I
have talked to a lot of Civil War re-enactors
and they all tell me one important aspect of why
they do it. One of the truly wonderful aspects
of the Civil War re-enacting hobby is the ability
to appreciate the locale of history and the impact
history has had on those historical places.
Who
can say they have not felt something while standing
at the wall of Gettysburg, or walking across Kelly
Field at Chickamauga? Looking across the cornfield
at Sharpsburg or down the hill… scratch that,
mountain at Chattanooga; all these places help
us to understand the incredible moments of history.
Imagine 5,000 cavalrymen sitting atop the high
ridge just west of the Nash Farm and visualize
them charging with sabers raised high in their
hands towards the dismounted Texans standing defiant
in the lower end of a corn field.
We
can stand at the spot where history was made by
men of flesh and blood and iron conviction --
where history was made by men not all that different
from us. They breathed, ate and hoped just as
we do; they suffered more and faced danger of
a sort we can only imagine, but they made history.
They saved a nation and made the United States
whole again.
At
Chickamauga I stood looking across Kelly Field
and later looked down from the crest of Snodgrass
Hill and tried to imagine what those men faced,
a time of terror we cannot fathom -- of courage,
bravery and sacrifice unimaginable to us. One
can look across that field and down that hill
and realize that the trees and the hills witnessed
a battle of incredible proportions; one that some
might say decided the fate of a nation.
The
serene silence of the Bloody Pond at Shiloh, the
brutal hills of Georgia and swamps of South Carolina
all have left marks upon my soul. By seeing the
fields of battle and the sites of campaign I have
come to better understand the men of the War Between
the States. Seeing the places and walking the
fields brought history alive for me and made the
words in history books more poignant, more real.
Cold
Harbor, Shiloh, Gettysburg, Chickamauga, Kennesaw
and Nash Farm are all places we can visit today
and appreciate the actions of a previous generation.
We can appreciate the lay of the land, the scope
of the battle and the accomplishments of the soldiers
who fought and died there. We can stand on the
ground that they did, on the same ground that
they fought over and soaked with their blood.
Through the land we can better appreciate their
actions. One can see the size of the fields and
forest they fought through. The killing fields
that they dreaded… and knew all too well.
Patriotic
blood watered the hills, valleys and plains of
over 20 Georgia Counties and thousands of bodies
sleep in unknown graves from North Georgia to
the small desolate and overgrown cemeteries lying
near Lovejoy.
The
reminders of the battles fought in Georgia are
everywhere.
In
our everyday lives in Henry & Clayton County,
we are never far away from the markings of that
war. We drive past the earthworks; we worship
in churches that served as hospitals for wounded
soldiers. We are shaded by the same trees that
covered the movements of the armies as they marched,
rode, or fought on.
We
dig up mini balls as we plant our flowers or till
our gardens. A statue on the McDonough Square
tells us of men who stood up in defense of their
beloved town. A small plot of land in Jonesboro
still holds the remains of 1,000 unknown soldiers.
We live alongside the reminders of Georgia's bloody
invasion. We feel the valor and the pain. We still
smell the powder burning.
If
one wishes, it is not difficult to don the gear
of the war, pick up a reproduction rifle and walk
the same fields that their ancestors did. Firing
a volley in the same place, marching under the
same sun or in the same rain brings us that much
closer to understanding them. All helps to make
us appreciate them so much more.
The
passions and fears that drove those men are not
that difficult to understand; in fact after reading
the letters and diaries it isn't difficult to
realize that those men were much the same as we
are today. They walked the land by placing one
foot in front of the other the same as we, they
looked up at the trees and the shade they provided
just as we do today. Many of those trees are the
same that stood one hundred and forty years ago,
though they are and stronger and wiser now.
Combining
the knowledge, the letters and diaries brings
us that much closer to true understanding. With
that understanding one gains appreciation, respect
and honor to those who have gone before us. The
soldiers of the War Between the States changed
our country and our nation's destiny; they made
it possible for the United States to grasp greatness
and made her the nation she is today.
Victory
is great; but honor is greater.
Photos courtesy of
the Library of Congress |