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Supernatural beings
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haunting blood-stained battlefields.
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Mysterious spies infiltrating
the inner sanctum of power.
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And treasure hunters
seeking a legendary fortune
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in gold.
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From 1861 to 1865,
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the United States of America found itself
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in a deadly conflict
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a four-year struggle that
forged heroes, freed millions,
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and would forever be
known as the civil war.
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While history often focuses
on the polarizing politics
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and the bloody battles
of this tumultuous era,
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there are also many
fascinating and shocking stories
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to be found of the people
and places that played a role
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in the war between the states.
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From rumors of lost treasure
and haunted battlefields,
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to mysterious premonitions
and secret societies,
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could these intriguing
tales shed new light
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on america's darkest days?
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Well, that is what we'll try and find out.
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This historic landmark was built in 1829
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to protect Charleston
harbor against naval attacks.
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Every year, hundreds of
thousands of people visit
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this old sea fort to walk in the footsteps
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of some truly remarkable
American history.
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Because on April 12, 1861,
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it was here that the first shots were fired
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during the American civil war.
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The civil war is perhaps
the most important thing
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that ever happened in
the history of this country.
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It's often referred to
as "the brothers' war,"
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not just because you had
Americans from the south
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fighting Americans from the north,
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but within families, there was division.
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You had sons growing up
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in the same household
with the same parents,
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and one takes the side of the north,
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and the other takes the side of the south.
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There were between two and
three million men who were serving.
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The expectation was
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that it would only be for a few months.
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But the war actually
lasted from April of 1861
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to April 1865.
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During the conflict, the
confederate states of america
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attempted to dominate
the United States military
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on the field of battle.
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By the time that the war ends in 1865,
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over 600,000 Americans
have lost their lives
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as a result of combat
during the American civil war.
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That is a total number that is greater
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than any other conflict
we have ever fought.
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So, more Americans die
fighting the American civil war
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than die fighting the second world war.
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We should be comforted by the idea
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that we're so far away from this conflict
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and that nothing to equal the terror
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of the American civil war has happened
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to the American people since.
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The civil war saw over 10,000 battles
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and military engagements
fought in 19 states,
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between the union army of the north
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and the confederate army of the south.
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And today, the most visited
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of these former battlegrounds
is in rural Pennsylvania
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at the site of the
conflict's bloodiest battle.
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1863.
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For the first three days
of July, intense fighting
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would leave 51,000 Americans wounded,
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captured, missing or killed
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at the battle of gettysburg.
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The battlefield here at gettysburg
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looks very much like it did in 1863.
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Here we are on the
face of little round top.
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This was a scene of mass confusion.
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The Ridge in the
distance is seminary Ridge.
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The attacking confederates
came across these rocks.
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This was bloody, hand-to-hand fighting,
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confederates coming up the cliff.
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It was just an amazing scene of bullets,
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cannonballs, exploding shells.
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The horror here was astounding.
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My great-great grandfather
was in the extreme right flank
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of the confederate attack here,
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and he had served through the war.
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The fact that I have stood
here where my ancestors fought
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and seen the battle in my mind's eye
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that was undescribable to me.
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It's really a part of who I am spiritually.
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Gettysburg is not only a place
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of spiritual reflection, but for many,
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it's also a place filled
with restless spirits.
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Many have wondered,
is gettysburg haunted
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by the tens of thousands
of soldiers that died here?
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This is definitely not
only hallowed ground,
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but haunted ground.
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People actually see spectral soldiers.
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They hear musket fire.
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They hear phantom
artillery fire to this day.
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There are so many
accounts by so many people
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of their experiences here,
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that it simply cannot be discounted.
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I was a park ranger at gettysburg
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for six years in the '70s.
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Having studied this for 40, 50 years,
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I would have to say, without a doubt,
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gettysburg is one of
the most haunted places
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probably in the world.
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What happened in
gettysburg stayed in gettysburg.
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The ghosts of the soldiers
who died... they're here.
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And most everybody feels
it in one way or another.
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According to Mark nesbitt,
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the highest concentration
of otherworldly reports come
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from an area on the battlefield
that is called "devil's den."
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Right now, we're in devil's den,
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one of the more recognizable places
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on the battlefield of gettysburg.
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The fighting here gradually grew
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into some of the most savage fighting
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of the battle, and hence,
of the American civil war.
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From 4:00 P.M. on July 2
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to 4:00 P.M. on July 3, 1863,
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at gettysburg was the bloodiest 24 hours
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in American history.
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These granite boulders formed
tunnels and passageways
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through these great rocks in devil's den.
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Soldiers had to fight through these.
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This area is very much like a maze.
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There are great cracks in these boulders.
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Wounded men fell into them,
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and then, after the battle,
when the burials were going on,
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there's no place to dig a grave,
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so, sadly, a number of
these men were just tossed
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into these crevices
between the giant rocks.
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And so it's no surprise
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that this is one of the most
haunted spots in america.
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Perhaps the most
frightening story I ever heard
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about gettysburg took
place here in devil's den.
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Two women were up on these rocks.
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And they were hopping
across one of these cracks.
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And one woman stepped
over, and all of a sudden,
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her leg got caught.
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And she looked down,
and there was a hand
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that had come up and grabbed her leg.
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And she screamed and pulled away.
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And when they went over
to look down in the crevice,
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no one was there.
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Why is there such a high concentration
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of haunting reports at devil's den?
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Some believe it could trace back
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to the most chilling photograph
ever taken at gettysburg.
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The home of the rebel
sharpshooter photograph
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was taken at devil's den.
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It's one of the most famous photos
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from the whole of the civil war.
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You see this dead
body, and you see a rifle.
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And it is a powerful, powerful photo.
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It's also staged.
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The photographer, Alexander gardner,
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moved the body, he
had positioned the head,
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so the face was a little bit
more toward the camera,
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he had set the rifle in a certain place,
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because he was trying to tell a story.
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That fallen sharpshooter
haunts gettysburg.
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I can't recall any other time
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when, soldiers were...
Were actually posed.
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Here's a young man,
obviously young, killed.
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They're desecrating his memory.
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So, if there is a perturbed
spirit at devil's den,
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no doubt it's this young man
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who was dragged back
and forth and posed
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just to make a
photographer some money.
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Could the desecration
of this unidentified soldier
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be connected to paranormal
activity reported in gettysburg?
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It's an intriguing thought.
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But there are other civil war mysteries
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that may be much easier to unravel,
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like the legends of lost
gold just waiting to be found.
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Treasure hunter Brian
cerniglia scours farms, fields
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and former battlegrounds
of the American civil war
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searching for lost pieces
of 19th-century history.
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Here we have a six-pound cannonball.
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Brian and others have managed
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to find all kinds of
historic civil war artifacts,
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from simple buttons and buckles
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to objects of remarkable value.
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00:10:48,540 --> 00:10:52,790
I've been hunting for civil
war relics almost my entire life.
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The passion for history and the search
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for the unknown constantly drives me
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to pick up a metal detector
and get out and explore.
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We stumble across quite a bit of relics
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from the civil war era.
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Of course, the favorite
of everybody is the coins.
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So, here's just a small example
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of all the different types
of coins that can be found
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when you're out
treasure-hunting for civil war relics.
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And this coin is actually
made out of silver.
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Large coins like this were
how the soldiers got paid.
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This could have been in the pocket
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of a civil war soldier.
200
00:11:32,160 --> 00:11:33,950
The prospect of finding a stash
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of civil war coins is every
treasure hunter's dream,
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00:11:37,040 --> 00:11:40,750
but just how much silver and
gold might still be out there,
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waiting to be found?
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There are real mysteries
of civil war treasure,
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because we know quite a lot
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of gold and silver was
used during the war.
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00:11:51,450 --> 00:11:54,330
Quite a lot of payrolls were
going out during the civil war.
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00:11:54,500 --> 00:11:57,040
And a lot of it went missing.
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00:11:57,160 --> 00:12:01,870
A great example of that
at the end of the civil war
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00:12:02,040 --> 00:12:04,790
is when it's clear that the
union is coming to Richmond.
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It was really the end for the south.
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00:12:07,290 --> 00:12:10,410
The confederate
government leaves Richmond,
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00:12:10,620 --> 00:12:12,160
and they call it "evacuation day."
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00:12:12,370 --> 00:12:15,080
Confederate president
Jefferson Davis left Richmond
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00:12:15,200 --> 00:12:17,870
with a train that had the entirety
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of what was remaining of
the confederate treasury,
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00:12:20,910 --> 00:12:22,620
millions in gold and silver.
218
00:12:22,750 --> 00:12:25,830
And six weeks later, when he's captured,
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he's got essentially a
few dollars in his pocket,
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00:12:28,200 --> 00:12:31,790
and in between, we don't know
what happened to all that money.
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And that's not the only case
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during the entire American civil war
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where large dollar
amounts went missing.
224
00:12:38,660 --> 00:12:40,016
And we don't know
where that money went.
225
00:12:40,040 --> 00:12:42,700
The tales of missing fortunes
226
00:12:42,870 --> 00:12:45,290
have motivated many history sleuths
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to try and piece clues
together to find lost loot.
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00:12:51,500 --> 00:12:53,700
One of the most sought-after
hidden fortunes is said
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00:12:53,870 --> 00:12:56,000
to have belonged to
a confederate colonel
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named John singleton mosby,
also known as "the gray ghost."
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00:13:02,040 --> 00:13:05,000
John singleton mosby
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00:13:05,200 --> 00:13:07,160
is a really interesting
character in the war.
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00:13:07,330 --> 00:13:09,120
He's with the 43rd Virginia cavalry,
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00:13:09,290 --> 00:13:13,040
but his unit, which comes to
be called "mosby's rangers,"
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00:13:13,200 --> 00:13:17,290
their specialty was to just
pop up, you know, ten miles
236
00:13:17,450 --> 00:13:19,830
behind the lines where
no one was expecting it.
237
00:13:20,000 --> 00:13:22,540
They'd grab sentries, or
they would steal things.
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00:13:22,700 --> 00:13:25,040
And so he almost
becomes like a boogeyman.
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00:13:26,200 --> 00:13:27,830
John mosby... he was known
240
00:13:28,040 --> 00:13:30,620
as "the gray ghost," because
the ghost would appear,
241
00:13:30,790 --> 00:13:32,410
and the ghost would vanish.
242
00:13:32,620 --> 00:13:35,660
He would strike railroad lines
243
00:13:35,870 --> 00:13:37,660
that were carrying supplies to the army.
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00:13:37,830 --> 00:13:40,580
He would attack
messengers and couriers
245
00:13:40,750 --> 00:13:42,910
so that communication
would be broken up.
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00:13:43,080 --> 00:13:45,676
And then, if they needed to hide,
247
00:13:45,700 --> 00:13:48,120
mosby's men would disappear
248
00:13:48,290 --> 00:13:51,870
in that part of Virginia, to
the blue Ridge mountains.
249
00:13:52,080 --> 00:13:54,240
Once you were in the mountain,
the enemy was not going
250
00:13:54,330 --> 00:13:55,330
to follow you there.
251
00:13:56,290 --> 00:13:59,120
Mosby was also rumored to
have cleverly made a stash
252
00:13:59,290 --> 00:14:01,250
of gold, silver and jewels disappear
253
00:14:01,410 --> 00:14:05,410
from a federal building
in Fairfax, Virginia.
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00:14:06,870 --> 00:14:11,160
It is said that on march 9, 1863,
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00:14:11,370 --> 00:14:14,870
the gray ghost snuck behind enemy lines
256
00:14:15,000 --> 00:14:17,700
and robbed the Fairfax courthouse,
257
00:14:17,870 --> 00:14:20,830
making off with a fortune
that, if found today,
258
00:14:21,000 --> 00:14:24,580
would be worth six million dollars.
259
00:14:27,330 --> 00:14:30,910
Mosby's men go right
to Fairfax courthouse.
260
00:14:31,120 --> 00:14:34,330
Mosby sends parties
out to capture horses
261
00:14:34,450 --> 00:14:37,000
and officers associated
with the union army.
262
00:14:37,160 --> 00:14:40,040
But then he discovers something.
263
00:14:40,200 --> 00:14:46,200
$350,000 dollars' worth of loot there,
264
00:14:46,370 --> 00:14:49,040
stored in Fairfax
county at the courthouse.
265
00:14:49,200 --> 00:14:53,040
So, the story goes, he decides to Bury it.
266
00:14:53,200 --> 00:14:57,040
And so, in the darkness,
somewhere in Virginia
267
00:14:57,200 --> 00:15:02,000
between Fairfax
courthouse and centreville,
268
00:15:02,160 --> 00:15:05,620
there mosby buries the loot.
269
00:15:06,660 --> 00:15:10,080
Mosby found $350,000
dollars' worth of gold,
270
00:15:10,250 --> 00:15:12,410
silver and family heirlooms
271
00:15:12,540 --> 00:15:14,330
that had been taken by the union soldiers
272
00:15:14,500 --> 00:15:15,660
from southern homes.
273
00:15:15,830 --> 00:15:17,950
And as they left, the legend states
274
00:15:18,120 --> 00:15:22,000
that mosby buried the gold and silver
275
00:15:22,200 --> 00:15:24,540
between two pine trees
that he marked with an "x"
276
00:15:24,750 --> 00:15:26,330
with his knife.
277
00:15:26,540 --> 00:15:29,160
And only he and his
sergeant knew the location.
278
00:15:29,330 --> 00:15:32,950
Mosby's treasure was never recovered,
279
00:15:33,120 --> 00:15:35,540
but there is a story that, on his deathbed,
280
00:15:35,750 --> 00:15:38,200
he said something to the effect of,
281
00:15:38,370 --> 00:15:41,750
"there's a fortune in
the hills of Virginia,"
282
00:15:41,870 --> 00:15:44,410
to suggest that maybe
it had been left behind.
283
00:15:44,580 --> 00:15:46,080
So people ever since
284
00:15:46,250 --> 00:15:48,660
have been looking for
trees with xs carved in them,
285
00:15:48,830 --> 00:15:52,080
trying to find mosby's treasure.
286
00:15:52,290 --> 00:15:55,120
Could the gray ghost's
fabled lost treasure
287
00:15:55,290 --> 00:15:58,450
really be hiding in a Virginia forest?
288
00:15:58,620 --> 00:16:02,250
While it could be easy to
dismiss the story as pure myth,
289
00:16:02,410 --> 00:16:06,250
remarkably, a very real civil war treasure
290
00:16:06,410 --> 00:16:09,500
has recently been discovered.
291
00:16:09,700 --> 00:16:12,660
In the summer of 2023, on his property,
292
00:16:12,830 --> 00:16:14,330
a farmer in Kentucky
293
00:16:14,450 --> 00:16:16,950
made a pretty interesting discovery.
294
00:16:17,120 --> 00:16:19,080
This man looks down in the dirt
295
00:16:19,250 --> 00:16:21,620
of the recently plowed field
and sees some gold coins.
296
00:16:21,750 --> 00:16:23,660
By the time he's done rooting around
297
00:16:23,830 --> 00:16:25,620
in the recently plowed field,
298
00:16:25,790 --> 00:16:27,950
he's pulled out over 800 coins,
299
00:16:28,120 --> 00:16:31,500
over 700 of which are gold.
300
00:16:31,700 --> 00:16:33,620
These coins are all minted
301
00:16:33,750 --> 00:16:35,080
in the years before the civil war
302
00:16:35,250 --> 00:16:39,660
and during the civil war, up until 1863.
303
00:16:39,870 --> 00:16:43,346
And here we are in 2023,
304
00:16:43,370 --> 00:16:47,250
and a man has just found
this mother lode of coins
305
00:16:47,370 --> 00:16:50,040
that date to the era of the civil war.
306
00:16:50,160 --> 00:16:52,080
It's a significant find.
307
00:16:52,200 --> 00:16:54,290
The massive cache of riches
308
00:16:54,410 --> 00:16:57,790
is estimated to be worth
more than two million dollars,
309
00:16:57,950 --> 00:17:01,330
and is a priceless
incentive to relic hunters
310
00:17:01,540 --> 00:17:06,040
to continue their search
for treasures of the civil war.
311
00:17:07,000 --> 00:17:09,160
Growing up and exploring Virginia,
312
00:17:09,330 --> 00:17:11,370
I find myself retracing the paths,
313
00:17:11,540 --> 00:17:13,790
the steps those soldiers
would have taken,
314
00:17:13,950 --> 00:17:17,080
searching for any trinkets or treasures
315
00:17:17,250 --> 00:17:19,250
they may have dropped along the way.
316
00:17:19,410 --> 00:17:22,250
I was out detecting one
day and stumbled upon
317
00:17:22,410 --> 00:17:25,370
this small pocketknife,
which doesn't look like much,
318
00:17:25,540 --> 00:17:30,000
but given the context and
the story of general mosby
319
00:17:30,160 --> 00:17:32,160
marking the treasure with his knife,
320
00:17:32,370 --> 00:17:34,450
I thought to myself, "maybe, just maybe,
321
00:17:34,620 --> 00:17:36,040
this could be the knife."
322
00:17:36,160 --> 00:17:39,080
Unfortunately, the knife
was all that was there,
323
00:17:39,200 --> 00:17:43,080
but it gives me the thought
that possibly, maybe,
324
00:17:43,250 --> 00:17:45,250
treasure could be buried nearby.
325
00:17:45,450 --> 00:17:48,330
There is always the possibility
326
00:17:48,540 --> 00:17:51,830
that John mosby's
treasure is still out there,
327
00:17:52,000 --> 00:17:54,620
and that I could be the one to find it.
328
00:17:57,120 --> 00:17:59,450
Will the gray ghost's
treasure ever be found?
329
00:18:01,200 --> 00:18:03,080
I guess it depends on
whether anyone can locate
330
00:18:03,200 --> 00:18:06,290
those two pine trees, if
even they're still standing.
331
00:18:07,370 --> 00:18:10,160
But sometimes the
most intriguing secrets
332
00:18:10,370 --> 00:18:12,620
are hiding in plain sight.
333
00:18:12,750 --> 00:18:15,660
For instance, there's the story
334
00:18:15,870 --> 00:18:18,056
of a prominent southern socialite
335
00:18:18,080 --> 00:18:22,636
who controlled a spy ring
inside the headquarters
336
00:18:22,660 --> 00:18:24,660
of the confederate states of america.
337
00:18:31,620 --> 00:18:33,910
Evidence of this southern
city's strategic importance
338
00:18:34,040 --> 00:18:36,450
during the civil war can still be found.
339
00:18:36,580 --> 00:18:38,726
There is the tredegar iron works,
340
00:18:38,750 --> 00:18:40,000
where over half the cannons
341
00:18:40,200 --> 00:18:42,160
used by the southern states were made;
342
00:18:42,290 --> 00:18:44,000
the chimborazo hospital,
343
00:18:44,200 --> 00:18:47,386
which treated over
76,000 injured soldiers;
344
00:18:47,410 --> 00:18:50,386
and the white house of the confederacy,
345
00:18:50,410 --> 00:18:53,080
the south's base of operations.
346
00:18:54,620 --> 00:18:57,160
In 1861, Richmond becomes
the capital of the confederacy,
347
00:18:57,290 --> 00:18:58,810
and then basically, all the government
348
00:18:58,910 --> 00:19:00,160
is gonna flood to it
349
00:19:00,290 --> 00:19:02,056
and massively increase the population.
350
00:19:02,080 --> 00:19:05,250
So, Richmond becomes the
center of confederate legislation,
351
00:19:05,410 --> 00:19:09,120
but also the center of
moving food and weapons
352
00:19:09,290 --> 00:19:12,200
and war materials to
all the theaters of war.
353
00:19:12,410 --> 00:19:14,330
It will have confederate
government departments,
354
00:19:14,500 --> 00:19:16,500
so a war department,
a Navy department,
355
00:19:16,620 --> 00:19:19,080
all the stuff that comes with
trying to run a government
356
00:19:19,290 --> 00:19:21,790
is grafted onto Richmond.
357
00:19:24,250 --> 00:19:26,500
In addition to president Jefferson Davis,
358
00:19:26,620 --> 00:19:27,830
other key figures
359
00:19:28,040 --> 00:19:29,700
like vice president Alexander Stephens
360
00:19:29,870 --> 00:19:31,580
and general Robert e. Lee,
361
00:19:31,750 --> 00:19:34,450
the supreme commander
of the confederate army,
362
00:19:34,620 --> 00:19:37,790
all made Richmond their home.
363
00:19:39,000 --> 00:19:41,080
As local residents of status and wealth
364
00:19:41,200 --> 00:19:42,620
began to socialize with the men
365
00:19:42,790 --> 00:19:44,750
who were tasked with saving the south,
366
00:19:44,910 --> 00:19:49,500
an unlikely spy was secretly
plotting to defeat them.
367
00:19:51,160 --> 00:19:54,830
Her name was Elizabeth Van lew.
368
00:19:55,830 --> 00:19:58,330
Elizabeth Van lew was
from a wealthy family.
369
00:19:58,540 --> 00:20:01,250
She was born and raised
in Richmond, Virginia.
370
00:20:01,410 --> 00:20:03,330
Throughout the 1840s and 1850s,
371
00:20:03,540 --> 00:20:07,000
she's vocally advocating
for abolition of slavery,
372
00:20:07,200 --> 00:20:09,200
which is a fairly dangerous thing to do
373
00:20:09,370 --> 00:20:13,040
in Richmond, Virginia,
of the 1840s and 1850s.
374
00:20:13,200 --> 00:20:16,040
When war came,
Elizabeth Van lew ended up
375
00:20:16,200 --> 00:20:17,910
leading an espionage network
376
00:20:18,080 --> 00:20:20,330
to collect military information
377
00:20:20,540 --> 00:20:22,250
information that would be of value
378
00:20:22,410 --> 00:20:26,160
and transmit it successfully
to the United States army.
379
00:20:26,370 --> 00:20:29,700
So, the Van lew spy ring is the story of
380
00:20:29,870 --> 00:20:33,200
the most successful spy
network of the civil war.
381
00:20:34,250 --> 00:20:37,580
The consequences
for spying were severe.
382
00:20:37,750 --> 00:20:39,910
You could be sentenced
to death if you were found
383
00:20:40,080 --> 00:20:42,450
to be guilty of spying in Richmond.
384
00:20:42,620 --> 00:20:45,450
But she helped to get information out
385
00:20:45,620 --> 00:20:48,660
about the confederate government
and the confederate military
386
00:20:48,830 --> 00:20:51,200
at a time when the U.S. really needed
387
00:20:51,370 --> 00:20:54,330
valuable, actionable intelligence.
388
00:20:54,500 --> 00:20:55,820
So it says a lot about the people
389
00:20:55,870 --> 00:20:57,410
who were willing to do this
390
00:20:57,580 --> 00:21:00,500
because they were willing
to gamble with their lives.
391
00:21:00,620 --> 00:21:02,500
With the ever-present threat
392
00:21:02,620 --> 00:21:04,540
of being caught and punished by death,
393
00:21:04,750 --> 00:21:07,450
how did an established southern belle
394
00:21:07,660 --> 00:21:11,330
become the most successful
spymaster of the civil war?
395
00:21:12,330 --> 00:21:14,170
Well, some believe it was
because she employed
396
00:21:14,330 --> 00:21:18,200
secret agents that could
easily hide in plain sight
397
00:21:18,370 --> 00:21:21,000
among Richmond's
confederate leadership.
398
00:21:22,000 --> 00:21:26,870
Van lew recruited African
Americans as spies.
399
00:21:28,040 --> 00:21:31,556
Van lew understood southern culture
400
00:21:31,580 --> 00:21:33,410
because she was a part of it.
401
00:21:33,540 --> 00:21:38,160
She understood how they thought,
how they viewed black people.
402
00:21:38,330 --> 00:21:40,386
And so, she understood
403
00:21:40,410 --> 00:21:44,200
that if she sent black people out to spy,
404
00:21:44,370 --> 00:21:46,950
that they could be very successful,
405
00:21:47,120 --> 00:21:49,200
because no one would ever expect
406
00:21:49,370 --> 00:21:52,000
that they had the
intelligence or the courage
407
00:21:52,120 --> 00:21:54,950
to carry any of her plans out.
408
00:21:55,080 --> 00:21:59,250
And she realized that if she
was going to be successful,
409
00:21:59,450 --> 00:22:01,660
if she was going to aid the union,
410
00:22:01,790 --> 00:22:03,910
she would have to use black people
411
00:22:04,080 --> 00:22:05,620
to help her in that endeavor.
412
00:22:05,790 --> 00:22:08,660
And she brought them
into this whole thing.
413
00:22:10,080 --> 00:22:11,620
But we're still trying to find out
414
00:22:11,790 --> 00:22:14,830
the extent to which African
Americans were involved
415
00:22:15,040 --> 00:22:18,500
in intelligence gathering
during the civil war.
416
00:22:18,660 --> 00:22:23,500
We can't always put a
name to these people,
417
00:22:23,660 --> 00:22:26,410
because their operations
were clandestine.
418
00:22:27,950 --> 00:22:30,176
The identities of
Elizabeth Van lew's spies
419
00:22:30,200 --> 00:22:31,910
remain largely a mystery.
420
00:22:32,040 --> 00:22:34,660
But remarkably, there
is evidence to suggest
421
00:22:34,830 --> 00:22:37,500
that she was able to place
an African American spy
422
00:22:37,660 --> 00:22:39,830
inside the most important
confederate residence
423
00:22:40,000 --> 00:22:41,620
in all of Richmond,
424
00:22:41,750 --> 00:22:45,580
the home of the
confederate president himself,
425
00:22:45,750 --> 00:22:47,410
Jefferson Davis.
426
00:22:48,750 --> 00:22:53,580
In 1911, Harper's monthly
magazine published a story,
427
00:22:53,700 --> 00:22:57,660
and that story detailed
that Elizabeth Van lew
428
00:22:57,870 --> 00:23:00,160
had been a spy in
Richmond during the civil war
429
00:23:00,370 --> 00:23:02,410
on behalf of the United States.
430
00:23:02,580 --> 00:23:05,040
And it said that an
African American woman
431
00:23:05,200 --> 00:23:07,620
had been placed in the home
of Jefferson Davis as a spy.
432
00:23:07,830 --> 00:23:12,040
It named that woman as
Mary Elizabeth bowser.
433
00:23:12,200 --> 00:23:16,700
And that story from 1911
has been kind of repeated
434
00:23:16,870 --> 00:23:22,000
and re-repeated and embellished
for a hundred-plus years.
435
00:23:23,580 --> 00:23:27,040
The person that we certainly
celebrate more than anyone else
436
00:23:27,200 --> 00:23:30,080
is Mary Elizabeth bowser.
437
00:23:30,250 --> 00:23:33,410
She was a young woman who grew up
438
00:23:33,540 --> 00:23:36,040
in the Van lew household.
439
00:23:37,200 --> 00:23:39,500
Historians have grappled in recent years
440
00:23:39,700 --> 00:23:43,410
with her true identity, because she used
441
00:23:43,580 --> 00:23:45,950
a variety of aliases during her life.
442
00:23:46,120 --> 00:23:47,830
And it makes sense,
443
00:23:48,000 --> 00:23:50,830
because if she's engaging in espionage,
444
00:23:51,040 --> 00:23:54,660
she doesn't want anyone
to know her true identity.
445
00:23:54,830 --> 00:23:58,370
So, it's been very
difficult, as a consequence,
446
00:23:58,580 --> 00:24:01,540
for historians to really trace her life.
447
00:24:02,580 --> 00:24:04,000
Historians would love to know
448
00:24:04,200 --> 00:24:07,950
if she was actually in the
confederate white house,
449
00:24:08,080 --> 00:24:12,160
and what she actually
discovered while there
450
00:24:12,370 --> 00:24:14,830
and how that might
have impacted the war,
451
00:24:15,040 --> 00:24:18,040
but we just don't have that information.
452
00:24:20,790 --> 00:24:23,700
Did an African American spy
named Mary Elizabeth bowser
453
00:24:23,910 --> 00:24:27,330
really infiltrate the
confederate white house?
454
00:24:27,500 --> 00:24:30,386
While the mystery lives on,
455
00:24:30,410 --> 00:24:32,870
we do know that
Elizabeth Van lew's spy ring
456
00:24:33,040 --> 00:24:35,410
proved hugely successful.
457
00:24:35,580 --> 00:24:38,200
In fact, her clandestine operations
458
00:24:38,370 --> 00:24:39,660
even garnered praise
459
00:24:39,830 --> 00:24:41,910
from the commander of the union army,
460
00:24:42,080 --> 00:24:44,370
general ulysses s. Grant.
461
00:24:44,580 --> 00:24:46,790
Ulysses Grant said
about Elizabeth Van lew,
462
00:24:46,950 --> 00:24:48,990
"you provided me with the
most valuable information
463
00:24:49,040 --> 00:24:51,040
I received from
Richmond during the war."
464
00:24:51,200 --> 00:24:52,950
That's pretty high praise.
465
00:24:53,120 --> 00:24:56,500
Similarly, George sharpe,
head of military intelligence,
466
00:24:56,700 --> 00:24:59,580
said that Elizabeth Van
lew was all that was left
467
00:24:59,750 --> 00:25:02,500
of the power of the U.S.
government in Richmond.
468
00:25:02,660 --> 00:25:05,500
So, the people that are most positioned
469
00:25:05,660 --> 00:25:08,000
to say whether or not this was valuable
470
00:25:08,160 --> 00:25:12,080
unequivocally said how valuable
the Richmond spy network was.
471
00:25:13,080 --> 00:25:15,540
The courage shown by Elizabeth Van lew
472
00:25:15,750 --> 00:25:17,500
and the African Americans
473
00:25:17,620 --> 00:25:20,330
who participated in
the Richmond spy ring
474
00:25:20,450 --> 00:25:22,830
must have outweighed the fear
475
00:25:23,000 --> 00:25:25,370
they felt conducting
such a dangerous mission.
476
00:25:25,910 --> 00:25:28,450
But there's another mystery
477
00:25:28,620 --> 00:25:30,500
that's frightening for
a very different reason.
478
00:25:30,700 --> 00:25:33,870
It involves a grotesque
monster said to roam
479
00:25:34,040 --> 00:25:36,250
one of the civil war's
bloodiest battlefields.
480
00:25:44,700 --> 00:25:47,410
Overlooking the winding Tennessee river,
481
00:25:47,540 --> 00:25:50,540
this picturesque site spans 9,000 acres
482
00:25:50,700 --> 00:25:53,500
across the border of
Tennessee and Georgia.
483
00:25:55,200 --> 00:25:59,830
In 1863, this was the site
of the second bloodiest battle
484
00:26:00,000 --> 00:26:02,040
of the civil war after gettysburg.
485
00:26:03,450 --> 00:26:06,450
It's the battle of chickamauga.
486
00:26:06,620 --> 00:26:09,750
The battle of chickamauga
took place in Tennessee
487
00:26:09,910 --> 00:26:12,200
a few months after
the battle of gettysburg.
488
00:26:12,410 --> 00:26:14,040
And the carnage was awful.
489
00:26:15,200 --> 00:26:16,620
Confederate general John Gordon
490
00:26:16,750 --> 00:26:18,830
would write in his book about the battle
491
00:26:19,040 --> 00:26:21,540
that he had heard that
the word "chickamauga"
492
00:26:21,660 --> 00:26:24,160
translates to "river of blood."
493
00:26:24,330 --> 00:26:26,330
He got the translation wrong,
494
00:26:26,500 --> 00:26:28,250
but he got the spirit of it right.
495
00:26:28,410 --> 00:26:30,830
It was the river of death.
496
00:26:33,450 --> 00:26:35,750
More than 100,000 soldiers
497
00:26:35,870 --> 00:26:38,330
met at the battle of chickamauga,
498
00:26:38,500 --> 00:26:42,660
and 34,000 were either killed or injured.
499
00:26:42,870 --> 00:26:45,370
In addition to this river of death,
500
00:26:45,580 --> 00:26:47,580
according to local legend,
501
00:26:47,750 --> 00:26:49,886
soldiers on the chickamauga battlefield
502
00:26:49,910 --> 00:26:53,500
saw an even more disturbing sight,
503
00:26:53,700 --> 00:26:57,450
a terrifying creature
picking through the corpses
504
00:26:57,620 --> 00:27:01,700
that has come to be
known as old green eyes.
505
00:27:01,870 --> 00:27:05,790
Old green eyes is a very
difficult story to pinpoint
506
00:27:05,950 --> 00:27:09,330
because there are so many
variations of the legend.
507
00:27:10,370 --> 00:27:13,660
One of the prevailing theories
is that he is possibly a demon
508
00:27:13,870 --> 00:27:16,290
that has come to feed on that negativity.
509
00:27:16,410 --> 00:27:19,000
And so, in chickamauga,
with such a large loss of life
510
00:27:19,120 --> 00:27:21,660
that was protracted over several days,
511
00:27:21,870 --> 00:27:23,310
that may have attracted the interest
512
00:27:23,370 --> 00:27:25,000
of something that's malevolent.
513
00:27:25,120 --> 00:27:29,830
Old green eyes has been
described as a predatory cat.
514
00:27:30,040 --> 00:27:33,620
He's been described as a
small goblin-like creature.
515
00:27:34,750 --> 00:27:36,910
He's also been described as a soldier
516
00:27:37,080 --> 00:27:39,330
who possibly lost his
head to a cannonball
517
00:27:39,540 --> 00:27:41,750
during the battle
518
00:27:44,790 --> 00:27:47,450
and he is out searching for it.
519
00:27:48,620 --> 00:27:51,700
The one thing that's consistent
is they always described him
520
00:27:51,870 --> 00:27:53,750
as having glowing green eyes.
521
00:27:55,000 --> 00:27:57,200
The legend is that soldiers
522
00:27:57,370 --> 00:28:01,290
would see this indistinct
shape out in front of them.
523
00:28:01,450 --> 00:28:03,080
As it got closer, they would see
524
00:28:03,250 --> 00:28:06,290
these piercing green
eyes staring at them.
525
00:28:06,450 --> 00:28:10,660
But of course, we're not
100% sure about any of this.
526
00:28:12,000 --> 00:28:15,290
Is old green eyes a real thing?
527
00:28:15,500 --> 00:28:17,870
Is this a hallucination?
528
00:28:18,040 --> 00:28:20,700
That I don't know.
That's-that's the mystery.
529
00:28:20,830 --> 00:28:24,950
But we do know that
the savagery was real
530
00:28:25,160 --> 00:28:27,540
and it was an awful thing to witness.
531
00:28:27,700 --> 00:28:30,040
The men, they didn't have a term
532
00:28:30,200 --> 00:28:32,620
called post-traumatic stress syndrome,
533
00:28:32,750 --> 00:28:35,580
but no doubt, they all went home with it.
534
00:28:35,750 --> 00:28:38,120
Is the legend of old green eyes
535
00:28:38,290 --> 00:28:40,580
based on a real flesh-and-blood monster,
536
00:28:40,750 --> 00:28:45,330
or is it a story meant to
describe the madness of war?
537
00:28:46,870 --> 00:28:50,330
Clues might be found
in indigenous folklore
538
00:28:50,500 --> 00:28:52,580
that is surprisingly similar
539
00:28:52,750 --> 00:28:55,910
to the stories of the horrific creature.
540
00:28:56,910 --> 00:28:58,846
In native American lore,
there are several places
541
00:28:58,870 --> 00:29:01,290
where there are mounds
that they believe are protected
542
00:29:01,500 --> 00:29:03,750
by entities and spirits,
543
00:29:03,870 --> 00:29:06,830
much like what old green
eyes would be described as.
544
00:29:07,870 --> 00:29:09,630
In the middle of the
chickamauga battlefield
545
00:29:09,790 --> 00:29:11,250
stands snodgrass hill,
546
00:29:11,370 --> 00:29:15,000
and it's about 900 foot tall at elevation.
547
00:29:15,200 --> 00:29:18,660
It is possible that that mound
had some spiritual significance
548
00:29:18,830 --> 00:29:21,450
to native Americans
who lived in that area,
549
00:29:21,620 --> 00:29:23,160
because during the battle,
550
00:29:23,330 --> 00:29:26,330
it was where green
eyes is seen the most.
551
00:29:26,540 --> 00:29:28,830
Strange stories of creatures,
monsters and ghosts
552
00:29:29,000 --> 00:29:31,410
have been around for millennia,
553
00:29:31,540 --> 00:29:33,000
and they cross all cultures.
554
00:29:33,120 --> 00:29:35,330
So it's quite possible
that native Americans
555
00:29:35,540 --> 00:29:38,200
had some belief in
something in this region,
556
00:29:38,370 --> 00:29:39,870
and that after the battle,
557
00:29:40,040 --> 00:29:42,540
they sort of got mixed
and merged together.
558
00:29:42,700 --> 00:29:45,370
We're trying to put a name on
something we don't understand.
559
00:29:46,540 --> 00:29:49,330
While it's hard to pinpoint
the true origin of this legend,
560
00:29:49,540 --> 00:29:51,790
and it's easy to dismiss
the idea of a monster
561
00:29:51,950 --> 00:29:54,370
with glowing green eyes,
562
00:29:54,540 --> 00:30:00,500
to this day, locals claim
they've seen the beast.
563
00:30:00,700 --> 00:30:03,830
One of the earlier ones that I researched
564
00:30:04,040 --> 00:30:07,120
was about a young man who
was on his way to pick up a date.
565
00:30:07,250 --> 00:30:10,330
He lived in Tennessee
and he was driving down
566
00:30:10,450 --> 00:30:12,160
into Georgia to pick her up.
567
00:30:12,330 --> 00:30:15,160
And on the way through,
it was a foggy night.
568
00:30:15,330 --> 00:30:17,580
And in the distance, he
noticed an oncoming car
569
00:30:17,700 --> 00:30:19,160
had green headlights.
570
00:30:19,370 --> 00:30:20,870
And as he got closer,
571
00:30:21,040 --> 00:30:22,846
he noticed that they
weren't headlights at all,
572
00:30:22,870 --> 00:30:24,700
but glowing green eyes,
573
00:30:24,870 --> 00:30:26,830
and they appeared to
be running towards him.
574
00:30:27,040 --> 00:30:28,750
This, of course, startles him,
575
00:30:28,910 --> 00:30:31,000
and he wrecks his car
off to the side of the road.
576
00:30:31,200 --> 00:30:34,080
It's a very strange occurrence. Very odd.
577
00:30:36,200 --> 00:30:38,500
Every legend is real to some extent.
578
00:30:38,660 --> 00:30:43,160
So if people are seeing things
and then giving it that label,
579
00:30:43,370 --> 00:30:46,160
like old green eyes,
that was real to them.
580
00:30:46,290 --> 00:30:49,250
A story can't endure and stick around
581
00:30:49,410 --> 00:30:51,136
if it's not getting
reinforced by other people
582
00:30:51,160 --> 00:30:52,830
having an experience.
583
00:30:53,040 --> 00:30:56,410
So, in that regard,
yeah, it's absolutely real.
584
00:30:57,410 --> 00:31:02,040
Did the terrible carnage on
the chickamauga battlefield
585
00:31:02,200 --> 00:31:05,160
attract the attention of
a bloodthirsty monster?
586
00:31:05,370 --> 00:31:08,370
Or was the legend of old green eyes
587
00:31:09,540 --> 00:31:12,250
created to try to make
sense of the horrors of war?
588
00:31:13,200 --> 00:31:16,540
Whatever the case, there's another
589
00:31:16,660 --> 00:31:18,870
chilling civil war mystery,
590
00:31:19,080 --> 00:31:23,306
one of deadly premonitions,
not from a battlefield
591
00:31:23,330 --> 00:31:27,120
but from the mind of
Abraham Lincoln himself.
592
00:31:36,200 --> 00:31:39,620
In the oval-shaped parlor
known as the red room,
593
00:31:39,790 --> 00:31:42,660
where america's first ladies
traditionally held receptions
594
00:31:42,790 --> 00:31:45,330
for visiting dignitaries,
595
00:31:45,540 --> 00:31:48,830
president Abraham Lincoln's
wife Mary Todd Lincoln
596
00:31:49,000 --> 00:31:52,580
welcomes guests for an unusual event.
597
00:31:52,750 --> 00:31:55,000
The group is holding a séance
598
00:31:55,200 --> 00:31:58,250
to contact the lincolns' dead son.
599
00:31:59,200 --> 00:32:01,660
In February 1862, the lincolns lost
600
00:32:01,870 --> 00:32:04,160
their favorite son, Willie Lincoln,
601
00:32:04,330 --> 00:32:07,580
and that was a very dark
time for the Lincoln family.
602
00:32:07,700 --> 00:32:09,910
And Abraham and Mary Lincoln
603
00:32:10,080 --> 00:32:13,330
fell into an extraordinarily deep grief.
604
00:32:13,500 --> 00:32:17,000
They had lost another
son earlier in their lives,
605
00:32:17,160 --> 00:32:19,410
but this one really hit hard.
606
00:32:20,370 --> 00:32:22,290
During the Lincoln presidency,
607
00:32:22,450 --> 00:32:26,000
Mary Todd Lincoln was holding
séances in the white house.
608
00:32:26,160 --> 00:32:30,000
She was so distraught, so
she would bring in mediums
609
00:32:30,200 --> 00:32:33,040
to try to communicate with his spirit.
610
00:32:33,200 --> 00:32:35,516
And we know President Lincoln
attended at least one of them,
611
00:32:35,540 --> 00:32:36,700
because he paid a bit
612
00:32:36,870 --> 00:32:38,390
of a political price in the newspapers
613
00:32:38,540 --> 00:32:40,500
that said, "what's this president doing
614
00:32:40,620 --> 00:32:42,830
consulting with mediums and psychics"
615
00:32:43,000 --> 00:32:44,450
and things like that.
616
00:32:46,450 --> 00:32:49,040
Despite the flak
President Lincoln received,
617
00:32:49,200 --> 00:32:51,250
the notion of spiritualism,
618
00:32:51,370 --> 00:32:53,910
the belief that the dead
could communicate
619
00:32:54,080 --> 00:32:56,750
with the living via psychic mediums,
620
00:32:56,910 --> 00:33:00,080
was actually on the
rise during the civil war,
621
00:33:00,250 --> 00:33:04,016
and Lincoln himself was no exception.
622
00:33:04,040 --> 00:33:05,500
During the civil war,
623
00:33:05,660 --> 00:33:07,500
this is an, a time period when people
624
00:33:07,660 --> 00:33:10,950
all over the world believe
in this "spiritualist idea"
625
00:33:11,080 --> 00:33:13,000
of communicating with the dead.
626
00:33:13,120 --> 00:33:16,000
And over the course of the civil war,
627
00:33:16,160 --> 00:33:19,830
there are intense
casualties on the battlefield.
628
00:33:20,040 --> 00:33:22,830
So, people are having séances
629
00:33:22,950 --> 00:33:24,540
to speak to their long-lost dead.
630
00:33:26,290 --> 00:33:27,676
I think President Lincoln
was probably more
631
00:33:27,700 --> 00:33:29,410
spiritually in tune than most,
632
00:33:29,540 --> 00:33:33,410
especially considering
the pressure he was under.
633
00:33:35,200 --> 00:33:37,620
His son died while he
was in the white house.
634
00:33:37,790 --> 00:33:41,000
His nation's at war with itself.
635
00:33:41,200 --> 00:33:43,620
Tens of thousands of
people dying on both sides,
636
00:33:43,750 --> 00:33:47,200
you're desperately trying
to hold this country together.
637
00:33:47,370 --> 00:33:49,160
It's now your charge,
you're the president.
638
00:33:49,370 --> 00:33:51,500
And, of course, he paid the ultimate price
639
00:33:51,660 --> 00:33:53,250
for the office.
640
00:33:59,660 --> 00:34:01,160
Just five days
641
00:34:01,370 --> 00:34:03,790
after the south's
surrender ends the civil war,
642
00:34:03,950 --> 00:34:06,080
president Abraham Lincoln and his wife
643
00:34:06,250 --> 00:34:08,200
attend a play at Ford's theatre.
644
00:34:08,370 --> 00:34:10,080
And as the show is about to begin,
645
00:34:10,250 --> 00:34:11,540
a gunshot rings out.
646
00:34:13,160 --> 00:34:17,040
Lincoln slumps forward in
his seat, mortally wounded
647
00:34:17,200 --> 00:34:21,160
by an assassin named
John wilkes booth.
648
00:34:22,750 --> 00:34:25,790
John wilkes booth was a
confederate sympathizer
649
00:34:25,950 --> 00:34:27,700
and a very famous actor.
650
00:34:27,870 --> 00:34:29,620
That night, he went in,
651
00:34:29,790 --> 00:34:33,830
secretly went outside the president's box,
652
00:34:34,040 --> 00:34:37,040
opened the door, he had a derringer,
653
00:34:37,200 --> 00:34:40,160
rushed in and shot the
president in the head.
654
00:34:41,910 --> 00:34:43,910
When John wilkes booth
assassinates Lincoln,
655
00:34:44,040 --> 00:34:47,450
he jumps down, he
catches his leg in a bunting,
656
00:34:47,580 --> 00:34:49,500
but he yells "sic semper tyrannis,"
657
00:34:49,620 --> 00:34:52,290
which means "thus always to tyrants."
658
00:34:52,450 --> 00:34:53,750
So, it's personal for him.
659
00:34:53,950 --> 00:34:56,620
He hates Abraham Lincoln.
660
00:34:56,830 --> 00:34:58,620
And there were people
who thought of Lincoln
661
00:34:58,790 --> 00:35:00,200
as a tyrant.
662
00:35:01,540 --> 00:35:04,176
While Lincoln's
assassination is well-known,
663
00:35:04,200 --> 00:35:06,080
in the wake of this tragic event,
664
00:35:06,250 --> 00:35:10,500
Lincoln's biographer
and friend ward hill lamon
665
00:35:10,660 --> 00:35:14,120
claims that Lincoln had told
him of a terrible dream he had
666
00:35:14,290 --> 00:35:17,500
just three days before his murder.
667
00:35:19,830 --> 00:35:23,580
Ward hill lamon was Lincoln's
self-appointed bodyguard.
668
00:35:23,750 --> 00:35:25,750
They were very close to one another.
669
00:35:25,910 --> 00:35:31,830
In 1872, lamon published
a biography of Lincoln.
670
00:35:31,950 --> 00:35:34,000
And according to lamon,
671
00:35:34,200 --> 00:35:37,200
Lincoln had a dream that
he was in the white house,
672
00:35:37,370 --> 00:35:40,660
and Lincoln heard all sorts
of weeping and wailing.
673
00:35:40,870 --> 00:35:42,330
And in his dream,
674
00:35:42,540 --> 00:35:44,226
he made his way
through the white house
675
00:35:44,250 --> 00:35:47,080
and went downstairs into the east room,
676
00:35:47,200 --> 00:35:50,040
and when he got there,
he saw a catafalque
677
00:35:50,200 --> 00:35:53,660
with a corpse on it being
guarded by a soldier.
678
00:35:54,700 --> 00:35:56,460
And Lincoln went up
to the soldier and said,
679
00:35:56,580 --> 00:35:58,660
"who is dead in the white house?"
680
00:35:58,790 --> 00:36:01,160
And the soldier replied, "the president.
681
00:36:01,370 --> 00:36:03,830
He's been shot by an assassin."
682
00:36:03,950 --> 00:36:05,750
And according to lamon,
683
00:36:05,870 --> 00:36:09,500
Lincoln told this story to Mary
and to several other people,
684
00:36:09,660 --> 00:36:12,120
and that Lincoln looked very disturbed
685
00:36:12,290 --> 00:36:13,700
by the dream he had had.
686
00:36:14,700 --> 00:36:17,120
Did president Abraham Lincoln
687
00:36:17,250 --> 00:36:20,290
have a premonition of his own death?
688
00:36:20,450 --> 00:36:24,000
It's a question that
has intrigued historians
689
00:36:24,200 --> 00:36:26,500
for over 150 years.
690
00:36:26,700 --> 00:36:28,300
Did Lincoln actually have a premonition,
691
00:36:28,370 --> 00:36:33,200
or was this simply what the
exhausted and stressed mind
692
00:36:33,370 --> 00:36:36,120
produced in moments
of unconscious sleep?
693
00:36:36,290 --> 00:36:38,950
By the time you get to April 1865,
694
00:36:39,120 --> 00:36:41,370
Lincoln's exhaustion is total.
695
00:36:41,540 --> 00:36:43,660
Think of all of the
deaths on the battlefield
696
00:36:43,870 --> 00:36:45,950
that must have just
sort of bounced around
697
00:36:46,120 --> 00:36:47,676
in his consciousness
698
00:36:47,700 --> 00:36:50,660
before he drifted off to sleep each night.
699
00:36:50,790 --> 00:36:52,660
And a troubled person,
700
00:36:52,830 --> 00:36:56,000
their troubles will be
reflected in their dreams.
701
00:36:57,040 --> 00:36:59,450
I don't know if Lincoln
was psychic or clairvoyant,
702
00:36:59,580 --> 00:37:03,120
but the night Lincoln
went to Ford's theatre,
703
00:37:03,290 --> 00:37:05,346
there was a-a story about how
704
00:37:05,370 --> 00:37:08,080
he always said good
night to one of his guards.
705
00:37:08,500 --> 00:37:09,870
It was always "good night."
706
00:37:10,040 --> 00:37:12,750
But that night, he said "goodbye."
707
00:37:12,910 --> 00:37:15,726
And maybe he knew. Did he
know it would be that night?
708
00:37:15,750 --> 00:37:19,500
When we can't get
answers, mysteries are born.
709
00:37:27,870 --> 00:37:30,870
Members of a mysterious
secret society wait
710
00:37:31,080 --> 00:37:34,000
for Abraham Lincoln to
pass through the city by train.
711
00:37:35,040 --> 00:37:38,910
Their goal is to murder
the newly-elected president
712
00:37:39,040 --> 00:37:42,370
before he ascends to the
highest office in the land.
713
00:37:42,540 --> 00:37:45,580
While this secret plot
was ultimately discovered
714
00:37:45,750 --> 00:37:49,580
and prevented by legendary
detective Allan pinkerton,
715
00:37:49,790 --> 00:37:52,580
it revealed the existence
of a shadowy organization
716
00:37:52,750 --> 00:37:56,910
known as the knights
of the golden circle.
717
00:37:58,790 --> 00:38:01,000
The knights of the golden
circle was a secret society
718
00:38:01,200 --> 00:38:03,410
that was born in the mid-1850s
719
00:38:03,580 --> 00:38:05,950
by a man named George bickley.
720
00:38:06,950 --> 00:38:10,160
The knights of the golden
circle was a secret society
721
00:38:10,370 --> 00:38:12,410
with 25,000 or 50,000 members.
722
00:38:12,540 --> 00:38:15,830
The knights' secrecy
was composed of rituals,
723
00:38:16,000 --> 00:38:17,870
but the rituals were kept oral.
724
00:38:18,080 --> 00:38:21,830
So what they were saying
was really never disclosed.
725
00:38:22,040 --> 00:38:25,660
There was passwords needed
to get into knights meetings.
726
00:38:25,870 --> 00:38:28,870
And because of the secrecy,
it's very hard to decipher
727
00:38:29,040 --> 00:38:31,040
what the knights
actually did and didn't do.
728
00:38:31,200 --> 00:38:34,160
The knights of the golden circle
wanted to create a new world,
729
00:38:34,370 --> 00:38:36,660
a new country designated
the "golden circle,"
730
00:38:36,830 --> 00:38:40,290
and that is the southern
states stretching all the way
731
00:38:40,410 --> 00:38:43,040
around Mexico and
circling the Caribbean,
732
00:38:43,200 --> 00:38:47,370
where slavery would be enshrined
as a part of the constitution.
733
00:38:47,540 --> 00:38:49,500
And so Lincoln became an annoyance
734
00:38:49,660 --> 00:38:51,330
that they had to deal with.
735
00:38:52,370 --> 00:38:55,790
The knights of the golden circle
operated largely in the north,
736
00:38:55,950 --> 00:38:59,290
and they were seen as
a secret traitorous society
737
00:38:59,450 --> 00:39:02,160
that may have wanted to
overthrow the union from within.
738
00:39:02,370 --> 00:39:05,700
When Lincoln was assassinated in 1865,
739
00:39:05,870 --> 00:39:07,330
Americans at the time
740
00:39:07,450 --> 00:39:09,660
believed that the knights
of the golden circle
741
00:39:09,870 --> 00:39:12,950
may have been behind the
assassination conspiracy.
742
00:39:14,000 --> 00:39:15,840
While we know the
knights of the golden circle
743
00:39:16,000 --> 00:39:20,500
plotted to kill Abraham Lincoln
in 1861, many have wondered,
744
00:39:20,700 --> 00:39:24,200
was the assassination of Lincoln in 1865
745
00:39:24,370 --> 00:39:27,750
also the work of this secret society?
746
00:39:29,750 --> 00:39:31,790
There was an 1865 wood print
747
00:39:31,950 --> 00:39:36,790
that says, "theory, practice, effect."
748
00:39:36,950 --> 00:39:39,660
And under the "theory,"
it shows George bickley,
749
00:39:39,870 --> 00:39:42,160
who was the head of the
knights of the golden circle.
750
00:39:42,330 --> 00:39:44,910
Under "practice," it shows booth
751
00:39:45,080 --> 00:39:49,330
as having been the one
that assassinated Lincoln
752
00:39:49,450 --> 00:39:52,410
and the "effect" was
Lincoln's assassination.
753
00:39:52,580 --> 00:39:55,500
So I believe that the wood panel alleges
754
00:39:55,700 --> 00:39:57,370
some connection between
755
00:39:57,540 --> 00:40:00,660
the knights, booth and
the Lincoln assassination.
756
00:40:00,870 --> 00:40:03,910
So, that's one of the
mysteries involved here.
757
00:40:04,040 --> 00:40:05,950
Was that really true?
758
00:40:07,000 --> 00:40:09,330
Was a secret society the hidden hand
759
00:40:09,540 --> 00:40:11,580
behind one of the most
infamous assassinations
760
00:40:11,700 --> 00:40:13,450
in American history?
761
00:40:13,580 --> 00:40:15,540
We may never know.
762
00:40:16,540 --> 00:40:19,330
But like so many
stories from the civil war,
763
00:40:19,540 --> 00:40:23,290
solving each mystery
may be as complicated
764
00:40:23,450 --> 00:40:26,830
as the history of the United States itself.
765
00:40:28,830 --> 00:40:31,830
The civil war continues
to capture our imagination
766
00:40:32,040 --> 00:40:35,000
because the conflict
remains incredibly important
767
00:40:35,160 --> 00:40:38,540
to the overall broader narrative
of the American experience.
768
00:40:38,750 --> 00:40:40,830
And there are still going to be mysteries
769
00:40:41,000 --> 00:40:44,750
that need to be solved
because, in many respects,
770
00:40:44,910 --> 00:40:46,580
we are still living in the shadow
771
00:40:46,700 --> 00:40:48,910
of the American civil war.
772
00:40:49,040 --> 00:40:50,540
There's so much
773
00:40:50,700 --> 00:40:53,870
still that we don't know
that we're trying to unpack
774
00:40:54,000 --> 00:40:56,000
about the civil war.
775
00:40:56,160 --> 00:40:58,160
There will always be questions.
776
00:40:58,370 --> 00:41:01,580
We will never know all of the answers,
777
00:41:01,700 --> 00:41:04,830
but we have to get as
close to the truth as we can.
778
00:41:06,500 --> 00:41:10,330
The idea that a secret
society with radical plans
779
00:41:10,450 --> 00:41:12,000
may be responsible
780
00:41:12,160 --> 00:41:15,500
for the tragic assassination
of President Lincoln
781
00:41:15,660 --> 00:41:18,250
just goes to show us that, even today,
782
00:41:18,410 --> 00:41:22,450
160 years after the last shots were fired,
783
00:41:22,620 --> 00:41:25,620
there are still many
mysteries yet to be solved
784
00:41:25,790 --> 00:41:28,500
about the American civil war.
785
00:41:28,660 --> 00:41:32,120
Whether it's spy rings or premonitions
786
00:41:32,290 --> 00:41:34,790
or even monstrous creatures,
787
00:41:34,950 --> 00:41:37,700
historians, researchers
and treasure hunters
788
00:41:37,870 --> 00:41:41,540
will continue to explore
the fascinating stories
789
00:41:41,700 --> 00:41:45,410
of millions of Americans
who experienced
790
00:41:45,580 --> 00:41:48,830
the bloodiest days to
ever occur on U.S. soil.
791
00:41:49,040 --> 00:41:53,330
These tales continue to
be a source of curiosity
792
00:41:53,500 --> 00:41:57,620
and fascination, and may forever remain
793
00:41:58,540 --> 00:42:00,620
unexplained.
63437
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