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The Famous Brock Road-Orange Plank Road Intersection | Overland 160 

American Battlefield Trust
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This video is part of our series commemorating the 160th Anniversary of The Overland Campaign. You can view the full series here: • The Overland Campaign ... #thewildernesstour
We conclude our tour of The Wilderness Battlefield with a visit to "the most important intersection in the world in May of 1864." The Brock Road-Orange Plank Road intersection is where Ulysses S. Grant famously decided to take the Army of the Potomac to Richmond.
The American Battlefield Trust preserves America’s hallowed battlegrounds and educates the public about what happened there and why it matters. We permanently protect these battlefields for future generations as a lasting and tangible memorial to the brave soldiers who fought in the American Revolution, the War of 1812, and the Civil War.

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6 май 2024

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Комментарии : 52   
@wickedcurve1975
@wickedcurve1975 24 дня назад
Born and raised in Chancellorsville and have many ancestors in Wilderness Cemetery. Thank you! For your dedication, remembrance, and great contextualization.
@michaeldouglas1243
@michaeldouglas1243 20 дней назад
Overland 160 coverage has been terrific so far. Every speaker giving great content. As i always comment, i love the personal stories
@fastsetinthewest
@fastsetinthewest 24 дня назад
Mr. Adelman is a great advocate of history. A very knowledgeable person. Mr. White gives us a historical perspective with skill.
@crippledcrow2384
@crippledcrow2384 24 дня назад
Chris White really knows his stuff. Very knowledgeable guide. Thank you so much.
@johnbrumbaugh1687
@johnbrumbaugh1687 24 дня назад
Thank you for these great videos! I have been to the Wilderness twice, and I had four ancestors fight for the Union there. Looking forward to Spotsylvania!
@Ericbean1993
@Ericbean1993 24 дня назад
Thank you for covering the Vermont Brigade, i had uncle there later wounded at cold harbor and many original photos of soldiers from vermont killed and wounded in the wilderness. "Put the vermonters' ahead"
@kjmav10135
@kjmav10135 24 дня назад
My great great grandfather died in the Wilderness Campaign and I have a great great uncle who enlisted in 1861 and was killed in action a week before the war ended. They were both from the Ryegate area in Northeastern Vermont. I wonder if your Uncle knew my relatives.
@5graney5
@5graney5 24 дня назад
Excellent. Wish I had more time to spend there on my last visit
@southernman5839
@southernman5839 23 дня назад
Thank you for keeping American history alive.
@annmcgehee1728
@annmcgehee1728 24 дня назад
Thank you for spotlighting the more unknown participants and monuments here, such great tidbits of information!
@michaelhoffman5348
@michaelhoffman5348 23 дня назад
Excellent job - so proud to be a long time member of the ABT.
@AmericanBattlefieldTrust
@AmericanBattlefieldTrust 23 дня назад
Honored to have you as long time member Michael!
@N2Dressage001
@N2Dressage001 23 дня назад
Thank you for this coverage!
@royschalk6554
@royschalk6554 24 дня назад
Thank you for the history lesson!
@Grunt802VT
@Grunt802VT 24 дня назад
Brilliant Content!! As a Green Moutain Boy and Marine Veteran I would love to one day visit there! Semper Fi
@kfiscal01
@kfiscal01 24 дня назад
Living near Todd's Tavern for many years, that intersection is very familiar. The history in this area is some of the best for Civil War enthusiasts.
@legiox3719
@legiox3719 24 дня назад
Can’t wait for your spotslyvania court house videos. Such a gruesome struggle along the mule shoe
@craiggleason8386
@craiggleason8386 24 дня назад
Love your videos, thanks
@Stew-kv8nw
@Stew-kv8nw 23 дня назад
Good work as always. The sign at the crossroads really show how important this whole road network was in ‘64 and ‘63
@fishinglunkies3629
@fishinglunkies3629 23 дня назад
Y’all MOTIVATE the heck out of my heart and soul!!! Thanks for the upload
@jankovarik9714
@jankovarik9714 24 дня назад
Thanks to the Roving ABT Video Crew for stopping at sites such as this that many have never seen...and for those of us who will likely never have the opportunity to visit personally. This adds to my body of knowledge about the Civil War, and through ABT, I will continue to learn.
@jankovarik9714
@jankovarik9714 24 дня назад
Outstanding overview of a complex engagement...thanks to the ABT Team!
@gregboyden564
@gregboyden564 24 дня назад
you guys really paint a great picture of the battle. thank your for this knowledge. I would be lost without it.
@wildcolonialman
@wildcolonialman 23 дня назад
Fabulous. Harrowing history of course. But this Western man from far far away appreciates your effort. The US Civil War had ramifications across the Western World.
@philipryan25
@philipryan25 24 дня назад
Congratulations, excellent content 👍
@jorgemartinpaez4376
@jorgemartinpaez4376 23 дня назад
Thanks again Gary and Kris, the fighting nesr Orange turnpike, the Federals have won the race now to hold the road, the vermonters come in and Gen. Alexander Hayes, is killed was he a sharpshooter commander? Was he related to later POTUS Hayes? The stacking of federals in interesting II, V,, VI, WOW!!! Battles are fought by roads snd terrain geography and la naturaleza the road networks are crucial to the flows of battle, the Brock road is taken by the 2ndVT brigade, they suffered 1,000+ , May 5-6, yes I've heard about the VT brigade, 1/10 of casualties oh my......the dense vegetation and trees block the view, the father and son is touching... Sarah Kay, your tying up the home front and the impact is amazing.. gracias I never knew the battle was heavily intense w battle 💥 and fires on the earhworks gracias maestros y maestra...👏🏽👏🏽🙏🏽
@bigsarge2085
@bigsarge2085 24 дня назад
👍👍
@MegaWillieo
@MegaWillieo 22 дня назад
Put the Vermonters ahead. The roads do a wonderful job of explaining the Wilderness’s. I took my kids to these battlefields of Chancellorsville/ Wilderness
@GatorTTailAllain
@GatorTTailAllain 24 дня назад
Outstanding! Thank You Gentleman and Cheers 🍻
@robertvirtue
@robertvirtue 24 дня назад
Another GREAT presentation.
@chrisstyles4822
@chrisstyles4822 24 дня назад
Hays had an epic beard. 😂
@delstanley1349
@delstanley1349 24 дня назад
3:51 George Washington Getty is tasked to take control of the intersection. 4:32 Henry Heth is the first officer to contest Getty here. Wow! I wonder what Heth was thinking-------anytime the name "Getty" is involved it is he who kickstarts the big engagement. It was Heth's vanguard that started the battle in Getty-sburg. A little note to trivia I guess
@rcg8255
@rcg8255 24 дня назад
I like how no one comes to a complete stop at the intersection
@tomr1630
@tomr1630 24 дня назад
My Great Great Grandfather stood there with the 8th New Jersey Volunteer Infantry.
@RollTide1987
@RollTide1987 24 дня назад
I have visited that very intersection several times and can't begin to imagine the amount of inhuman carnage that occurred there on May 6, 1864.
@zachsmith3376
@zachsmith3376 24 дня назад
Represent my friend RTR
@kjmav10135
@kjmav10135 24 дня назад
Man, I wish I could be there and ask you a dozen questions. We donated my great great grandfather’s letters to the Vermont Historical Society. He Was a US First Sharpshooter, Birdan’s Uhit, and he died, supposedly, at the Bloody Angle. it seems to me though, that in his letters he talks about a plank road. I always assumed it was literally a road made of planks! He couldn’t have written about it during this battle, though, because Grant cut off the mail about a month or so before this. His guy who was the hard drinker/friend of Grant’s. Was he himself a sharpshooter? Is that why he was wearing Sharpshooter pants? I thought the Sharpshooters’ uniforms were ALL green. Were they? I think My GGGfather was with Hancock at this point, but I’m not sure. Whose unit would a US First Sharpshooter have been in at this point in the war? So many questions!! This is really interesting. Thank you!
@j.j.guerrieri5257
@j.j.guerrieri5257 24 дня назад
You guys film this in early spring?
@AmericanBattlefieldTrust
@AmericanBattlefieldTrust 24 дня назад
Indeed
@j.j.guerrieri5257
@j.j.guerrieri5257 23 дня назад
@@AmericanBattlefieldTrust Great work, I love the videos👌
@waltw4537
@waltw4537 23 дня назад
The Getty stand story got to me.
@swlc5555
@swlc5555 24 дня назад
For those who know, was the spacing of trees during the battle about what we see in the video or was it a lot more dense? Also, I'm guessing this video was made in March or April. Would trees in early May have leaves on them adding more concealment?
@TimDavis-gr5jn
@TimDavis-gr5jn 24 дня назад
My guess it’s not as dense seeing the fires would have served to clear the underbrush and resulting regrowth would come back thicker. Park Service keeping it cut back for path and Vt monument. But I’m no forestry major.
@dsmonington
@dsmonington 24 дня назад
The wilderness of the 1860s had huge swaths of thickets and underbrush and a high density of small thin trees with probably very few big old trees since all timber would have been cut to fuel the furnaces and smelters. So in your minds eye add in a lot more thinner trees and a lot more underbrush. Photos from the time do a good job of showcasing the thickness and density of foliage, just look at the background of the photo @21:35.
@swlc5555
@swlc5555 22 дня назад
@@TimDavis-gr5jnThanks for the response. I agree that there would likely be a lot more undergrowth in 1864. I think the Park Service is generally big on trying to recreate the landscape as it looked at the time of the battle. But if that meant letting the forest grow wild, it would probably make it difficult for visitors to see much.
@swlc5555
@swlc5555 22 дня назад
@@dsmonington From photos I've seen I also had the impression that there was a lot more undergrowth. From what I've read it seemed it was often described as almost impenetrable with soldiers barely able to see things in front of them. One thing I hadn't considered was that most of the old trees would have been cut down by locals in previous years as you stated. That makes sense. I think I was influenced by the painting "Skirmish in the Wilderness" by Winslow Homer which shows soldiers huddled around a huge tree. But that was more likely the exception. Thanks for your input!
@DustyMagroovy
@DustyMagroovy 24 дня назад
Great information. Please replace Kris's mic or find a solution that doesn't peak.
@Chiller11
@Chiller11 24 дня назад
Oh I have to be first
@71avalon36
@71avalon36 24 дня назад
I'm 4th. I guess that doesn't qualify me even for the bronze medal does it? Maybe lead? 😂 😂 😂 😂
@stevent9179
@stevent9179 24 дня назад
You're the third loser.
@philkaiser6025
@philkaiser6025 23 дня назад
You guys need to think about walking in the trenches in a different way: BECAUSE we're not allowed to walk in them is precisely the reason they are disappearing! We need to walk in them like they did to keep them around! Without walking in them they get filled up over time and gradually disappear. I mean, it's not like you'll have hundreds of thousands of people walking them anyway, you might get a couple of dozen a year. Seriously, they are going away BECAUSE we aren't allowed to walk in them! Think about it!
@matthewdekorte373
@matthewdekorte373 24 дня назад
do not confuse your place with the world
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