Gray_Lensman wrote:I have been trying to remember the name of that song, "Battle Cry of Freedom", It would be neat to have it play when you select the USA, and have "Dixie" play when you select the CSA.
I totally agree! that would be a very nice touch.
I think the thing that amazes most about these normal, everyday folk who made up so much of the military on both sides was their willingness to march into near suicide every day.
In "For Cause & Comrades" on page 4-5 is the paragraph that after reading I knew I had to read the rest of this book before moving onto Foote:
"My initial grappling with the question of Civil War soldiers' motivation occurred during the aftermath of the Vietnam War. Others also probed this puzzle at the time. A veteran who became a student of the Civil War after his tour in Vietnam was awestruck by the dedication of soldiers in that earlier conflict. In all his Vietnam experience he had met only one American "who had the same 'belief structure' as the Civil War soldiers." In Vietnam "the soldier fought for his own survival, not cause. The prevailing attitude was: do your time...keep your head down, stay out of trouble, get out alive." How different was the willingness of Civil War soldiers to court death in a conflict whose casualty rate was several times greater than for American Soldiers in Vietnam. "I find that kind of devotion...mystifying." When General John. A. Wickham, who commanded the famous 101st Airborne Division in the 1970s and subsequently rose to Army Chief of Staff, visited Antietam battlefield in the 1980s he gazed at Bloody Lane where several Union assaults had been repulsed before finally breaking through.
"You couldn't get American soldiers today to make an attack like that," he marveled."
After reading that I guess I knew I was going to read on about why they faught so hard and dedicated right up until the bitter end in many cases. I also really enjoyed reading the unedited notes from soldiers on the field everyday. You really get a feel for their personality and who they were since the letters are left unedited for content and grammer.