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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:11,512 --> 00:00:14,866 ‐ Ulysses S. Grant. 2 00:00:14,890 --> 00:00:16,534 This man's name is U. S. Grant. 3 00:00:16,558 --> 00:00:19,204 ‐ 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 00:00:22,356 --> 00:00:25,084 Resign or court‐martial. 6 00:00:25,108 --> 00:00:27,212 ‐ I'm not asking you to speak. 7 00:00:27,236 --> 00:00:29,214 I'm asking you to lead. 8 00:00:29,238 --> 00:00:31,007 ‐ There were but two parties now, 9 00:00:31,031 --> 00:00:33,676 traitors and patriots. 10 00:00:33,700 --> 00:00:35,595 I believe if I can take both forts, 11 00:00:35,619 --> 00:00:38,139 we can advance as far as Nashville. 12 00:00:38,163 --> 00:00:40,808 ‐ When I wish to consult you on the subject, 13 00:00:40,832 --> 00:00:43,102 I will notify you. 14 00:00:43,126 --> 00:00:44,437 ‐ General Buell's men? 15 00:00:44,461 --> 00:00:45,688 ‐ They're three days out. 16 00:00:45,712 --> 00:00:47,732 ‐ We'll move on Corinth when he gets here. 17 00:00:47,756 --> 00:00:50,860 There is little doubt that Corinth will fall easily. 18 00:00:52,678 --> 00:00:53,905 ‐ Fire! 19 00:01:01,311 --> 00:01:02,789 ‐ Come on, now, boys, pitch in. 20 00:01:02,813 --> 00:01:04,332 I'm right behind you. 21 00:01:05,899 --> 00:01:09,045 Fire the cannon! 22 00:01:17,411 --> 00:01:22,141 ‐ Very few people really know who Ulysses S. Grant was. 23 00:01:22,165 --> 00:01:26,688 ‐ Today there is this sense that he's forgotten. 24 00:01:26,712 --> 00:01:29,941 ‐ He's been called so many things over the years. 25 00:01:29,965 --> 00:01:32,569 ‐ The greatest general of his time. 26 00:01:32,593 --> 00:01:34,779 ‐ A military genius. 27 00:01:34,803 --> 00:01:36,614 ‐ A bloody butcher. 28 00:01:36,638 --> 00:01:38,616 ‐ A corrupt president. 29 00:01:38,640 --> 00:01:41,685 ‐ A belligerent drunk who got lucky. 30 00:01:42,477 --> 00:01:44,747 He didn't get lucky. 31 00:01:44,771 --> 00:01:47,709 ‐ Ulysses S. Grant is this perfectly average, 32 00:01:47,733 --> 00:01:51,671 humble individual from a poor, hardscrabble background. 33 00:01:51,695 --> 00:01:54,924 ‐ With a lot of hard times and failures in his life. 34 00:01:54,948 --> 00:01:57,135 ‐ But he's got this dogged determination, 35 00:01:57,159 --> 00:01:59,804 this bulldog mentality. 36 00:01:59,828 --> 00:02:01,431 ‐ This guy comes from nothing, 37 00:02:01,455 --> 00:02:02,765 rises to the highest ranks 38 00:02:02,789 --> 00:02:04,600 of the Union army. 39 00:02:04,624 --> 00:02:07,228 ‐ Fights bloody, terrible battles. 40 00:02:07,252 --> 00:02:09,814 ‐ With indomitable will. 41 00:02:09,838 --> 00:02:11,024 ‐ To save the Union. 42 00:02:11,048 --> 00:02:12,942 ‐ To heal his country. 43 00:02:12,966 --> 00:02:16,988 ‐ To lead the nation towards justice for everybody. 44 00:02:17,012 --> 00:02:19,449 ‐ He's the unheroic hero 45 00:02:19,473 --> 00:02:22,577 of our greatest national epic, the American Civil War. 46 00:02:22,601 --> 00:02:25,079 ‐ It's truly an American story 47 00:02:25,103 --> 00:02:27,498 not only of patriotism to the nation 48 00:02:27,522 --> 00:02:29,542 but for the values, who we are, 49 00:02:29,566 --> 00:02:31,794 and who we aspire to be. 50 00:02:46,333 --> 00:02:48,561 ‐ Dear Julia... 51 00:02:48,585 --> 00:02:50,897 the battle at this place was the most desperate 52 00:02:50,921 --> 00:02:53,816 that has ever taken place on the continent, 53 00:02:53,840 --> 00:02:56,819 and I don't look for another like it. 54 00:03:13,694 --> 00:03:15,755 ‐ The battle of Shiloh is the bloodiest battle 55 00:03:15,779 --> 00:03:18,216 in American history up to that time. 56 00:03:18,240 --> 00:03:19,342 The nation is shocked 57 00:03:19,366 --> 00:03:21,177 when the casualty reports come out. 58 00:03:23,912 --> 00:03:27,225 ‐ Grant doesn't come out of Shiloh looking very good. 59 00:03:27,249 --> 00:03:29,685 You know, he was "Unconditional Surrender" Grant 60 00:03:29,709 --> 00:03:31,062 at Fort Donelson, 61 00:03:31,086 --> 00:03:32,730 became a hero. 62 00:03:32,754 --> 00:03:34,982 And now all of a sudden, people are asking, 63 00:03:35,006 --> 00:03:37,568 "What happened?" 64 00:03:37,592 --> 00:03:40,071 ‐ The casualty list and the fact that Grant 65 00:03:40,095 --> 00:03:42,949 was surprised on the first day 66 00:03:42,973 --> 00:03:46,327 overshadow the fact of the victory. 67 00:03:48,311 --> 00:03:50,581 ‐ Rumors start reaching Washington 68 00:03:50,605 --> 00:03:52,959 that explain that surprise as Grant must be 69 00:03:52,983 --> 00:03:54,710 on the bottle once again. 70 00:03:54,734 --> 00:03:56,754 But the president answered 71 00:03:56,778 --> 00:03:59,298 those critical of Grant by saying, 72 00:03:59,322 --> 00:04:01,968 "I can't spare this man. 73 00:04:01,992 --> 00:04:03,928 He fights." 74 00:04:15,672 --> 00:04:18,443 ‐ After the bloodbath of Shiloh... 75 00:04:18,467 --> 00:04:20,736 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... 78 00:04:25,599 --> 00:04:28,411 with no duties, 79 00:04:28,435 --> 00:04:30,455 no real authority, nothing. 80 00:04:32,105 --> 00:04:35,293 ‐ Grant is so frustrated by this. 81 00:04:35,317 --> 00:04:37,170 Halleck is not aggressive, 82 00:04:37,194 --> 00:04:38,463 and then you have someone like Grant, 83 00:04:38,487 --> 00:04:39,922 who is very go‐get‐'em. 84 00:04:39,946 --> 00:04:42,300 He's ready to jump in, grab the initiative. 85 00:04:42,324 --> 00:04:44,260 Grant wants to finish off 86 00:04:44,284 --> 00:04:46,095 what's left of the Confederate army 87 00:04:46,119 --> 00:04:47,764 that attacked him at Shiloh 88 00:04:47,788 --> 00:04:50,308 but are having time to reorganize themselves 89 00:04:50,332 --> 00:04:53,269 as they fall back into Corinth. 90 00:04:56,880 --> 00:04:59,901 They're well defended. 91 00:04:59,925 --> 00:05:02,612 I would say quite active. 92 00:05:02,636 --> 00:05:04,947 They're preparing for battle. 93 00:05:04,971 --> 00:05:08,201 ‐ 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 00:05:18,693 --> 00:05:20,171 ‐ Hear that? 97 00:05:20,195 --> 00:05:22,131 I knew it. 98 00:05:22,155 --> 00:05:24,008 Trains coming in every day. 99 00:05:24,032 --> 00:05:25,885 They're reinforcing. 100 00:05:25,909 --> 00:05:29,680 ‐ Again, sir, I differ. This is a retreat. 101 00:05:29,704 --> 00:05:32,308 Our railroad men have ears on the tracks. 102 00:05:32,332 --> 00:05:33,726 They say it's empty trains coming in 103 00:05:33,750 --> 00:05:35,853 and loaded ones going out. 104 00:05:35,877 --> 00:05:38,481 They're withdrawing. 105 00:05:38,505 --> 00:05:39,482 Let's move on them now‐‐ 106 00:05:39,506 --> 00:05:41,901 ‐ Enough, Grant. 107 00:05:41,925 --> 00:05:46,489 After Shiloh, I'd have thought you'd have learned your lesson. 108 00:05:52,644 --> 00:05:55,665 ‐ Grant is like, "Speed, tempo‐‐these are weapons 109 00:05:55,689 --> 00:05:58,292 that can be used for an adversary that's on the run." 110 00:05:59,609 --> 00:06:02,505 Grant recognizes there's an opportunity, 111 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, 114 00:06:07,075 --> 00:06:09,220 they'll pass you by. 115 00:06:09,244 --> 00:06:12,515 And Grant sees this as a missed opportunity. 116 00:06:14,374 --> 00:06:16,310 ‐ General. 117 00:06:26,720 --> 00:06:28,155 ‐ Rebs are gone. 118 00:06:28,179 --> 00:06:30,366 Nothing but a bunch of scarecrows. 119 00:06:31,558 --> 00:06:34,328 ‐ Send a telegraph to the president. 120 00:06:34,352 --> 00:06:36,664 Corinth is ours. 121 00:06:36,688 --> 00:06:39,750 It's a great Union victory. 122 00:06:39,774 --> 00:06:44,589 ‐ The possession of Corinth was of strategic importance, 123 00:06:44,613 --> 00:06:47,967 but the victory was barren in every other particular. 124 00:06:47,991 --> 00:06:51,596 Corinth had already been evacuated. 125 00:06:51,620 --> 00:06:54,599 A well‐directed attack would at least have partially 126 00:06:54,623 --> 00:06:56,350 destroyed the defending army. 127 00:07:00,211 --> 00:07:02,064 ‐ Corinth has fallen. Grant is like, 128 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." 130 00:07:05,800 --> 00:07:07,820 And what happens? Halleck sits tight. 131 00:07:07,844 --> 00:07:09,405 He disperses the army, 132 00:07:09,429 --> 00:07:11,574 and things slow down in the western theater. 133 00:07:13,308 --> 00:07:16,287 ‐ Keep in mind that in the early years of the war, 134 00:07:16,311 --> 00:07:19,957 there are really two distinct theaters. 135 00:07:19,981 --> 00:07:22,960 The west is where Grant is. 136 00:07:22,984 --> 00:07:25,212 And there's the eastern theater, 137 00:07:25,236 --> 00:07:28,174 and this is the fights of the Union army 138 00:07:28,198 --> 00:07:32,094 against essentially the Army of Northern Virginia of Lee. 139 00:07:33,787 --> 00:07:37,266 ‐ So while Grant has been demoted out west, 140 00:07:37,290 --> 00:07:39,018 in the east, Robert E. Lee 141 00:07:39,042 --> 00:07:41,812 has taken over the Army of Northern Virginia. 142 00:07:41,836 --> 00:07:43,689 And the average result in the eastern theater 143 00:07:43,713 --> 00:07:46,359 is that the Union army loses 144 00:07:46,383 --> 00:07:49,487 to an undermanned Confederate army. 145 00:07:51,513 --> 00:07:54,200 In the east, Lincoln's experience with his generals 146 00:07:54,224 --> 00:07:59,163 had been bad, trending to worse. 147 00:07:59,187 --> 00:08:01,999 ‐ Abraham Lincoln had seen Robert E. Lee defeat 148 00:08:02,023 --> 00:08:04,669 an entire bench of Union commanders. 149 00:08:06,236 --> 00:08:09,465 ‐ 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. 151 00:08:13,118 --> 00:08:14,804 In fact, he calls it, of course, 152 00:08:14,828 --> 00:08:16,305 the darkest days of the war. 153 00:08:19,082 --> 00:08:23,771 ‐ Dear Julia, I am no longer boss. 154 00:08:23,795 --> 00:08:26,816 What the next move is or the part I am to take, 155 00:08:26,840 --> 00:08:28,651 I do not know. 156 00:08:32,846 --> 00:08:34,615 ‐ What's going on? 157 00:08:34,639 --> 00:08:36,117 ‐ I've had enough. 158 00:08:37,350 --> 00:08:38,577 I'm resigning. 159 00:08:38,601 --> 00:08:40,287 ‐ Oh, for God's sake. 160 00:08:40,311 --> 00:08:42,331 ‐ Look, I want to fight and win this war, 161 00:08:42,355 --> 00:08:44,417 but if Halleck has me sit it out, 162 00:08:44,441 --> 00:08:46,627 I might as well sit it out at home. 163 00:08:46,651 --> 00:08:48,838 ‐ You're not resigning. 164 00:08:48,862 --> 00:08:51,048 ‐ If I can't fight, well, then I'm useless. 165 00:08:51,072 --> 00:08:54,385 ‐ Sam, you're the most useful man we have. 166 00:08:54,409 --> 00:08:57,054 I know it. You know‐‐ By God, Lincoln? 167 00:08:57,078 --> 00:08:58,180 He knows it. 168 00:09:01,875 --> 00:09:02,875 ‐ Look at this. 169 00:09:06,087 --> 00:09:08,941 It says I was drunk at Shiloh. 170 00:09:08,965 --> 00:09:10,234 ‐ Oh, hell. 171 00:09:10,258 --> 00:09:12,069 Forget the papers. 172 00:09:18,433 --> 00:09:20,578 Listen. 173 00:09:20,602 --> 00:09:23,706 You know the next move is Vicksburg. 174 00:09:23,730 --> 00:09:25,708 You can take Vicksburg. 175 00:09:27,734 --> 00:09:30,046 Who else can do it? 176 00:09:30,070 --> 00:09:32,048 Halleck? 177 00:09:34,908 --> 00:09:37,053 ‐ Vicksburg. 178 00:09:37,077 --> 00:09:39,055 Lincoln was right. 179 00:09:40,663 --> 00:09:42,683 Vicksburg is the key. 180 00:09:50,507 --> 00:09:54,111 ‐ Controlling Vicksburg allowed food and other goods 181 00:09:54,135 --> 00:09:56,405 to move freely across the Mississippi 182 00:09:56,429 --> 00:09:58,157 and get onto railcars 183 00:09:58,181 --> 00:10:01,160 and feed the Confederacy in the east. 184 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, 186 00:10:07,774 --> 00:10:10,377 capturing Vicksburg would be a daunting task. 187 00:10:13,822 --> 00:10:15,925 ‐ The city of Vicksburg is on the east bank 188 00:10:15,949 --> 00:10:18,135 of the Mississippi River. 189 00:10:18,159 --> 00:10:22,223 And it is nestled among bluffs that tower 300 feet 190 00:10:22,247 --> 00:10:26,227 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 192 00:10:34,384 --> 00:10:38,072 connected by a continuous line of trenches and rifle pits 193 00:10:38,096 --> 00:10:41,242 that stretched for more than eight miles 194 00:10:41,266 --> 00:10:45,246 and then 172 big guns. 195 00:10:48,148 --> 00:10:50,793 ‐ Back east, Abraham Lincoln was at that moment 196 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 00:11:03,872 --> 00:11:06,475 ‐ 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 205 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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