Тёмный
No video :(

Gettysburg's Aftermath with Garry Adelman 

Adams County Historical Society at Gettysburg
Подписаться 18 тыс.
Просмотров 99 тыс.
50% 1

Delve into the devastating aftermath of the Battle of Gettysburg with Garry Adelman, Chief Historian of the American Battlefield Trust. This program will examine early photography at Gettysburg through the camera lens of Alexander Gardner, Mathew Brady, and other early photographers who visited the battlefield in 1863.

Опубликовано:

 

28 авг 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 77   
@Goffas_and_gumpys
@Goffas_and_gumpys Год назад
This fella and Matt Atkinson are the reason I would come half way around the world to visit Gettysburg. The passion and the knowledge is infectious and I hope to make one day before it's too late. This was a great presentation and the hour long time just flew by. I want more LOL. Great stuff everyone involved.
@signoguns8501
@signoguns8501 Год назад
Im currently reading Shelby Footes civil war trilogy, so I've been on a bit of an American civil war binge, devouring everything I can find on youtube. These lectures are some of my favourites. Very engaging, charismatic and knowledgeable speakers. Hopefully one day I will get to go to the US and see all these places for myself. Maybe attend a few lectures like this. That would be great. Thank you for the upload. Best wishes, from England.
@leza6288
@leza6288 Год назад
@signoguns8501 I want to travel around GB and have my bucket list for England, Scotland and Wales! I love Shelby Footes work! He was an amazing historian.
@terryeustice5399
@terryeustice5399 Год назад
Garry heard this before. Never gets old! Thank you! ❤️💯
@daytonlights-peterwine468
@daytonlights-peterwine468 Год назад
Thanks, Garry! I love watching your videos, as I always know you not only know what's up, and share that with us, but your enthusiasm is contagious, too. I wish I could visit one day.
@MrFrostings
@MrFrostings Год назад
This was a ton of fun! Wonderful presentation. History should be fun, learning should be fun, and this was an hour worth spending. Thank you Garry.
@patriciaspadea2266
@patriciaspadea2266 Год назад
Fantastic, I'll be rewatching😮😢🎉😅❤
@samdown1914
@samdown1914 Год назад
Fascinating lecture, Gary is so easy to listen to
@michaelewert8310
@michaelewert8310 Год назад
Mr. Aldeman's passion and expertise is on full display in this great presentation. The before and present day photos of battlefields helps to accurately locate events.
@stflaw
@stflaw Год назад
Garry's knowledge and enthusiasm are unparalleled. Great presentation.
@davidbowman4259
@davidbowman4259 Год назад
He's the best.
@Stiglr
@Stiglr Год назад
That was fantastic!!! I followed along on my wargame battle maps and on Google maps, and you have enriched my knowledge of the battlefield immensely. I have a trip planned to the town this coming July, so my battlefield tramps during that week will likely have a few more target vistas to visit!!
@philspaugy1756
@philspaugy1756 Год назад
Fantastic celebration. Very happy to hav been in the house for this.
@edouardrobert160
@edouardrobert160 Год назад
Great job 👍
@stevensimonson282
@stevensimonson282 Год назад
Love your enthusiasm. I had the same experience as you... I got Frassinito's book when I went to Gettysburg in 1976 (age 15) and have been fascinated (some would say obsessed) with Gettysburg ever since.
@KingAlobar21
@KingAlobar21 Год назад
Wow great presentation! Thank you 😊
@creechman
@creechman Год назад
Thanks Gary. That was well done.
@loetzcollector466
@loetzcollector466 Год назад
33:36 Back in 1980 as a lad of ten years old I visited the park and stood at that exact spot. It had been raining earlier in the day. That little cistern in the foreground was filled with water exactly as was in the original photo. It was almost as if someone had only just came and removed the body moments before. "4D experience" indeed.
@SpartansAndHeroes
@SpartansAndHeroes Год назад
Garry is a treasure
@andrewsilverstein6186
@andrewsilverstein6186 Год назад
Always a pleasure listening to Mr. Adelman
@berenke11
@berenke11 Год назад
Excellent as always Gary. Very well done indeed.
@mellisapollom2241
@mellisapollom2241 Год назад
This lecture is wonderful! It is great crediting Frazz❤❤
@deborahgibson9039
@deborahgibson9039 Год назад
Garry, your enthusiasm is contagious! This was so interesting! Thanks for a great presentation!
@davidmurray5399
@davidmurray5399 Год назад
Looking at the "Harvest of Death" photo at 22:24, you can see a presumably white, diamond shaped badge on either the clothing or gear of one of the dead Union soldiers. This would indicate that men of the Second division of Sickle's Third Corps were fighting on and around this area. I would guess that it's likely many of the corpses in the photo are men of the 120th New York, whose regiment suffered heavy losses between the Wheatfield Road and Emmitsburg Road area.
@CrossTrain
@CrossTrain Год назад
This was awesome! Thank you Garry!
@keithhuotari2571
@keithhuotari2571 Год назад
Loved it! Thanks, Garry... :)
@hoytoy100
@hoytoy100 Год назад
Garry is the best. Super engaging.
@bullhead900
@bullhead900 Год назад
Garry is awesome!
@michaelhoffman5348
@michaelhoffman5348 Год назад
Great presentation, but I am wondering why you can not access directly from your Adams county Historical Society site? I just happened to stumble on it while viewing another lecture...
@vipergtsmre
@vipergtsmre Год назад
Garry is the man. My Pops is a massive Gettysburg enthusiast and has met Garry several times. I recall walking Pickett's Charge, from the confederate side as a young lad, many times.
@mwdjr3158
@mwdjr3158 Год назад
Fantastic!
@davidwarr8600
@davidwarr8600 Год назад
I had to watch this in two parts. The second half is hilarious.
@Gitarzan66
@Gitarzan66 Год назад
It's a safe bet that there are quite a few nerds watching as well. Spiritual nerds sort of, there in spirit.
@Gramma-Bambi-Lynn
@Gramma-Bambi-Lynn Год назад
Great job, Garry!
@billbrenneman334
@billbrenneman334 Год назад
EXCELLENT !!!
@TaaarrrrHeeeels
@TaaarrrrHeeeels Год назад
"That was not videoed right?..." We're glad too Garry!!
@chipbleonard3
@chipbleonard3 Год назад
Excellent!!
@5.56Media
@5.56Media Год назад
Amazing! Thank you!
@kennethzullick6897
@kennethzullick6897 Год назад
Thanks Garry!
@gimmethedetails7209
@gimmethedetails7209 11 месяцев назад
Garry is the main reason I am planning a trip to Gettysburg for the 161. I hope to be able to hire him, or at least piggyback on someone elses tour. How much is Garry for a full days session with one history buff? :) The other reason is John R. Ash, whom he mentioned as an unlikely soldier identified as the rebel sharpshooter (although I disagree)
@davidwarr8600
@davidwarr8600 Год назад
Interesting talk but unfortunately I can’t see much detail in the pictures on youtube.
@buck1978
@buck1978 Год назад
This was great
@6thmichcav262
@6thmichcav262 11 месяцев назад
Is the background photo at 57:20 a deliberate attempt to place the Harvest of Death photo? Has anyone gone back and analyzed Coates and Mayer’s theory that the location is West of the Emmitsburg Road near the Spangler farm?
@davidmurray5399
@davidmurray5399 Год назад
Looking at the bodies that are in the photo shown at 29:08, it looks like a place where wounded men were either carried or staggered back to after being wounded. It doesn't look like bodies that fell on the line of battle.
@jmchinch
@jmchinch Год назад
I love Gary’s energy when he talks about this stuff
@larryrhody8784
@larryrhody8784 Год назад
Job well done. Please forward the Jennie Wade joke.
@HHIto
@HHIto 9 месяцев назад
Pictures of the valiant horses saddens me so!
@ourv9603
@ourv9603 11 месяцев назад
A young soldier said the most disgusting thing he witnesses during the war was after a battle, as the dead & wounded littered the battlefield dying, vultures would gather on fenceposts & low limbs and patiently wait for the wounded to die before they descended upon the dead & feasted. !
@ARDRI2009
@ARDRI2009 Год назад
Why is Little Round Top closed? Will it open again?
@shealey9763
@shealey9763 Год назад
"I found Abraham Lincoln" Got to love Garry, what a legend.
@Tom26NC
@Tom26NC 10 месяцев назад
Garry is a treasure! I see Jim Hessler there at the very end.
@dreamcatcher7939
@dreamcatcher7939 Год назад
Be careful what you click on if you're having breakfast.
@Killswitch1411
@Killswitch1411 Год назад
We're siting here analyzing individual trees being damaged during the civil war.. Seeing modern weapons damage.. We have brought down a reign of destruction those civil war soldiers never thought could be possible.
@bobjaissle
@bobjaissle Год назад
Garry, Did you figure out the names of the flies (on John Burns)(yet)?
@willoutlaw4971
@willoutlaw4971 Год назад
These are flies that followed the barefoot, unwashed rebel armies into Pennsylvania.
@Blues4Winter
@Blues4Winter Год назад
He's the absolute best
@---------353
@---------353 8 месяцев назад
👏👏👏👏👏
@chadillac2472
@chadillac2472 Год назад
There were approximately 7000 deaths at Gettysburg. Where are the photos that document this?
@joslynscott466
@joslynscott466 Год назад
Garry makes history fun
@johnnyfarout
@johnnyfarout Год назад
Garry's gotta' be the biggest nerd ever. but then, what's with the dog house passion? the doghouse looks like it was made from farm use left over scrap lumber back in the day. that's not going to happen nowadays. kicking the doghouse around isn't going to look like that at all. leave the doghouse alone. i've no doubt the carpenters who did the work on the restoration... understood what that doghouse was and just figured make a doghouse like the restoration. no way to construct it like in 1861 other than copying what they learned and doing their best. Olde timey left over oak and pine scraps and cut offs ... that's just not in the wood, garry!
@ktd9
@ktd9 Год назад
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@tlmoscow
@tlmoscow Год назад
Everyone is gushing over Garry, but I wish he’d stop emoting, slow down a bit, and calmly share all his interesting insights. Maybe then, he wouldn’t get so out of breath.
@JonathanAgain
@JonathanAgain Год назад
I was a big fan of Garry Adelman and his natural passion - until I watched this particular video. Gaining enjoyment from posing in the death arrangement of fallen soldiers is disrespectful and demeaning to the memory of their sacrifice. Sadly, he seems to enjoy the death poses of Confederate boys the most as if their deaths offer a handy source of entertainment and humor. North or South, boy or man, the memory of these fallen soldiers now suffer the insult of laughter over their horrible deaths. Shame on you Gary. Next will you dance on their graves as well?
@ted1091
@ted1091 Год назад
Poor sound
@donaldball9265
@donaldball9265 Год назад
A manic presentation. Disrespectful of the immense tragedy of that battle. "A ton of fun"? Good lord.
@ronbednarczyk2497
@ronbednarczyk2497 Год назад
Why do you insist that the Devil's Den sharpshooter isn't a real sharpshooter? Yes, the gun is a prop, Gardner used prop guns all the time because by the time he got to a battle the fields had been searched and guns had been picked up. There's a prop gun ay Bloody Lane at Antietam. How come the only photo of this guy's face is at Devil's Den? His face isn't seen in the other photos. His body would have been better preserved if he was within the confines of the rocks and not laying out in the open in a field. Garry, you said it was difficult dragging a body uphill. It's easier to drag a body from Devil's Den downhill to the other locations. Frassanito isn't god. He wasn't there at the time. He isn't infallible. Accept the possibility that there could be an alternate explanation for the Devil's Den sharpshooter.
@s.a.charles271
@s.a.charles271 Год назад
I love this debate! I wonder if we’ll ever know for sure? I believe he was a sharpshooter and killed in his hide before being dragged and photographed elsewhere, I read an article once about how one of the fed batteries on little round top kept being harassed by a single sniper, once they found him, they sent a shell on his position and silenced him, insinuating he died from concussion of the round, the article then pointed out the rocks being out of place, in particular the biggest one which they believed was laying over his legs making them appear crushed, which they most certainly do, all very interesting, one of the million fascinating stories of the battle
@ronbednarczyk2497
@ronbednarczyk2497 Год назад
@@s.a.charles271 That must be the article by James C. Groves. William A. Frassanito is an author and historian. He isn't a forensics expert. He isn't an artillery expert. He isn't a scientist. Why is his opinion taken as the only truth? The Park Service only presents his interpretation of the photo. I don't know if this soldier was a sharpshooter or not. That is the title given to him by those who viewed the photo. He may have been just another scared soldier who found a safe place. Either way, we should get the sequence of events correct.
@6thmichcav262
@6thmichcav262 11 месяцев назад
Frassanito’s reasoning is compelling to me. The rain soaked clothing in the “original” photo that is disturbed in the “sharpshooter” photo. The blanket that magically appears under him that isn’t present in the first photo. Those are just two examples.
@lindanorris2455
@lindanorris2455 7 месяцев назад
another civil war episode with a pathetic microphone!
@gerrys4822
@gerrys4822 Год назад
"The locals didn't want the soldiers bum-rushing the town"???? Poor choice of words Gary. These men (on BOTH SIDES) were heroes to their kinfolk. Scholarship or no scholarship, the pop-culture euphomisms aren't so cute to some of us historians. I understand you are a passionate researcher, but please try to be more careful with your flowery commentary in the future Sir. Some of us vets out here (still living and struggling to survive domestic hostile culture) don't take kindly to these references to "bums" etc. There are many fakers and poseurs out there giving us vets a bad name. Not our fault. Some actually do have mental issues and unresolved PTSD etc. But terms like that only muddy the waters more and feed into the media stereotypes. Those who haven't served will never understand the POST-WAR struggles vets go through (not just combat vets btw) as we attempt to reassimilate back into mundane society. Not downing your style or charisma Sir. Just pointing out your choice of wording. These brave men may have been dirty, (sweaty, grimy and disheveled bedraggled etc. better adjectives to use)... from being in the field so long, and fighting in the hot summer heat and humidity, but that's not their fault and it HAPPENS in warfare. Just saying. I'm sure the Yankee farmers there knew what that summer heat and sweat looked like being rural country folk. 🙄
@JonathanAgain
@JonathanAgain Год назад
Bravo Sir, bravo!
@colby25
@colby25 Год назад
Bum rush.........oxford english dictionary..........suddenly force or barge one's way into.
@willoutlaw4971
@willoutlaw4971 Год назад
Wouldn't it be wonderful if the United Daughters of the Confederacy paid to remove the equestrian statue of Confederate traitor Robert E. Lee from the Gettysburg battlefield?
@davidwarr8600
@davidwarr8600 Год назад
What!?
@jimminshall7449
@jimminshall7449 Год назад
@@davidwarr8600 Will Outlaw is a troll.
@THEMICROMARKSHOW
@THEMICROMARKSHOW Год назад
why are we hearing about flys and maggots?
Далее
SIGMA ENVY IS UNTOUCHABLE 🔥 #insideout2
00:10
Просмотров 3 млн
🛑самое грустное видео
00:10
Просмотров 143 тыс.
The Making Of The Western Mind | Tom Holland
1:05:18
Просмотров 117 тыс.
Meade at Gettysburg: A Study in Command
1:35:48
Просмотров 50 тыс.
Witness to War: The Taverns of Gettysburg
56:05
Просмотров 34 тыс.
Devil's Den - Ranger Matt Atkinson
1:03:41
Просмотров 650 тыс.