American Civil War Game Club (ACWGC)

ACWGC Forums

* ACWGC    * Dpt. of Records (DoR)    *Club Recruiting Office     ACWGC Memorial

* CSA HQ    * VMI   * Join CSA    

* Union HQ   * UMA   * Join Union    

CSA Armies:   ANV   AoT

Union Armies:   AotP    AotT

Link Express

Club Forums:     NWC    CCC     Home Pages:     NWC    CCC    ACWGC
It is currently Thu Oct 23, 2025 11:39 am

All times are UTC - 5 hours




Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 6 posts ] 
Author Message
PostPosted: Tue Oct 14, 2025 10:34 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Sun May 14, 2017 1:55 am
Posts: 1177
Location: Tennessee
This is a continuation of the Civil War Talk Radio episode reviews I started. In case anyone is interested you can go back and check out my Season 1 notes in a previous post.

To recap:
The following is just for fun. I am currently listening to the Civil War Talk Radio podcasts https://impedimentsofwar.org/ while out jogging and decided to "start at the beginning" of the series and write up some quick episode reviews here for anyone interested. You can also find these episodes wherever you get your podcasts. I will add a new post to this thread each time I complete a podcast. Feel free to add comments if you have any about the episodes or the points raised in them. I'm also going to break the threads up by seasons so the thread isn't too long.

Season 2 List of Episodes worth listening to... so far...
Episode 2.04: Thomas Desjardin

_________________
Gen. Blake Strickler
Confederate General-in-Chief
El Presidente 2010 - 2012

Image


Top
 Profile Send private message  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Tue Oct 14, 2025 10:52 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Sun May 14, 2017 1:55 am
Posts: 1177
Location: Tennessee
EPISODE 2.01 -
August 26, 2005

Right Makes Might
Guest: Harold Holzer

Listen to Harold Holzer, author of the award-winning Lincoln At Cooper Union: The Speech that Made Abraham Lincoln President analyze this long neglected but critical oratory.


Blake's Review:
I was looking forward to this conversation based on the fame of Lincoln's Cooper Union speech. Unfortunately, the interview just seemed to never touch all that much on the speech despite spending a good 30 minutes on the topic. Weird, I know. I learned about Lincoln's speechwriting, how he practiced speeches, how he traveled to New York to make the speech, what he did there, and so on and so on. But it felt like a lot of who, what, where, and when stuff but not a lot of "why" he was there.

I guess they did cover that a little. He went there to introduce himself to the eastern Republicans who doubted a westerner could capture the New England states in 1860. Having a westerner like Lincoln running on the Republican ticket was important as he might win the critical Midwest states as well as the stalwart Republican states in the east. Lincoln's success in winning over influential eastern backers became a key ingredient to his eventual success in 1860.

What did he say at Cooper Union? They never really covered that either. I did learn that the speech was written out by Lincoln and that he later gave the speech to a newspaper publisher who replicated it with Lincoln editing it the whole time. As they set the pages for the printing press (amazingly enough the same night as the speech - Lincoln did not sleep apparently) the pages were allowed to fall to the ground where they were likely swept up and thrown away or burned the next day. So while we do have Lincoln's authorized reproduction of his speech, the original is lost.

The conversation did drift, as do all Lincoln chats from 2004 - 2005, to the topic of Lincoln's sexuality. Holzer's opinion? "I don't think it is character assassination, I think it comes out of this sense that people have had for generations that Lincoln belongs to everybody and everybody can identify with Lincoln. In fact, the people who have advanced this theory are gay and are scholars of gay history." Holzer goes on to talk about the authors of the book on Lincoln's homosexuality and how they reportedly found lost love letters between Lincoln and Joshua Speed. "He (one of the authors) later admitted to me in a phone call that he made it up.... He said it was just for 'consciousness raising' and wasn't real. He said he wanted to get people to think that it was possible." Holzer is ready to put this topic to rest (as most people asked by Gerry about this are).

Overall, just an average interview with a few interesting tidbits here and there.

_________________
Gen. Blake Strickler
Confederate General-in-Chief
El Presidente 2010 - 2012

Image


Top
 Profile Send private message  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Wed Oct 15, 2025 2:58 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Sun May 14, 2017 1:55 am
Posts: 1177
Location: Tennessee
EPISODE 2.02 -
September 02, 2005

Who Would Not be a Soldier?
Guest: Mark Dunkelman

Mark H. Dunkelman has spent a lifetime researching the story of the 154th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment. It's a fascinating story, stretching from Chancellorsville to Chattanooga to the March to the Sea. In Brothers One and All: Esprit de Corps in a Civil War Regiment, Dunkelman goes beyond antiquarian detail-mongering to show how the 154th NY became the world in which its members lived, and sometimes died, shedding new light on the importance of the regiment as a community.


Blake's Review:
This interview mainly revolves around the author's personal history as a descendent of a soldier from the 154th New York and how he got interested in writing about and researching the unit. They discuss Dunkelman's views on the unit and the unit's history during the Civil War as a member of the 11th Corps and later of the 20th Corps. Overall, while not a excellent interview, it did keep me listening to the end as Dunkelman does bring up some interesting points about Civil War regiments and how "espirt de corps" is different from unit "morale".

Arguably the most amusing part of the interview was when Dunkelman discusses the origins of the phrase, "Who would not be a soldier?" He found that the members of the 154th New York used this heavily sarcastic phrase (sarcasm not yet becoming a mainstream form of comedy in America in the 19th Century) whenever something bad happened. Therefore, if you wake up covered in snow, "who would not be a soldier?" they would say. Or if they are wounded, lost, tired, hungry, or simply disgruntled, "who would not be a soldier?" Probably a feeling and phrase which can cut across all generations and nationalities.

_________________
Gen. Blake Strickler
Confederate General-in-Chief
El Presidente 2010 - 2012

Image


Top
 Profile Send private message  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Fri Oct 17, 2025 1:20 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Sun May 14, 2017 1:55 am
Posts: 1177
Location: Tennessee
EPISODE 2.03 -
September 09, 2005

The Last Port
Guest: Chris Fonvielle, Jr

Did the blockade make a difference? Why did Union forces spend so much effort to take Wilmington, N.C., in the final year of the war? Wilmington native and UNC-Wilmington professor Chris Fonvielle, author of The Wilmington Campaign: Last Rays of Departing Hope, analyzes the important and fascinating events that marked the war in North Carolina in 1864-65.


Blake's Review:
The interview begins twenty minutes late due to some tech issues and so they have a shotened amount of time to dicsuss the topic. It's ironic because they begin discussing how events on the seaboard always seem to be overlooked and never given the respect they deserve. Neither noticed the irony of the tech issues which gave them less time than a normal show.

Was the blockade a success? They talk about the fact that the Confederacy was supplied largely from overseas to the tune of perhaps 50% of their war material. It did disrupt their economy and did, by 1865, manage to cut-off all their major ports. But the Confederacy never lost a battle due to the lack of supplies and it took so long for the blockade to close all the ports that the Union could have lost the war waiting for it to happen. The blockade did force the Confederacy to defend their extremely long coast and divert men and supplies to far-flung forts which might otherwise have been in Virginia or Tennessee. The Confederacy also spent a lot of time, material, and money, to build a navy of their own to try and break the blockade.

Overall, just an average interview. The talked about Wilmington and why it was an important fortress by 1864 and 1865. The guest had some good stories from the bombardment, such as Butler's attempt to pack a dummy warship with tons of explosives and beach it close to the fort to attempt to blast a hole in it (spoiler - bad idea). They also talked about earth fortifications taking over masonry fortifications during the war. At Wilmington, the Union fired a very large number of shells which had zero effect on the fortifications as the Confederates simply went out each night and shoveled the sand back into place.

_________________
Gen. Blake Strickler
Confederate General-in-Chief
El Presidente 2010 - 2012

Image


Top
 Profile Send private message  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Tue Oct 21, 2025 10:29 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Sun May 14, 2017 1:55 am
Posts: 1177
Location: Tennessee
EPISODE 2.04 -
September 23, 2005

One, Two, Many Gettysburgs
Guest: Thomas Desjardin

Living in Gettysburg, historian Thomas Desjardin discovered that many of the most well-known stories of the battle are badly distorted versions of the original events. In These Honored Dead: How the Story of Gettysburg Shaped American Memory Desjardin describes how the postwar efforts of John Bachelder, Dan Sickles, and others helped to create the modern view of what happened at the battle. He raises the disturbing question: is it possible ever to know what really happened in the past?


Blake's Review:
This was the first really interesting interview of Season Two. Gerry and Desjardin have a very interesting chat about Gettysburg history and why we remember it as we do - and why we are often wrong.

The show begins with Desjardin discussing his interest in Joshua Chamberlain and how his legacy really took off after the release of Ken Burns documentary, coupled with the surge in popularity of The Killer Angels and the release of the movie Gettysburg.

The conversation then turns to Desjardin's new book, These Honored Dead, in which "you argue that history is not a fixed and static collection of facts." Desjardin talks about being a Gettysburg native and tour guide and how "you quickly discover that what you think you know about the battlefield is mostly not true, and there are so many myths and legends and so forth."

The Shoe Factory? Wasn't Heth looking for shoes?

There was no shoe factory in Gettysburg. Desjardin states the obvious that if there were shoes that Early's men would have already captured them when he went through the town on the 28th.

So where does that myth come from? Mostly from Harry Heth who, long after the battle, wrote about his divisions lack of supplies (especially shoes he puts in parenthesis in his writing) as the reason for moving on Gettysburg. Shelby Foote and other historians continued to talk about the shoe factory in Gettysburg despite there not being one. Ken Burns also puts the shoe factory myth into his documentary adding to the legend of the factory.

They then talk about Little Round Top and how it has become the most famous part of the battlefield where the battle, and maybe the war, was either won or lost by the actions of Chamberlain. Is that fair? And why is Little Round Top so popular now?

Desjardin says, not jokingly, that LRT is more popular than nearly anywhere else at Gettysburg because it has good parking and a great view. It's also convenient that Gettysburg is near so many eastern cities and is easy to access for millions of people (unlike Shiloh which had, arguably, more influence on the outcome of the overall war than Gettysburg did).

So why does LRT endure? "There were a couple of things that appeal now to our concept of that sort of John Wayne charge or our 'just in the nic of time' kinds of things." They discuss the LRT story and then return to the myths of the fighting. The Federals were not outnumbered by 3, 4 or 5 times by the Confederates and were actually similar in numbers to the Rebs. Did the 20th Maine charge down the hill with Chamberlain leading and capture hundreds of men? Not really. "It just sort of happens. Chamberlain... spent his whole life saying, 'I didn't order a charge.' He said if I had, no one would have heard me."

The myth also lives on with LRT because people think if Lee's army takes the position that they can turn Meade's flank and lay a devastating fire on the Union army causing them to retreat. "When you stand on the surfact (of LRT), you have a great view, but its of the Confederate lines, not the Union lines. So that if the Confederates had gotten to the top of the hill, they would have been able to combard their own troops. But to turn and fire up the long, skinny shape of the hill toward the Union army would have been almost impossible." Not to mention that the Confederates had no massive amount of guns to move up LRT even if the 20th Maine retreats.

The whole interview is very interesting and it's one of the best so far. Highly recommended!

_________________
Gen. Blake Strickler
Confederate General-in-Chief
El Presidente 2010 - 2012

Image


Top
 Profile Send private message  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Wed Oct 22, 2025 2:08 pm 
Offline

Joined: Thu Jan 21, 2021 8:52 pm
Posts: 101
You would imagine that shoe factory legend would have been dispelled sooner but even I thought there was a shoe factory until now. Shows what I know.

_________________
Gen. Mitch Johnson
GENERAL IN CHIEF

Image


Top
 Profile Send private message  
Reply with quote  
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 6 posts ] 

All times are UTC - 5 hours


Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 24 guests


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Search for:
Jump to:  
Powered by phpBB® Forum Software © phpBB Group