoy2198 Месяц назад +2

      @jaytee0007
      I am 73 years old.
      My great grandfather was wounded in Pickett's Charge, but survived and fought in several later battles. He was paroled at Appomattox Courthouse, and like many other CSA infantrymen, had to walk home to Stanly County, NC. He and his wife produced four sons and four daughters. He lived until 1935.
      My other great- grandfather - also from Stanly County, NC - was killed at Gettysburg, but apparently had at least one daughter - my grandmother - before joining the CSA.
      🇺🇲 God bless the USA, and all who live here.

  • @jarredsdad
    @jarredsdad Месяц назад +14

    Excellent! Thank you!

  • @user-yd3cx1ih6b
    @user-yd3cx1ih6b Месяц назад +27

    My great grandfather was in Sherman's Army, and I have lived in the area they conquered since 1961.

    • @milkywayan2232
      @milkywayan2232 26 дней назад

      @user-yd3cx1ih6b- Did you try getting a discount on your land?

    • @unclejamo94553
      @unclejamo94553 17 дней назад

      Conquered, or liberated?

    • @mandoguy726
      @mandoguy726 16 дней назад +5

      Why would you be proud of this? And conquered is definitely the word.

  • @douglasslist3200
    @douglasslist3200 2 месяца назад +47

    Great piece. Very much helps to bring history into realism.

  • @needsaride15126
    @needsaride15126 2 месяца назад +27

    That was such a great story.

  • @yvonnephillips3888
    @yvonnephillips3888 Месяц назад +53

    My forefathers fought against Sherman. As Sherman marched towards Charleston, any Confederate solders left in hopes of diverting the union soldiers away. Also Sherman did his early training at Fort Moultrie in Charleston and made friends with many families there. That was two reasons he did not obliterate Charleston as he did Atlanta.

    • @yb-rk5oh
      @yb-rk5oh Месяц назад +1

      same with savannah

    • @bremenrooster
      @bremenrooster Месяц назад

      Sherman was the first President of the Louisiana Military Academy….now LSU! He hated the fact that war broke out and he had to leave his friends down there! Also, it is being proven now that Sherman…did not BURN Columbia, SC….escaping Rebels did….by lighting bales of cotton on fire. Another fact: in the March to the Sea….approx 2500 Federal Troops were killed and only 1500 Rebel guerillas. Just FYI to break down more Sherman myths!

    • @davidoneil858
      @davidoneil858 Месяц назад

      00⁰

    • @rickbrant4285
      @rickbrant4285 24 дня назад

      And Columbia..... that letter us pure propaganda. Drunk Yankee soldiers burned the city

    • @mandoguy726
      @mandoguy726 15 дней назад +1

      Your forefathers were Valiant heroes fighting for a righteous cause and you should be proud.

  • @russwayne2132
    @russwayne2132 16 дней назад +3

    I was born and raised in Columbia, my family on my mother's side going back at least four generations in Columbia and nearby Lexington County. My grandmother told me that she remembered stories from her grandmother telling of Sherman's march through Columbia, and no one was singing songs. She said; "Everyone was hiding their good silver because them damn Yankees was stealing everything they could get their hands on".

  • @josetomatostv5718
    @josetomatostv5718 Месяц назад +9

    Wow. I was rapt! What a story! Thank you!!!

  • @feralbluee
    @feralbluee 13 часов назад +1

    Thank you for this history lesson :). It made Sherman a human being and not the General he is made out to be. The southerners set fire to their own cotton. It was Sherman’s soldiers who went wild, although, could he have stopped them? He set free Union soldiers, thank goodness - the southern prisons were horrific!! And he had compassion for others - e.g. Bryers :)
    My first time here - very well done. Have a great day! :) ☁️🌷🌱

  • @hatfieldmain
    @hatfieldmain 2 месяца назад +17

    Thank you for posting

  • @MyelinProductions
    @MyelinProductions Месяц назад +5

    WOW! THANK YOU! Amazing! Great history and insights. Very Good Useful information of real actual historical events. ~ Be Safe out there folks ~ Peace & Health to Us All.

  • @PhilChavanne
    @PhilChavanne 2 дня назад

    Great story, poignant song! Thank you for the research you put in to resurrect this unique moment in the little history of men at war!

  • @redcossack245
    @redcossack245 2 месяца назад +18

    Another great show. Many of my family members fought Sherman all the way to around Atlanta and one chased him on his march to the sea. Ah well, by gones are by gones. Great show.

    • @OnTheOnlyShipButHalfWannaSink
      @OnTheOnlyShipButHalfWannaSink Месяц назад

      “Bygones are bygones” - a sentiment I admire, but rarely hear these days, and even more rarely see in action.

  • @paulginsberg6942
    @paulginsberg6942 Месяц назад +6

    Wonderful living history. We have changed.

  • @snowman333-
    @snowman333- 2 месяца назад +33

    this is the first time I have heard of Sherman's march in anything but a negative connotation. thank you

    • @veramae4098
      @veramae4098 2 месяца назад +12

      Sherman's Army liberated Andersonville, a POW camp for Union prisoners. Conditions had been horrible. It was after this that Sherman showed no mercy.

    • @TisiphonesShadow
      @TisiphonesShadow Месяц назад +18

      @@veramae4098 Maybe he should have toured Camp Douglas and Elmira, plus a few other large Union POW camps. He might have changed sides.

    • @leonwhitesell4849
      @leonwhitesell4849 Месяц назад +2

      My gggrand father starved to death in Fortress Monroe as a Union soldier from PA, leaving a widow with three children! 🇺🇸 ✝️🇺🇸❤️

    • @janetprice85
      @janetprice85 Месяц назад +2

      When they got to Savannah Union soldiers wrote home complaining" all they had to eat was rice everlasting rice at every meal". Savannah was surrounded by rice plantations as was many coastal areas from north Florida to SC. Rice is the potatoes of east Georgia. My grandmother served virtually it at every meal with peas,okra tomato gumbo,with gravy and fried chicken,etc. Probably why Chinese food is a favorite in the south.

    • @jamescook7713
      @jamescook7713 Месяц назад

      Sherman, war criminal.

  • @genevawhite3178
    @genevawhite3178 День назад

    Thanks for this program.

  • @waynefoster6964
    @waynefoster6964 5 дней назад +1

    I find this song very interesting and brings it closer to home for me. It mentions Resaca Georgia. That's where my ancestor Pvt. William White (118th Ohio) was wounded and eventually died of his wounds. He was part of Gen. Scofield failed attack. Thank you for sharing that story!

  • @steveshoemaker6347
    @steveshoemaker6347 2 месяца назад +10

    Wonderful song....Thanks very much.....
    Old F-4 Phantom ll pilot Shoe🇺🇸

  • @johngalt-dz2cg
    @johngalt-dz2cg 10 дней назад +3

    Doesn't make Sherman any less of a scalawag. Damn him and his name.

  • @markkinsler4333
    @markkinsler4333 2 месяца назад +36

    Gen Sherman was born and grew up just around the corner from here. Lancaster, Ohio, long a Confederate stronghold, did not appreciate him much. There's a small statue of the gentleman downtown, just standing there holding his hat. Ohio offered to erect a far larger, equestrian statue around 1900, but the locals refused it. Check out the across the street from the Plaza Hotel (in Central Park, actually) in New York City. Sherman never came back to Lancaster..

    • @MrIronose
      @MrIronose 2 месяца назад +6

      They pronounce it LANK-ister. I grew up in Newark, pronounced Nerk.

    • @joanwalter6551
      @joanwalter6551 Месяц назад +2

      Does anyone have a musical score to this poem ?

    • @swampybman7741
      @swampybman7741 Месяц назад +2

      Sherman was not know for being a gentleman nor burden with mercy. Many a Union loyalist suffered greatly from his tactics in the south.

    • @TomSpeaks-vw1zp
      @TomSpeaks-vw1zp Месяц назад +2

      @@MrIronose
      You pronounced both correctly. I was born and raised in
      Lankister😂
      The Palace theatre was across the street from The Sherman House. On either side of the movie screen were huge murals. One side was an Indian chief. The other a portrait of Robert E. Lee facing the Sherman house. That’s how divided that area was during the Civil War.

    • @TomSpeaks-vw1zp
      @TomSpeaks-vw1zp Месяц назад

      @@swampybman7741
      But his troops loved Uncle Billy. There’s always two sides to every coin as well as stories. That was no ordinary war. And you did what you had to do. Some swore he was insane. But he got the job done. He was accused of burning Atlanta when in fact the fleeing Confederate army started the fires. As far a pillaging the towns, and farms along the way, when you have 60+ thousand troops under your command you can’t control everything. And they need to eat. It was war!

  • @jameshorn270
    @jameshorn270 Месяц назад +10

    Most of my family was Pennsylvania Dutch, with a few Quakers scattered in, but one, the son of a Union militia colonel, became a minister called to serve a church in Charleston S C, where he married the daughter of a Confederate captain. The Confederate branch of the family learned that Sherman was advancing from Savannah, figured that he was certain to make his main target their city, so they shipped most of their valuables up country to their plantation to the NE of Columbia for safety. Naturally, Sherman, did the unexpected and bypassed Charleston, took Coumbia, and continued straight across their plantation. Thus, we have relatively few heirlooms from that branch of our ancestors.

    • @janetprice85
      @janetprice85 Месяц назад +2

      Sherman marched right down the road to Savannah past multiple members of my Mom's families's farms and businesses. The men were off fighting. The irony is my Mom married a boy in WW2 who's midwestern family was with the Illinois Union soldiers with Sherman marching past her families's homes.

  • @rogerdavies6226
    @rogerdavies6226 2 месяца назад +9

    thank you

  • @amadeusamwater
    @amadeusamwater 2 месяца назад +30

    Us Iowa folks are very creative...

    • @rb1179
      @rb1179 2 месяца назад +2

      As someone that's done RAGBRAI a dozen times, I agree!

    • @amadeusamwater
      @amadeusamwater 2 месяца назад +1

      @@rb1179 Good man. We like repeat riders.

    • @cht2162
      @cht2162 2 месяца назад +1

      We Iowa folks...

    • @stevensapyak7971
      @stevensapyak7971 2 месяца назад +2

      6.19.24. ⛹🏻‍♀️Caitlin Clark … the WNBA’s💁🏻‍♂️Larry Bird™️

    • @Steve-gx9ot
      @Steve-gx9ot 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@stevensapyak7971she is nowhere near Bird level! Get real

  • @xisotopex
    @xisotopex 2 месяца назад +22

    wow to live that long and witness so many changes...

  • @susanschaffner4422
    @susanschaffner4422 2 месяца назад +12

    Great story.

  • @EruditeDM
    @EruditeDM Месяц назад +7

    I’m a Texas A&M Aggie but I’ve been to a football game in Columbia before. Bet the note said “Go Cocks!!” #SEC 😂👍🏼

    • @babbarr77
      @babbarr77 Месяц назад +1

      I lived in Columbia for five years. I attended a basketball game at the university,
      On the bottoms of the underpants the cheerleaders wore for Columbia was printed: “Go Cocks”.

  • @98f12-h7g
    @98f12-h7g 25 дней назад +18

    Most of the men in the South did not own slaves . Only the very wealthy plantation owners but we all surfed .

    • @karenpowers3319
      @karenpowers3319 19 дней назад +1

      For following the traitors to the country.

    • @unclejamo94553
      @unclejamo94553 17 дней назад +1

      We? How old are you?

    • @dmac2782
      @dmac2782 17 дней назад

      Charlie don't surf!!

    • @dmac2782
      @dmac2782 17 дней назад

      Charlie don't surf!

    • @apacheworrier3776
      @apacheworrier3776 7 дней назад +1

      @@karenpowers3319
      Slavery wasn’t even mentioned as a cause until 3 years into the war. (Emancipation Proclamation) Lincoln offered to make slavery a constitutional right before the war started, if the south would agree to a 25% tax on cotton exports. Our ancestors were killed over a tax dispute less than 100 years after the revolution.

  • @cfjohnson7369
    @cfjohnson7369 2 месяца назад +23

    As I recall, the SC statehouse has several bronze stars on one side, to mark where Gen. Sherman's cannon balls struck. The population did not want to forget!

    • @JohnOliver100
      @JohnOliver100 Месяц назад +7

      Indeed! I live near Columbia. The bronze stars are still there and across the river there is marker where Sherman's canons stood.

    • @TheScotsman1977
      @TheScotsman1977 Месяц назад

      And your assessment?

  • @PObermanns
    @PObermanns 2 месяца назад +6

    Amazing story!

  • @delstanley1349
    @delstanley1349 2 месяца назад +35

    The song written in 1864/65 I guess it is safe to assume that he won't be demonetized by RUclips for copyright infringement🙂

    • @scottmckenna9164
      @scottmckenna9164 2 месяца назад +7

      On the highway driving and in politics….ASSUME NOTHING!

    • @genespell4340
      @genespell4340 2 месяца назад +4

      There is a good possibility that the song never got submitted for a copyright.

    • @delstanley1349
      @delstanley1349 2 месяца назад +4

      @@genespell4340 >It was meant only as a joke.

    • @hsiehkanusea
      @hsiehkanusea Месяц назад

      A lot of truth in jest. If an ASCAP/RIAA patent troll hears of it, I suspect they'll "reach out" to the channel.

    • @milkywayan2232
      @milkywayan2232 26 дней назад

      @delstnley1349. Oh. I thought jokes were supposed to be funny.

  • @paulapridy6804
    @paulapridy6804 2 месяца назад +5

    Good one. Uplifting 😊

  • @oldgeezerproductions
    @oldgeezerproductions 2 месяца назад +20

    Thanks for another winner Ron. Would it be possible to do some research into the song's intended melody?
    I would very much like to know the melody to which these lyrics would be sung to. As it stands, it is a wonderful and clever panegyric poem, but it would be more pleasurable and more easily memorized if it could be sung to a tune. I know that there were many such songs in those days (when people had to make their own music) that were sung to older Irish, Scottish, French, German and English Folk tunes, in addition to the very popular Steven Foster melodies of the day.

    • @RichardDCook
      @RichardDCook 2 месяца назад +3

      That's exactly what I was wondering about. Some of the most well-known songs we have today, such as The Star-Spangled Banner and Amazing Grace, were simply sets of words, poems, with no melody whatsoever. Both of these were married to various melodies as time went on, and at some point became associated with the tunes we associate with them today (To Anacreon in Heaven, and New Britain, respectively). What might be done, if the original tune can't be found, is to marry it to a popular tune of that time that suits the meter of the lyrics. It was done with the early 19th century sea-song The Baltimore, of which only the lyrics survived. Married to a strong shanty-tune it makes a wonderful song. (I read that later the original tune was discovered, as it happens not nearly as nice as the old shanty-tune!)

  • @thomasfort2051
    @thomasfort2051 27 дней назад +2

    I’m glad you are so happy and delirious about a city which was surrendered intact and days later was burned to the ground. A happy time for you, but not for the unfortunate citizens of the city. This was a true war crime and an outrage.

  • @user-st6vw1iw9v
    @user-st6vw1iw9v 5 дней назад

    Amazing I like it they all love America.

  • @RMAli23
    @RMAli23 2 месяца назад +40

    Nice song. Sherman must have been quite pleased.

    • @delstanley1349
      @delstanley1349 2 месяца назад +9

      And I always thought the phrase "Sherman's March to the Sea" was a phrase used by historians AFTER the war. So Sherman was a legend in song in his own time! So much so that a prisoner of war (confederate prisoner at that) knew of Sherman's movements and where he was going and had time to get pen AND paper and still have enough of cheery soul to write an ode or song.

    • @stevesnider4251
      @stevesnider4251 Месяц назад +3

      ​@delstanley1349. The author of the song was a Union soldier held prisoner in Charleston.

    • @delstanley1349
      @delstanley1349 Месяц назад +2

      @@stevesnider4251 >Yes, I knew that from watching the video, but I guess I was too clumsy in my wording. I should have said a "prisoner of the confederates" instead of a "confederate prisoner." I was using it in the sense of saying "Al Capone was a federal prisoner," meaning he was a prisoner of the feds, or "James Bonds is a British spy," meaning he is a spy of/for the British government, but I can easily see where the confusion comes in despite the context in the video. Thanx, my bad.

  • @tamer1773
    @tamer1773 2 месяца назад +4

    Always interesting. Especially the biographic details of the people involved.

  • @dmaxwell167
    @dmaxwell167 5 дней назад

    My Great-Grandfather marched with Indiana 97th under Sherman from TN to Atlanta to Columbia up to Washington DC. He marched in the Grand Parade turn came home to farm near Linton IN.

  • @fredferd965
    @fredferd965 2 месяца назад +10

    Considering modern times as they are today, and then hearing this, I fear that we have lost something, something very important and very wonderful along the way. What it is we will never know, and will never understand, unless we discover it again....

  • @rafehr1378
    @rafehr1378 2 месяца назад +9

    As a Nevadan. Nevada sent Silver, gold, and men to the North, to fight the South. How Nevada became a state in the United States.

    • @benevolencia4203
      @benevolencia4203 2 месяца назад +1

      🫡🇺🇸👍🏽

    • @NJMerlin
      @NJMerlin Месяц назад

      There was a “Bonanza” episode about that.

  • @captcardor
    @captcardor 2 месяца назад +5

    Very Interesting. All trained historians long to discover true to life moments of humanity like this. Great work!

  • @jameslemes8397
    @jameslemes8397 11 часов назад

    They information I gained here in from this story changes so much what was feed to us in school in the 1940-70's 😧
    Making Sherman a tyrannical Military General Burning his way through every encounter and city.
    This presents a compassionate side I had not attributed to him or his match ... Thank you
    Whereas History is often written by the victor, many times the scholars might have an axe to grind or mark to make. ... God Bless America ... May we all deserve the HUGE Sacrifice that Hundreds of Thousands of soldiers and innocent civilians gave to secure what we now enjoy without much afterthought or attention in our own growing problems. Amen

  • @rudydedogg6505
    @rudydedogg6505 2 месяца назад +34

    As a South Carolinian, I take umbrage with this story. So typical of "the victor writing the history". Sherman actually wrote that he told the mayor that no harm would come to the people of Columbia or the town? If so, he was a damned liar! History shows that Sherman exacted a particularly brutal treatment upon the town, burning most of it to the ground and leaving its citizens devoid of food and shelter. He did so deliberately to punish the capitol of South Carolina for being the first state to secede from the Union. And that nice little song? What a delightful description of the hell Sherman's troops brought to those they encountered along their storied march to the sea. Sherman said he would "make Georgia howl", remember? Well, the Georgians did and they were primarily women and children as their men were either dead, POWs or trying to return home. Crops were destroyed, homes were burned and though Sherman ordered that his men not engage in rape, thievery or other crimes, they did anyway and with very little reprimand. That you could tell this story with a smile and without a hint of an inclusion of the facts behind it leaves me speechless.

    • @stevebickley2498
      @stevebickley2498 2 месяца назад +9

      As an 8th generation south Carolinian. I 100% agree with you.

    • @redneckgaijin
      @redneckgaijin 2 месяца назад +15

      Shall we talk about what your ancestors were doing to black people in South Carolina for the prior 90 years and then discuss the injustice of Sherman's march again?

    • @scottwhitcher265
      @scottwhitcher265 2 месяца назад +18

      Sure, right after we duscuss the injustices committed by the black people that sold those black people to the northerners who controlled all the shipping, then how those northerners committed injustices to those same black people until they found that it was cheaper to commit injustices to Irish, Scottish and asian immigrants, so sold their remaining black people to southerners. Then we can discuss the injustices they committed against southerners by taxing southern exports and using the proceeds to fund northern infrastructure. We could go on for some time...
      War crimes are just that.

    • @redneckgaijin
      @redneckgaijin 2 месяца назад +8

      @@scottwhitcher265 And defense of slavery is also just that, no matter your whataboutism.

    • @charleshinesjr.2360
      @charleshinesjr.2360 2 месяца назад +6

      Shall we talk about what your ancestors were doing to black peoplle when the North dominated the "triangle trade" for 200+ years bringing hundreds of thousands of African slaves, not only to the States but to Brazil, Jamaica, and the British Antilles. It was the astute Yankee merchantmen who early on learned of the enormous profits to be made in the trade of Africans. In 1636, the "Desire", the first ship designed and built for the transport of African slaves was launced from the slipways of Marblehead, Mass.

  • @curtgomes
    @curtgomes 2 месяца назад +18

    Quite an episode. I would really loved to have heard the POW glee club sing this song. Thanks for doing this research…...

  • @victoriakidd-cromis1124
    @victoriakidd-cromis1124 Месяц назад +2

    This is the first time I've listtened to your program. Well done! I am distantly related to Champ Ferguson, who turned outlaw at the end of the war. If I remember correctly his father was a brother to my great great grandfather on my mother's side of the family. I am interested in the stories of the civil war. My mother's family, on both sides, were from Clinton county, KY. My dad's family were from Virginia, but to my knowledge did not serve on either side.

  • @caSClady
    @caSClady Месяц назад +3

    Being born in Iowa and raised in CA, I knew that my grandfather had in his heritage a grandfather who marched with Sherman down to the sea. It was a shock when our family moved to Lexington SC just across from Columbia. The people here are so lovely and we call it home. I worked for some years in Columbia and used to imagine what it was like for Grandfather Cook fighting there, especially as I crossed the bridge into the city. I marveled seeing the scars on the statehouse where cannon balls from my grandfather’s troop hit the marks. I was always proud that he had fought for the Union and to free the slaves. My heart swelled hearing your reading of the song. I can’t thank you enough for telling this remarkable story. I’ll be sharing this with my history loving son to show to his sons.

  • @danieljstark1625
    @danieljstark1625 2 месяца назад +5

    Fascinating!

  • @stephenburns3678
    @stephenburns3678 22 дня назад +1

    Thank you

  • @vinnolano
    @vinnolano Месяц назад +17

    I remember in Charleston when some somebody at a bar heard my northern accent he had to take a dig at me that his" great great great grandaddy kilt himself a yankee." I responded " cool, my parents emigrated from Europe. Thats got nothing to do with me."
    Great Story about Sherman acknowledging this man

    • @damkayaker
      @damkayaker 23 дня назад

      Well that hick rebel was lying because he added too many generations to his grand daddy. My great grandfather was born in 1844 and fought in the Civil War.

    • @scottw5315
      @scottw5315 20 дней назад +8

      I'm from Charleston. I'm sixty one and aside from schoolboy trash talk from half a century ago, no one today thinks much of that war and most of us know it was a costly mistake. The south did two things wrong in my opinion. They built an economy based on slavery. Then, rather than giving up an evil system when it was clear the world had moved on from such barbarity, they chose to fight to maintain it. Sadly, a tiny minority of wealthy landowners convinced mostly poor dirt farmers who didn't own slaves to do their fighting for them. They used the argument that it was their state right's that were at stake. That argument is still alive and well today. However, the key state right for them was to maintain the slavery institution. A testament to man's folly.

    • @-sensibleChris
      @-sensibleChris 17 дней назад

      ​@@scottw5315That's it in a nut shell. I grew uo in the south also and that is the truth. Some of us see it, others are still being duped by wealthy landowners into doing their bidding. Dinald Trump is the equivalent of those wealthy southern landowners that would do anything to keep their slave labor. Repu license cling to their anti labor core beliefs that are leftover from the Civil War when Today's Republicans were then Southern Democrats.

    • @mandoguy726
      @mandoguy726 15 дней назад

      ​@@-sensibleChris You should remember the government tyranny that was pushed on the Southern states. The tyrants in Washington DC want you to forget. That's how they operate. And you really have a glaring misunderstanding of what a States Rights president is.

    • @akaJackLugar
      @akaJackLugar 12 дней назад

      South Carolina was the biggest pain in the a** during the war

  • @MBSLC
    @MBSLC 2 месяца назад +19

    "With Fire and Sword" and "Switzerland and the Swiss" were authored by S.H.M. Byers. Thanks for the great information. These books are available on Amazon.

  • @temijinkahn511
    @temijinkahn511 2 месяца назад +2

    Excellent! Earned a sub!

  • @davidlee8551
    @davidlee8551 2 месяца назад +7

    “ A song from the American Civil War. In September 1864 General Sherman advanced from Chattanooga to Atlanta and then cut a swath of desolation through central Georgia to Savannah. After reaching his objective on the Georgia coast in December, he turned North, where hundreds of ragged Federal soldiers in Charleston Jail were eagerly awaiting their freedom. One of them, Lieutenant S. H. M. Byers, composed this song. Although he wrote a tune, it was more frequently sung to the Irish melody of "Rosin the Beau". The song became a big hit in the North, appearing in thousands of copies of song sheets and songbooks.”
    More at:
    ruclips.net/video/9dvvUnTJh4g/видео.html&pp=ygUhU29uZyAtIFNoZXJtYW4ncyBtYXJjaCB0byB0aGUgc2Vh

  • @ontherocks23
    @ontherocks23 Месяц назад +4

    FWIW, a slightly different account of the out-of-control fires in Columbia was that evacuating Confederate military leaders advised city leaders to destroy all liquor supplies in advance of the arrival of occupying Union forces. Apparently, the city leaders failed to do this and later, drunken Union soldiers, bent on punishing South Carolina for starting the war, set fire to cotton bales, which then spread to numerous buildings. Apparently, as the city had surrendered, the burning of Columbia was not intentional.
    Note: this account was in a book - read decades ago - about the closing months of the war. (The author and title escape my memory, at the moment.) Apparently, the Union soldiers wanted to advance on and burn Charleston in revenge, but the Union forces bypassed Charleston to proceed north towards Richmond, VA.

    • @alancourtney4000
      @alancourtney4000 Месяц назад +2

      I read another account put together by journals of the citizens of Columbia that substantiate your statements. While WTS did not sanction or order the atrocities committed by his troops, the fact remains that they occurred and were committed by troops that fell in with his forces as they took the war to the south in order to shorten the war. Most of the carnage that occurred in Columbia was instigated by drunken troops from the Ohio brigades as was documented by many of the private journals. The southern troops that were on duty in Columbia had departed weeks before to shore up the defense of Charlotte where the Confederates thought that he would go next. He went to Fayetteville, instead. Ohio troops were less than humane to the former slaves in Columbia as was reported in the journals. I wasn't there so I can neither confirm nor deny the veracity of these journals. I can, however, agree that history is written or fabricated by the victors. As a disclaimer, and as I understand, WTS was a devout man and was loyal to his troops. Unfortunately some of the soldiers that fell in with his march to the sea were not as devout nor were they as humane.

  • @CosmasNDamian
    @CosmasNDamian 2 месяца назад +1

    Absolutely brilliant.

  • @Gravitycreatedlife
    @Gravitycreatedlife Месяц назад +12

    Sherman's March to the Sea was an American Civil War campaign lasting from November 15 to December 21, 1864, in which Union Major General William Tecumseh Sherman led troops through the Confederate state of Georgia, pillaging the countryside and destroying both military outposts and civilian properties.

    • @jamescook7713
      @jamescook7713 Месяц назад +6

      Northern war criminals, NOT soldiers.

    • @chilidogg2047
      @chilidogg2047 Месяц назад

      ​@jamescook7713 , Yes, intentionally targeting and attacking civilians is a war crime. A couple years ago, I read a well-documented book about war crimes against the South, both black and white people. It matters not what you think of the cause of either side, they are facts. Of course, war itself is a crime.

    • @stevesnider4251
      @stevesnider4251 Месяц назад +3

      ​@@jamescook7713......said the American taitors.

    • @yuckyool
      @yuckyool Месяц назад

      ​@@keithmarlowe5569Kennesaw Mountain?

    • @yuckyool
      @yuckyool Месяц назад +1

      @@keithmarlowe5569 Reason I enjoy history --- always more facts and interpretations being considered. So much I don't know. Was at Chattanooga and Vicksburg recently.

  • @paulhoward6158
    @paulhoward6158 2 месяца назад +7

    I love all the comments from the defenders of the Lost Cause.
    I lived in Columbia for a time several years ago. One of the questions I frequently encountered was "So who are your people", meaning where did I come from and what was my background. It came across not as a friendly inquiry a type of value judgment. I usually explained that I came Colorado via Iowa.
    My grandfather was from upstate New York. His father was too young but six of his uncles fought in is Civil War for the Union. One of them died at Fredericksburg.
    Eventually I tired of the "who are your people" question and finally chose to answer by telling them that my people were the ones that kicked your butts in the Civil War. That usually brought a quick end to the inquiries.

    • @NopiusMaximus
      @NopiusMaximus 2 месяца назад +3

      We kicked your butt pretty well until we were outproduced,outnumbered and blockaded.
      Proud Columbia native !

    • @RobertShannon-cu7iz
      @RobertShannon-cu7iz 2 месяца назад +3

      ​@@NopiusMaximusOnly kicked butt because the weak leadership of the North initially that 3 times could have ended the war but didn't pursue the advantage. It wasn't until Lincoln finally removed the weak and indecisive and brought in true equal leadership that the advantage held to end the war. The South had numerous chances to industrialize but the power of the slave holders kept all but a few cities focused on agrarian society. Atlanta was probably the only truly industrialized city. Many had industry but Atlanta went at it with gusto. That's why Sherman's army razed the place. Since Georgia and Virginia were the wealthiest states in the confederacy they became the targets to destroy to weaken the resolve of the rebellion.

  • @2ezee2011
    @2ezee2011 2 месяца назад +4

    loved that !

  • @davidaltschuler9687
    @davidaltschuler9687 2 месяца назад +6

    "Here ARE the words..."

  • @winnon992
    @winnon992 2 месяца назад +19

    The Geneva Convention had just been formed in the early 1860’s. in Europe. I’ve read If it had had a few more years Sherman would have probably been one of the first prosecuted under their laws. He burned and allowed his troops to pillage from the citizens all across the Southeast. Civilian’s starved because of his actions.
    Remember, The winner writes the History Books. They omit these parts.

    • @alanlight7740
      @alanlight7740 2 месяца назад +1

      Yes, though there had been widely recognized laws of war in Europe and America for centuries before Sherman came along. It was British violations of these laws in South Carolina during the Revolution which were largely responsible for the backlash which ultimately secured independence for all the united States.
      As they left Columbia the Union troops burned the city to the ground, leaving all - black and white - destitute and homeless.

    • @GeorgeIngersoll-cj9ok
      @GeorgeIngersoll-cj9ok 2 месяца назад +1

      Sherman should have been a model soldier, like Anderson and Quantrel. Rite.??

    • @winnon992
      @winnon992 2 месяца назад +1

      @@GeorgeIngersoll-cj9ok ALot if that’s who got to tell the story.
      I know it was a movie but Outlaw Josie Wales can tell you a lot. It’s probably more factual than what the powers to be have printed in their books.
      I wonder what you’d be reading if the Nazis had won WW2 ?

    • @alanlight7740
      @alanlight7740 2 месяца назад +5

      @@GeorgeIngersoll-cj9ok - Quantrill was reacting to Union soldiers killing non-combatants including women. Even so the Confederate government cut ties to him because of his war crimes.
      By contrast, Lincoln repeatedly promoted officers who committed war crimes against civilians.

    • @GeorgeIngersoll-cj9ok
      @GeorgeIngersoll-cj9ok 2 месяца назад

      @@alanlight7740 must be a Democrat, rewriting history again

  • @junefields1512
    @junefields1512 Месяц назад +1

    Awesome history

  • @rickvia8435
    @rickvia8435 2 месяца назад +3

    Very impressive...

  • @AsaTrenchard1865
    @AsaTrenchard1865 Месяц назад +2

    The commandant of Andersonville was a Swiss guy named Wirtz.

    • @chrism3872
      @chrism3872 Месяц назад +2

      He was also hanged as a war criminal after the war...

  • @kenroberts2556
    @kenroberts2556 2 месяца назад +8

    wow, this should be should not be forgotten ,powerfull words. thank you

  • @georgeparris8293
    @georgeparris8293 2 месяца назад +6

    why don't you read the part of his memior where he rescued a lady who had a book signed by Sherman....Sherman could have recovered all the men at Andersonville while he was chilling in Atlanta...but he did not because they would slow him down.....

  • @mitchellhawkes22
    @mitchellhawkes22 2 месяца назад +4

    Nice Civil War interlude, with a musical side story. We're so glad you didn't try to sing it, Ron.
    You've got a good, sincere, gravelly voice for documentary. We appreciate what you bring.
    But music is a refined and different discipline.
    Leave it to the inmates. Whose fans were the Southern Belles.

  • @user-gf3op7kr1p
    @user-gf3op7kr1p 23 дня назад +3

    The story is excellent but I am alarmed at the atrocious misspelling of several key words. There is a casual, if not cavalier air of ignorance and neglect that reflects a dark downturn in our country's education in the last 25 or so years. We used to have, and maintained a reading and comprehension level in this country on par with an eighth grade education level. But it is so sad to see how much lower that reading and comprehension level is now. The transcript has several key words that are so butchered that it destroys the story. For example: in lieu of the word "bales," which is referring to cotton bales, it reads "bells" which is an instrument for a musical note. Then there's the word "Lee," which being capitalized refers to some one's name and should have read, "lea" which in this case would refers to a grassy open area or field. This is only the tip of the iceberg of social media spelling. Our education system has dumbed down several generations and it needs to be overhauled and returned to it's former standards.

  • @poisonpawn6452
    @poisonpawn6452 2 месяца назад +9

    "Uncle Billy" has been my hero all my life.

    • @thomasfort2051
      @thomasfort2051 Месяц назад

      Then you are an admirer of a criminal.

    • @thomasfort2051
      @thomasfort2051 27 дней назад

      I guess you idealize a psychopath and an arsonist.

    • @poisonpawn6452
      @poisonpawn6452 26 дней назад

      @thomasfort2051 His acts after the war disprove the psychopath theory. He lived and died a hero against an enemy of...I got censored for saying it last time...but it starts with a "T" and rhymes with "Craters."

    • @thomasfort2051
      @thomasfort2051 26 дней назад

      @@poisonpawn6452
      The T word is often thrown around by people who don’t understand anything about the formation of this country and the constitution.
      I suggest l that you read the book “North over South “ by Mary-Susan Grant to educate yourself.
      The Southerners were no different than the original Rebels of 1776.
      Unless you think that “Might makes Right” you would agree.
      There is a historical marker on River Drive in Columbia where the mayor met Sherman outside of the city and surrendered the city intact, undefended and unburned.
      The subsequent attack was on women, children, and old men.
      Columbia burned as did other cities and private residences all across the South.
      If you approve of that, then you ought to look inward to see what kind of person you are.

  • @CHAZAGE
    @CHAZAGE 2 месяца назад +5

    Well, all I can say, that Capt Rhett Butler, at Tara, warned the South about what was to come! They didn't listen!🤪

  • @tyjameson7404
    @tyjameson7404 2 месяца назад +4

    Epic lyrics ❤️😘🐐🎠🌙

  • @lannyfaulkner6697
    @lannyfaulkner6697 2 месяца назад +7

    Great! Thanks for this!

  • @anotheryoutubechannel4809
    @anotheryoutubechannel4809 15 дней назад

    Thank you!

  • @harrygr218
    @harrygr218 2 месяца назад +7

    wonderful bits of history

  • @FuzzyWuzzy75
    @FuzzyWuzzy75 Месяц назад +2

    I thought for certain Ron would SING the song Luciano Pavarotti or Placido Domingo style ha ha!😂

    • @lifeonthecivilwarresearchtrail
      @lifeonthecivilwarresearchtrail  Месяц назад +1

      You don't want me to sing. :)

    • @FuzzyWuzzy75
      @FuzzyWuzzy75 Месяц назад +1

      @@lifeonthecivilwarresearchtrail I had a gut feeling you'd say that... I will chalk it up to modesty!

  • @stevekohl5351
    @stevekohl5351 2 месяца назад +5

    amadeususawater Yes we are! I am surprised that an Iowa Union soldier was a POW in South Carolina. I thought Iowa soldiers mainly served in the west.

    • @stanleyshannon4408
      @stanleyshannon4408 2 месяца назад +4

      Sherman was leading a western army.

    • @kenvandevoort7820
      @kenvandevoort7820 Месяц назад

      My piano teacher's father-in-law from Iowa was a POW at Andersonville.

  • @philipbaity7083
    @philipbaity7083 Месяц назад +4

    War is Hell!

  • @delstanley1349
    @delstanley1349 2 месяца назад +5

    If anyone wants to hear the song's melody accompanied by voice and acoustic guitar there is a RUclipsr --- raymondcrooke video titled "Sherman's March to the Sea (by SHM Byers)" you can check out.

  • @katherinecompton6591
    @katherinecompton6591 Месяц назад

    Thank you, just found and subdcribed.

  • @custardflan
    @custardflan 2 месяца назад +1

    My great grandfather's brothers unit was the 3rd Wwisconsin and was therw.

  • @scallgin
    @scallgin 2 месяца назад +19

    History is always written through the eyes of the victors. Sherman, remembered in the South as a villainous conqueror, was doing the business of the Union’s leadership. Sadly, it has always been so, those who set in motion the destruction of property and loss of life are too “civilized” to contemplate the harsh realities of conquest/pacification.

    • @alancoe1002
      @alancoe1002 2 месяца назад +4

      The Southerners have written a great many histories of the War, some of them true.

    • @alanlight7740
      @alanlight7740 2 месяца назад +7

      Well, after promising the mayor that Union troops intended no harm to the citizens of the town, they _did_ burn it all down. But not until it was of no further use to them.
      But this was in line with Sherman's stated desire to exterminate the southern people, just as he wished to exterminate Indians - and of course that was essentially the business of the Union's leadership.

    • @jcsmith9412
      @jcsmith9412 2 месяца назад +2

      Like Abe Lincoln and his ilk?

    • @dianenecaise1776
      @dianenecaise1776 2 месяца назад +5

      ​@@alanlight7740 Being a Southerner, I was not a fan of Sherman, I just recently learned of his exploits concerning the American Indians. He truly was not an honorable man.

    • @oswaldoramosferrusola5235
      @oswaldoramosferrusola5235 2 месяца назад +4

      Make no mistake, had Sherman had nukes available, he would have used against Dixie. He was a pioneer and an advocate of total war.

  • @brianloughnane781
    @brianloughnane781 2 месяца назад +9

    Amazing

  • @Austin8thGenTexan
    @Austin8thGenTexan Месяц назад

    A great story! In the US Army during the Civil War, an adjutant was most likely a captain.

  • @ukulelemikeleii
    @ukulelemikeleii 2 месяца назад +3

    And now for my third and final comment: what were the circumstances behind Byers capture? Was he taken prisoner during the Battles of Atlanta, or during the March to the Sea?

    • @lifeonthecivilwarresearchtrail
      @lifeonthecivilwarresearchtrail  2 месяца назад +7

      Byers and about 80 others from his regiment were captured at the November 1863 Battle of Missionary Ridge.

  • @PaulTamm
    @PaulTamm 2 месяца назад +3

    I always like your podcasts. This one was especially fun.

  • @NoBody-xg1wg
    @NoBody-xg1wg Месяц назад

    My maternal grandmother was a niece of Col. Nelson A. Miles.

  • @leswilliamson3587
    @leswilliamson3587 Месяц назад

    Thanks

  • @scottmorse1798
    @scottmorse1798 21 день назад

    sure would be cool to hear the song sung!

  • @gillygil8747
    @gillygil8747 Месяц назад +1

    Good ol' Uncle Billy!