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‐ Ulysses S. Grant.
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This man's name
is U. S. Grant.
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‐ A military life
had no charms for me.
4
00:00:19,228 --> 00:00:22,332
‐ Grant, you know
the rules about drink.
5
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Resign or court‐martial.
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‐ I'm not asking you to speak.
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I'm asking you to lead.
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‐ There were
but two parties now,
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traitors and patriots.
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I believe
if I can take both forts,
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we can advance
as far as Nashville.
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‐ When I wish to consult you
on the subject,
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I will notify you.
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‐ General Buell's men?
15
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‐ They're three days out.
16
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‐ We'll move on Corinth
when he gets here.
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There is little doubt
that Corinth will fall easily.
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‐ Fire!
19
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‐ Come on, now, boys, pitch in.
20
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I'm right behind you.
21
00:01:05,899 --> 00:01:09,045
Fire the cannon!
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‐ Very few people really know
who Ulysses S. Grant was.
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‐ Today there is this sense
that he's forgotten.
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‐ He's been called
so many things over the years.
25
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‐ The greatest general
of his time.
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‐ A military genius.
27
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‐ A bloody butcher.
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‐ A corrupt president.
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‐ A belligerent drunk
who got lucky.
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He didn't get lucky.
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‐ Ulysses S. Grant
is this perfectly average,
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humble individual from a poor,
hardscrabble background.
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‐ With a lot of hard times
and failures in his life.
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‐ But he's got
this dogged determination,
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this bulldog mentality.
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‐ This guy comes from nothing,
37
00:02:01,455 --> 00:02:02,765
rises to the highest ranks
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of the Union army.
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‐ Fights bloody,
terrible battles.
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‐ With indomitable will.
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‐ To save the Union.
42
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‐ To heal his country.
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‐ To lead the nation
towards justice for everybody.
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‐ He's the unheroic hero
45
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of our greatest national epic,
the American Civil War.
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‐ It's truly an American story
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not only of patriotism
to the nation
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but for the values, who we are,
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and who we aspire to be.
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‐ Dear Julia...
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the battle at this place
was the most desperate
52
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that has ever taken place
on the continent,
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and I don't look
for another like it.
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‐ The battle of Shiloh
is the bloodiest battle
55
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in American history
up to that time.
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The nation is shocked
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when the casualty reports
come out.
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‐ Grant doesn't come out
of Shiloh looking very good.
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You know, he was
"Unconditional Surrender" Grant
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at Fort Donelson,
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became a hero.
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And now all of a sudden,
people are asking,
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"What happened?"
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‐ The casualty list
and the fact that Grant
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was surprised on the first day
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overshadow the fact
of the victory.
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‐ Rumors start
reaching Washington
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that explain that surprise
as Grant must be
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on the bottle once again.
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But the president answered
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those critical of Grant
by saying,
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"I can't spare this man.
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He fights."
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‐ After the bloodbath
of Shiloh...
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Grant's superior,
76
00:04:20,760 --> 00:04:22,613
Henry W. Halleck,
77
00:04:22,637 --> 00:04:25,575
removes Grant
from his army command...
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00:04:25,599 --> 00:04:28,411
with no duties,
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no real authority, nothing.
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‐ Grant is so frustrated
by this.
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Halleck is not aggressive,
82
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and then you have
someone like Grant,
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who is very go‐get‐'em.
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He's ready to jump in,
grab the initiative.
85
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Grant wants to finish off
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what's left
of the Confederate army
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that attacked him at Shiloh
88
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but are having time
to reorganize themselves
89
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as they fall back into Corinth.
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‐ They're well defended.
91
00:04:59,925 --> 00:05:02,612
I would say quite active.
92
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They're preparing for battle.
93
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‐ Respectfully,
General Halleck, that smoke?
94
00:05:08,225 --> 00:05:11,454
It's plain.
They're burning supplies.
95
00:05:11,478 --> 00:05:14,207
It suggests they're preparing
to retreat, sir.
96
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‐ Hear that?
97
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I knew it.
98
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Trains coming in every day.
99
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They're reinforcing.
100
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‐ Again, sir, I differ.
This is a retreat.
101
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Our railroad men
have ears on the tracks.
102
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They say it's empty trains
coming in
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and loaded ones going out.
104
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They're withdrawing.
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Let's move on them now‐‐
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‐ Enough, Grant.
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After Shiloh, I'd have thought
you'd have learned your lesson.
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‐ Grant is like, "Speed,
tempo‐‐these are weapons
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that can be used for an
adversary that's on the run."
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Grant recognizes
there's an opportunity,
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00:06:02,529 --> 00:06:04,257
but he also knows
the windows of opportunity
112
00:06:04,281 --> 00:06:05,842
are very small,
113
00:06:05,866 --> 00:06:07,051
and if you don't
take advantage of them,
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they'll pass you by.
115
00:06:09,244 --> 00:06:12,515
And Grant sees this
as a missed opportunity.
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‐ General.
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‐ Rebs are gone.
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Nothing but a bunch
of scarecrows.
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‐ Send a telegraph
to the president.
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Corinth is ours.
121
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It's a great Union victory.
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‐ The possession of Corinth
was of strategic importance,
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but the victory was barren
in every other particular.
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Corinth had already
been evacuated.
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A well‐directed attack
would at least have partially
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destroyed the defending army.
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‐ Corinth has fallen.
Grant is like,
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00:07:02,088 --> 00:07:03,941
"Great, this is an opportunity
to strike out.
129
00:07:03,965 --> 00:07:05,776
We should go to Atlanta.
We should go to Vicksburg."
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00:07:05,800 --> 00:07:07,820
And what happens?
Halleck sits tight.
131
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He disperses the army,
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and things slow down
in the western theater.
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‐ Keep in mind that
in the early years of the war,
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00:07:16,311 --> 00:07:19,957
there are really
two distinct theaters.
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The west is where Grant is.
136
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And there's the eastern theater,
137
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and this is the fights
of the Union army
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against essentially the Army
of Northern Virginia of Lee.
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‐ So while Grant
has been demoted out west,
140
00:07:37,290 --> 00:07:39,018
in the east,
Robert E. Lee
141
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has taken over
the Army of Northern Virginia.
142
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And the average result
in the eastern theater
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is that the Union army loses
144
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to an undermanned
Confederate army.
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‐ In the east, Lincoln's
experience with his generals
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had been bad, trending to worse.
147
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‐ Abraham Lincoln had seen
Robert E. Lee defeat
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an entire bench
of Union commanders.
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‐ By this time, Grant
is in a bad situation too.
150
00:08:09,489 --> 00:08:13,094
That second year of the war
is just not very good for him.
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In fact, he calls it, of course,
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the darkest days of the war.
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‐ Dear Julia,
I am no longer boss.
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What the next move is
or the part I am to take,
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I do not know.
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‐ What's going on?
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‐ I've had enough.
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I'm resigning.
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‐ Oh, for God's sake.
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‐ Look, I want to fight
and win this war,
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but if Halleck
has me sit it out,
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I might as well
sit it out at home.
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‐ You're not resigning.
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‐ If I can't fight,
well, then I'm useless.
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‐ Sam, you're the most useful
man we have.
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I know it. You know‐‐
By God, Lincoln?
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He knows it.
168
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‐ Look at this.
169
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It says I was drunk at Shiloh.
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‐ Oh, hell.
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Forget the papers.
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Listen.
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You know the next move
is Vicksburg.
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You can take Vicksburg.
175
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Who else can do it?
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Halleck?
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‐ Vicksburg.
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Lincoln was right.
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Vicksburg is the key.
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‐ Controlling Vicksburg
allowed food and other goods
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to move freely
across the Mississippi
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and get onto railcars
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and feed the Confederacy
in the east.
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00:10:01,184 --> 00:10:06,207
Without it, the Confederacy
can be cut in two.
185
00:10:06,231 --> 00:10:07,750
But for any army in history,
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00:10:07,774 --> 00:10:10,377
capturing Vicksburg
would be a daunting task.
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‐ The city of Vicksburg
is on the east bank
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of the Mississippi River.
189
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And it is nestled among bluffs
that tower 300 feet
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above a horseshoe‐shaped bend
of the Mississippi.
191
00:10:30,130 --> 00:10:34,360
The line of defense
consisted of nine major forts
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connected by a continuous line
of trenches and rifle pits
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that stretched for more
than eight miles
194
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and then 172 big guns.
195
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‐ Back east, Abraham Lincoln
was at that moment
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00:10:50,817 --> 00:10:54,380
about to rid himself
of his general and chief
197
00:10:54,404 --> 00:10:56,340
George McClellan,
198
00:10:56,364 --> 00:10:58,342
and the replacement
that he pitches upon
199
00:10:58,366 --> 00:11:00,761
is Henry Wager Halleck.
200
00:11:00,785 --> 00:11:03,848
He brings Halleck east.
201
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‐ And so finally,
the clouds part,
202
00:11:06,499 --> 00:11:09,145
and Halleck gives Grant
the authority
203
00:11:09,169 --> 00:11:11,647
to command as Grant sees fit,
204
00:11:11,671 --> 00:11:13,816
and the interesting thing is,
it takes Grant
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00:11:13,840 --> 00:11:16,443
all of one day
206
00:11:16,467 --> 00:11:20,656
to start organizing
an offensive against Vicksburg.
207
00:11:24,392 --> 00:11:27,413
‐ I would call Grant's
Vicksburg campaign
208
00:11:27,437 --> 00:11:28,914
his masterpiece.
209
00:11:28,938 --> 00:11:30,875
It's the centerpiece of the war.
210
00:11:32,609 --> 00:11:37,006
But Vicksburg was incredibly
difficult to get at.
211
00:11:39,949 --> 00:11:42,261
‐ When Grant starts
this campaign,
212
00:11:42,285 --> 00:11:45,181
Grant is on the western side
of the river.
213
00:11:45,205 --> 00:11:47,486
Vicksburg, of course, is on
the eastern side of the river.
214
00:11:49,209 --> 00:11:54,690
‐ North of Vicksburg
was a great, gigantic swamp.
215
00:11:54,714 --> 00:11:57,860
He needs to put his troops
on open ground,
216
00:11:57,884 --> 00:12:02,072
but the only open ground
is below Vicksburg
217
00:12:02,096 --> 00:12:04,825
on the eastern side
of the river.
218
00:12:04,849 --> 00:12:09,371
Well, how are you going
to get troops below Vicksburg?
219
00:12:09,395 --> 00:12:13,083
You just can't send
transports and gunboats
220
00:12:13,107 --> 00:12:15,920
because they would have to run
the batteries at Vicksburg
221
00:12:15,944 --> 00:12:17,755
to get past the defenses.
222
00:12:23,576 --> 00:12:26,305
‐ Now, throughout the winter,
Grant will orchestrate
223
00:12:26,329 --> 00:12:29,350
a series of bayou campaigns,
as they were called.
224
00:12:32,919 --> 00:12:37,149
‐ Grant makes seven attempts
to get at Vicksburg.
225
00:12:37,173 --> 00:12:39,777
All of these are efforts
to get around the city
226
00:12:39,801 --> 00:12:42,154
without having to run
those batteries,
227
00:12:42,178 --> 00:12:44,490
which is their great fear.
228
00:12:44,514 --> 00:12:49,578
‐ Among the operations
is excavation of a canal.
229
00:12:49,602 --> 00:12:52,831
It enthralls Abraham Lincoln,
who almost on a daily basis
230
00:12:52,855 --> 00:12:54,917
would send Grant
a telegraph asking,
231
00:12:54,941 --> 00:12:58,295
"How's work on the canal
coming along?"
232
00:12:58,319 --> 00:13:01,257
And Grant would send back
these very rosy reports.
233
00:13:01,281 --> 00:13:04,009
But Sherman was
far more candid when he said,
234
00:13:04,033 --> 00:13:06,095
"The canal
don't amount to much."
235
00:13:06,119 --> 00:13:08,472
And by late March,
even Grant would realize
236
00:13:08,496 --> 00:13:11,016
that this canal was a bust.
237
00:13:13,626 --> 00:13:15,104
And at this point in time,
238
00:13:15,128 --> 00:13:17,731
it's the rainy season
in Mississippi.
239
00:13:19,299 --> 00:13:22,903
‐ The whole country
was covered with water.
240
00:13:22,927 --> 00:13:25,364
Troops could scarcely
find dry ground
241
00:13:25,388 --> 00:13:27,992
on which to pitch their tents.
242
00:13:28,016 --> 00:13:30,786
Malarial fevers
broke out among the men.
243
00:13:32,645 --> 00:13:35,916
‐ Vicksburg shows a number
of qualities of Grant.
244
00:13:35,940 --> 00:13:38,669
There's again a degree
of determination.
245
00:13:38,693 --> 00:13:42,464
He tries every which way
to come at Vicksburg,
246
00:13:42,488 --> 00:13:45,759
but on any battlefield
or in any campaign,
247
00:13:45,783 --> 00:13:47,845
results do matter.
248
00:13:49,162 --> 00:13:50,723
‐ Now, at this point in time,
249
00:13:50,747 --> 00:13:52,474
Lincoln changed his generals
250
00:13:52,498 --> 00:13:54,518
almost as frequently
as he changed his shirts.
251
00:13:54,542 --> 00:13:58,022
So Grant realized that
his time and his options
252
00:13:58,046 --> 00:14:00,232
were running out.
253
00:14:19,859 --> 00:14:21,670
‐ General.
254
00:14:33,831 --> 00:14:36,018
‐ Have you heard?
255
00:14:36,042 --> 00:14:39,563
I'm stuck in the mud
in northern Mississippi.
256
00:14:43,716 --> 00:14:45,694
Vicksburg.
257
00:14:48,137 --> 00:14:51,241
We need to get out of this mud
and into the water.
258
00:14:51,265 --> 00:14:52,993
‐ What do you mean?
259
00:14:53,017 --> 00:14:55,204
‐ Use the river to advance.
260
00:14:55,228 --> 00:14:58,123
Move our men south.
261
00:14:58,147 --> 00:15:00,250
Ferry them across here.
262
00:15:00,274 --> 00:15:04,671
‐ But we'll need to get ships
south to transport our men.
263
00:15:04,695 --> 00:15:06,715
‐ If we move those ships
past the Vicksburg guns,
264
00:15:06,739 --> 00:15:10,177
they'll blow us
out of the water.
265
00:15:10,201 --> 00:15:11,386
‐ It's too risky.
266
00:15:13,329 --> 00:15:15,766
‐ There's no other way.
267
00:15:15,790 --> 00:15:17,726
It's time to take a risk.
268
00:15:19,335 --> 00:15:22,731
Gentlemen...
269
00:15:27,260 --> 00:15:29,238
I'm gonna run their guns.
270
00:15:33,516 --> 00:15:36,620
‐ This is thought
to be suicidal.
271
00:15:36,644 --> 00:15:39,081
Everybody believes
this is a losing proposition.
272
00:15:42,650 --> 00:15:45,254
‐ The gunboats
of the Mississippi squadron,
273
00:15:45,278 --> 00:15:47,297
although they are ironclad,
274
00:15:47,321 --> 00:15:49,258
the roofs of these gunboats
275
00:15:49,282 --> 00:15:52,261
are vulnerable
to a plunging fire.
276
00:15:54,620 --> 00:15:56,640
‐ Sherman cautions him
against it.
277
00:15:56,664 --> 00:15:59,143
Sherman says,
"I want this on paper
278
00:15:59,167 --> 00:16:01,019
that I'm against this."
279
00:16:01,043 --> 00:16:03,105
And Grant can live with that.
280
00:16:04,797 --> 00:16:08,694
‐ Grant had something to prove
during the Civil War.
281
00:16:08,718 --> 00:16:12,447
He must have known that
this was his chance to show
282
00:16:12,471 --> 00:16:14,074
what he had inside him.
283
00:16:17,393 --> 00:16:21,665
‐ The plan is, while the boats
will run the batteries,
284
00:16:21,689 --> 00:16:25,836
Grant will march his men down
the western side of the river.
285
00:16:27,612 --> 00:16:31,008
Ironclads provide protection
for his transports.
286
00:16:31,032 --> 00:16:32,593
The transports are there
because they are
287
00:16:32,617 --> 00:16:34,178
gonna move his troops
from one side
288
00:16:34,202 --> 00:16:36,054
of the river to the other
289
00:16:36,078 --> 00:16:37,681
and then run a land campaign
290
00:16:37,705 --> 00:16:39,683
to come in
from the eastern side.
291
00:16:44,045 --> 00:16:45,981
‐ In preparation,
all the gunboats
292
00:16:46,005 --> 00:16:47,733
are painted black.
293
00:16:47,757 --> 00:16:50,986
Bales of cotton,
bales of hay are stacked
294
00:16:51,010 --> 00:16:53,697
around the engines
to muffle the sounds,
295
00:16:53,721 --> 00:16:55,282
as well as out on the gun decks,
296
00:16:55,306 --> 00:16:58,118
to absorb incoming rounds
of Confederate ammunition.
297
00:17:01,145 --> 00:17:03,081
Around 11:00 at night,
298
00:17:03,105 --> 00:17:05,125
the gunboats
and transport vessels,
299
00:17:05,149 --> 00:17:07,669
in single‐file line,
will slowly drift
300
00:17:07,693 --> 00:17:09,671
with the current.
301
00:17:15,576 --> 00:17:17,346
‐ Sir, they've set fire
to the opposite shore
302
00:17:17,370 --> 00:17:18,410
so they can see us coming.
303
00:17:36,055 --> 00:17:39,368
‐ There they go.
304
00:17:39,392 --> 00:17:42,829
‐ The enemy were evidently
expecting our fleet.
305
00:17:45,064 --> 00:17:48,544
The sight was magnificent...
306
00:17:48,568 --> 00:17:50,504
but terrible.
307
00:17:53,656 --> 00:17:55,884
‐ Now, on the night
of April the 16th,
308
00:17:55,908 --> 00:17:58,720
Admiral David Porter
pays very close attention
309
00:17:58,744 --> 00:18:02,933
as to where the shot and shell
are hitting his vessels.
310
00:18:02,957 --> 00:18:05,185
They are hitting
his smokestacks,
311
00:18:05,209 --> 00:18:08,564
but almost none are getting any
lower to where the vital parts
312
00:18:08,588 --> 00:18:10,023
of your boats are situated.
313
00:18:12,758 --> 00:18:15,237
And he realizes
the Confederates can't fire
314
00:18:15,261 --> 00:18:20,325
against the near bank
of the Mississippi.
315
00:18:20,349 --> 00:18:25,289
And so Porter orders all his
gunboats to hug the shoreline.
316
00:18:25,313 --> 00:18:28,000
So close did they come
that almost all
317
00:18:28,024 --> 00:18:32,045
the Confederate shots are now
flying harmlessly overhead.
318
00:18:37,116 --> 00:18:40,554
‐ They're getting through,
Rawlins.
319
00:18:40,578 --> 00:18:43,599
They're getting through.
320
00:18:43,623 --> 00:18:45,350
We're gonna take Vicksburg
in a few days.
321
00:18:45,374 --> 00:18:47,603
By God, at last.
322
00:18:47,627 --> 00:18:50,606
‐ We'll end this war now.
323
00:18:50,630 --> 00:18:53,275
‐ I think so too, John.
324
00:18:53,299 --> 00:18:55,527
Let's see where we stand
when the sun comes up.
325
00:18:55,551 --> 00:18:57,946
Get a message to Admiral Porter,
326
00:18:57,970 --> 00:19:01,783
see what condition the boats
and the men are in.
327
00:19:01,807 --> 00:19:04,328
‐ Sir.
328
00:19:07,980 --> 00:19:10,083
‐ Due to the success
of the passage
329
00:19:10,107 --> 00:19:12,753
on the night of April the 16th,
330
00:19:12,777 --> 00:19:15,797
Grant would transport
24,000 soldiers
331
00:19:15,821 --> 00:19:18,800
across the mighty river.
332
00:19:18,824 --> 00:19:20,636
‐ I think what we see
in Vicksburg
333
00:19:20,660 --> 00:19:23,680
is the maturity of Grant
334
00:19:23,704 --> 00:19:26,475
and the decisions that he makes.
335
00:19:26,499 --> 00:19:30,562
It's an extraordinary campaign
at the operational level.
336
00:19:30,586 --> 00:19:33,106
How do armies move
from point to point?
337
00:19:33,130 --> 00:19:35,484
How do they sustain themselves?
338
00:19:35,508 --> 00:19:38,779
And that's all separate
from battle itself.
339
00:19:38,803 --> 00:19:41,406
‐ Grant's decision
to run those batteries,
340
00:19:41,430 --> 00:19:43,617
the determination, the grit,
341
00:19:43,641 --> 00:19:45,994
this is utterly part
of his makeup.
342
00:19:46,018 --> 00:19:49,498
And the loss of ships running
Vicksburg batteries is one.
343
00:19:52,316 --> 00:19:54,127
‐ All the labors, hardships,
344
00:19:54,151 --> 00:19:56,338
and exposures were
for the accomplishment
345
00:19:56,362 --> 00:19:59,675
of this one object.
346
00:19:59,699 --> 00:20:02,010
I was on dry ground
347
00:20:02,034 --> 00:20:05,055
on the same side
of the river with the enemy.
348
00:20:10,209 --> 00:20:11,978
‐ So he's now run the batteries,
349
00:20:12,002 --> 00:20:14,022
he's crossed
over the Mississippi River,
350
00:20:14,046 --> 00:20:18,568
and Grant is now
making progress in the west.
351
00:20:20,553 --> 00:20:22,864
Meanwhile
in the eastern theater,
352
00:20:22,888 --> 00:20:25,659
it's not going well.
353
00:20:25,683 --> 00:20:27,202
‐ At one point, the Union army
354
00:20:27,226 --> 00:20:29,329
is losing something like
200 men a day
355
00:20:29,353 --> 00:20:31,373
to desertion in early 1863.
356
00:20:31,397 --> 00:20:34,042
So the army is literally
leaving the field.
357
00:20:34,066 --> 00:20:35,544
And then in May of 1863,
358
00:20:35,568 --> 00:20:37,504
you get Lee's greatest victory
of the war
359
00:20:37,528 --> 00:20:39,965
at Chancellorsville.
360
00:20:39,989 --> 00:20:41,717
‐ This is Robert E. Lee's
high point.
361
00:20:41,741 --> 00:20:44,052
Outnumbered two to one,
this is the whole idea
362
00:20:44,076 --> 00:20:46,388
of one Confederate could fight
three Union soldiers.
363
00:20:46,412 --> 00:20:48,432
Here he proves it.
364
00:20:48,456 --> 00:20:49,725
The Union public
is starting to feel like
365
00:20:49,749 --> 00:20:51,727
this is unwinnable.
366
00:20:51,751 --> 00:20:54,563
And so there is
a ticking clock politically,
367
00:20:54,587 --> 00:20:56,398
and everyone is watching to see
368
00:20:56,422 --> 00:20:58,191
if Grant will be successful.
369
00:21:02,762 --> 00:21:05,365
‐ In May of 1863,
370
00:21:05,389 --> 00:21:09,202
Grant's on that open ground
below Vicksburg.
371
00:21:09,226 --> 00:21:10,579
Now that, mind you,
is only the beginning
372
00:21:10,603 --> 00:21:12,330
of his campaign, though.
373
00:21:12,354 --> 00:21:14,249
'Cause now, once on the ground,
374
00:21:14,273 --> 00:21:15,792
that's when the campaign really
375
00:21:15,816 --> 00:21:17,085
has to move into high gear.
376
00:21:19,445 --> 00:21:21,757
‐ Once on the Vicksburg side
of the river,
377
00:21:21,781 --> 00:21:23,425
most people would have
expected Grant
378
00:21:23,449 --> 00:21:25,635
to march north toward Vicksburg.
379
00:21:25,659 --> 00:21:29,264
And yet he doesn't
do anything like that.
380
00:21:29,288 --> 00:21:30,932
First of all, you don't attack
381
00:21:30,956 --> 00:21:32,642
where the enemy
expects you to attack,
382
00:21:32,666 --> 00:21:34,102
from the south.
383
00:21:34,126 --> 00:21:35,771
Second of all, in command
384
00:21:35,795 --> 00:21:37,689
of the roughly 30,000
troops of Vicksburg
385
00:21:37,713 --> 00:21:40,442
is John C. Pemberton.
386
00:21:40,466 --> 00:21:43,612
And Pemberton's fortifications
are wildly strong.
387
00:21:47,056 --> 00:21:50,035
‐ Rather than take
the direct road to Vicksburg,
388
00:21:50,059 --> 00:21:53,789
Grant opts to move
in a northeasterly direction,
389
00:21:53,813 --> 00:21:57,250
cut Pemberton's line
of supply and communication,
390
00:21:57,274 --> 00:22:00,086
isolate his opponent
in Vicksburg,
391
00:22:00,110 --> 00:22:02,756
and then move in for the kill.
392
00:22:02,780 --> 00:22:07,010
Over the next 17 days,
Grant's army will push deep
393
00:22:07,034 --> 00:22:11,473
into the interior
of the state of Mississippi.
394
00:22:11,497 --> 00:22:13,975
‐ However, in the state
capital of Jackson,
395
00:22:13,999 --> 00:22:17,103
another Confederate force
was beginning to organize
396
00:22:17,127 --> 00:22:19,815
under the command
of Joseph Johnston.
397
00:22:19,839 --> 00:22:23,819
So Grant was really facing two
separate Confederate armies
398
00:22:23,843 --> 00:22:25,570
deep in enemy territory
399
00:22:25,594 --> 00:22:29,282
with a extraordinarily
limited supply line.
400
00:22:32,935 --> 00:22:35,330
‐ There is actually
great risk for that moment.
401
00:22:35,354 --> 00:22:37,290
He turns his back
on Pemberton's army,
402
00:22:37,314 --> 00:22:39,167
nearly the same size of his own.
403
00:22:41,902 --> 00:22:43,505
A commander always
needs to know himself,
404
00:22:43,529 --> 00:22:46,341
know the environment,
know the enemy.
405
00:22:46,365 --> 00:22:48,343
He knows John Pemberton.
406
00:22:48,367 --> 00:22:50,303
He knows he's not aggressive,
407
00:22:50,327 --> 00:22:51,721
and he thinks,
408
00:22:51,745 --> 00:22:53,348
"If I strike quickly,
I can defeat them
409
00:22:53,372 --> 00:22:55,141
"in piecemeal before they join,
410
00:22:55,165 --> 00:22:56,393
"and therefore,
it's an advantage
411
00:22:56,417 --> 00:22:58,436
to have
this central position."
412
00:22:58,460 --> 00:22:59,855
And that's exactly what he does.
413
00:22:59,879 --> 00:23:03,024
He accepts risk by leaving
Pemberton in his rear,
414
00:23:03,048 --> 00:23:05,235
and he's gonna go ahead
and turn and attack Jackson.
415
00:23:09,555 --> 00:23:11,533
‐ And on May the 14th,
416
00:23:11,557 --> 00:23:13,743
Grant's armies
will drive Confederate forces
417
00:23:13,767 --> 00:23:15,370
out of Jackson
418
00:23:15,394 --> 00:23:19,416
and destroy Pemberton's line
of supply and communication.
419
00:23:22,735 --> 00:23:25,338
With Johnston's forces
scattered to the winds,
420
00:23:25,362 --> 00:23:27,591
Grant will turn west
toward Vicksburg.
421
00:23:29,533 --> 00:23:30,886
‐ Pemberton all of a sudden
422
00:23:30,910 --> 00:23:32,721
realizes Grant has turned west.
423
00:23:32,745 --> 00:23:34,723
And this is when
Pemberton decides,
424
00:23:34,747 --> 00:23:37,893
"I gotta stop
and give battle."
425
00:23:37,917 --> 00:23:40,186
The numbers are largely equal,
426
00:23:40,210 --> 00:23:43,273
somewhere less than
30,000 on each side.
427
00:23:44,798 --> 00:23:49,279
‐ If Ulysses S. Grant
loses a stand‐up fight,
428
00:23:49,303 --> 00:23:52,532
his army is in trouble.
429
00:23:52,556 --> 00:23:56,328
They have cast off
most of their logistics.
430
00:23:56,352 --> 00:23:58,872
They are
in Confederate territory.
431
00:23:58,896 --> 00:24:03,543
But if there is a way he can
beat the Confederate army
432
00:24:03,567 --> 00:24:06,546
without having
to storm Vicksburg,
433
00:24:06,570 --> 00:24:09,758
he is more than willing
to do it.
434
00:24:12,660 --> 00:24:15,013
‐ Champion Hill,
where Pemberton had chosen
435
00:24:15,037 --> 00:24:16,556
to receive us,
436
00:24:16,580 --> 00:24:19,434
was well selected.
437
00:24:19,458 --> 00:24:21,603
It is one of the highest points
438
00:24:21,627 --> 00:24:25,023
and commanded all the ground.
439
00:24:34,348 --> 00:24:38,620
Tell General McClernand to have
his men advance quickly.
440
00:24:38,644 --> 00:24:40,413
Osterhaus and Carr
to push the center.
441
00:24:40,437 --> 00:24:43,249
Blair and Smith should advance
quickly on the left.
442
00:24:49,989 --> 00:24:52,133
‐ Grant could feel
a battlefield.
443
00:24:52,157 --> 00:24:55,303
He could see it in his mind,
444
00:24:55,327 --> 00:24:56,930
not just in space,
because keep in mind
445
00:24:56,954 --> 00:24:59,599
it's not just
who's on the left, the right,
446
00:24:59,623 --> 00:25:03,061
the center, but in time...
447
00:25:03,085 --> 00:25:06,940
because it's sequencing
the different activities.
448
00:25:06,964 --> 00:25:09,609
And that is really
just short of genius.
449
00:25:14,179 --> 00:25:17,158
‐ I see a break
in Pemberton's line.
450
00:25:17,182 --> 00:25:18,618
Tell McPherson
to flank to the left
451
00:25:18,642 --> 00:25:21,121
and press them hard.
452
00:25:55,846 --> 00:25:57,699
‐ The rebs are running, sir.
453
00:25:57,723 --> 00:26:00,368
‐ Hell, they're running
all the way to Vicksburg.
454
00:26:00,392 --> 00:26:03,621
‐ Send General Osterhaus
to follow them.
455
00:26:03,645 --> 00:26:05,373
I want to thin them out
before we face them again
456
00:26:05,397 --> 00:26:07,375
at Vicksburg.
457
00:26:13,572 --> 00:26:16,176
‐ An army on the move
is an army to be destroyed.
458
00:26:16,200 --> 00:26:17,677
And therefore,
he's gonna continue
459
00:26:17,701 --> 00:26:19,888
to push Pemberton's army.
460
00:26:19,912 --> 00:26:21,639
And this is gonna drive
the Confederates back
461
00:26:21,663 --> 00:26:24,392
into the defenses of Vicksburg.
462
00:26:27,544 --> 00:26:30,148
‐ Grant took enormous risk
when he went east
463
00:26:30,172 --> 00:26:33,401
rather than immediately
to Vicksburg.
464
00:26:33,425 --> 00:26:37,697
But he very deftly
defeats piecemeal
465
00:26:37,721 --> 00:26:39,908
the different Confederate forces
466
00:26:39,932 --> 00:26:43,203
that are trying to come
to reinforce Vicksburg,
467
00:26:43,227 --> 00:26:46,539
and essentially, it's a siege
from there on out.
468
00:26:48,607 --> 00:26:51,419
‐ As long as we could hold
our position,
469
00:26:51,443 --> 00:26:54,255
the enemy was limited
in supplies of food,
470
00:26:54,279 --> 00:26:56,966
men, and ammunition.
471
00:27:17,136 --> 00:27:19,197
‐ Keep these men digging,
Captain.
472
00:27:19,221 --> 00:27:21,616
Let's be done with this
by nightfall.
473
00:27:21,640 --> 00:27:24,452
‐ Yes, sir.
474
00:27:24,476 --> 00:27:25,995
‐ Ulysses S. Grant has now
475
00:27:26,019 --> 00:27:27,247
gone down the Mississippi River.
476
00:27:27,271 --> 00:27:30,834
He's in the midst
of the Vicksburg Campaign.
477
00:27:30,858 --> 00:27:33,378
In 17 days, Grant's army marched
478
00:27:33,402 --> 00:27:36,589
200 miles and won five battles.
479
00:27:36,613 --> 00:27:39,592
And now we are talking
about a siege.
480
00:27:42,327 --> 00:27:45,014
‐ When Grant first settles
into siege operations,
481
00:27:45,038 --> 00:27:47,725
he digs a line opposite
the Confederate ones,
482
00:27:47,749 --> 00:27:52,605
so you can cut off the key
routes of supply to the city.
483
00:27:52,629 --> 00:27:54,065
And then in case
a Confederate force
484
00:27:54,089 --> 00:27:56,359
came from his rear,
he then dug another
485
00:27:56,383 --> 00:27:58,778
series of entrenchments
facing the other way.
486
00:28:00,429 --> 00:28:03,658
And now he's gonna ring
Vicksburg with artillery.
487
00:28:03,682 --> 00:28:05,493
In fact, he's even gonna bring
488
00:28:05,517 --> 00:28:07,453
naval artillery off naval ships
489
00:28:07,477 --> 00:28:09,038
to bombard Vicksburg.
490
00:28:09,062 --> 00:28:11,457
We want to put them
under the maximum pressure
491
00:28:11,481 --> 00:28:13,209
so that they recognize
this sacrifice
492
00:28:13,233 --> 00:28:15,879
is no longer worth it.
493
00:28:15,903 --> 00:28:18,673
‐ And Grant ordered
his soldiers to begin sinking
494
00:28:18,697 --> 00:28:21,926
approaches toward
the Confederate works.
495
00:28:21,950 --> 00:28:23,928
And so you have Union engineers,
496
00:28:23,952 --> 00:28:25,430
and they'd be working
behind the protection
497
00:28:25,454 --> 00:28:28,099
of what was called a sap roller,
498
00:28:28,123 --> 00:28:30,768
normally a bundle
of cane and vine
499
00:28:30,792 --> 00:28:32,562
packed with dirt or cotton,
500
00:28:32,586 --> 00:28:34,397
anything that'll stop a bullet.
501
00:28:34,421 --> 00:28:36,774
And the whole object
is to get all the way
502
00:28:36,798 --> 00:28:39,068
up to the Confederate line.
503
00:28:48,018 --> 00:28:49,746
‐ Sharpshooters!
Get down!
504
00:28:49,770 --> 00:28:50,914
Sharpshooters!
505
00:28:50,938 --> 00:28:52,332
‐ Sharpshooters!
506
00:28:52,356 --> 00:28:54,417
‐ Get down!
Get down!
507
00:28:54,441 --> 00:28:55,877
‐ See them?
508
00:28:55,901 --> 00:28:57,879
Where are they?
509
00:28:57,903 --> 00:29:00,632
‐ Get down!
Everybody get down!
510
00:29:00,656 --> 00:29:01,841
‐ We gotta move!
511
00:29:21,468 --> 00:29:23,571
‐ Cease fire!
512
00:29:23,595 --> 00:29:25,615
Hold your fire!
513
00:29:25,639 --> 00:29:26,741
‐ Hold fire!
514
00:29:26,765 --> 00:29:27,825
‐ They're gone!
515
00:29:27,849 --> 00:29:29,702
‐ Hold fire!
516
00:29:35,899 --> 00:29:37,877
‐ I'll take that.
517
00:29:40,320 --> 00:29:42,340
All right, everyone!
518
00:29:42,364 --> 00:29:44,342
All right, get back to work!
519
00:29:44,366 --> 00:29:45,593
Now!
520
00:29:45,617 --> 00:29:47,595
Get back to work!
521
00:29:49,871 --> 00:29:52,892
‐ When it has been made clear
that the Negro,
522
00:29:52,916 --> 00:29:54,727
as an independent laborer,
523
00:29:54,751 --> 00:29:57,146
can do these things well,
524
00:29:57,170 --> 00:30:00,233
it would be very easy
to put a musket in his hands
525
00:30:00,257 --> 00:30:02,068
and make a soldier of him.
526
00:30:06,096 --> 00:30:08,950
‐ Throughout the Civil War,
African‐Americans
527
00:30:08,974 --> 00:30:12,620
start to flee
to Union army encampments
528
00:30:12,644 --> 00:30:16,833
in hopes of finding
some mechanism for freedom.
529
00:30:18,400 --> 00:30:21,087
Essentially, what these
African‐Americans do
530
00:30:21,111 --> 00:30:23,631
is, they appeal
to the Union army and say,
531
00:30:23,655 --> 00:30:26,801
"Make use of me
in this conflict."
532
00:30:26,825 --> 00:30:31,264
‐ If the logic of war
is any resources,
533
00:30:31,288 --> 00:30:35,184
whether it be guns, you know,
cannon, fortifications,
534
00:30:35,208 --> 00:30:38,479
if the enemy is using something
to support their war effort,
535
00:30:38,503 --> 00:30:41,357
it can be legitimately
taken away.
536
00:30:41,381 --> 00:30:43,860
So by the end of the first
year of the war,
537
00:30:43,884 --> 00:30:45,653
Lincoln has come
to the conclusion
538
00:30:45,677 --> 00:30:49,323
that emancipation
is a necessary war angle.
539
00:30:51,433 --> 00:30:53,745
‐ In Grant's own personal life,
540
00:30:53,769 --> 00:30:56,080
the fact that he married
into a family
541
00:30:56,104 --> 00:30:59,834
that was dependent
on the system of slavery...
542
00:30:59,858 --> 00:31:04,338
his decision to grant
freedom to a slave...
543
00:31:04,362 --> 00:31:08,217
the fact that during
his time in Missouri,
544
00:31:08,241 --> 00:31:11,220
he's tilling the soil
with enslaved people,
545
00:31:11,244 --> 00:31:13,556
I think illustrates how
546
00:31:13,580 --> 00:31:15,683
Grant's life is actually
an object lesson
547
00:31:15,707 --> 00:31:19,103
in the ways that a person
has to grapple
548
00:31:19,127 --> 00:31:22,398
with their position on equality.
549
00:31:25,467 --> 00:31:30,031
‐ And then Lincoln issues
the Emancipation Proclamation.
550
00:31:30,055 --> 00:31:34,577
This goes into effect
as both civil and military law
551
00:31:34,601 --> 00:31:38,706
on the 1st of January, 1863.
552
00:31:38,730 --> 00:31:41,709
‐ When Lincoln put out
the Emancipation Proclamation,
553
00:31:41,733 --> 00:31:44,879
it was an amazing thing.
554
00:31:44,903 --> 00:31:48,216
One out of every four
enslaved African‐Americans
555
00:31:48,240 --> 00:31:50,218
made their way to freedom.
556
00:31:52,702 --> 00:31:54,097
‐ The most important part
557
00:31:54,121 --> 00:31:55,348
of the Emancipation Proclamation
558
00:31:55,372 --> 00:31:57,850
is, that's the moment
where Lincoln first,
559
00:31:57,874 --> 00:32:00,895
you know, calls up black people
to fight in the armies
560
00:32:00,919 --> 00:32:01,896
of the country.
561
00:32:01,920 --> 00:32:03,898
That is significant.
562
00:32:03,922 --> 00:32:05,525
That is actually a huge,
huge deal
563
00:32:05,549 --> 00:32:08,903
and has, you know, great
implications on the North
564
00:32:08,927 --> 00:32:11,781
actually winning the war.
565
00:32:13,849 --> 00:32:16,410
‐ And so beginning in 1863,
566
00:32:16,434 --> 00:32:19,413
you have your first appearance
567
00:32:19,437 --> 00:32:22,875
of black soldiers
in blue uniforms.
568
00:32:22,899 --> 00:32:24,669
Their first engagement, in fact,
569
00:32:24,693 --> 00:32:27,296
occurs during
the Vicksburg campaign.
570
00:32:30,907 --> 00:32:32,844
‐ During the course
of the siege of Vicksburg,
571
00:32:32,868 --> 00:32:35,012
Grant had established
supply enclaves
572
00:32:35,036 --> 00:32:37,640
at places such
as Milliken's Bend.
573
00:32:37,664 --> 00:32:39,976
And most of these
supply enclaves
574
00:32:40,000 --> 00:32:43,271
were defended by recently
recruited black troops
575
00:32:43,295 --> 00:32:44,605
in Union blue.
576
00:32:46,214 --> 00:32:48,818
But at the same time,
Confederates west of Vicksburg
577
00:32:48,842 --> 00:32:50,736
were ordered to do
578
00:32:50,760 --> 00:32:54,699
"something on behalf
of the garrison of Vicksburg."
579
00:32:54,723 --> 00:32:57,618
And so on June the 7th,
a Confederate brigade
580
00:32:57,642 --> 00:33:02,123
would attack the supply
enclave at Milliken's Bend.
581
00:33:02,147 --> 00:33:04,834
‐ And it is at this moment
that two things
582
00:33:04,858 --> 00:33:06,210
become very clear:
583
00:33:06,234 --> 00:33:07,962
that they have not been given
584
00:33:07,986 --> 00:33:09,589
the best training,
585
00:33:09,613 --> 00:33:11,382
nor have they been given
the best weaponry
586
00:33:11,406 --> 00:33:14,886
to protect themselves.
587
00:33:14,910 --> 00:33:16,304
‐ The thing to recognize
about the colored troops
588
00:33:16,328 --> 00:33:19,515
is, expectations were so low.
589
00:33:19,539 --> 00:33:21,976
I mean, the idea
that black people
590
00:33:22,000 --> 00:33:24,061
would fight as soldiers...
591
00:33:24,085 --> 00:33:27,982
I mean, this was like
a man going to the moon.
592
00:34:13,218 --> 00:34:15,988
‐ This was the first important
engagement of the war
593
00:34:16,012 --> 00:34:19,492
in which colored troops
were under fire.
594
00:34:19,516 --> 00:34:21,535
These men were very raw,
595
00:34:21,559 --> 00:34:25,206
having all been enlisted since
the beginning of the siege,
596
00:34:25,230 --> 00:34:28,084
but they were most gallant,
and I doubt not
597
00:34:28,108 --> 00:34:30,878
they will make good troops.
598
00:34:30,902 --> 00:34:33,089
‐ There were 1,500
Confederates pitted against
599
00:34:33,113 --> 00:34:36,550
a little more than
1,000 Union troops.
600
00:34:36,574 --> 00:34:38,052
The Confederates
would drive them back
601
00:34:38,076 --> 00:34:39,553
from their fortifications,
602
00:34:39,577 --> 00:34:41,222
through their encampment,
603
00:34:41,246 --> 00:34:45,101
and all the way
to the Mississippi River.
604
00:34:45,125 --> 00:34:48,729
Black soldiers would lose
70% of their numbers,
605
00:34:48,753 --> 00:34:51,941
but they would successfully
hold on to the supply enclave
606
00:34:51,965 --> 00:34:53,234
at Milliken's Bend.
607
00:34:55,719 --> 00:34:58,948
‐ Lincoln says he can
no longer consider an idea
608
00:34:58,972 --> 00:35:01,742
of going back to things
being the way they were
609
00:35:01,766 --> 00:35:04,453
after black people have
actually died for the country.
610
00:35:04,477 --> 00:35:06,455
You can't restore those people
to slavery again.
611
00:35:08,106 --> 00:35:12,044
‐ And in fact,
by the end of the Civil War,
612
00:35:12,068 --> 00:35:15,006
almost 200,000
African‐Americans,
613
00:35:15,030 --> 00:35:18,259
you know,
fight on the Union side.
614
00:35:18,283 --> 00:35:20,886
‐ To His Excellency
A. Lincoln:
615
00:35:20,910 --> 00:35:25,641
Sir, by arming the Negro,
we have added a powerful ally.
616
00:35:25,665 --> 00:35:28,477
This, with the emancipation
of the Negro,
617
00:35:28,501 --> 00:35:32,005
is the heaviest blow
yet given the Confederacy.
618
00:35:50,523 --> 00:35:53,502
‐ The primary strategy
of any siege
619
00:35:53,526 --> 00:35:58,257
is isolating the people
you are besieging inside,
620
00:35:58,281 --> 00:36:01,636
causing them to use up
both their military resources
621
00:36:01,660 --> 00:36:04,305
but especially their food
622
00:36:04,329 --> 00:36:07,975
to force them to capitulate.
623
00:36:07,999 --> 00:36:10,853
So the consequence of this
is, Grant's army will grow
624
00:36:10,877 --> 00:36:15,316
to over 70,000 troops
over time...
625
00:36:15,340 --> 00:36:17,902
and it's a ratcheting up
of military pressure.
626
00:36:20,512 --> 00:36:23,366
‐ Now, the Confederate
government in Richmond
627
00:36:23,390 --> 00:36:27,870
is rather concerned about
the situation at Vicksburg.
628
00:36:27,894 --> 00:36:30,998
And there has emerged
a group that believes
629
00:36:31,022 --> 00:36:33,167
that less focus needs
to be placed on the east,
630
00:36:33,191 --> 00:36:34,794
where things are going well,
631
00:36:34,818 --> 00:36:36,879
and more focus needs
to be put on the west,
632
00:36:36,903 --> 00:36:38,422
where things are not going well.
633
00:36:39,906 --> 00:36:42,343
Robert E. Lee's response is,
634
00:36:42,367 --> 00:36:44,345
"Even if I send troops
to Vicksburg,
635
00:36:44,369 --> 00:36:46,681
"by the time they got there,
636
00:36:46,705 --> 00:36:48,349
it might be over."
637
00:36:48,373 --> 00:36:51,227
And Lee decides to go north
638
00:36:51,251 --> 00:36:53,354
and try to seek
a decisive engagement
639
00:36:53,378 --> 00:36:57,400
with the federals
north of Pennsylvania.
640
00:37:00,051 --> 00:37:02,530
At the same time,
Grant keeps the pressure up
641
00:37:02,554 --> 00:37:05,366
at Vicksburg to end the siege.
642
00:37:07,475 --> 00:37:08,703
‐ By the end of June,
643
00:37:08,727 --> 00:37:10,454
the Confederate Army
of Vicksburg
644
00:37:10,478 --> 00:37:13,249
was subsisting
on a handful of peas and rice
645
00:37:13,273 --> 00:37:16,043
issued once a day per man.
646
00:37:16,067 --> 00:37:17,586
Even their water
would be rationed
647
00:37:17,610 --> 00:37:20,548
to one cup per man per day.
648
00:37:22,782 --> 00:37:24,260
‐ So now as the temperature
of the summer
649
00:37:24,284 --> 00:37:26,220
continues to get
hotter and hotter,
650
00:37:26,244 --> 00:37:27,680
Grant will dam up
651
00:37:27,704 --> 00:37:29,473
all the creeks
that are going in there.
652
00:37:30,957 --> 00:37:33,936
Confederates are being shelled
by Union gunboats
653
00:37:33,960 --> 00:37:36,647
as well as Union batteries.
654
00:37:40,258 --> 00:37:42,570
‐ But also,
throughout the siege,
655
00:37:42,594 --> 00:37:46,574
you have a civilian population
trapped in the city,
656
00:37:46,598 --> 00:37:49,785
estimated at about 2,000.
657
00:37:49,809 --> 00:37:52,329
And the citizens
lived underground
658
00:37:52,353 --> 00:37:56,125
in man‐made caves to escape
the constant bombardment
659
00:37:56,149 --> 00:37:59,253
of Union cannon
and heavy mortar.
660
00:38:01,946 --> 00:38:04,842
And about the only time
they came out of these caves
661
00:38:04,866 --> 00:38:06,761
is when the Union artillerymen
662
00:38:06,785 --> 00:38:09,930
ate their morning, noon,
and evening meals.
663
00:38:11,414 --> 00:38:13,601
‐ Grant knows full well
664
00:38:13,625 --> 00:38:17,605
the suffering of the civilians
in Vicksburg.
665
00:38:17,629 --> 00:38:19,774
He doesn't relish any of it,
666
00:38:19,798 --> 00:38:22,860
but I think he does believe
667
00:38:22,884 --> 00:38:26,447
without breaking the will
of the Southern people
668
00:38:26,471 --> 00:38:29,950
that this war is not
gonna come to an end.
669
00:38:29,974 --> 00:38:31,160
‐ These civilians at Vicksburg,
670
00:38:31,184 --> 00:38:32,787
who weeks earlier
were able to get
671
00:38:32,811 --> 00:38:35,956
all the food they needed,
were clearly starving.
672
00:38:35,980 --> 00:38:38,626
And they started eating
anything that moved,
673
00:38:38,650 --> 00:38:40,461
rats included.
674
00:38:40,485 --> 00:38:42,671
And by early July, it was clear
675
00:38:42,695 --> 00:38:45,716
that the Confederates were
near the end of their rope.
676
00:38:50,662 --> 00:38:53,516
‐ On July 3rd,
two persons were seen
677
00:38:53,540 --> 00:38:57,353
coming towards our lines
bearing a white flag.
678
00:38:57,377 --> 00:39:00,397
It was a glorious sight
to soldiers on the line.
679
00:39:04,217 --> 00:39:06,695
‐ On the hot afternoon
of July 3rd,
680
00:39:06,719 --> 00:39:08,823
at the very same time
Pickett's legions
681
00:39:08,847 --> 00:39:12,993
were storming over
the stone wall at Gettysburg,
682
00:39:13,017 --> 00:39:15,496
the Confederate commander
John Pemberton
683
00:39:15,520 --> 00:39:17,414
would ask Grant on what terms
684
00:39:17,438 --> 00:39:20,417
he would receive
the surrender of the city.
685
00:39:26,030 --> 00:39:27,341
‐ General Pemberton.
686
00:39:34,914 --> 00:39:36,559
‐ Your terms, General?
687
00:39:36,583 --> 00:39:37,601
Surprise me.
688
00:39:39,752 --> 00:39:43,357
I propose‐‐ ‐ No proposals.
689
00:39:43,381 --> 00:39:45,359
Terms won't change.
690
00:39:45,383 --> 00:39:47,778
Unconditional surrender.
691
00:39:53,433 --> 00:39:55,536
‐ Sir.
692
00:39:55,560 --> 00:39:58,414
Listen, we need to offer terms.
693
00:39:58,438 --> 00:39:59,540
‐ No.
694
00:39:59,564 --> 00:40:00,749
‐ Be practical.
695
00:40:00,773 --> 00:40:03,544
What are we gonna do
with 30,000 prisoners?
696
00:40:03,568 --> 00:40:05,546
Better offer terms,
don't you think?
697
00:40:07,822 --> 00:40:09,133
General.
698
00:40:12,744 --> 00:40:14,930
‐ I'm prepared
to accept the parole
699
00:40:14,954 --> 00:40:16,265
but only if my men walk away
700
00:40:16,289 --> 00:40:18,559
with all of their
personal property.
701
00:40:20,919 --> 00:40:24,231
‐ By personal property,
do you mean to include slaves?
702
00:40:27,800 --> 00:40:30,571
Sidearms, horses...
703
00:40:30,595 --> 00:40:33,240
no slaves.
704
00:40:33,264 --> 00:40:34,909
No slaves leave with you.
705
00:40:37,769 --> 00:40:41,790
You have until 10:00 tonight.
706
00:40:41,814 --> 00:40:43,751
Then we attack the city.
707
00:41:19,811 --> 00:41:21,872
‐ Up to this point,
Grant's reputation
708
00:41:21,896 --> 00:41:24,500
is "Unconditional
Surrender" Grant.
709
00:41:24,524 --> 00:41:27,586
And yet here, he paroles
the men that are there,
710
00:41:27,610 --> 00:41:31,173
and it shows what
flexibility of mind he had.
711
00:41:31,197 --> 00:41:32,883
I think he makes the calculus
712
00:41:32,907 --> 00:41:34,969
of, "What if we send
these 30,000 scarecrows
713
00:41:34,993 --> 00:41:36,929
"back to their towns?
714
00:41:36,953 --> 00:41:38,681
"What are they gonna tell them?
715
00:41:38,705 --> 00:41:39,974
We just got whipped."
716
00:41:42,875 --> 00:41:45,729
‐ See the corporal.
He'll sign your parole card.
717
00:42:12,280 --> 00:42:14,758
‐ General Grant.
718
00:42:14,782 --> 00:42:16,593
‐ Retain your sidearms, General.
719
00:42:29,130 --> 00:42:31,859
The enemy had been suffering,
720
00:42:31,883 --> 00:42:34,737
particularly towards the last.
721
00:42:34,761 --> 00:42:38,574
I saw our men taking bread
from their haversacks
722
00:42:38,598 --> 00:42:41,702
and giving it to the enemy
they had so recently
723
00:42:41,726 --> 00:42:44,705
been engaged in starving out.
724
00:42:50,068 --> 00:42:53,380
‐ Grant doesn't have
a hatred of Southern people.
725
00:42:53,404 --> 00:42:57,384
He sees them as Americans
that have gone astray.
726
00:42:57,408 --> 00:42:58,969
He doesn't agree
with their cause,
727
00:42:58,993 --> 00:43:01,472
but he cares
for the people themselves.
728
00:43:01,496 --> 00:43:05,726
That really colors the way
he deals with the Confederates
729
00:43:05,750 --> 00:43:08,896
throughout the Civil War.
730
00:43:08,920 --> 00:43:12,066
‐ Vicksburg surrenders,
and the Mississippi is open.
731
00:43:12,090 --> 00:43:13,567
And as Lincoln says,
732
00:43:13,591 --> 00:43:19,740
"The father of waters flows
again, unvexed, to the sea."
733
00:43:21,182 --> 00:43:23,952
And the great thing is
that the news comes to him
734
00:43:23,976 --> 00:43:27,581
the same weekend as the news
of the victory at Gettysburg.
735
00:43:29,607 --> 00:43:33,170
‐ My dear General,
when you first reached
736
00:43:33,194 --> 00:43:36,924
the vicinity of Vicksburg,
I never had any faith,
737
00:43:36,948 --> 00:43:42,012
except a general hope that
the expedition could succeed.
738
00:43:42,036 --> 00:43:44,807
I now wish to make
the personal acknowledgment
739
00:43:44,831 --> 00:43:47,684
that you were right
and I was wrong.
740
00:43:47,708 --> 00:43:51,105
Yours very truly,
A. Lincoln.
741
00:43:53,297 --> 00:43:57,611
‐ Grant and Lincoln
first meet as correspondents.
742
00:43:57,635 --> 00:44:00,155
And their correspondence
is quite wonderful.
743
00:44:00,179 --> 00:44:02,783
They are both men of the west,
744
00:44:02,807 --> 00:44:06,286
and I think they share
a certain philosophy
745
00:44:06,310 --> 00:44:09,123
and perhaps a certain attitude.
746
00:44:09,147 --> 00:44:10,958
And I think it really
set the terms
747
00:44:10,982 --> 00:44:12,960
for their future relationship.
748
00:44:15,153 --> 00:44:19,466
This victory was a culmination
of a very long campaign
749
00:44:19,490 --> 00:44:21,051
full of trial and error,
750
00:44:21,075 --> 00:44:25,013
full of Grant figuring out,
"How do I capture
751
00:44:25,037 --> 00:44:27,474
what seemed
an impregnable fort?"
752
00:44:34,505 --> 00:44:36,817
‐ The Vicksburg campaign
has been studied
753
00:44:36,841 --> 00:44:41,321
by military professionals
ever since July of 1863.
754
00:44:43,014 --> 00:44:46,160
In fact, in the army's
war‐fighting manual,
755
00:44:46,184 --> 00:44:48,162
it highlights
the Vicksburg campaign
756
00:44:48,186 --> 00:44:49,705
as the most brilliant campaign
757
00:44:49,729 --> 00:44:53,876
ever waged on American soil.
758
00:44:53,900 --> 00:44:55,711
And so whereas
the Civil War is often
759
00:44:55,735 --> 00:44:57,963
referred to as the last
of the old wars,
760
00:44:57,987 --> 00:44:59,673
first of the modern wars,
761
00:44:59,697 --> 00:45:04,928
Grant can be termed the first
modern American warrior.
762
00:45:09,040 --> 00:45:10,684
‐ With the success at Vicksburg,
763
00:45:10,708 --> 00:45:12,186
there's no question that Grant
764
00:45:12,210 --> 00:45:14,688
is one of the top
generals in the war.
765
00:45:17,006 --> 00:45:18,942
Lincoln said, "He'll be my man
766
00:45:18,966 --> 00:45:21,945
and I'll be his
the rest of the war."
767
00:45:21,969 --> 00:45:26,116
And so Grant is given command
of the entire western theater.
768
00:45:27,767 --> 00:45:31,205
Well, part of that
new command was Chattanooga.
769
00:45:31,229 --> 00:45:33,916
And in Chattanooga,
there was a Union army
770
00:45:33,940 --> 00:45:37,044
that was essentially trapped.
771
00:45:37,068 --> 00:45:40,214
‐ It's at this point
that Lincoln decides
772
00:45:40,238 --> 00:45:42,216
that he must call Grant in
for the situation.
773
00:45:44,742 --> 00:45:47,721
‐ The art of war
is simple enough.
774
00:45:47,745 --> 00:45:50,098
Find out where your enemy is,
775
00:45:50,122 --> 00:45:52,893
get at him as soon as you can,
776
00:45:52,917 --> 00:45:55,062
strike him as hard as you can,
777
00:45:55,086 --> 00:45:57,397
and keep moving on.
778
00:46:12,436 --> 00:46:14,748
‐ By the summer of 1863,
779
00:46:14,772 --> 00:46:17,584
the Union army had moved
all the way through Tennessee
780
00:46:17,608 --> 00:46:21,004
and captured Chattanooga.
781
00:46:21,028 --> 00:46:24,508
The Union army
then moved into Georgia,
782
00:46:24,532 --> 00:46:29,596
but the Confederates lashed
back and won a huge victory.
783
00:46:29,620 --> 00:46:32,975
The Union army retreated
back into Chattanooga.
784
00:46:32,999 --> 00:46:35,435
The Confederates followed,
occupying the heights
785
00:46:35,459 --> 00:46:37,604
around the city.
786
00:46:37,628 --> 00:46:39,398
And U. S. Grant is brought
into Chattanooga
787
00:46:39,422 --> 00:46:41,483
to do what he does best...
788
00:46:41,507 --> 00:46:43,443
win.
789
00:46:45,803 --> 00:46:49,408
‐ He's essentially being
brought in as a kind of fixer.
790
00:46:49,432 --> 00:46:53,287
Here's the guy who won
the campaign at Vicksburg,
791
00:46:53,311 --> 00:46:56,707
and he's being asked
to do it again.
792
00:46:56,731 --> 00:46:59,167
The Union Army
of the Cumberland is stuck
793
00:46:59,191 --> 00:47:01,003
down in this valley,
794
00:47:01,027 --> 00:47:05,299
trapped in a siege,
and starving.
795
00:47:05,323 --> 00:47:07,050
The Confederate army has set up
796
00:47:07,074 --> 00:47:09,720
a ring around the city
797
00:47:09,744 --> 00:47:12,889
that gives them a commanding
artillery position.
798
00:47:17,710 --> 00:47:20,647
It's incredibly high stakes.
799
00:47:20,671 --> 00:47:23,358
By holding Chattanooga,
you hold one of the most
800
00:47:23,382 --> 00:47:27,654
important rail networks
in Tennessee.
801
00:47:27,678 --> 00:47:30,240
Grant knew if you can
hold that rail hub,
802
00:47:30,264 --> 00:47:32,576
you can build up
a massive effort
803
00:47:32,600 --> 00:47:35,996
to invade the Deep South.
804
00:47:36,020 --> 00:47:37,414
The loss of Chattanooga
would've set
805
00:47:37,438 --> 00:47:39,333
the Union war effort
back months,
806
00:47:39,357 --> 00:47:40,667
if not years.
807
00:47:42,693 --> 00:47:45,672
‐ His first concern
is to feed his troops
808
00:47:45,696 --> 00:47:47,799
by winning a small engagement
on the Confederate side
809
00:47:47,823 --> 00:47:49,259
of the Tennessee River
810
00:47:49,283 --> 00:47:53,388
to open up his new supply line.
811
00:47:53,412 --> 00:47:55,140
Then, like any boss
that comes into a new company,
812
00:47:55,164 --> 00:47:57,517
Grant wants his people.
813
00:47:57,541 --> 00:48:00,020
And he immediately calls
the four divisions
814
00:48:00,044 --> 00:48:04,191
of William Tecumseh Sherman
to come to Chattanooga.
815
00:48:04,215 --> 00:48:06,485
‐ The intention then
is to seize the initiative
816
00:48:06,509 --> 00:48:08,236
and make an attack
against the Confederates
817
00:48:08,260 --> 00:48:10,197
and drive them
away from Chattanooga.
818
00:48:15,059 --> 00:48:17,037
‐ During the battle
of Chattanooga,
819
00:48:17,061 --> 00:48:20,499
Grant is commanding
multiple armies.
820
00:48:20,523 --> 00:48:23,085
He's got Sherman with
the Army of the Tennessee.
821
00:48:23,109 --> 00:48:26,046
He has George Thomas with
the Army of the Cumberland.
822
00:48:26,070 --> 00:48:27,631
He also has Joseph Hooker,
823
00:48:27,655 --> 00:48:30,258
who's coming in
from the eastern theater.
824
00:48:30,282 --> 00:48:32,803
‐ The idea was that
Hooker would flank
825
00:48:32,827 --> 00:48:35,097
the Confederate position
from the south,
826
00:48:35,121 --> 00:48:37,099
Sherman would bring his army
827
00:48:37,123 --> 00:48:38,892
to the northern flank,
828
00:48:38,916 --> 00:48:41,686
and George Thomas
would assault the center.
829
00:48:41,710 --> 00:48:45,565
Three separate assaults
of one position.
830
00:49:10,239 --> 00:49:11,574
‐ Sir.
831
00:49:14,118 --> 00:49:16,346
From General Sherman
on Missionary Ridge.
832
00:49:19,957 --> 00:49:22,769
‐ At Chattanooga,
his battle plan doesn't work
833
00:49:22,793 --> 00:49:24,604
the way he expected it to,
834
00:49:24,628 --> 00:49:27,274
but he's got
the presence of mind
835
00:49:27,298 --> 00:49:30,485
to process it and make decisions
836
00:49:30,509 --> 00:49:34,448
and adapt to things that
he didn't expect to happen.
837
00:49:37,349 --> 00:49:38,785
‐ Sherman's stuck.
838
00:49:38,809 --> 00:49:41,621
Send in Thomas' men.
839
00:49:41,645 --> 00:49:45,333
Order them to attack the rifle
pits below Missionary Ridge.
840
00:49:45,357 --> 00:49:48,295
Sherman needs our help‐‐ now.
841
00:49:51,363 --> 00:49:54,801
‐ George Thomas' army
had been much maligned
842
00:49:54,825 --> 00:49:58,138
for having been trapped
in a siege,
843
00:49:58,162 --> 00:50:00,807
and I think those men
were spoiling for a fight
844
00:50:00,831 --> 00:50:02,976
as a result.
845
00:50:09,507 --> 00:50:12,152
‐ Grant gives the order
with the hope that that will
846
00:50:12,176 --> 00:50:14,988
force the Confederates
to start moving troops
847
00:50:15,012 --> 00:50:16,990
away from Sherman's path.
848
00:50:20,351 --> 00:50:23,330
The order was that once
they seized the rifle pits,
849
00:50:23,354 --> 00:50:25,665
they should stop, reorganize,
850
00:50:25,689 --> 00:50:30,212
and then attack the top
of Missionary Ridge.
851
00:50:30,236 --> 00:50:33,173
But they don't stop.
852
00:50:46,919 --> 00:50:49,356
‐ Without awaiting
further orders,
853
00:50:49,380 --> 00:50:53,026
on our troops went
for the crest.
854
00:50:56,220 --> 00:50:59,324
The fire along
the rebel line was terrific.
855
00:50:59,348 --> 00:51:03,703
Cannon and musket balls
filled the air.
856
00:51:03,727 --> 00:51:06,873
The pursuit continued
until the crest was reached.
857
00:51:13,654 --> 00:51:16,925
‐ It was a fantastic
victory for Grant.
858
00:51:16,949 --> 00:51:19,469
This is the battle
that really, I think, makes
859
00:51:19,493 --> 00:51:24,808
the Republic respect Grant
as the possible savior.
860
00:51:27,376 --> 00:51:31,064
‐ News of this goes through
the North as a great triumph.
861
00:51:31,088 --> 00:51:33,900
Grant is now clearly
and unambiguously
862
00:51:33,924 --> 00:51:36,570
the general who looks like
863
00:51:36,594 --> 00:51:38,905
finally the man
who can win this war.
864
00:51:41,056 --> 00:51:44,286
‐ Grant has eliminated two
Confederate armies via siege,
865
00:51:44,310 --> 00:51:47,539
Fort Donelson and Vicksburg.
866
00:51:47,563 --> 00:51:49,624
At Chattanooga, he combined
three disparate armies
867
00:51:49,648 --> 00:51:51,084
into a single effort,
868
00:51:51,108 --> 00:51:54,254
so his technical competencies
were beyond reproach.
869
00:51:55,654 --> 00:51:58,091
‐ At Chattanooga,
he reverses another
870
00:51:58,115 --> 00:52:01,761
very desperate situation
for the Union forces.
871
00:52:01,785 --> 00:52:04,598
That's what ultimately
then leads Lincoln
872
00:52:04,622 --> 00:52:06,016
to bring Grant east.
873
00:52:08,334 --> 00:52:10,937
‐ By March of 1864,
874
00:52:10,961 --> 00:52:12,939
Lincoln has found his man,
875
00:52:12,963 --> 00:52:15,275
and Congress raises Grant
to the rank
876
00:52:15,299 --> 00:52:17,777
of full lieutenant general,
877
00:52:17,801 --> 00:52:20,488
the first general
since Washington
878
00:52:20,512 --> 00:52:24,117
to hold the full rank
of lieutenant general.
879
00:52:25,559 --> 00:52:30,123
‐ He is to be in command
of all the Union armies.
880
00:52:30,147 --> 00:52:32,667
This is novel.
881
00:52:32,691 --> 00:52:35,503
‐ The bill restoring the grade
of lieutenant general
882
00:52:35,527 --> 00:52:38,673
of the army had passed.
883
00:52:38,697 --> 00:52:42,135
I was ordered to Washington
to receive my commission.
884
00:52:43,661 --> 00:52:45,847
‐ Grant and Lincoln never meet
each other face‐to‐face
885
00:52:45,871 --> 00:52:48,058
until Grant shows up
in Washington
886
00:52:48,082 --> 00:52:51,478
to be promoted
to lieutenant general...
887
00:52:51,502 --> 00:52:53,313
but his ability
to advise Lincoln
888
00:52:53,337 --> 00:52:55,315
and to guide
the whole nation's effort
889
00:52:55,339 --> 00:52:57,233
to win the war...
890
00:52:57,257 --> 00:52:59,802
that was a question mark.
891
00:53:11,772 --> 00:53:13,816
‐ Mr. President.
892
00:53:15,359 --> 00:53:18,296
‐ General Grant.
893
00:53:18,320 --> 00:53:20,382
Come in.
894
00:53:20,406 --> 00:53:23,093
Come in.
895
00:53:27,496 --> 00:53:29,891
I do not profess
to be a military man,
896
00:53:29,915 --> 00:53:33,895
and I certainly would
never interfere, but...
897
00:53:35,838 --> 00:53:37,548
Here it is.
898
00:53:42,261 --> 00:53:45,031
I've marked
our current placements.
899
00:53:45,055 --> 00:53:46,449
Now...
900
00:53:46,473 --> 00:53:47,992
if we move into Virginia
901
00:53:48,016 --> 00:53:50,078
between the course
of these two rivers,
902
00:53:50,102 --> 00:53:53,081
we can not only use them
to bring in supplies.
903
00:53:53,105 --> 00:53:55,858
We might also protect
our flanks.
904
00:53:57,276 --> 00:53:59,254
‐ I'll consider it, sir.
905
00:54:05,701 --> 00:54:09,389
‐ Of course.
906
00:54:09,413 --> 00:54:11,433
But tell me...
907
00:54:13,751 --> 00:54:17,856
You'll go after Lee?
908
00:54:17,880 --> 00:54:21,860
You'll go after him
until he's finished?
909
00:54:21,884 --> 00:54:23,820
It all depends on you.
910
00:54:29,308 --> 00:54:32,162
‐ The president told me
that all he had ever wanted
911
00:54:32,186 --> 00:54:34,831
was someone who would
take responsibility
912
00:54:34,855 --> 00:54:36,166
and act.
913
00:54:41,737 --> 00:54:43,465
‐ Lincoln had gone
through about every other
914
00:54:43,489 --> 00:54:45,425
senior general in the Union army
915
00:54:45,449 --> 00:54:47,260
at this point in time.
916
00:54:47,284 --> 00:54:49,387
And finally,
Lincoln finds his general,
917
00:54:49,411 --> 00:54:52,182
a general who will
actually fight.
918
00:54:52,206 --> 00:54:54,517
And Grant is truly
one of the great
919
00:54:54,541 --> 00:54:58,021
battle captains of all time.
920
00:54:58,045 --> 00:55:01,941
He is someone
who achieved brilliance,
921
00:55:01,965 --> 00:55:04,652
tactically, operationally,
and strategically.
922
00:55:06,261 --> 00:55:08,948
At the tactical level,
this would be commanding
923
00:55:08,972 --> 00:55:12,494
multiple brigades like
Fort Henry and Fort Donelson
924
00:55:12,518 --> 00:55:14,996
in the early stages
of the war in the west.
925
00:55:18,357 --> 00:55:21,544
Operationally, this is
multiple divisions now.
926
00:55:21,568 --> 00:55:24,255
And, of course,
Vicksburg is an extraordinary
927
00:55:24,279 --> 00:55:26,466
example of that.
928
00:55:26,490 --> 00:55:28,176
And then strategically,
929
00:55:28,200 --> 00:55:29,761
when he comes east,
930
00:55:29,785 --> 00:55:32,805
he for the first time
then develops
931
00:55:32,829 --> 00:55:36,684
a true strategic campaign
for all of the Union forces.
932
00:55:39,711 --> 00:55:42,023
‐ Grant's idea when
he becomes commanding general
933
00:55:42,047 --> 00:55:46,486
is to get all of the Union
forces to act in harmony.
934
00:55:46,510 --> 00:55:48,905
He wants to move on Mobile Bay,
935
00:55:48,929 --> 00:55:51,324
one of the last
Confederate ports.
936
00:55:51,348 --> 00:55:54,994
He wants Sherman
to advance on Atlanta.
937
00:55:56,770 --> 00:55:59,123
He wants Franz Sigel to go
down the Shenandoah Valley,
938
00:55:59,147 --> 00:56:02,418
the breadbasket of
the Confederacy in the east.
939
00:56:02,442 --> 00:56:04,462
Benjamin Butler will
come up the James River
940
00:56:04,486 --> 00:56:06,089
and get at Richmond
from the south,
941
00:56:06,113 --> 00:56:08,341
hopefully dividing
some of Lee's attention.
942
00:56:08,365 --> 00:56:09,968
And then finally,
the Army of the Potomac
943
00:56:09,992 --> 00:56:12,971
will head at Robert E. Lee
in Richmond.
944
00:56:12,995 --> 00:56:15,557
It's those five pieces
acting in concert
945
00:56:15,581 --> 00:56:17,517
that is his original vision
for how this war
946
00:56:17,541 --> 00:56:19,227
should come to a close.
947
00:56:21,837 --> 00:56:23,565
‐ The South had become
very good,
948
00:56:23,589 --> 00:56:25,650
with the smaller population,
949
00:56:25,674 --> 00:56:28,069
at moving troops
from one place to another.
950
00:56:29,511 --> 00:56:31,322
What Grant realized was that
951
00:56:31,346 --> 00:56:34,867
if you simultaneously attack
many Confederate positions,
952
00:56:34,891 --> 00:56:36,911
they would not be able
to play this game.
953
00:56:38,395 --> 00:56:42,333
‐ Grant's strategic genius
was the ability to move
954
00:56:42,357 --> 00:56:46,004
five different armies
simultaneously...
955
00:56:46,028 --> 00:56:48,298
but also, Grant recognized,
956
00:56:48,322 --> 00:56:51,050
the destruction
of Robert E. Lee's army,
957
00:56:51,074 --> 00:56:53,469
the symbol
of Confederate nationalism,
958
00:56:53,493 --> 00:56:57,098
was fundamental
to winning the war.
959
00:57:00,167 --> 00:57:02,395
‐ Robert E. Lee's army
had countless times
960
00:57:02,419 --> 00:57:04,314
defeated Union armies
on the battlefield
961
00:57:04,338 --> 00:57:06,774
with brilliant
tactical maneuvers,
962
00:57:06,798 --> 00:57:09,652
so there was a confidence.
963
00:57:09,676 --> 00:57:11,112
There was an esprit de corps
964
00:57:11,136 --> 00:57:13,573
that bound that army together,
965
00:57:13,597 --> 00:57:16,451
and spirits are high
and ready for an engagement.
966
00:57:19,311 --> 00:57:21,164
Robert E. Lee
is born the scion
967
00:57:21,188 --> 00:57:24,250
to two of the oldest
elite families
968
00:57:24,274 --> 00:57:25,585
of the state of Virginia.
969
00:57:27,152 --> 00:57:29,589
And in many ways,
Robert E. Lee becomes
970
00:57:29,613 --> 00:57:31,049
the general most connected
971
00:57:31,073 --> 00:57:32,842
with the institution of slavery
972
00:57:32,866 --> 00:57:35,720
and protecting that institution.
973
00:57:35,744 --> 00:57:38,848
‐ Grant had none
of that mystique.
974
00:57:38,872 --> 00:57:41,643
There was no illusion of a guy,
975
00:57:41,667 --> 00:57:45,146
you know, who was highborn
in the way that Lee was.
976
00:57:45,170 --> 00:57:47,565
But, you know, when I see you
on the battlefield,
977
00:57:47,589 --> 00:57:49,275
none of that matters.
978
00:57:49,299 --> 00:57:51,903
It's just me and you.
979
00:57:51,927 --> 00:57:53,696
‐ But all of Grant's
success had been
980
00:57:53,720 --> 00:57:56,532
in the western theater.
981
00:57:56,556 --> 00:57:59,661
And everybody would argue...
982
00:57:59,685 --> 00:58:00,870
you're not out
in the western theater anymore.
983
00:58:00,894 --> 00:58:03,456
You're fighting Robert E. Lee.
984
00:58:03,480 --> 00:58:05,583
Of course, we could flip
that coin and say
985
00:58:05,607 --> 00:58:09,837
Robert E. Lee is now
fighting Ulysses S. Grant.
986
00:58:14,908 --> 00:58:17,845
‐ Grant is gonna
personally attach himself
987
00:58:17,869 --> 00:58:20,765
to George Gordon Meade's
Army the of Potomac,
988
00:58:20,789 --> 00:58:23,184
which is gonna
latch on like a bulldog
989
00:58:23,208 --> 00:58:26,729
to Robert E. Lee's
Army of Northern Virginia.
990
00:58:28,088 --> 00:58:29,774
‐ When Grant comes
down to Brandy Station
991
00:58:29,798 --> 00:58:33,194
to visit the headquarters
of George Gordon Meade,
992
00:58:33,218 --> 00:58:36,864
Meade's staff are surprised.
993
00:58:36,888 --> 00:58:40,076
This was a slightly
ordinary figure
994
00:58:40,100 --> 00:58:44,872
who looked like a merchant
who'd just come from a store.
995
00:58:44,896 --> 00:58:47,375
But then you met his eye,
996
00:58:47,399 --> 00:58:51,963
that icy cold eye that Grant
could somehow have,
997
00:58:51,987 --> 00:58:53,464
and suddenly you knew this man
998
00:58:53,488 --> 00:58:56,300
was totally in charge of things.
999
00:58:56,324 --> 00:58:59,220
One clerk was advised,
1000
00:58:59,244 --> 00:59:02,598
"When Grant gives you
a straight order, obey it.
1001
00:59:02,622 --> 00:59:04,350
"When you have
information for Grant,
1002
00:59:04,374 --> 00:59:06,519
"give it to him straight.
1003
00:59:06,543 --> 00:59:11,566
"And above all,
don't say 'sir' too much.
1004
00:59:11,590 --> 00:59:13,568
Grant's not interested
in that."
1005
00:59:16,803 --> 00:59:20,950
‐ Through most of the winter
of 1863 and 1864,
1006
00:59:20,974 --> 00:59:22,827
the Union army
and the Confederates
1007
00:59:22,851 --> 00:59:24,412
have been glaring at each other,
1008
00:59:24,436 --> 00:59:27,039
waiting for the spring to come
1009
00:59:27,063 --> 00:59:29,667
so that the new campaign
can begin.
1010
00:59:29,691 --> 00:59:32,754
Grant wants to get south
so he can engage
1011
00:59:32,778 --> 00:59:35,465
Confederates
in more open ground.
1012
00:59:35,489 --> 00:59:37,925
But before he does that,
he has to go across
1013
00:59:37,949 --> 00:59:40,720
the Rapidan River
and go through an area
1014
00:59:40,744 --> 00:59:44,640
deemed as almost Lee's hunting
ground for Union armies...
1015
00:59:44,664 --> 00:59:46,416
"The Wilderness."
1016
00:59:50,712 --> 00:59:54,192
‐ Gentlemen?
1017
00:59:54,216 --> 00:59:57,195
‐ Grant may have won
some victories in the west,
1018
00:59:57,219 --> 01:00:00,239
but this is Virginia.
1019
01:00:00,263 --> 01:00:02,074
‐ We're strong here, sir.
1020
01:00:02,098 --> 01:00:03,826
And if he attacks,
1021
01:00:03,850 --> 01:00:05,912
we can make a play
for Washington.
1022
01:00:05,936 --> 01:00:07,872
‐ And if he crosses the Rapidan,
1023
01:00:07,896 --> 01:00:10,666
he'd have to cut
through the Wilderness.
1024
01:00:10,690 --> 01:00:14,378
I can't imagine
he'd be fool enough.
1025
01:00:14,402 --> 01:00:16,506
We'd whip him but good.
1026
01:00:18,406 --> 01:00:21,594
‐ General Longstreet?
1027
01:00:25,288 --> 01:00:29,894
‐ I know Grant
from West Point and Mexico.
1028
01:00:29,918 --> 01:00:33,064
Do not underestimate him.
1029
01:00:33,088 --> 01:00:35,358
He will fight us every day
and every hour
1030
01:00:35,382 --> 01:00:37,819
till the end of this war.
1031
01:00:39,970 --> 01:00:41,781
‐ There's sort of a sense
that, "Okay,
1032
01:00:41,805 --> 01:00:45,159
Robert E. Lee is the champion
of the eastern theater."
1033
01:00:46,893 --> 01:00:49,038
"And we've tried challenger
after challenger
1034
01:00:49,062 --> 01:00:50,998
"after challenger.
1035
01:00:51,022 --> 01:00:54,168
But now we're bringing in
our best guy from the west."
1036
01:00:56,319 --> 01:00:58,297
There's huge expectations.
1037
01:00:59,990 --> 01:01:03,553
‐ I know Lee
as well as he knows himself.
1038
01:01:03,577 --> 01:01:05,805
I intend to attack
his weak points
1039
01:01:05,829 --> 01:01:07,807
and flank his strong ones.
1040
01:01:12,794 --> 01:01:15,147
‐ We have two choices:
1041
01:01:15,171 --> 01:01:17,358
flank Lee and get to Richmond
from the west,
1042
01:01:17,382 --> 01:01:19,652
which leaves Washington exposed,
1043
01:01:19,676 --> 01:01:21,404
or head south,
1044
01:01:21,428 --> 01:01:23,030
get to Lee by going
through the Wilderness.
1045
01:01:23,054 --> 01:01:24,490
‐ The rebs know those woods.
1046
01:01:24,514 --> 01:01:26,367
Could be deadly for us
to go through there.
1047
01:01:26,391 --> 01:01:28,327
‐ We have to move quickly,
get out the other side,
1048
01:01:28,351 --> 01:01:29,829
meet him in the open.
‐ It's a trap.
1049
01:01:29,853 --> 01:01:32,248
We'd be leaving
Washington undefended.
1050
01:01:32,272 --> 01:01:33,583
‐ General Meade?
1051
01:01:33,607 --> 01:01:35,334
‐ I beat Lee at Gettysburg.
1052
01:01:35,358 --> 01:01:37,378
I'd like to finish the job.
1053
01:01:37,402 --> 01:01:39,505
‐ Then wherever he goes,
you'll follow.
1054
01:01:44,200 --> 01:01:47,179
We'll cross the Rapidan
into the Wilderness.
1055
01:01:52,709 --> 01:01:54,604
‐ General, our scouts
report he crossed
1056
01:01:54,628 --> 01:01:56,939
the Rapidan last night.
1057
01:01:56,963 --> 01:01:59,692
His army is twice ours, sir.
1058
01:01:59,716 --> 01:02:02,361
‐ We'll just have
to even the odds.
1059
01:02:03,762 --> 01:02:06,365
Catch them before they
get through the Wilderness.
1060
01:02:08,058 --> 01:02:11,579
Have General Hill advance
on the Orange Plank Road.
1061
01:02:11,603 --> 01:02:14,707
General Ewell, on the turnpike.
1062
01:02:14,731 --> 01:02:17,043
‐ Yes, sir.
1063
01:02:24,032 --> 01:02:26,260
‐ The wilderness of Spotsylvania
1064
01:02:26,284 --> 01:02:31,807
was 70 square miles
of dense forest.
1065
01:02:34,793 --> 01:02:37,229
It was difficult for mass groups
1066
01:02:37,253 --> 01:02:39,023
of soldiers to move through
1067
01:02:39,047 --> 01:02:41,067
this particular area
of Virginia.
1068
01:02:43,426 --> 01:02:46,572
‐ A little further south
is Spotsylvania Courthouse.
1069
01:02:46,596 --> 01:02:49,158
The land around that area
is a lot more wide open.
1070
01:02:49,182 --> 01:02:52,411
So Grant says, "We need
to cross the Rapidan River
1071
01:02:52,435 --> 01:02:54,413
"and move through
the Wilderness,
1072
01:02:54,437 --> 01:02:57,583
"get to this wide‐open ground
closer to Richmond,
1073
01:02:57,607 --> 01:02:59,627
"and in doing so,
1074
01:02:59,651 --> 01:03:01,295
"Lee's gonna have
to come out and fight us
1075
01:03:01,319 --> 01:03:02,588
and on ground of our choosing."
1076
01:03:05,448 --> 01:03:08,928
‐ Lee knew this ground.
He knew it well.
1077
01:03:08,952 --> 01:03:10,972
He was going to use every tree
1078
01:03:10,996 --> 01:03:16,602
and every bush to try
to delay Grant's actions.
1079
01:03:16,626 --> 01:03:18,437
‐ The great advantage
of the Union army
1080
01:03:18,461 --> 01:03:19,772
against
the Army of Northern Virginia
1081
01:03:19,796 --> 01:03:22,775
is in numbers and artillery.
1082
01:03:22,799 --> 01:03:26,112
In that choked vine forest,
1083
01:03:26,136 --> 01:03:27,780
numbers matter less,
1084
01:03:27,804 --> 01:03:31,575
and you cannot bring
your artillery to bear.
1085
01:03:31,599 --> 01:03:33,452
In fact, the Army of the Potomac
1086
01:03:33,476 --> 01:03:35,329
fought there
against Robert E. Lee
1087
01:03:35,353 --> 01:03:36,622
at the battle
of Chancellorsville
1088
01:03:36,646 --> 01:03:39,875
earlier in the war and had lost.
1089
01:03:39,899 --> 01:03:41,127
The battle of Chancellorsville
1090
01:03:41,151 --> 01:03:43,129
is Robert E. Lee's high point.
1091
01:03:43,153 --> 01:03:46,090
Lee is gonna violate all kind
of military principles,
1092
01:03:46,114 --> 01:03:48,634
divide his army in the face
of a larger enemy,
1093
01:03:48,658 --> 01:03:50,803
and, though outnumbered
two to one,
1094
01:03:50,827 --> 01:03:54,557
he will drive the Union army
back across the river.
1095
01:03:54,581 --> 01:03:58,144
This is the magic
of Robert E. Lee.
1096
01:03:58,168 --> 01:03:59,186
‐ The Chancellorsville
battlefield
1097
01:03:59,210 --> 01:04:00,813
and the Wilderness battlefield
1098
01:04:00,837 --> 01:04:04,942
are pretty much
right on top of each other.
1099
01:04:04,966 --> 01:04:08,904
And during the initial phase
of the Wilderness campaign,
1100
01:04:08,928 --> 01:04:10,656
when Grant
and the Army of the Potomac
1101
01:04:10,680 --> 01:04:14,160
cross the river,
they see the remains
1102
01:04:14,184 --> 01:04:17,079
of the battle
of the year before.
1103
01:04:29,824 --> 01:04:32,678
‐ When Grant was traveling
with the Army of the Potomac,
1104
01:04:32,702 --> 01:04:34,680
he realized the extent
to which Lee
1105
01:04:34,704 --> 01:04:39,018
had gotten into the mind
of all of the officers.
1106
01:04:39,042 --> 01:04:42,897
And he knew that he had
to deal with the Lee mystique.
1107
01:04:42,921 --> 01:04:47,860
That was really one
of his major objectives.
1108
01:04:47,884 --> 01:04:50,112
‐ The natural disposition
of most people
1109
01:04:50,136 --> 01:04:52,490
is to clothe the commander
of a large army
1110
01:04:52,514 --> 01:04:54,200
whom they do not know
1111
01:04:54,224 --> 01:04:57,203
with almost
superhuman abilities.
1112
01:04:57,227 --> 01:05:00,039
But I had known
General Lee personally
1113
01:05:00,063 --> 01:05:03,292
and knew that he was mortal.
1114
01:05:04,901 --> 01:05:08,214
‐ The Army of the Potomac
numbers about 120,000 men.
1115
01:05:08,238 --> 01:05:13,385
The Confederate army
numbers approximately 62,000.
1116
01:05:13,409 --> 01:05:15,096
Lee knows he's outnumbered,
1117
01:05:15,120 --> 01:05:17,640
but he knows if he can
bottle him up somewhere,
1118
01:05:17,664 --> 01:05:20,726
those superior numbers
won't account for anything.
1119
01:05:22,919 --> 01:05:25,606
Both sides are confident.
1120
01:05:25,630 --> 01:05:27,733
The Confederates,
they've rebounded
1121
01:05:27,757 --> 01:05:29,902
since their defeat
from Gettysburg.
1122
01:05:31,261 --> 01:05:33,030
And also,
the Union Army of the Potomac,
1123
01:05:33,054 --> 01:05:34,657
coming off that victory
at Gettysburg,
1124
01:05:34,681 --> 01:05:37,743
they're ready to keep
following up that success.
1125
01:05:37,767 --> 01:05:41,247
That mentality, I think,
explains the ferocity
1126
01:05:41,271 --> 01:05:42,581
of the fighting that follows.
1127
01:05:44,983 --> 01:05:47,837
‐ We had to have hard fighting.
1128
01:05:47,861 --> 01:05:49,755
The two armies
now confronting each other
1129
01:05:49,779 --> 01:05:52,800
had been in deadly conflict
for so long
1130
01:05:52,824 --> 01:05:55,594
without any decisive result,
1131
01:05:55,618 --> 01:05:58,872
they hardly knew
which could whip the other.
1132
01:07:07,607 --> 01:07:11,086
‐ So the first time that Grant
and Lee go into battle,
1133
01:07:11,110 --> 01:07:13,005
the two headliners of the war,
1134
01:07:13,029 --> 01:07:14,506
at the Battle of the Wilderness,
1135
01:07:14,530 --> 01:07:18,886
May of 1864,
Grant crosses into territory
1136
01:07:18,910 --> 01:07:22,097
where Lee has his army deployed,
1137
01:07:22,121 --> 01:07:24,683
and it's a pretty brutal fight.
1138
01:07:24,707 --> 01:07:27,228
‐ Lee was actually
moving very aggressively.
1139
01:07:27,252 --> 01:07:29,688
He wanted to attack Grant.
1140
01:07:29,712 --> 01:07:33,234
He wanted to push Grant
out of Virginia.
1141
01:07:33,258 --> 01:07:35,903
‐ Once Grant crosses the river,
1142
01:07:35,927 --> 01:07:39,698
you see two steely‐eyed
killers who go at each other.
1143
01:07:39,722 --> 01:07:41,450
It's relentless.
It's brutal.
1144
01:07:41,474 --> 01:07:43,535
It's nonstop.
It's exhausting.
1145
01:07:46,312 --> 01:07:48,332
‐ General Grant,
1146
01:07:48,356 --> 01:07:50,251
Rebel forces are at
the Orange Turnpike
1147
01:07:50,275 --> 01:07:52,962
on the Plank Road.
1148
01:07:52,986 --> 01:07:54,266
‐ Pitch into them at the first‐‐
1149
01:07:55,446 --> 01:07:57,216
Pitch into them
at the first opportunity.
1150
01:07:57,240 --> 01:07:59,051
Call the battery and gun crews.
1151
01:07:59,075 --> 01:08:00,511
We'll hold this position.
1152
01:08:00,535 --> 01:08:02,429
‐ Grant is going to tell Meade,
1153
01:08:02,453 --> 01:08:04,139
"You do not wait
for them to attack you.
1154
01:08:04,163 --> 01:08:06,684
You attack them."
1155
01:08:06,708 --> 01:08:08,269
‐ Why does he do this?
1156
01:08:08,293 --> 01:08:10,396
Because his object
is to go ahead and fight
1157
01:08:10,420 --> 01:08:12,231
Robert E. Lee.
1158
01:08:12,255 --> 01:08:14,441
He takes tactical risk
fighting in the Wilderness
1159
01:08:14,465 --> 01:08:17,236
because there is a opportunity
1160
01:08:17,260 --> 01:08:19,238
to destroy parts of Lee's army.
1161
01:08:21,014 --> 01:08:22,700
‐ It throws Lee for a loop,
1162
01:08:22,724 --> 01:08:25,703
because Lee thought
he had Grant pegged.
1163
01:08:25,727 --> 01:08:27,246
Lee's going off
the old rule book here,
1164
01:08:27,270 --> 01:08:29,873
Union army is not
gonna act aggressively,
1165
01:08:29,897 --> 01:08:31,625
and at the Wilderness,
1166
01:08:31,649 --> 01:08:33,585
that preconceived notion
that he had
1167
01:08:33,609 --> 01:08:36,588
really gets destroyed.
1168
01:08:36,612 --> 01:08:39,758
‐ Grant firmly believes that if
he can retain the initiative,
1169
01:08:39,782 --> 01:08:42,594
he can force the other army
to react to him.
1170
01:08:42,618 --> 01:08:43,971
He believes the Confederate army
1171
01:08:43,995 --> 01:08:45,222
should march to a Union drum.
1172
01:08:47,915 --> 01:08:50,102
Therefore,
he's gonna continue to push
1173
01:08:50,126 --> 01:08:53,230
and drive those Confederates.
1174
01:08:56,549 --> 01:08:58,610
This is not one of those
wide‐open battlefields
1175
01:08:58,634 --> 01:09:01,488
that you can see long lines
of clashing troops.
1176
01:09:01,512 --> 01:09:05,617
Visibility is less
than 20 yards.
1177
01:09:05,641 --> 01:09:07,494
Throw in the smoke
and noise of battle,
1178
01:09:07,518 --> 01:09:10,789
and now it's
even more confusing.
1179
01:09:36,381 --> 01:09:39,318
‐ It had been a very dry spring.
1180
01:09:39,342 --> 01:09:41,945
Now, if you think of men
firing their muskets,
1181
01:09:41,969 --> 01:09:44,365
there's gonna be
a flash of fire,
1182
01:09:44,389 --> 01:09:46,784
and all it takes is one spark.
1183
01:09:48,434 --> 01:09:52,164
And the real horrors
of the Wilderness begin.
1184
01:09:52,188 --> 01:09:54,833
The fires are gonna
grow in intensity.
1185
01:10:14,752 --> 01:10:17,356
For the men who are wounded,
1186
01:10:17,380 --> 01:10:19,817
they can either crawl
to the enemy lines,
1187
01:10:19,841 --> 01:10:23,654
or they can always kill
themselves with a revolver.
1188
01:10:23,678 --> 01:10:26,615
For the living soldiers,
at the end of this fight,
1189
01:10:26,639 --> 01:10:29,410
they have to now listen
to men scream to death
1190
01:10:29,434 --> 01:10:32,121
as they're burned alive
in this fire,
1191
01:10:32,145 --> 01:10:34,081
and they now
have to smell their bodies
1192
01:10:34,105 --> 01:10:36,041
as its roasted
in the conflagration,
1193
01:10:36,065 --> 01:10:38,585
and that is something
that truly sticks with them
1194
01:10:38,609 --> 01:10:39,729
for the rest of their lives.
1195
01:10:42,405 --> 01:10:45,175
‐ The Wilderness was a brutal,
bloody battle,
1196
01:10:45,199 --> 01:10:46,635
similar to the battle
they'd fought
1197
01:10:46,659 --> 01:10:48,220
at Chancellorsville
the year before,
1198
01:10:48,244 --> 01:10:50,389
almost in the exact same
location.
1199
01:10:50,413 --> 01:10:53,058
And that battle had ended
with the Union army
1200
01:10:53,082 --> 01:10:54,727
pulling back from the field
1201
01:10:54,751 --> 01:10:56,979
and trying to regenerate itself
1202
01:10:57,003 --> 01:11:00,607
and get itself
back into condition.
1203
01:11:00,631 --> 01:11:02,568
‐ Grant might have been,
like the other generals,
1204
01:11:02,592 --> 01:11:05,404
justified in breaking off
and pulling back to regroup.
1205
01:11:21,861 --> 01:11:24,882
‐ General Grant.
1206
01:11:24,906 --> 01:11:26,741
Do you want
the casualty numbers?
1207
01:11:31,078 --> 01:11:33,539
‐ We'll be the first
to attack in the morning.
1208
01:11:34,874 --> 01:11:36,852
‐ Our men are exhausted.
1209
01:11:36,876 --> 01:11:38,711
‐ So are his.
1210
01:11:40,254 --> 01:11:42,733
We go forward.
1211
01:11:42,757 --> 01:11:45,569
Lee's still waiting
for reinforcements.
1212
01:11:45,593 --> 01:11:46,820
So if we're the first to attack,
1213
01:11:46,844 --> 01:11:48,304
we have our advantage.
1214
01:11:50,014 --> 01:11:51,200
‐ General.
1215
01:11:51,224 --> 01:11:52,725
‐ General Meade.
1216
01:11:54,352 --> 01:11:56,830
Don't forget.
1217
01:11:56,854 --> 01:11:59,440
We possess strengths
they do not have.
1218
01:12:00,942 --> 01:12:04,087
Our numbers...
1219
01:12:04,111 --> 01:12:06,089
and our purpose, Meade.
1220
01:12:08,741 --> 01:12:10,677
Our purpose.
1221
01:12:12,662 --> 01:12:15,015
‐ Right, sir.
1222
01:13:03,296 --> 01:13:05,566
‐ I was anxious that
the rebels should not take
1223
01:13:05,590 --> 01:13:07,776
the initiative in the morning
1224
01:13:07,800 --> 01:13:10,487
and therefore
ordered an assault.
1225
01:13:31,991 --> 01:13:34,720
‐ Union forces were successful
initially in the morning.
1226
01:13:34,744 --> 01:13:36,763
They catch
the Confederate 3rd Corps
1227
01:13:36,787 --> 01:13:38,807
under A. P. Hill
by surprise,
1228
01:13:38,831 --> 01:13:41,393
they push them a good mile,
1229
01:13:41,417 --> 01:13:45,188
and it looks like Lee's right
flank is about to cave in.
1230
01:13:51,594 --> 01:13:53,947
‐ General.
‐ We're losing ground.
1231
01:13:53,971 --> 01:13:56,617
‐ But Longstreet's
moving in from the west...
1232
01:13:56,641 --> 01:13:58,327
With the Texas boys.
1233
01:13:58,351 --> 01:14:00,412
‐ And I'm glad of it.
1234
01:14:00,436 --> 01:14:03,415
Those Texas boys will
stand and fight all day.
1235
01:14:09,528 --> 01:14:12,424
‐ Longstreet has arrived
with reinforcements.
1236
01:14:12,448 --> 01:14:13,926
Lee may counterattack.
1237
01:14:13,950 --> 01:14:15,844
‐ Let him.
1238
01:14:15,868 --> 01:14:17,346
We'll stick it out.
1239
01:14:17,370 --> 01:14:19,348
‐ Let's taken our land,
forced us out.
1240
01:14:19,372 --> 01:14:20,766
He's gonna advance.
1241
01:14:20,790 --> 01:14:24,519
‐ I'm tired of hearing
about what Lee is gonna do.
1242
01:14:24,543 --> 01:14:26,772
Some of you think he's gonna
turn a double somersault
1243
01:14:26,796 --> 01:14:30,651
and land in our rear and both
flanks at the same time.
1244
01:14:30,675 --> 01:14:32,361
Go back to your commands.
1245
01:14:32,385 --> 01:14:34,613
Think about what we're gonna do.
1246
01:14:46,649 --> 01:14:51,129
‐ Longstreet arrives to save
the day in the nick of time.
1247
01:14:52,405 --> 01:14:54,383
James Longstreet
had actually attended
1248
01:14:54,407 --> 01:14:57,469
Ulysses S. Grant's wedding.
1249
01:14:57,493 --> 01:14:59,429
And he is Lee's
most trusted subordinate.
1250
01:14:59,453 --> 01:15:00,973
He is the old warhorse.
1251
01:15:05,668 --> 01:15:09,731
‐ The Confederates
slam into Union lines...
1252
01:15:09,755 --> 01:15:12,150
but the Union
had bolstered their defenses.
1253
01:15:14,635 --> 01:15:18,949
Ultimately,
the series of assaults fail.
1254
01:15:18,973 --> 01:15:21,868
‐ And James Longstreet
will be accidentally wounded
1255
01:15:21,892 --> 01:15:24,663
by his own men,
shot in the neck,
1256
01:15:24,687 --> 01:15:27,541
nearly choking to death
on his own blood
1257
01:15:27,565 --> 01:15:30,836
before he can be moved
from the field.
1258
01:15:32,570 --> 01:15:35,549
The Wilderness is on fire.
1259
01:15:44,290 --> 01:15:45,767
One soldier describes it
1260
01:15:45,791 --> 01:15:49,187
as a battle of invisibles
versus invisibles.
1261
01:15:54,592 --> 01:15:57,696
They could not see
the enemy army.
1262
01:16:07,938 --> 01:16:10,208
Soldiers are trapped.
1263
01:16:10,232 --> 01:16:12,836
They cannot find their way out.
1264
01:16:47,103 --> 01:16:52,292
‐ The woods were set on fire
by the bursting shells.
1265
01:16:52,316 --> 01:16:54,961
The wounded,
who had not strength to move,
1266
01:16:54,985 --> 01:16:57,964
were either suffocated
or burned to death.
1267
01:17:03,452 --> 01:17:05,097
‐ By the end
of two days of combat,
1268
01:17:05,121 --> 01:17:07,974
the Union army has sustained
about 17,000 men
1269
01:17:07,998 --> 01:17:10,602
killed, captured,
wounded, or missing.
1270
01:17:10,626 --> 01:17:13,355
Confederates are about 11,000.
1271
01:17:13,379 --> 01:17:16,608
Grant has lost now more men
in the two days at Wilderness
1272
01:17:16,632 --> 01:17:19,111
than he did
in the two days at Shiloh.
1273
01:17:21,137 --> 01:17:24,825
‐ This was a particularly
horrifying battle...
1274
01:17:24,849 --> 01:17:27,119
not only because
of the number of casualties,
1275
01:17:27,143 --> 01:17:29,329
but the forest is burning.
1276
01:17:29,353 --> 01:17:32,999
What that meant was,
Grant went into his tent,
1277
01:17:33,023 --> 01:17:36,795
flung himself down on the cot.
1278
01:17:36,819 --> 01:17:38,296
There was a need for some
1279
01:17:38,320 --> 01:17:40,715
emotional release or catharsis,
1280
01:17:40,739 --> 01:17:43,009
and Grant had never
shown that side
1281
01:17:43,033 --> 01:17:46,304
of his character before.
1282
01:17:49,540 --> 01:17:53,645
‐ Our losses
in the Wilderness were severe.
1283
01:17:53,669 --> 01:17:56,690
We could claim no victory
over the enemy,
1284
01:17:56,714 --> 01:17:59,693
neither did they gain
a single advantage.
1285
01:18:13,564 --> 01:18:17,002
‐ We have 'em hell, General Lee.
1286
01:18:17,026 --> 01:18:19,629
‐ They gave us the same.
1287
01:18:19,653 --> 01:18:21,655
‐ I'm told Longstreet
will survive.
1288
01:18:24,742 --> 01:18:27,179
Scouts say Grant's packing up.
1289
01:18:27,203 --> 01:18:29,014
Finally retreating, sir.
1290
01:18:29,038 --> 01:18:30,765
We won't see him here again.
1291
01:18:30,789 --> 01:18:32,934
‐ Tell me, Colonel...
1292
01:18:32,958 --> 01:18:35,854
have you ever met Grant?
1293
01:18:35,878 --> 01:18:37,606
‐ No, sir.
1294
01:18:37,630 --> 01:18:39,900
‐ No.
1295
01:18:39,924 --> 01:18:41,902
I didn't think so.
1296
01:18:43,344 --> 01:18:45,989
If you had,
you know he's not retreating.
1297
01:18:47,723 --> 01:18:50,202
He's not a retreating man.
1298
01:19:02,988 --> 01:19:04,758
‐ I now felt the full weight
1299
01:19:04,782 --> 01:19:07,719
of responsibility
on my shoulders.
1300
01:19:27,471 --> 01:19:30,075
‐ You will go after Lee.
1301
01:19:30,099 --> 01:19:33,912
You will go after him
until he's finished.
1302
01:19:35,604 --> 01:19:38,107
‐ It all depends on you.
1303
01:19:40,651 --> 01:19:41,962
‐ Gentlemen.
1304
01:19:41,986 --> 01:19:44,089
‐ Come on, boys!
Let's move out!
1305
01:19:47,783 --> 01:19:51,263
‐ After two days
of the most brutal,
1306
01:19:51,287 --> 01:19:56,226
vicious fighting
in the Wilderness of Virginia,
1307
01:19:56,250 --> 01:19:58,228
soldiers
of the Army of the Potomac
1308
01:19:58,252 --> 01:20:00,146
and their opposite numbers
1309
01:20:00,170 --> 01:20:01,481
in the Army of Northern Virginia
1310
01:20:01,505 --> 01:20:04,985
had fought themselves
to a standstill.
1311
01:20:05,009 --> 01:20:07,445
Usually when a standstill
like that happened,
1312
01:20:07,469 --> 01:20:09,406
the result was that
the Union army
1313
01:20:09,430 --> 01:20:12,659
would pack its bags and go
back across the Rapidan River,
1314
01:20:12,683 --> 01:20:16,621
as it had happened
literally one year before
1315
01:20:16,645 --> 01:20:19,541
at the battle
of Chancellorsville.
1316
01:20:19,565 --> 01:20:22,419
The question in the minds
of these soldiers was,
1317
01:20:22,443 --> 01:20:24,170
"What direction is Ulysses Grant
1318
01:20:24,194 --> 01:20:25,547
going to take us?"
1319
01:20:31,201 --> 01:20:36,224
‐ In war, anything
is better than indecision.
1320
01:20:36,248 --> 01:20:38,810
We must decide.
1321
01:20:38,834 --> 01:20:41,021
If I am wrong,
we shall soon find out
1322
01:20:41,045 --> 01:20:43,481
and can do the other thing.
1323
01:20:43,505 --> 01:20:47,485
Not to decide
may ruin everything.
1324
01:20:52,181 --> 01:20:56,036
‐ And so Grant arrives
at the critical intersection
1325
01:20:56,060 --> 01:20:59,205
in the Wilderness if he was
going to move farther south
1326
01:20:59,229 --> 01:21:00,999
around Lee's flank,
1327
01:21:01,023 --> 01:21:03,877
seizing the strategic initiative
1328
01:21:03,901 --> 01:21:07,839
to threaten the Confederate
capital, Richmond.
1329
01:21:11,241 --> 01:21:13,720
‐ The soldiers
were waiting to see,
1330
01:21:13,744 --> 01:21:17,015
"What direction
is he going to take?
1331
01:21:17,039 --> 01:21:19,100
"If he turns to the left,
1332
01:21:19,124 --> 01:21:21,394
"we're gonna be retreating
back across the river.
1333
01:21:21,418 --> 01:21:22,854
"If he turns right,
1334
01:21:22,878 --> 01:21:24,606
that means
we're heading south."
1335
01:21:28,217 --> 01:21:29,861
‐ We're going south!
1336
01:21:29,885 --> 01:21:31,696
‐ Heading south?
‐ To Richmond.
1337
01:21:31,720 --> 01:21:34,032
‐ Richmond?
‐ To Richmond.
1338
01:21:34,056 --> 01:21:36,242
‐ We're heading south.
‐ We're headed south!
1339
01:21:49,446 --> 01:21:51,383
‐ Suddenly,
to their astonishment,
1340
01:21:51,407 --> 01:21:54,552
they're all wheeling
around to the south.
1341
01:21:54,576 --> 01:21:57,055
And it took tremendous
courage and tremendous
1342
01:21:57,079 --> 01:22:00,100
personal fortitude
on Grant's part
1343
01:22:00,124 --> 01:22:03,603
because Union casualties
were higher at the Wilderness
1344
01:22:03,627 --> 01:22:06,856
than Confederate casualties...
1345
01:22:06,880 --> 01:22:10,944
but Grant always had this
ultimate faith in victory.
1346
01:22:10,968 --> 01:22:13,988
And I think that there are
certain generals in history,
1347
01:22:14,012 --> 01:22:15,698
when they have
that faith in victory,
1348
01:22:15,722 --> 01:22:18,243
it's something
that communicates itself
1349
01:22:18,267 --> 01:22:19,411
to the troops.
1350
01:22:22,938 --> 01:22:26,418
‐ At Wilderness,
that is a tactical loss,
1351
01:22:26,442 --> 01:22:28,420
and yet Grant stands
at those crossroads
1352
01:22:28,444 --> 01:22:31,256
and goes, "This is not a loss.
1353
01:22:31,280 --> 01:22:33,758
This is the first step
to the end of the war."
1354
01:22:36,034 --> 01:22:38,430
So as he heads south,
Grant will fight
1355
01:22:38,454 --> 01:22:42,642
in a scope and scale
beyond anybody's experience.
1356
01:22:42,666 --> 01:22:44,936
We actually see the changing
character of war here.
1357
01:22:46,628 --> 01:22:48,440
Technology starts
to be a big part of it:
1358
01:22:48,464 --> 01:22:51,985
steam engines, ironclads,
1359
01:22:52,009 --> 01:22:55,447
railroads, telegraph.
1360
01:22:55,471 --> 01:22:59,284
However, there is this
unchanging nature of war.
1361
01:22:59,308 --> 01:23:01,119
It's still a clash of wills.
1362
01:23:01,143 --> 01:23:05,540
There's still fear and interest.
1363
01:23:05,564 --> 01:23:09,294
There's still hope
about what might happen.
1364
01:23:14,198 --> 01:23:15,842
When you think
about the Civil War,
1365
01:23:15,866 --> 01:23:17,343
we say that
Confederates are fighting
1366
01:23:17,367 --> 01:23:19,345
for hearth and home
1367
01:23:19,369 --> 01:23:21,473
and for this cause
of a Southern way of life.
1368
01:23:21,497 --> 01:23:22,849
Well, look at what
the Northerners
1369
01:23:22,873 --> 01:23:26,144
are fighting for.
1370
01:23:26,168 --> 01:23:28,563
Think about all those people.
1371
01:23:28,587 --> 01:23:30,815
They're fighting for this idea.
1372
01:23:30,839 --> 01:23:32,442
The nation is new.
1373
01:23:32,466 --> 01:23:35,153
We're largely
made up of immigrants.
1374
01:23:35,177 --> 01:23:36,654
They have come here
because they've seen
1375
01:23:36,678 --> 01:23:38,698
what it's like in the Old World.
1376
01:23:38,722 --> 01:23:41,659
And that idea that
all men are created equal...
1377
01:23:41,683 --> 01:23:45,079
if it doesn't exist here,
it doesn't exist anywhere.
1378
01:23:45,103 --> 01:23:49,000
And therefore,
they're willing to fight.
1379
01:23:56,490 --> 01:24:00,053
‐ The greatest enthusiasm
was inspired by the fact
1380
01:24:00,077 --> 01:24:02,055
that the movement was south.
1381
01:24:02,079 --> 01:24:03,932
‐ Headed to Richmond!
1382
01:24:03,956 --> 01:24:05,517
‐ We're going south, boys!
1383
01:24:05,541 --> 01:24:08,853
‐ It indicated to the men
that they had passed through
1384
01:24:08,877 --> 01:24:13,316
the beginning of the end.
1385
01:24:13,340 --> 01:24:16,361
There would be no turning back.
1386
01:24:19,721 --> 01:24:22,075
‐ Advance!
1387
01:24:22,099 --> 01:24:24,869
‐ Hold on with a bulldog grip.
1388
01:24:24,893 --> 01:24:27,580
Chew and choke
as much as possible.
1389
01:24:27,604 --> 01:24:29,958
‐ We've got Lee
in a box, General.
1390
01:24:29,982 --> 01:24:31,417
‐ Go after him.
1391
01:24:31,441 --> 01:24:33,169
I regard it as my duty
1392
01:24:33,193 --> 01:24:35,088
by asking of you the surrender
1393
01:24:35,112 --> 01:24:37,298
of the Confederate States Army.
1394
01:24:37,322 --> 01:24:40,426
President Lincoln has been shot.
1395
01:24:40,450 --> 01:24:41,886
‐ The country
having just emerged
1396
01:24:41,910 --> 01:24:43,221
from a great rebellion,
1397
01:24:43,245 --> 01:24:45,723
I ask patient forbearance,
1398
01:24:45,747 --> 01:24:49,418
one toward another,
cementing a happy union.
106178
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