The Civil War, which seems so long ago in history, was not really that long ago. Some of us more "mature" forum members could have talked to civil war vets.My mother went to collage in Gainesville, Ga in the mid 30's. One Sunday afternoon she had tea with Gen. Longstreets last wife who died in 1968. She was 21 when she married the very old Gen. in 1904/5.
My Grandfather as a young boy knew Gen Joe Kreshaw in Camden, SC. Kreshaw was one of Lee's better Div. Commanders but you hear very little of him.
Longstreet's Grave Site
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Re:Longstreet's Grave Site
jtdragon wrote:
You can get farther with a kind word and a gun than you can with a kind word alone.
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Re:Longstreet's Grave Site
Amish John wrote:
Chamberlain
Now that would have been something !!!The Civil War, which seems so long ago in history, was not really that long ago. Some of us more "mature" forum members could have talked to civil war vets.


Chamberlain
-Col. Joshua Chamberlain, 20th Maine
We cannot retreat. We cannot withdraw. We are going to have to be stubborn today
We cannot retreat. We cannot withdraw. We are going to have to be stubborn today
Re:Longstreet's Grave Site
Chamberlain wrote:
No kidding! That would be an experience of a lifetime!! B)
Amish John wrote:Now that would have been something !!!The Civil War, which seems so long ago in history, was not really that long ago. Some of us more "mature" forum members could have talked to civil war vets.
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Chamberlain
No kidding! That would be an experience of a lifetime!! B)
OHIO UNIVERSITY
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Re:Longstreet's Grave Site
Chamberlain wrote:
I was never fortunate to have visited a CW warrior, but did spend some time in the last century with a widow of one who had accompanied her husband to the last Gettysburg reunion. She lived in Table Rock, NE, about a stone's throw from the depot where I spent some time as a train-order operator. Like Longstreet's last wife, her marriage was a May-December arrangement that turned into a love affair AFTER the marriage ceremony was performed. A very gracious lady who loved to share her husbands stories.
That is one of the reasons that the books by Bruce Catton were so successful...he spent hours and hours of his youth "interviewing" and listening to the old stories told by the veterans of his hometown. Then he incorporated them into his writings providing "first-person" accounts and human interest stories.Amish John wrote:Now that would have been something !!!The Civil War, which seems so long ago in history, was not really that long ago. Some of us more "mature" forum members could have talked to civil war vets.
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Chamberlain
I was never fortunate to have visited a CW warrior, but did spend some time in the last century with a widow of one who had accompanied her husband to the last Gettysburg reunion. She lived in Table Rock, NE, about a stone's throw from the depot where I spent some time as a train-order operator. Like Longstreet's last wife, her marriage was a May-December arrangement that turned into a love affair AFTER the marriage ceremony was performed. A very gracious lady who loved to share her husbands stories.
Last edited by Kerflumoxed on Sun Sep 27, 2009 9:12 am, edited 1 time in total.
Jack Hanger
Fremont, NE[/size]
"Boys, if we have to stand in a straight line as stationary targets for the Yankees to shoot at, this old Texas Brigade is going to run like hell!" J. B. Poley, 4th Texas Infantry, Hood's Texas Brigade
Fremont, NE[/size]
"Boys, if we have to stand in a straight line as stationary targets for the Yankees to shoot at, this old Texas Brigade is going to run like hell!" J. B. Poley, 4th Texas Infantry, Hood's Texas Brigade