shrapnel
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 27, 2015
- Messages
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Actually, there were around 53,000 casualties total at the battle and 13,000+ deaths. I’m sure that many deaths occurred later from those casualties…It is crazy to think 54,000 men died in three days on that little field. As many that died during the entire Vietnam war.
Over a million pounds of lead were fired!
Nine months later when Lincoln gave the Gettysburg address they were still burying the bodies.
It's a haunting place for sure. Well worth the visit.
Been there several times. The most haunting place to be at last light is on little round top looking down into devil’s den. Found out recently I have kin that was killed there.
I usually ride the HD up there a few times a year. Some years ago I restored the Eisenhower Desk that sits in the foyer of the home he lived in which is reception offices now I believe. He baught this while in Europe during WW2I went several times as a kid. Growing up in NE OH it wasn’t a terribly long drive. It was always fun, but the true impact didn’t really sink in.
During the early days of COVID I watched the full series of the guided virtual tour, and it had a way different impact as an adult. 300,000 men trying to annihilate each other, this quaint little town caught in the cross fire. All those poor bastards being ordered to to fight and die. It’s a lot.
On a side note, the Eisenhower farm is also pretty neat. Learned a lot I didn’t know about ol’ Ike on that tour.
It’s highly unlikely that really happened. The only cartridges that would have been used would be for a Henry or Spencer rifle. The only thing similar in the Civil War would have been paper cartridges, which would not work in a movie set other than one with Alec Baldwin in charge…In 1993 filming the movie “Gettysburg” extras were taking a break. An older man in a filthy uniform and reeking of sulfur came out of the woods and talked briefly. When he left them, the man handed out some rolled cartridges. The extras didn’t recognize the cartridges so they turned them over to the people in charge of such things. Cartridges were live and period specific!
That’s one of the few Civil War ghost stories I can’t discount. Because think of it, if this unknown man were some trouble maker, he would have had to do a lot of work in a short time to appear and smell real. Then handing out live cartridges that he knew would be touched off in movie takes is straight up manslaughter.