Civil War 125th "Surrender at Appomattox" - Re-enacting Retro 1990

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • April 9, 1865 - 155 years ago… Part 2 of 2.
    Re-enacting Retro - the well-produced climax 125th Anniversary Re-enactment video first released after the April 1990 125th Anniversary Re-enactment. Classic Images shot video footage (on Beta SP and other analog formats popular at the time) - Great staged recreations shot on the actual battlefield.
    We hope you enjoy. This is another in a series of postings on our RUclips channel of a cool New series of Old videos -- featured only on here -- taken from a personal collection of re-enacting films and videos from the 1980s that can't be found anywhere else, or else we've tried to find them for nostalgia's sake, but did our own digging and presenting the results of our treasure hunt here. Some are taken from VHS originals or DVD transfers from those VHS copies.
    Some Classic Re-enacting videos are already searchable on RUclips, but we wanted to start a new series of some rarely or never before seen classics that either only aired once or where short lived and available only to a select few at the time. We hope you enjoy. These programs presented in this RE-ENACTING RETRO series are presented for the enjoyment of all and we don't claim them for ourselves.
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Комментарии • 289

  • @internetstrangerstrangerofweb
    @internetstrangerstrangerofweb 2 года назад +22

    Fascinating event. Perhaps the “stiff” acting, as some here point out, seems more natural and makes it even more fascinating. It better accentuates the fact that away from the uniforms and fame, every man here is just that. A man, and the situation is extremely momentous for both sides, so they’re speaking carefully!

  • @stever4181
    @stever4181 4 года назад +33

    I was there at this filming on the Union side, aside from the fact that many Rebs were a little rotund their uniforms were tattered, torn and worn out. Some marched barefoot and there were genuine tears from their faces. It was a solemn and respectful occasion 125 years later.

    • @JCmacDavid
      @JCmacDavid 3 года назад +7

      I was there on the Confederate side and I can tell you the tears were real. I am sure you know all I'm going to say but for those who may read this, it is for them. Many of the Confederate units cut their battleflags up and surrendered only the flagpole. Most of these flags were made for the 125th Manassas and carried throughout the 125th events until the surrender ceremony. I still have my piece of the battleflag and it was heart wrenching to see a bunch of grown men in tears as they cut the flag in pieces. I can only image how bad it was for the men who actually fought under those banners. I have nothing but praise for the Union side that day for their behavior when we marched down that road.

    • @stever4181
      @stever4181 3 года назад +4

      @@JCmacDavid Brother in arms, I to have the greatest respect for the Confederates. We had heard on the day that many regiments tore up their flags. It did move us.
      I started re-enacting in 1983. The Civil War has always been a part of my life. My grandpa was in WW1 until Aug 1919. His father was in the 144th NY Volunteers and later in 1st NY Veterans Cav. My Grandpa had his saber. As a young boy to see this and handle it was special.
      During my time re-enacting we saw a swell in the ranks every time a Civil War film was shown. Only about 1 in 10 would remain. To the rest, it was just a fancy. To people like you and me, it is a part of our lives.
      I now live in England and yet I still have all my uniforms and kit both Infantry and Cavalry. My saddle was made in the 1870s. I always wear my slouch hat with Chaplin's badge and hat cord. My photo you see was taken in England with my wife. The unit I belonged to in Minnesota was the 1st Regiment of Minnesota Company A

    • @godfreybarton7654
      @godfreybarton7654 3 года назад +2

      we came over from UK and were with the 20th Maine

    • @stever4181
      @stever4181 3 года назад +2

      @@godfreybarton7654 Wow! That was some commitment! I hope everyone received you well.

    • @godfreybarton7654
      @godfreybarton7654 3 года назад +2

      @@stever4181 hi yes well looked after by everyone.

  • @metalrocker627
    @metalrocker627 Год назад +11

    Grant and Lee both taught us two very valuable lessons here. Be Dignified in Defeat and be Gracious in Victory.

    • @jamesmiller5331
      @jamesmiller5331 Год назад +2

      Move toward healing asap. No vengeance, you've already torn each other apart.
      We have to share this country.

    • @crawford4140
      @crawford4140 Год назад

      When we face the Russians and Chinese we need to do the same thing once they surrender just like what happened at Appomattox

    • @jmitterii2
      @jmitterii2 Год назад +1

      And when you done screwed up, and have been shown the errors of your ways, you learn from them. And accept your wrongness and embrace the correction.

    • @mattjones8254
      @mattjones8254 10 месяцев назад

      @@jamesmiller5331 That's why Lincoln instructed Grant " Let these men go home".... He wanted it to stop too.... Without a doubt he did....

  • @snappy452
    @snappy452 3 года назад +43

    The acting was....a bit stiff in the beginning, but the story was well told and powerful. A beautiful piece of historical cinema.

    • @Unknown_Ooh
      @Unknown_Ooh 2 года назад

      Lol have you been to Appomattox? I wouldn't consider anyone there born to act. It's a sleepy little town with an uneducated population.

  • @wendellwilson7444
    @wendellwilson7444 3 года назад +35

    An uncivilized war, and yet, so civilized and dignified at the end. May We, the People, never have to witness such carnage from, or for our fellow Americans. Ever again ......

    • @brianwalsh1401
      @brianwalsh1401 Год назад

      Yet we have a certain segment of our society who throw's the use of the term civil war around like nothing and seems to hope for it because there wannabe dictator lost the 2020 election. Insanity.

    • @richardross119
      @richardross119 Год назад +3

      May the federal government never overstep their bounds.
      This was exactly what the constitution was written for.

    • @davidlawrence3645
      @davidlawrence3645 Год назад +2

      ​@@richardross119Exactly how did the federal government overstep its bounds? Do you have the slightest idea what the Confederacy was fighting for, and what it was that triggered 11 of the 15 southern states to secede?

    • @richardross119
      @richardross119 Год назад

      @davidlawrence3645 it must be awesome being so superior to everyone around you. Do you have to wrap a towel around your ears at night so all that knowledge doesn't roll out and stain your pillow?

    • @davidlawrence3645
      @davidlawrence3645 Год назад +2

      @@richardross119 Try to focus Richard: How did the Federal government overstep its bounds prior to the start of the Civil War? Focus.

  • @wythetrumpet6419
    @wythetrumpet6419 3 года назад +20

    Thank you for this outstanding video. May we always learn from history and may it never be forgotten.

    • @LionHeartFilmWorks
      @LionHeartFilmWorks  3 года назад +3

      Thanks for visiting the channel and your comment on this presentation. Help us spread the word!

    • @farooq30th
      @farooq30th Год назад +1

      and repeated

  • @zach7193
    @zach7193 4 года назад +24

    This is something. It is a moment in history.

    • @Remmet1803
      @Remmet1803 4 года назад +1

      Just like that as Tommy cooper would say

    • @rawfoodwriter
      @rawfoodwriter 2 года назад

      Yea. Now we are all slaves

  • @walterbatch5296
    @walterbatch5296 4 года назад +33

    Another splendid piece of history again.Please keep them coming.

  • @waynesigmon5628
    @waynesigmon5628 4 года назад +12

    I will never forget you my Southern Brothers my great-great-grandfather was wounded at the Battle of Chancellorsville May 2nd 1863 never forget where you're from Southern Brothers

  • @StephenLyons-tl8ie
    @StephenLyons-tl8ie Год назад +2

    A very moving, well made documentary.

  • @thejimshow7170
    @thejimshow7170 10 месяцев назад +3

    Cool! Saw myself at 26:56! Man, that was a long time ago!

  • @dean4559
    @dean4559 2 года назад +3

    The very stiff acting/speaking of their script lines aside, this was really compelling in its detail of exacty what happened. thank you.

  • @markross2124
    @markross2124 3 года назад +7

    The war actually ended when Johnston surrendered to Sherman on April 24th. Also Lincoln was assassinated one week later ending all hopes for an amiable reconstruction.

  • @donsena2013
    @donsena2013 2 года назад +6

    I loved the dialogue, as reenacted in its formal style of the time, by Grant and Lee. It expressed a certain character of American English that has perhaps been totally lost. Even the current norm of standard American English is often flouted and mindlessly ignored,

  • @moonmunster
    @moonmunster 4 года назад +12

    Who knew General Meade could move that fast and show so much emotion?

    • @pendragonU
      @pendragonU 2 года назад +1

      he had been doing so from one battlefield to the next in the last 2 years but I get the insinuation

    • @bradleykeefer8896
      @bradleykeefer8896 Год назад +1

      Who knew Tom Downes, who played Meade, could ride a horse at a gallup! I was there for both Sayler's Creek and Appomattox. It was the end of my first full year of reenacting with the 8th Ohio in the National Regiment. I am still at it, though unauthentically long of tooth for sure!

  • @SandfordSmythe
    @SandfordSmythe 3 года назад +10

    Later on there was a Victory Parade in Washington for the Union Army to pass by and be honored. The troops were angry about this. They just wanted to return home as soon as possible.

    • @rawfoodwriter
      @rawfoodwriter 2 года назад

      They had to have the dog and pony show! The elites get their rocks off to this. Proof that the army was a tool for rich folks to gawk over and thump their chests.

    • @SandfordSmythe
      @SandfordSmythe 2 года назад +3

      @@rawfoodwriter My experience that it is a chance for the common folk to give their thanks, and to share being proud of them. I don't see the cause for the Civil War as being a money making endeavor for the capitalists, although they certainly did make huge profits. That the troops just wanted to go home showed GI's just being totally burnt out by what they went through. Need I tell you that you are walking on thin ice here?

    • @edthacow
      @edthacow 2 года назад +1

      In my experience as someone that has come home from war the parade stuff is something most soldiers don't like but realize it's part of the deal. Obviously anyone would rather go home.

  • @leeroy4980
    @leeroy4980 Год назад +1

    Loving the ‘bald wig’ in the background 😂😂

  • @edthacow
    @edthacow 2 года назад +1

    I have always held Lee in high regard. As I get older this video reminded me that he was old. Old for the time and old for a soldier. He was an old man. Some kind of quote said be weary of an old man in a profession meant for young. Lee was that old man. A professional soldier his whole life.

    • @davidlawrence3645
      @davidlawrence3645 Год назад

      A traitor, a brutal slave owner who broke up slave families and employed use of the lash. He was responsible for the killing of more soldiers of the United States than any enemy leader in history. He was the only Virginian among 8 Virginians who held the rank of Colonel to have turned his back on his oath and his country and joined the rebellion.

  • @reelsoffortuneslotsplay4267
    @reelsoffortuneslotsplay4267 4 года назад +8

    I see Brian Pohanka in the background... He was a great historian

  • @robmiah4501
    @robmiah4501 4 года назад +7

    Thank you please post more videos love American civil war history

  • @SpaghettiFarts
    @SpaghettiFarts 4 года назад +5

    I like the fake bald cap

  • @sqike001ton
    @sqike001ton 2 месяца назад

    there is much to be said that Chamberlin and his small act of kindness to show honor to the confederates. the soldiers remembered that and helped in the early days for rebuilding

  • @martel732
    @martel732 3 месяца назад

    I can't believe Traveler made it through the entire war. He must've been exhausted, just like Lee.

    • @sqike001ton
      @sqike001ton 2 месяца назад

      I believe traveler out lived lee

  • @dadsongs
    @dadsongs Год назад

    This is incredibly well done. Thank you.

  • @jameshetu6885
    @jameshetu6885 3 года назад +13

    For a starving army with no rations to feed itself... there sure are a lot of chubby Confederates.

    • @rawfoodwriter
      @rawfoodwriter 2 года назад +4

      They did not look like that in real life. If you saw them in the flesh their appearance would likely startle and intimidate you and me.

  • @el_spicerbeasto
    @el_spicerbeasto Год назад +1

    It still blows my that the first bsttle fought in the front of the homeowner who then moved where it ended.

  • @joemasello519
    @joemasello519 4 года назад +3

    I love civil war documentaries, photographs, learning new facts and especially quotes from personal letters and battlefield journals.
    @ 8:35 ...I used to own one just like it as a kid. Used it for tricker treating and quickly found out it wasn't allowed during school session hours but it was a big hit on the school bus.

  • @FlyingTooFast
    @FlyingTooFast 3 года назад +5

    I wish we heard more of Johnston's surrender to Sherman....
    I mean I love hearing about appomattox, but I wish there was more about Johnston's surrender to Sherman

    • @pendragonU
      @pendragonU 2 года назад

      Lee and Grant had made it already for them and on which terms, they were meeting mainly to follow and proceed on that and the difficulties on the ground given there were military units widespread across 3 more states past them and as far as Texas, some units posted managing logistics places as telegraphs or Post lines, military hospitals and train depos, awaiting to be relieved by Civilians under Federal officers supervision. Many Southern officers could not just get discharged and on the way back home. So if it took weeks for many of their men in the ranks to get back home, the officers would have to remain helping the Federal officers to account for the whole release, exchange of Military Forts and properties and relieve units of the rest of dependencies (however there were many desertions that would not await) and restitute to civilians local or state management assets the Army had commissioned or required. Their adjutants and staff would keep working on the details, but their meeting had the urgency to quench any units temptations to go rogue and pretend not receiving orders and I guess they stressed on being effective the fastest the could, showmanship as executive commanders.

    • @travisbayles870
      @travisbayles870 Год назад

      Upon learning about Lee's surrender Confederate General Joseph Johnston opened negotiations with Union General William T Sherman in North Carolina to not only surrender his army but to bring hostilities to a close Sherman tried to make the terms of surrender the same that Grant gave Lee but he ran into opposition from Washington DC following Lincolns assassination Finally on April 26th 1865 Johnston surrendered He also commanded troops in South Carolina Georgia and Florida those were also included in the agreement making Johnstons capitulation the largest Confederate surrender of the war

  • @carmenopramolla5262
    @carmenopramolla5262 4 года назад +3

    'Have been to the Appomattox house recreation and it is worth a visit. A comment of Grant by on the character of Confederate officers who had attended West Point has always struck me as a good measure of the man. His comment was about the oath a plebe took to always defend their country the USA. Grant said that he was true to the oath and they were not.

  • @arctictimberwolf
    @arctictimberwolf 3 года назад +3

    22:14 Looks like the Wisconsin State Flag^!!^
    My Grandpa was with the Fighting Fifth and he was at Appomattox Court House.
    A few years later he went back to the Fatherland were he was born and fought in the 7 Weeks War with Count von Moltke.

    • @horrorfan1455
      @horrorfan1455 3 года назад +1

      thanks for sharing am glad you’re grandpa was part of a truly historic moment

    • @arctictimberwolf
      @arctictimberwolf 3 года назад

      @@horrorfan1455 , O, I was there and It was a Slaughter. When you see Me Reign in Blood and Utterly Destroy all those which oppose Me and Oppress the Weak and Needy, be not shaken nor surprised and you will know My Judgment is Faithful & True.
      Therefore prepare your heart that when the Destroyer come I shall pass over thee.
      Psalms 144:1

  • @robertferguson533
    @robertferguson533 7 месяцев назад

    Damn. That was well done. Thank you

  • @barneyporter6138
    @barneyporter6138 3 месяца назад

    Very well done but very sad and happy at the same time

  • @nelsonnoname001
    @nelsonnoname001 3 года назад +4

    The fact that Lee did not surrender his sword to Grant on his own volition and military protocol is disrespectful and makes me think of him in a different light

    • @davehough7139
      @davehough7139 Год назад

      Wasn't it Joshua Chamberlain who accepted his sword?

    • @davidlawrence3645
      @davidlawrence3645 Год назад

      What other light is there in which to view Lee? He was a traitor who fought to establish a slave owning republic.

    • @jameshepburn4631
      @jameshepburn4631 9 месяцев назад +1

      Some of the books that go into detail say Lee offered his sword, Grant wouldn’t take it. Other books say Lee never offered it and no one mentioned the sword. Neither Grant nor anyone else ever asked for it. One of history’s little mysteries. This re-enactment correctly shows Lee leaving the McLean house wearing his sword. In any case, Lee’s descendants donated the sword and scabbard and Lee’s dress uniform to the Museum of the Confederacy in Appomattox where it is to this day.

    • @nelsonnoname001
      @nelsonnoname001 9 месяцев назад

      @@jameshepburn4631 Adding to the mystery - I had also heard Custer was late, and locked out of the meeting, waiting on the porch until it was over (which they said here* Sorry! been a long time since I saw this video!), and supposedly, after seeing he still was in possession of it, he took the sword as Lee was about to depart - I don't believe this, the idea of Custer confronting Lee after he surrendered (let alone AT ALL!) and with other major generals and staff around... could only imagine what Grant would do to him alone! Haha

  • @undsetmarai7116
    @undsetmarai7116 2 года назад +3

    Grant is like: Bitch now what?

  • @johnnowakowski4062
    @johnnowakowski4062 Год назад +1

    A solemn, joyous and sad day...

    • @jmitterii2
      @jmitterii2 Год назад

      Not for those whose recent ancestry were slaves... only joyous. With obvious apprehension.

    • @RRM13
      @RRM13 4 месяца назад

      ​@@jmitterii2 Blah-blah-blah... STOP the victimization, once and for all.

  • @ifcdirector
    @ifcdirector Год назад

    I was in this event. I asked one of the Union reenactors if he had anything for a starving rebel. He reached in his haversack and said "Sure. Have a potato!" lol

  • @Willysmb44
    @Willysmb44 2 года назад +1

    I've known a few people who have taken part at re-enactments of this, and all told me it was very sad and subdued, for everyone. I'm told that many in blue or grey were crying

  • @jason60chev
    @jason60chev 4 года назад +6

    At time stamp 19:32, I am at the rear of the unit appearing at the center of the frame.....The Stonewall Brigade.

  • @jamesrichardson3322
    @jamesrichardson3322 2 года назад

    This ending score on the he credits made this more sad and heartbreaking, because you think of we have loss and what we gain.
    We must ever repeat this history!! The American Civil War was sad and extremely tragic, 750, 000 lives were lost during the war. Whole generation of men and young men who are dead and gone forever. We must ever forget them, and their personal sacrifice for God and Country.

  • @vivians9392
    @vivians9392 2 года назад +2

    My biggest complaint about the reenactment is that most of the actors are way too fat! A sign of our time, not theirs...

  • @TheJames1745
    @TheJames1745 4 года назад +4

    I'm a NY Yankee but the SOUTH SHALL RISE AGAIN.
    It already is, but this time around the SOUTH IS EVERYWHERE.

  • @woonfaseng8737
    @woonfaseng8737 3 года назад +3

    napoleon also love to wear a Colonel's rank and uniform

  • @leonedethebes
    @leonedethebes 2 месяца назад +2

    Lomg live general Grant

  • @lazysob2328
    @lazysob2328 3 года назад +4

    No doubt Lee was trying to show Grant up, but Grant actually bettered Lee again by not returning his insult by saying , “ maybe you’ll remember this face after today!”

    • @joshlight6892
      @joshlight6892 Год назад +3

      I highly doubt Lee meant that as an insult. He was a gentleman through and through I think he was merely telling the truth that he couldn't remember Grant. But even if he hadn't been given the circumstances he was trying to get the best possible result out of this surrender for his men and for the South its unlikely he would be purposely disrespectful like that. In fact after the war he praised Grant for his generous terms. And Grant for his part was trying to make sure he ended the war with this meeting. Though the Confederate Army was all but licked as a conventional army, they had more than enough men left to carry out guerilla warfare from the hills against Union troops and make their lives hell for years, and some Confederates were in favor of that. Lee didn't want that however, because it would be little more than vengeance and would not achieve the goal of southern independence. He thought more of his men than to make them merely be fugitive terrorists in their own land so the best he could do for them was try to get them a fair deal. Grant knew this too, which is why he had to be tactful to end the war, neither man wanted that.

  • @BigJeep00
    @BigJeep00 4 года назад +2

    It's only Half Time.🤠

    • @BigJeep00
      @BigJeep00 4 года назад +2

      @Pee Tee Hi I'm Vince, Nothing you can say will Ever change my knowledge of True History.

  • @Remmet1803
    @Remmet1803 4 года назад +1

    Thanks

  • @waynesigmon5628
    @waynesigmon5628 4 года назад +6

    My great-great-grandfather served with 12th North Carolina he was present at Appomattox Court House during the surrender he served with Stonewall Jackson and wounded at the Battle of Chancellorsville May 2nd 1863 return to service January 1864 I am proud of him and I wish wished it would have turned out different for our great country CSA forever

    • @ikant312
      @ikant312 4 года назад

      Wayne Sigmon you never had a country- you lost. You couldn’t have won because the almighty God himself was against you.

    • @ikant312
      @ikant312 3 года назад

      @CipiRipi00 Not really. As Shelby Foote once noted- the North fought the civil war with one arm behind its back. The South was never going to win.

    • @ikant312
      @ikant312 3 года назад

      @CipiRipi00 no, they weren’t close at all. Near the end of the war, the south’s troops had a saying- “if you can’t feed us- surrender us.” And again- the north hadn’t even brought the other arm from behind its back yet.

  • @MarkAJohnsonEDLDFall
    @MarkAJohnsonEDLDFall Год назад

    The terms that Grant offered Lee were extremely generous to the point that although many Southerners came to respect for his actions. The only term was the Confederates had to promise not to take arms again.

  • @kick-face3558
    @kick-face3558 4 года назад +3

    What happened to the quote about Parker being a real America (because he’s a Native American) by Lee and Parker responses we are all real Americans?????

  • @vincently1995
    @vincently1995 3 года назад +2

    155 Years Ago

  • @warrencraig6948
    @warrencraig6948 2 года назад

    Got a good idea how it all panned out on that day

  • @dlobes3285
    @dlobes3285 3 года назад +1

    I don't like to think this, but what if someone used a Lead ball in they're Musket ? Or are there safety baffles in the Guns ?

    • @JCmacDavid
      @JCmacDavid 2 года назад

      Before each battle a safety inspection is performed. Every musket is checked to make sure it is clean and unloaded, every cartridge box is checked for any improper loads or an unsafe object that could accidently be loaded. Many times, we even check what type of cap is used, there are some types of caps that are unsafe to use with men so close together. We use black powder, but we don't pull the ramrods, in case someone gets excited and accidently fires it. Any unsafe action can get someone pulled from the battle or event; file closers keep an eye out for everyone's safety.

  • @thesouthernhistorian4153
    @thesouthernhistorian4153 4 года назад +13

    My ancestors who fought with Gordon were happy that the war was over one of em who was 16 when lee surrenderd he wrote saying "I have always been faithful to the cause and to Lee today I and many others cry tears of joy and sadness for so many died for What? How many gave their lives and lost many loved ones all for nothing I do not know but I'm happy that this god forsaken conflict is finished."

    • @Remmet1803
      @Remmet1803 4 года назад +2

      Wise words

    • @Remmet1803
      @Remmet1803 4 года назад

      Great men of the past wars are brilliant

    • @thesouthernhistorian4153
      @thesouthernhistorian4153 4 года назад

      @Frogman Smith well I think he means that after all the pain and suffering they went through and yet they were now surrenderd he and his comrades still believed in their cause but I think he thought it should have been different with out the death and carnage

    • @johnbeechy
      @johnbeechy 4 года назад +1

      make Damn sure U r on the True side of any Cause......the south was farming based and they refused to learn that there was more coins in manufacturing and since the whites of then being rich possessed less education about business they feared teacing their slaves how to use tools to fix machines that would make the dresses that many southern fools bought from paris. why cant these southerners learn how to sew and manufacture?/ because they are farmers only and not serious about business models.. losing wars is losing.. ask GWBush about his loses../ iraq war now vets kill themselves at 20 per day.. 7300 per yr.. but so many sheep still make believe that business models are not important and they instead now offshore the jobs to where the slaves are chinese. // stay inside during this Purge fo 2020.. sure the First Amendment had been suspended in over 40 States, but that is what happens after Trump cuts the CDC funding by $100s of millions and fires the head of the pandemic dept.. he did that act of selfishness in 2018.. long before the C-Virus.. knowing is wining.. and losing is losing. and God hates idiots..

    • @Remmet1803
      @Remmet1803 4 года назад +2

      @thingaheinecebob ,Meaher and Michelle, Irelands favourite rebels

  • @Mountaineer3615
    @Mountaineer3615 Год назад

    I've seen this on Sid Meiers Gettysburg!

  • @cromwellsghost3434
    @cromwellsghost3434 4 года назад +1

    Famished? 23:17 have you seen those officers??
    Who’s in charge of their rations🤔

  • @ernestinkiriwang8152
    @ernestinkiriwang8152 Год назад

    to the civilians it means nothing, but for the military what the Union did when the approaching Confederates arrive is a MARCHING SALUTE.
    The victorious Union Army give their full honor to their enemy, the once mighty Army of Northern Virginia. The strongest Army of all the Confederacy.
    And years later many of the men in grey, saw action at the war with Spain under the flag of Stars and stripes again.
    Only in America. 👍

  • @danielkeirsteadsr1241
    @danielkeirsteadsr1241 2 года назад

    2 more beers and i will be crying.

  • @davidh5101
    @davidh5101 2 года назад

    The Sheridan actor looks just like him.

  • @chrishamilton5181
    @chrishamilton5181 4 года назад +5

    Lee should have known better than to invade Pennsylvania after the death of Jackson. The "game" was up, offensively after Chancellorsville. After Gettysburg on July 3rd and Vicksburg on July 4th, 1863. Richmond should have reconsidered...Lees hubris caused the destruction of the South.

    • @satturnine7320
      @satturnine7320 4 года назад +1

      Chris Hamilton
      General Lee along with President Jefferson Davis and others were trying gain support from England while lowering support that was already very divided in the North not to mention moving the war away from vital resources in Virginia
      They knew it was a calculated risk
      The French called it a saillie or to sally forth
      Lee wasn’t known for hubris
      If anything the opposite

    • @chrishamilton5181
      @chrishamilton5181 4 года назад +1

      @@satturnine7320 All the South had to do was not lose, and it could have won the war. The peace Republicans and/or Copperheads would not have allowed Lincoln to continue with staggering losses, if the Confederacy had kept things on a defensive plane. Which is what Davis wanted. Lee wanted an all or nothing gamble with the Army of the Potomac, around Washington, Gettysburg meant nothing to him, and chop it off and make a move on D.C. Lee was nothing without Jackson offensively, and squandered the Army of Northern Virginia like his father did with Stratford. Only had Jackson lived, resulting in serious Union defeats would the French or the English intervened. Slavery was a problem for many Europeans.

    • @SandfordSmythe
      @SandfordSmythe 3 года назад

      Lee was wanting to stir up Northern resistance against continuing the war by going into Pa. Without the North giving up, the South would have lost the war on purely military grounds. The massive Union military machine was moving into high gear. There were good generals and the troops were well experienced and trained. The Union cavalry became a match for the legionary South's. Basic arithmetic was against the South. Lincoln had warned England that any support of the Confederacy would be considered an Act of War, and he continued to aggressively rattle that sword through his ambassador to England. By the time the war was in high gear England knew it was no match to the Union Army or Navy to accomplish much of anything except to eventually loose Canada.

    • @chrishamilton5181
      @chrishamilton5181 3 года назад

      @@SandfordSmythe Had Jackson lived, and been uninjured after Chancellorsville. The entire complexion, narrative and outcome of the war would have been much different. Lee and the entire Army of Northern Virginia were nothing without Jackson.

  • @dayofthedaleks1524
    @dayofthedaleks1524 4 года назад +3

    was 14th south carolina's flag ever recovered?

    • @supportyourtroopsathletes6460
      @supportyourtroopsathletes6460 4 года назад

      Great question!

    • @johnbeechy
      @johnbeechy 4 года назад

      i watched a utube video on the german nazi flags at lenin's tomb.. the soviets grabbed all the Standards but they could not find the main one.. that had the blood from the Brownshirts that died .. the flags and standards were out of berlin.. it was an interesting video. many of the flags are still on show and tell in mother russia.. a terrible place.. // waste of time them russian lives.. //

    • @samuraieko5408
      @samuraieko5408 4 года назад +2

      @Pee Tee The arrogance of those who would wish to destroy historical artifacts because of their own pettiness about a long ceased war is astounding. Better that flag be in a museum than in the hands of those who treat history the same way an ISIS terrorist would.

    • @stever4181
      @stever4181 3 года назад

      @Pee Tee I come from a long line of Civil War vets from New York and Wisconsin. I am a reenactor from Minnesota.
      In reading your post I can only say your a prat!

  • @iamnoone5478
    @iamnoone5478 4 года назад +8

    The Heart of Dixie never surrender. ❤

    • @vernonbrowne6127
      @vernonbrowne6127 4 года назад +1

      The heart of Dixie never die.

    • @supportyourtroopsathletes6460
      @supportyourtroopsathletes6460 4 года назад +1

      It's sad and I did not know but in Georgia, one of the youngest Confederate Soldiers grave was located. He was only 11 years old. He did live to be a good age but I never seen Soldiers fight so young in combat. There was 3 in one area with tombstones and two or three is a nearby area. Not a big cemetery and the video is actually fairly new showing it. I guess from what the video stated most burial sites where parts of the properties belonging to the homestead where the family houses were back then. I could find the video if you are interested.

    • @jeremiahkittler6329
      @jeremiahkittler6329 3 года назад

      But they did surrender lol

  • @MayoFilms83
    @MayoFilms83 3 года назад +1

    Stragglers will be bayoneted let the men know that - General Stonewall Jackson.

  • @nolanwarner1882
    @nolanwarner1882 2 года назад

    it amazes me to this day that the comments here concerning the surrender. It does not mention the emancipation of the enslaved that should have happened with the defeat of the Confederacy.

    • @SandfordSmythe
      @SandfordSmythe Год назад

      Frankly, you are missing something here about the soldiers involved.

  • @jonathanziegler8126
    @jonathanziegler8126 2 года назад

    Meade is a forgotten American hero.

  • @oldcrone
    @oldcrone 4 года назад +3

    Gonna lay down my sword and shield down by the riverside

    • @johnbeechy
      @johnbeechy 4 года назад

      and May then u enter the Gates of Heaven.. Matthew 26:52 might not have been violated by U by the time u dropped that useless sword.. better to teach the south to arm their slaves with tools so they as slaves can fix machines that make more valuable items for resale.. farmers make the least of coins from the process of business and industry.. the south was destined to as it is today, low waged labor lands .. its their nature to have majority of their whites and non whites be low waged so the few can own their time to off for what they wish to do.. while the low waged (many white are the new slaves in the south) slaves slave away their useless uneducated lives.. // stay say and await that Last day..

  • @scotttheroux1538
    @scotttheroux1538 3 года назад +6

    And know America faces the same chapter again , mark my words we just had Harper's ferry and soon you will see a new fight occur it's just a matter of time

  • @TheConfederate1863
    @TheConfederate1863 3 года назад

    Like Grant liked to say “can you pass the cookies please?” January 1863

  • @barraig13
    @barraig13 4 года назад +1

    lastima que no este doblada en español toda la conversacion, porque esta representacion de la rendicion es bastante buena. ....por otra parte si LEE hubiese tenido fuerzas parejas al norte esta escena podria haber sido bien distinta, es decir , los papeles cambiados.

  • @stevenclark6025
    @stevenclark6025 2 года назад

    Does anyone the music or song were lee walks to his horse very epic and good feel for the moment

  • @BigLisaFan
    @BigLisaFan 3 года назад

    Not one colored regiment in the Victory Parade in Washington. They still had a long way to go for acceptance.

  • @frankbaptista8334
    @frankbaptista8334 3 месяца назад

    A sad day indeed

  • @stephenfitton6277
    @stephenfitton6277 Год назад

    Is that Bob Moats playing Lee?

  • @catherinekelly532
    @catherinekelly532 3 года назад

    Just could Not go inside the McLean House! The tragedy that occurred there!

    • @michaelwernimont4410
      @michaelwernimont4410 2 года назад

      Look at it this way...Would you rather that the war continued ..with even more death & destruction in the South ????.

  • @hollywoodwerewolf
    @hollywoodwerewolf 4 года назад +3

    How did the reenactors find their weapons & cartridge boxes after the filming was done?

    • @JCmacDavid
      @JCmacDavid 3 года назад

      When we left the field we stayed in formation, then a short time later we marched back in, in formation, to our spot and retrieved our weapons and gear. We did the surrender ceremony for the public and for the reenactors the filming of it was not our primary goal. This ceremony culminated the 125th series of events that began in 1986 with the 125th Anniversary of Manassas/Bull Run.

    • @jamesrichardson3322
      @jamesrichardson3322 2 года назад

      @@JCmacDavid Well you guys did a fantastic job, because of this series I became a Civil War Reenactor. I watched this as teenager, my mother got me this series as a birthday gift from Block Buster

    • @JCmacDavid
      @JCmacDavid 2 года назад

      @@jamesrichardson3322 That's great to hear. What unit do you portray and which theater?

    • @jamesrichardson3322
      @jamesrichardson3322 2 года назад +2

      @@JCmacDavid I protray the 45th Illinois Regiment , Western Theater.

  • @kostaachin4428
    @kostaachin4428 2 года назад +1

    The military combat ended, but sadly the Civil War did not. I went to college in the South in the 1970's (Atlanta, GA) and much to my surprise I found that quite a few of the students were still fighting the war. In my junior or senior year, my school had a black quarterback and it was not uncommon to hear in my dorm someone saying "Everyone knows a N... is too stupid to be a quarterback". You can just look at the state of politics in the South to know that that the war is not over.

    • @wonder528
      @wonder528 19 дней назад

      Correct because it’s about power and the selfish need to be dominant. Lost souls never give these facts up.

  • @patrickbush9526
    @patrickbush9526 4 года назад +2

    Could you imagine being a fly on that wall

  • @dalehall2067
    @dalehall2067 2 года назад

    Needed end but NECESSARY

  • @outdoorlife5396
    @outdoorlife5396 2 года назад +1

    I wish the Confederates like Gordan had of been more to reuniting this country, we would be better off

  • @JohnnyRebKy
    @JohnnyRebKy 3 года назад

    General Lee wasn't fat lol. He was 6 feet tall and pretty trim judging by the uniform on display that he wore that day

  • @JB-wv9jo
    @JB-wv9jo 2 года назад

    Why did they leave out the comment lee said Parker?

  • @jimbrew4529
    @jimbrew4529 Год назад

    Grant could have been tougher on Lee and his army, however, there wasn't much point. The South was not only defeated, but it was conquered.

    • @joshlight6892
      @joshlight6892 Год назад

      Though the South was beaten as a conventional army, they had more than enough men to carry out guerilla warfare on the Union troops for years from the hills and woods. Many Confederates were in favor of that in fact. Lee however realized this would not achieve the goal of Southern independence and would basically make his own men fugitives and terrorists, and he thought more of them than that so he decided the best he could do for them was try to get them a generous deal.. Grant knew it too, which was part of the reason he offered the generous terms he did, he wanted to end all fighting.

    • @jimbrew4529
      @jimbrew4529 Год назад

      @@joshlight6892 It's true this reduced the threat of domestic terrorism. It was also not feasible to try thousands of Confederates for treason. It also appears Grant was aware of the notion of rebuilding the nation.

  • @yellingyank1862
    @yellingyank1862 Год назад

    Anyone know the march played at 25:18?

  • @alpha-omega2362
    @alpha-omega2362 2 года назад

    I always heard that Robert Lincoln was present in the house or is that just a myth? There is no mention of him in this video.

    • @michaelwheeler3782
      @michaelwheeler3782 2 года назад

      I heard another account where they said Robert Lincoln was present

    • @alpha-omega2362
      @alpha-omega2362 2 года назад

      @@michaelwheeler3782 Yes, I have also, but this seems to be presenting itself as the "authoritative" account... so I'm just wondering why they didn't mention Robert Lincoln. and also I have seen depictions of Robert Lincoln later describing the events to his father....so I am still wondering if it's just a myth...

    • @alpha-omega2362
      @alpha-omega2362 2 года назад

      I just googled this and Wikipedia is saying that he was present at Appomattox.. I know he was on Grant's staff but he may have been outside not actually inside the room...so maybe there have been some embellishments of the story over the years.

  • @RetreatfarmFarmvilleVirginia
    @RetreatfarmFarmvilleVirginia 2 года назад +1

    Marse Robert !

  • @matthewskudzienski888
    @matthewskudzienski888 4 года назад +3

    Why did Robert E Lee surrendered

    • @mick7even
      @mick7even 4 года назад

      Because terrorists must never be allowed to win.

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 4 года назад +1

      @Gary Daniel Lee probably knew everything after Gettysburg was fruitless .... But he Continued! ..... He was the Murderer!

    • @amain325
      @amain325 4 года назад

      @@jamesalexander5623 Exactly

  • @ronnyrono782
    @ronnyrono782 2 года назад +1

    They fought bravely but they got their asses kicked. Their slaves were gone
    but they could look forward to their Jim Crow laws.. No pity from me.

    • @SandfordSmythe
      @SandfordSmythe Год назад

      I think Lee wanted to avoid having their asses kicked.

  • @patrickbush9526
    @patrickbush9526 4 года назад +2

    What happened at Wilbur McClain's house most definitely was a Divine appointment

  • @donaldreed2351
    @donaldreed2351 3 года назад +1

    The southern troops seem very over fed.

  • @karenballard7470
    @karenballard7470 4 года назад +4

    SAD, OH SO SAD 😥

  • @charlescalvert8647
    @charlescalvert8647 3 года назад +3

    Those who's homes were not invaded by illegal and unconstitutional warfare will never understand how this affected generations.
    My GG grandfather and his cousin both of 2nd Md Co B CSA were at Appomattox, I was a Confederate reenactor at this 125th event, the reading of Gen Lee's order was truly powerful.
    As we face cultural genocide in whats left of the United States remember that the Confederate American was the true fighter for right.

    • @leopoldberger9037
      @leopoldberger9037 3 года назад +4

      yes let's not forget that those who wanted to forcefully keep millions enslaved were the ones fighting the "righteous" fight. The lost cause propaganda has been real effective.

    • @wonder528
      @wonder528 19 дней назад

      No, they fought against humanity and progress. We can respect the men who fought for a cause, but not the cause itself. Today to many still fight this losing battle for nothing more than selfish pride.

  • @gonzalosirera7103
    @gonzalosirera7103 4 года назад +1

    👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @salvadorcerezojimenez1417
    @salvadorcerezojimenez1417 Год назад

    La Union Gano la guerra. Estados Unidos. Estaba otra vez unido. Le esperaba un gran futuro a Este pais.

  • @brianc2619
    @brianc2619 27 дней назад

    I love how the Yankees always scream "THERE WAS A NATIVE AMERICAN THERE! LOOK! WE ALLOWED THEM TO BE IN OUR MILITARY!!! ISN'T THAT SO PROGRESSIVE!?!?!"
    Meanwhile the South: Ever heard of Gen. Stand Watie? Or all of our Indian allies who you exterminated after the war ended?

  • @deepakraag
    @deepakraag 2 года назад

    Isn't the name bass ackwards?

  • @catherinekelly532
    @catherinekelly532 3 года назад

    Lee very much regretted this!

  • @WonderfulEagle-mm1vj
    @WonderfulEagle-mm1vj 3 месяца назад

    Yhe point i am yrying to make is that we had some yruely. Wose leader in yhis country snd cetsonly God has guided this country Hod has blessed this country snd if wew are eise we will return byo what has worked in thepast and abandon the humanist ideas. Anl

  • @emana6553
    @emana6553 Год назад

    The Black soldiers in the Union army were not portrayed.

  • @dperson9212
    @dperson9212 4 года назад

    I thought the bloke playing Grant was Ben Affleck.

  • @superman87jk
    @superman87jk Год назад

    Long live CSA DIXIE!

    • @wonder528
      @wonder528 19 дней назад

      Long live the United States of America with liberty and justice for all!

  • @jibucks
    @jibucks 4 года назад

    The music you dubbed over the original video is very distracting and detracts from the original presentation.