matteson_a_worse_place_than_hell
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matteson_a_worse_place_than_hell [2025/02/13 02:20] – ebooth | matteson_a_worse_place_than_hell [2025/03/09 20:48] (current) – 98.244.123.48 | ||
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+ | Reverend Arthur B. Fuller, a Union chaplain, was a physical wreck in 1862. Despite this, he rallied from his sickbed to join his regiment out of fear for his nation. (Guy) | ||
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+ | Arthur' | ||
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+ | In mid-April 1833, Arthur Fuller was wounded by a large piece of wood, permanently blinding him in his right eye. (Guy) | ||
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Louisa May Alcott and Walt Whitman' | Louisa May Alcott and Walt Whitman' | ||
Various Union blunders were part of the loss at Fredericksburg. The material needed for the pontoon bridges took too long to arrive, giving Confederate forces time to occupy the stone wall and Marye' | Various Union blunders were part of the loss at Fredericksburg. The material needed for the pontoon bridges took too long to arrive, giving Confederate forces time to occupy the stone wall and Marye' | ||
- | Shortly after the Battle of Fredericksburg, | + | Shortly after the Battle of Fredericksburg, |
Fredrick Douglass gave a lecture in Syracuse in which he spoke some harsh remarks, | Fredrick Douglass gave a lecture in Syracuse in which he spoke some harsh remarks, | ||
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General Burnside' | General Burnside' | ||
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+ | One of the interesting stories was that of Army Chaplain Arthur Fuller, who came to Captain Dunn and told him he wanted to help defend his men. Army chaplains were meant to help boost morale during the war, and I feel like Fuller fully embodied his work. His job was to help his men stay confident in what they were fighting for, so he went and fought with them. It was also interesting how Matteson compared Fuller' | ||
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+ | The last day of battle ended with little fighting and the city still burning from the previous days' attacks. The Union entered the city finding that the Confederates had retreated, leaving a victory for the North in Fredericksburg. (Emily Booth) | ||
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+ | At the beginning of the assigned section, the individual stories of people in the war helped really center this conflict back to some of the people it was directly affecting. Seeing how some people in different parts of life navigated this was was really interesting. (Caty) | ||
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+ | Some of the Union’s shortcomings at Fredericksburg can be attributed to the Union War Department not being totally adequate. The war department failed to deliver pontoon bridges in time with Burnside reaching the city, and so the Confederates had time to mass their troops and dig atop Maryes Heights. - Ewan H. | ||
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+ | General Burnside, likely frustrated with how things were going in his campaign, resorted to brash actions to try and take the city of Fredericksburg. After being repelled in his attempt to cross the Rappahannock elsewhere, he decided to cross into the heavily fortified/ | ||
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+ | General Lee took great offense with the Union barrage of Fredericksburg via cannon fire. When Burnside opened fire on the city of Fredericksburg, | ||
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+ | The Union strategy for Fredericksburg and eventually Richmond required speed. Unfortunately, | ||
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+ | The Union Army ultimately takes Fredericksburg and pushes the Confederates out; however, Burnside used more aggressive tactics than McClellan did, leading to greater Union casualties than Confederate. This is partially because the Confederates were firing on the Union army while they were trying to construct their pontoon bridges and because the Union Army was so disorganized. (Hank L) | ||
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+ | The wall that lined the base of Marye' | ||
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+ | Behind the Sunken Road, the terrain sloped sharply upward. The crest of Marye' | ||
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+ | Guns on Marye' | ||
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+ | Once the Confederate Army figured out Burnside’s plan, they decided to dig into Fredericksburg and the ridges overlooking the town and the Rappahannock. This provided great defenses for the Confederate Army during a Union assault on the town. Because of how dug in the Confederates were, it made it incredibly hard for the Union to push the Confederate Army out of the town. (Hank L) | ||
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+ | The failure for the Union army to beat back the Confederate army at Fredericksburg can very well be attributed to two factors: the delayed arrival of the resources needed to build the pontoon bridges, and Burnsides overwhelming need to be as timid as McClellan was. This meant that even with the delayed river crossing giving away the element of surprise, a crucial part of the Fredericksburg stratgey, Burnside still pressed on the attack, and essentially ran his troops into a fortified hill position. (Orion van Rooy) | ||
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+ | It was also interesting to learn that there had been a small urban skirmish within Fredericksburg itself, something you wouldn' | ||
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+ | Up to 200 000 troops fought at Fredericksburg on both sides, the scale being surprisingly high for me, as I always imagined Fredericksburg having been a relatively smalle battle compared to Gettysburg, Petersburg or Vicksburg. (Orion van Rooy) | ||
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+ | I found it interesting how the ministers would sing songs to the soldiers to help lift their spirits. This is one of the many things they did to try and push through the bloodshed and trauma of the war. (Lexi) |
matteson_a_worse_place_than_hell.1739413225.txt.gz · Last modified: 2025/02/13 02:20 by ebooth