Dead in a Tree at Gettysburg!!! | American Artifact Episode 84

2024 ж. 15 Мам.
1 358 122 Рет қаралды

How in the heck did a Confederate soldier end up dead in a tree at Gettysburg and what's the story behind how he was found? Those are the questions that we're diving into as we walk the battlefields and look at a few of the artifacts at The Gettysburg Museum of History.
This episode was produced in partnership with The Gettysburg Museum of History. See how you can support history education & artifact preservation by visiting their website & store at www.gettysburgmuseumofhistory...
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Пікірлер
  • We found part of a human rib cage in a cedar tree while elk hunting in New Mexico. That evening we met with a game warden and told him about it. I took him to the tree. The nexxt day the sheriff, coroner and a team from NMSU came out and started digging. It was a native man's remains from over 400 years prior. He was buried there and the tree grew, raising his remains out of the ground. They found many more graves and fenced off the area.

    @michaeltaylor4984@michaeltaylor498411 ай бұрын
    • @@repentandbelieveinJesusChrist9then don’t delay . Go to him.

      @surfdocer103@surfdocer10310 ай бұрын
    • ​@@surfdocer103if you had any idea what you're saying and what it would cost you you would get on your knees where you're at right now and ask for forgiveness!

      @brt-jn7kg@brt-jn7kg10 ай бұрын
    • Sounds like mt lion found a body

      @chrishoman3928@chrishoman392810 ай бұрын
    • Tree pushes body out of the ground vs a tree growing around a chain link fence. I've seen more trees around chain link fences.

      @jaimewright7099@jaimewright709910 ай бұрын
    • @@jaimewright7099 Its a Lie! Trees dont push their trunk up? Yeah they Can overgrow stuff, But in 400 years ? That rib would be fully overgrown?🤷🏼‍♂️

      @michaelripley4528@michaelripley452810 ай бұрын
  • I am 80 years old, from NJ and disabled. I will never again walk the Gettysburg Battle fields. So i enjoy the presentations and historical commentary. Thank you. I remember my grandmom talking about watching parades in Elizabeth, NJ and seeing the old Civil War veterans marching. That thrilled me as a child and still does to this day.

    @carolmeagher4134@carolmeagher413411 ай бұрын
    • 👍🏻

      @TheHistoryUnderground@TheHistoryUnderground11 ай бұрын
    • My father also recalled seeing elderly Civil War vets in parades in Wilkes-Barre, PA in the early 1920s...

      @kmterpin@kmterpin11 ай бұрын
    • My father was born in 1899, in New Jersey. He served in WW1, he knew men who served in the Civil War. He now lies at Arlington,

      @robschannel4512@robschannel451210 ай бұрын
    • ​@robschannel4512 My father was born in 1898, but never got a chance to enjoy Civil War history personally. He lived in Illinois most of his life.

      @maggiesfarm7970@maggiesfarm797010 ай бұрын
    • I am also from NJ! As a very young man, my grandfather(born 1889) enjoyed going to the corner store and hang out, listening to the Civil War veterans talk war stories.

      @amethystanne4586@amethystanne458610 ай бұрын
  • Grew up in southeast PA. Remember Boy Scout camping trips to Gettysburg. Hiking all over the battlefields, climbing rocks in Devils Den, seeing the various monuments. I remember sitting around the fire at night with my fellow Scouts and we pondered how a century earlier boys not much older than us were camping, fighting, and dying on the same ground. Really made us think just how easy we had it growing up.

    @mitchd949@mitchd94911 ай бұрын
    • Such a shame that we had so many Americans being killed by fellow Americans.

      @felixmadison5736@felixmadison573611 ай бұрын
    • Still happening everyday in places like Chicago unfortunately.

      @wayneevans5023@wayneevans502310 ай бұрын
    • @@wayneevans5023 And let us not forget #1, St. Louis, Misery, and #3, Birmingham, Alabama. The Civil War was just a start.

      @felixmadison5736@felixmadison573610 ай бұрын
    • Good story! This history should be teaches in school again .... I have been to Gettysburg twice when I was teenager and it was enlighting

      @franksweeny3829@franksweeny382910 ай бұрын
    • If you grew up in southeast PA then you know hoagies

      @ramencurry6672@ramencurry66724 ай бұрын
  • When my wife and I go to Gettysburg (we live 1-1/2 ours away) we hike from town to Little Round Top, down thru the Slaughter Pen, up to Devils Den and then back to town. We usually do this in the Spring or Fall when there is hardly anyone around. The one time, as we walked thru the Slaughter Pen we heard bugle calls….absolutely no one was around. Another time we took our Niece and her Parents for Sunrise at Little Round Top. My sister is her mom. After a beautiful sunrise, we went to Devils Den. While there we heard the distinctive sound of cannon fire coming from Longstreet’s kick off point. It was in December, early morning, so there was absolutely nothing going on. We also checked later, nothing was scheduled on the Battlefield. If you have ever been to Gettysburg mid-week in December, it is very quiet. Just thought I would share these two interesting events we encountered on the Battlefield in this location. This is truly a very special place. To appreciate and understand it, leave the car behind and walk it. You may just happen to encounter some unique History.

    @stevemaryellen91@stevemaryellen9111 ай бұрын
    • I have had a couple of experiences while visiting the Gettysburg battlefield. One that stands out especially in my mind was a trip my mom and I took In 1994. It was late in the afternoon and we generally don't visit the battlefield during peak times, so there was no one else around. We were headed West on the road that runs in front of the Trossel house where we encountered a Calvary officer riding his horse. As we passed him, I slowed down and said we should get a picture of him, I bet they're having a reenactment. I pulled off, turned around, and he was no where in sight. When we went by the visitor's center we stopped and asked about a reenactment and were told there was none. I mentioned the officer we saw and they just smiled. The other was in the Triangular Field. That place is very spiritual, I've felt it everytime I've visited in some way. I've been to at least two dozen battlefields and Gettysburg is my favorite!

      @headedforhome@headedforhome11 ай бұрын
    • These ghosts still don't even know they are dead. Hard not to sense.

      @kookietherapy9398@kookietherapy939811 ай бұрын
    • I have often felt a rage well-up in me as I hear of battlefields, or parts of battlefields sold in the name of real estate development. Even in Gettysburg there is a steady encroachment on various ancillary locations and positions. AFAIK there are unique conditions that must be met in order to have the kinds of experiences often reported. The fact that these events continue to occur tells me that these places are hallowed in a way that the average American is just never going to appreciate. Just sayin.....

      @BruceWSims@BruceWSims10 ай бұрын
    • @repentandbelieveinJesusChrist9 Gotta laugh..... On behalf of the Christ family....Mr and Mrs Christ and their son, Jesus.....maybe yoiu can explain why you have to use words that Jesus never spoke, written by a guy who never met Jesus, to support a belief system that Jesus never espoused. Apparently, what you don't know about Christ Consciousness, the Judaic Messianic movement of the turn of the Milenium and Religiousity vis Spirituality would fill a small library. Kindly take your intrusive self-appointment down the street, mayhaps to find someone who gives a shit. FWIW.

      @BruceWSims@BruceWSims10 ай бұрын
    • I thought you were gonna say you found some cool artifacts.

      @Rubberducky204@Rubberducky20410 ай бұрын
  • My great great grandfathers - Aaron Parker, 10th Alabama, and Hiram Duke, 14th Alabama - and Hiram's brother, Roland Duke, 47th Alabama, were present at Gettysburg. All came home. Which in the case of the first two, is how I came to be able to comment on your video. Thanks to the Yankees for missing, or to my ancestors for ducking. 😊

    @steveparker7240@steveparker724011 ай бұрын
    • My ex had Confederate ancestors, and I had Yankee ancestors. Thank goodness for bad aim!

      @susanpage8315@susanpage831511 ай бұрын
    • And that they had a good immune system!

      @TheOfficialRandomGuy@TheOfficialRandomGuy11 ай бұрын
    • My great great great gpa was named also named Hiram Sexton lived during the civil war. Georgia-Tennessee line

      @treysexton1624@treysexton162411 ай бұрын
    • ​@@susanpage8315 i😮😮

      @davidashaw310@davidashaw31011 ай бұрын
    • My great great grandfather drank whiskey and stayed in the Boston area.

      @DanimalJ3666@DanimalJ366611 ай бұрын
  • My father had an uncle who fought at Gettysburg with the 1st North Carolina Infantry and was wounded the first day of the battle, sat out the 2nd day, then participated in Picketts Charge on day 3. Luckily for us he survived the hell of that day only to be captured during Lees’ retreat in Falling Water’s Maryland. He was released in a prisoner exchange in Baltimore Maryland then went on to Vicksburg only to be captured again. After the war, he returned to Charlotte North Carolina and opened a dry goods store which is still there as far as I know.

    @skyraider1656@skyraider16569 ай бұрын
    • My family was mostly with NC 26th. Pvt Joseph Phillips Co F. Killed at Gettysburg July 1, 1863 as was his brother W. E. Phillips. Others came home. Missing limbs, facial deformities, and never the same mentally. That trauma carried down generations.

      @keepclimbing23@keepclimbing233 ай бұрын
  • I have a 1865 Springfield 50-70 Trapdoor rifle that was found by my great grandfather in the early 1900’s at fort Lowell in Tucson. The story goes my great grandfather found the rifle hidden up in the roof rafters when the fort was still standing.

    @craigthescott5074@craigthescott507410 ай бұрын
    • Cool!!

      @luv2luv720@luv2luv72010 күн бұрын
  • It’s amazing the things people find without really looking for them. That soldier was buried and no one cared that he was a southerner. They just took care of him. 🙂👍

    @cyndiebill6631@cyndiebill663111 ай бұрын
    • Thats cause the Civil war is over.

      @jackiemack8653@jackiemack865311 ай бұрын
    • Much better than the mass graves that other Confederate bodies still lay in, while the Union soldiers received nice neat graves with memorial markers.

      @mamawchip9426@mamawchip942625 күн бұрын
  • Devils Den is freaky. When I was about 15 years old, I was near the rocks looking toward Little Round Top when right next to me a disembodied voice said "What you lookin for is over there." No one was anywhere near me and it was RIGHT THERE! It still sticks with me nearly 40 years later.

    @bretthewitt3890@bretthewitt389011 ай бұрын
    • I believe it. Many have reported this type of experience at Devil's Den.

      @davidwilliam9681@davidwilliam968111 ай бұрын
    • Haunted 👻 👽 👻 👽 👻

      @kisha1682@kisha168211 ай бұрын
    • @@meganallen8585 No reason to be afraid. They're just people in a different form. Living humans are a lot more capable of harm.

      @davidwilliam9681@davidwilliam968111 ай бұрын
    • Your next stop...THE TWILIGHT ZONE!

      @felixmadison5736@felixmadison573611 ай бұрын
    • What was it you were looking for?

      @michaeltaylor4984@michaeltaylor498411 ай бұрын
  • I’m not a bit history buff by any means and this isn’t really the type of content I consume but man your channel is incredible.

    @MikeyD0@MikeyD011 ай бұрын
    • Cool thing about history...the more you look, the more you find!

      @TheGravitywerks@TheGravitywerks11 ай бұрын
    • Now ur hooked

      @toekneeb4277@toekneeb427711 ай бұрын
  • My great great great grandmother's brother NY North was wounded at Gettysburg and subcombed to his injuries 9 months later. His age was 24.

    @conniegaylord5206@conniegaylord520611 ай бұрын
  • My Great Grandfather enlisted with the 25th. Illinois Infantry in 1862. He was seriously wounded at the Seige of Corinth in May 1862. His Discharge Papers read, "Discharged due to partial loss of right hand - no longer able to fire a musket - disability 25%". He returned home, recuperated, and re-enlisted in the 10th. Illinois Cavalry as a scout. He was discharged as a Corporal at wars end in 1865.

    @dsbmwhacker@dsbmwhacker11 ай бұрын
  • My ex’s ancestor (Quitman’s grays, GA) fought in the wheat field. A bullet went through his leg but missed major blood vessels. He was captured and taken to Elmira Prison in upstate NY.

    @susanpage8315@susanpage831511 ай бұрын
    • Very interesting. Do you know what came of his life after the war?

      @cognomenunknown2144@cognomenunknown214411 ай бұрын
    • @@cognomenunknown2144 At the end of the war the prisoners were released and he walked/hitched rides back to Georgia. We still have the confederate dollar he had. He married and raised a family. He was an unrepentant Confederate and during reconstruction stabbed a Yankee veteran for singing a yankee song! (The man survived, and he was not charged)

      @susanpage8315@susanpage831511 ай бұрын
    • Being in and surviving a Yankee prison would be enough to make a man hate them for life.

      @michaeldouglas1243@michaeldouglas124311 ай бұрын
    • ​@@susanpage8315may he rest in piss

      @mikecosentino1478@mikecosentino147811 ай бұрын
    • @@michaeldouglas1243 You ever heard about Andersonville?

      @alonsocushing2263@alonsocushing226311 ай бұрын
  • Visited Gettysburg on many occasions beginning with Dad packing up the family on a weekend trip. As you tour the battlefield you observe others walking peacefully down the many footpaths that dot the area, one must remember the thousands of men and boys who's experience here was the polar opposite. Men who paid the supreme sacrifice and many not dying quietly but experiencing immense suffering until their demise. With that thought in mind ,the battlefield experience takes on a whole new meaning of significance.

    @jamesgatto8441@jamesgatto844111 ай бұрын
  • WOW!! I'm 74 years-old and have read just about everything I could find about the Civil War since I was in my early teens. I also love playing any and all Civil War board games over the past 60+ years. I visited Gettysburg in the early 1980s, and I was like a kid in a candy store...I did not want to leave! This KZhead series is fascinating and the stories from people like Pfeffer are amazing.

    @felixmadison5736@felixmadison573611 ай бұрын
  • This story reminds me of one told to me by my grandmother, who was born in 1879. Her grandfather was a boy in Canada during the War of 1812, and had told her of seeing the bodies of American soldiers hanging in the trees after the battle of Queenston Heights. Maybe also snipers. Sure makes history come alive.

    @lizbrown7232@lizbrown723211 ай бұрын
  • There use to be a path from just below Little Round Top to Devils Den. When they took all the trees down to make that area look more like it appeared during the battle, that path seemed to disappear. Anyway, while walking that path, every hair on my body stood up and chills ran through my chest and head. I always associated that feeling to some sort of ghost experience. I knew several battlefield guides, and I was told of a couple visiting the battlefield who so excited that the park would put on a demonstration of soldiers. They replied they looked so real. The guide stated that the park doesn’t allow anything like that only under special circumstances, and nothing was going on today. The couple insisted they saw a line of soldiers between Devils Den and Little Round Top.

    @bobdickerson3434@bobdickerson343411 ай бұрын
    • I got the same spooky feelings walking around the battlefield. They were particularly strong at a place called Point of the Woods. That's where Lee met his men coming back from Pickett's Charge.

      @df5295@df529511 ай бұрын
  • I read a account of another family losing a cow during the chaos of the battle. They assumed it ended up in a Confederate commissary but they were wrong. The cow wandered ten miles! To a neighboring hamlet and was recognized by a relative! If I remember correctly the cow even walked back home on its own. I think I read it in a book title “Debris of battle.”

    @pigmanobvious@pigmanobvious11 ай бұрын
  • My Ancestor George Washington Newmyer fought for the 28th Pennsylvania Infantry at Gettysburg. He survived the war and eventually settled in Nebraska. I saw his name on the 28th Infantry Marker at Gettysburg. I have a second ancestor who was in the 3rd Indiana Cavalry. I am not sure if he fought at Gettysburg.

    @timnewmyer780@timnewmyer78011 ай бұрын
  • Great story about the sharpshooter in the tree. The Pfeffer family stories really make Gettysburg come alive in these videos. Whoever does the music for your videos must be a musician, as they are spot on!

    @acousticshadow4032@acousticshadow403211 ай бұрын
  • Pvt Elbert A. Cotton was in the 15th Ala. Infantry Regt, Co. E and is my most direct Confederate ancestor and at 39 years of age when he enlisted in 1862. He is mentioned in Col. Wm. Oates book, The War Between the Union and the Confederacy, was present for duty at Little Round Top, survived this battle and many others, until he surrendered with the 15th, at Appomattox Court House. Thank you J.D., for mentioning the 15th Alabama.

    @tn_bayouwulf2949@tn_bayouwulf294911 ай бұрын
  • That's quite a story! I have to wonder about the family of the man who died in the tree. They probably never knew what became of this soldier since any id he might have had would have been long lost.

    @sandysue202@sandysue20211 ай бұрын
    • Very sad to think of who was left behind and never knew this man's fate.

      @user-wi9hv2pb2q@user-wi9hv2pb2q11 ай бұрын
  • Talking about snipers in the trees , my great great grandfather was a sharpshooter in the Confederate army. He and his brother were in the Battle of Williamsburg in 1862, and his brother was shot just as daylight was breaking by a sniper up in the trees, and my great great grandfather killed the sniper. As I remember the story, he said the sniper died in the tree. So I suppose it wasn't uncommon. Ironic too, he made it through Gettysburg and Picketts charge, didn't surrender until after 1900, and lived until 1921.

    @BlueRidgeCritter@BlueRidgeCritter11 ай бұрын
    • ASA see Easter dy tree syysy r try street the that start the free every d7 slider every r e Rd t Dr tree zyuu

      @eddiedority1816@eddiedority181611 ай бұрын
    • To survive all those years in the civil war when life expectancy was a few weeks he was a very lucky man. 🇦🇺

      @infidel202@infidel20211 ай бұрын
    • As a feller who climbs trees for a living, I don't doubt it at all. You'd want to be in a nice solid shooting position, and that would mean you've got a good spot to hang out in. Not surprising that you could be stuck right there if shot or incapacitated

      @SLOCLMBR@SLOCLMBR11 ай бұрын
    • @@infidel202 Nah, he was just too mean...he wasn't going to give the grim reaper the privilege.

      @BlueRidgeCritter@BlueRidgeCritter11 ай бұрын
    • @@BlueRidgeCritter he sounds like a top bloke

      @infidel202@infidel20211 ай бұрын
  • Samuel Gettys and Isabella Ramsey are my 6th great-grandparents, their daughter Elizabeth Gettys is my 5th great-grandmother. I feel this deep connection to Gettysburg through my familial roots and enjoy learning about the history of the town and of the battles that took place there. Thank you for making the content you share here.

    @JesMuse74@JesMuse7411 ай бұрын
  • Seems that dead soldier wanted to be found, hence the leg falling at the right moment and rustling the leaves. Touching story. Thank you.

    @hectorheathcote9495@hectorheathcote949511 ай бұрын
    • Heard another story from years back, probably over 15 years ago now. Someone was at Gettysburg with an old camcorder and captured what appeared to be Confederate soldiers marching through the tree line. I think it was around the area of Big Round Top as well. Very few if any people were at the national battlefield that day and no reenactments were scheduled because it was early March, still rather cold and rainy. The video itself is grainy of course due to the age of the camera that took it but, if you believe in ghosts, it'll certainly reinforce tales of the battlefield being haunted. Ya gotta figure too, even if you don't believe, that a place such as that where so much suffering and death occured, why wouldn't be haunted in some way?

      @Stargazzer811@Stargazzer81111 ай бұрын
    • I suspect he was dead at the time, so I doubt he wanted anything.

      @Ranstone@Ranstone10 ай бұрын
    • @@Stargazzer811 I saw that video. It looked very real.

      @tltfaas@tltfaas10 ай бұрын
    • ​@tltfaas it looked real but was actually debunked as computer generated images. I love a good ghost story but this one was proven to be false

      @eagle1984@eagle198410 ай бұрын
    • @@eagle1984 computer generated images on an old vhs camcorder....sure

      @ianwilkinson5069@ianwilkinson506910 ай бұрын
  • My grandma was born in Adams County, every wkend our family had to go see grandma's mom. Dad would drive the battlefield, he was at the dedication of the Gettysburg Peacelight.

    @smokingrammy828@smokingrammy82811 ай бұрын
  • My 2G great grandfather served in 47th Batt VA Cavalry CSA and was KIA in skirmishing along the Jackson River in Virginia on Dec 20 1863. He was just a farmer with a wife and two young sons. Family records say he was "found bleeding to death against a tree". I can only imagine his sense of pointlessness that night thinking about what he was losing - and for what? His family quickly fell apart, his wife died soon afterwards, and the sons fostered out to relatives. All the older family members sold their farms and went west to Missouri and farther. Only one son remained in VA and he was my great grandfather. This was a devastating war to many families in Virginia where they were torn apart and the reasons to fight and die were lost in the depths of their losses. Nothing romantic or pridefull about the civil war. Over 600,000 Americans died fighting each other over the expansion of slavery and a few wealthy southern men whose empires were dependent on slave labor. Truly a rich man's war and a poor man's battle. My family paid a price that very nearly wiped us out.

    @jsmcguireIII@jsmcguireIII11 ай бұрын
    • Fascinating comment thank you for sharing

      @CompetitivelyAwesome@CompetitivelyAwesome5 ай бұрын
    • All wars since the beginning have been fought for the benefit of rich men. When two poor farmers have a dispute, they can normally work it out between themselves. But for some reason, rich men like to hire young men to do the fighting for them.

      @vanespeer@vanespeer5 ай бұрын
    • Hi Vane. I know what you mean! However, IMO WWII was the last truly clear reason to war. A fight to protect global freedom from fascism. My ancestors lined up to fight, and the belief was personal, especially after Pearl Harbor. My Virginia ancestors were blue ridge farmers who fought in the Revolution, but many other Virginians were Loyalist for economic reasons. Several Southern Campaign battles (i.e.: Kings Mountain) looked a lot like a Virginia civil war. The truly wealthy men were in England, but they lost the war as the political will dwindled. I think the US Civil War is probably the most extreme example of a rich man's war. Northern industrialists and southern planters had serious economic interest in the outcome, and whether slave labor would permitted to spread to western territories. Then if we look at both the Bush's invasions and oil grabs in the Middle East we may have some of the best examples. And let's not forget the Spanish American War land grabs, and "Indian Wars" and etc.... @@vanespeer

      @jsmcguireIII@jsmcguireIII3 ай бұрын
  • Gettysburg was one of our favorite family trips. So impactful and so much to experience. Hire the walking/driving tour guide - they are so knowledgeable. An incredible place with so much history. It's like stepping back in time and no better place to understand the civil war.

    @bobwebster855@bobwebster85511 ай бұрын
  • An example of stories many would never hear if it wasn't for this channel, the personal touch makes it that much more interesting.

    @don-e4838@don-e483811 ай бұрын
  • Erik, his stories, his artifacts are legend!

    @1psychofan@1psychofan11 ай бұрын
  • My ancestor was in the 57th Va infantry and from what I can tell from my research, he was in Picketts charge.

    @ethanmeade8508@ethanmeade850811 ай бұрын
    • Which Company in the 57th?

      @Mack682@Mack68211 ай бұрын
    • @@Mack682 Co. C “the Franklin fire eaters”

      @ethanmeade8508@ethanmeade850811 ай бұрын
    • @@ethanmeade8508 I was part of a reenactors group for Company B of the 57th. "The Franklin Sharpshooters". I've been to Franklin County, beautiful area!

      @Mack682@Mack68211 ай бұрын
    • @@Mack682 I was born and raised in Franklin Co. beautiful place.

      @ethanmeade8508@ethanmeade850811 ай бұрын
  • Wonderful, thank you for this. My great-great grandfather was at the battle of Umbeyla Pass in late 1863, around the time Lincoln was giving the Gettysburg address. History is fascinating.

    @dougadamsau@dougadamsau9 ай бұрын
  • My hubby and I took our daughter to Gettysburg 20 years ago and one of the confederate actors took us into to the woods and showed us a rock with the name of a soldier carved in it. I can’t remember more details about it but it wasn’t far from the creek and the old cemetery. Pretty cool.

    @dragonwithagirltattoo598@dragonwithagirltattoo59811 ай бұрын
  • What a fascinating story. I lived in Dillsburg, PA 2011-2020. I’ve found confederate artifacts I believe from Jeb’s Calvary. I’ve sold the house but, there are plenty more to be found on the 2 acres.

    @darrylyusko8342@darrylyusko834211 ай бұрын
  • Thank you Eric for sharing your historical militaria with us. As a CW collector myself I always find this stuff fascinating and learning all the time.

    @jimrutherford2773@jimrutherford277311 ай бұрын
  • I absolutely love these personal behind the scenes stories it really brings it home.

    @obizzil@obizzil11 ай бұрын
  • I love Civil War history; this story was amazing!

    @barbaraoesterritter7318@barbaraoesterritter731811 ай бұрын
    • Given the state of politics nowadays, you may have another Civil War to study.

      @robeygulledge248@robeygulledge24810 ай бұрын
  • This is an amazing personal story handed down through the years. Thanks so much for sharing. The channel is always informative and amazing. Thanks so much for all that you do !

    @michaelrains2268@michaelrains226811 ай бұрын
  • I went to Gettysburg. Wish we could have stayed longer but were headed to our son’s graduation at Yale.🇺🇸❤️

    @juliajohnson5276@juliajohnson527611 ай бұрын
  • This is a story I will not forget. And I will be telling it. Thank you for sharing.

    @skimmer8774@skimmer877411 ай бұрын
  • That's awesome! I can remember in the early 1960's when I was a child I found a rusted triangular shaped bayonet in the area of West Fairview, Cumberland County. It was very rusted and that shape looks like it. They were doing bridge work/upgrades to the 11-15 bridge over the Penn Central railroad tracks....... that's amazing!!!!

    @myLordSaves@myLordSaves11 ай бұрын
  • Honestly and I don’t know why but this is one of my favorite American Artifact episodes yet! Awesome stuff!

    @HistorySavior1941@HistorySavior194111 ай бұрын
  • Erik, you and your family have quite the backstory, thanks for sharing. Can't wait to make it to Gettysburg again. The first place I visit will be the Gettysburg Museum of History. Thanks to JD and Erik for all their fine work.......

    @jetsons101@jetsons10111 ай бұрын
  • My daughter attended Gettysburg College and we visited the battlefield many times! It is a spiritual journey with every step. If you have never been there, I urge you to go and feel the presence of the past. It will change you!

    @lorettacassidy6078@lorettacassidy607810 ай бұрын
  • Awesome story, captured very well !!! Great job You two! JD and Erik, you both make a great team! Erik, I love this story that is from your family! I use to love sitting around a fire, and listening to my parents, Aunts and Uncles tell stories of their childhood! Now with them all gone and I'm 63, I wish I would of listened better!!!!

    @stephenrrose@stephenrrose11 ай бұрын
    • I suspect that is the lament of many of us when we get into our 60s -- or even beforehand. But, feel confident that you are not alone in the regret brother!

      @CrossTrain@CrossTrain11 ай бұрын
  • What an amazing story. Really interesting. You both have a great way of sharing information that makes it simple but detailed and brings it to life.

    @SueProv@SueProv11 ай бұрын
  • Wow, what a story! Thanks Erik and JD for your combined knowledge! I thoroughly enjoy the content!

    @deborahgibson9039@deborahgibson903911 ай бұрын
  • a friend of mine was sitting in a deer stand in NW Florida and said he heard some commotion coming through the woods, he said three rag-tag civil war soldiers were running through the woods looking disheveled and scared, he said as they disappeared in the woods an officer on horseback came tearing through the woods , stopped , looked behind him and took off again going the same way as the soldiers. He said there were no tracks left behind.

    @bluskytoo@bluskytoo10 ай бұрын
    • Wow, was this near Olustee?

      @cindymckimm5681@cindymckimm568110 ай бұрын
    • @@cindymckimm5681 no it was near Crestview Florida, near Eglin AFB

      @bluskytoo@bluskytoo10 ай бұрын
    • Ok, thanks. Thought it might have been in area of the Olustee battlefield park. But still near a military base, yikes.

      @cindymckimm5681@cindymckimm568110 ай бұрын
    • There are ghost horses?

      @mikemcghee3492@mikemcghee34929 ай бұрын
    • ​@@mikemcghee3492 Sure, like Casper and wendy's "NiteMare..."

      @MattGuzman-ng2yx@MattGuzman-ng2yx9 ай бұрын
  • What an insane story! Must be crazy to see some skeleton hanging in a tree. Great video again!!

    @ww2_and_history@ww2_and_history11 ай бұрын
  • Erik, I have heard this story about the civil war soldier found in a tree, didn’t realize you had a connection to it through one of your ancestors 😮

    @edithparra3356@edithparra335611 ай бұрын
  • It makes you wonder where the rest of the rifle went I love this channel especially WWII

    @chuckb9867@chuckb986711 ай бұрын
  • The rifles I have seen with out rear sights were done so post war . A shotgun was needed to hunt rabbits and squirrels , long range rear sights were in the way . I`m an old man and remember my great , great aunt talking about the young boys and older men going rabbit hunting . They all had the old guns and would pour powder down the barrels , stuff in some paper , a hand full of jack rocks , more paper , cock the guns with their bare feet , lift em up , put on a copper cap and away they would go . That night we would have rabbit and gravel for supper . All this because I asked if I could keep the old gun setting in a corner of an old smoke house . Still have that old Enfield without the rear sight .

    @alanjones3874@alanjones387411 ай бұрын
  • A local man, Thomas Brown of South Ryegate Vt, was in the 1st United States Sharpshooters. He was in a tree behind the Union lines at Spotsylvania and got a bullet in the forehead. His body was shipped home and buried and his wife kept his personal items including his belt buckle. That belt buckle has been one of my most prized Civil War items. He is mentioned in the book Something Abides, by Howard Coffin.

    @jameslackiejr5913@jameslackiejr591311 ай бұрын
  • I just can't get enough of this stuff The gentleman that owns a museum and the History traveler both I just love it. I've been to Gettysburg twice and it's an awesome feeling of great history and I don't know I can't explain it

    @Big_Daddy_CorkUSMC@Big_Daddy_CorkUSMC11 ай бұрын
  • Berdan's Sharpshooters (2nd Regiment USS I believe) had withdrawn eastward to this area. Not only were Berdan's Sharpshooters highly skilled snipers, they were superbly trained to track down and dispatch enemy snipers. A fellow up a tree and armed with a muzzleloading Enfield was no match for 2nd USS veteran armed with a tricked-out breechloading Sharps Rifle.

    @mrp55net@mrp55net11 ай бұрын
  • My g-g-grandfather was wounded @ Gettysburg! Was imprisoned @ the "notorious", Andersonville Prison, and (fortunately, for _me_ !😉) survived the war. In fact, at the time of his passing in 1941, he was one of only 3, surviving Civil War Veterans left in New Jersey. I was blessed/fortunate enough to come into possession of his original enlistment & discharge papers(95th NY volunteers), as well as his invitation from....The Government of The United States, to attend the ceremonies recognizing the 75th Anniversary of The Battle of Gettysburg, and several newspaper articles written about him in 1940 & '41. Sadly, I lost these priceless, familial heirlooms to a fire, two years ago. Proud & honored to say; besides my grandfather who was the..."bread-winner" and provider for his wife and 2 kids (dad, being one of them) during WWII, our family's continued devotion to serving our great nation, goes back to.....well,... _BEFORE_ we were even a nation!!

    @CollectingCardboard@CollectingCardboard11 ай бұрын
  • Great story about the bayonet. 👍🏼Thanx for today's history lesson.❤

    @lynnmitzy1643@lynnmitzy164311 ай бұрын
  • I absolutely love this channel. One of my bucket list items is to go to Gettysburg and go to the museum

    @tommyking2344@tommyking234411 ай бұрын
    • I've been there. Make sure you go.

      @mben-david2064@mben-david206410 ай бұрын
  • Western Marylander here! I visit both Gettysburg and Antietam a lot! A few years remains of a Union soldier from NY were found on the Cornfield on Antietam battlefield! They were identified and returned to NY for burial !

    @InnocentPotato-pd7wi@InnocentPotato-pd7wi12 күн бұрын
  • My little Dachshund Gretel was at round top and climbed devil's den. RIP -This video made me think of that special visit when we had taken her.

    @MrSpacejase@MrSpacejase11 ай бұрын
  • Random unrelated fact but a woman's remains were found in a tree in England in 1943 during WW2. One theory is that she was German a spy.

    @Roller_Ghoster@Roller_Ghoster11 ай бұрын
  • Wow, what a fascinating story Erik!! Awesome! As a civil war buff myself, I love these kinds of stories. No doubt I would be up to my eyeballs in this stuff if I had a family ancestry like yours! Great stuff as always, JD! 👊

    @Bam_Like_Dat@Bam_Like_Dat11 ай бұрын
  • Erik, Very cool personal story! Thanks, J D for another great film.

    @gaylewright8270@gaylewright827011 ай бұрын
  • Not really linked to Gettysburg, BUT…..I had an original three band enfield rifled musket that had three Minnie balls jammed in the barrel, which I know was a common problem during the ACW, due to panic. This rifle had been reproofed in Birmingham (England) proof house and was used by Indian troops during WWI. It’s reproof expired in 1955. Great content by the way! Best wishes from the UK.

    @TheWizardOfTheFens@TheWizardOfTheFens11 ай бұрын
  • Erik's family stories are incredible. Live this channel ❤

    @Liz-cmc313@Liz-cmc31311 ай бұрын
  • gettsyburg is on my list of places to visit in the next couple of years from UK I love the history I want to see it all myself

    @BIASED_YOUTUBE@BIASED_YOUTUBE11 ай бұрын
    • It’s amazing! I’ve been 3 times and plan to go many more. Avoid going in July as it is very crowded.

      @susanpage8315@susanpage831511 ай бұрын
    • The UK is on my bucket list.

      @susanpage8315@susanpage831511 ай бұрын
    • I've done West New York spent a good four months there with my ex near buffalo - but this next trip will be entirely for me to be a history geek. I'm really looking forward to it! thanks for the advice I will avoid July! I'd rather go in the off times anyway :) UK is a shadow of what it used to be the country won't exist for much longer if you want my opinion, we've allowed our nation to be over-run. THere are still some very cool historical places to visit here though, for sure,

      @BIASED_YOUTUBE@BIASED_YOUTUBE11 ай бұрын
    • @@BIASED_KZhead I’m sorry. I have wanted to visit for so many years. As for times of year, avoid major holidays and spring breaks (April). October is my favorite time.

      @susanpage8315@susanpage831511 ай бұрын
  • Imagine the soldier's family never knowing his fate, and the descendants, if there are any, will never know. That war tore this nation apart, and its effects continue in ways we don't even know. May he rest in peace through the mercy of the Lord, and may the souls of all his family be rejoicing at their reunion.

    @kimfleury@kimfleury10 ай бұрын
  • It seems like getting up in a tree when armies were on the move would be a terrible idea. Because once they saw the smoke from where you were at you would be an easy target to pop off.

    @nimitz1739@nimitz173911 ай бұрын
    • Not necessarily if you consider all the smoke and haze from cannon and musket fire it would probably be pretty hard to see a puff of smoke from a single shot fired from up in a tree.

      @blakeantoniuk5299@blakeantoniuk52997 ай бұрын
    • @@blakeantoniuk5299 Not really, for one there wasn’t cannons in that particular area. And if the smoke was so bad how do you think anyone would see him like they clearly did. Those guns are hard to load on the ground much less dangling from a tree.

      @nimitz1739@nimitz17397 ай бұрын
    • @@nimitz1739 It's hard to say what the weather conditions were like on that day. Was it overcast with a low ceiling and windy which would lead to low hanging smoke over the battle field.

      @blakeantoniuk5299@blakeantoniuk52996 ай бұрын
  • This is incredible. Thanks for sharing!

    @dianemoorhouse6802@dianemoorhouse680211 ай бұрын
  • I was at gettysburg the other day. Watching them work on little round top from devils den makes you wonder if they are finding any artifacts.

    @drinkmesilly@drinkmesilly11 ай бұрын
  • I went to Devils Den about 50 years ago. I just remember the rock formations. The rocks were very interesting to me. Made many hiding places.

    @mike94560@mike9456011 ай бұрын
  • Keep it going JD!! I’m heading to Gettysburg in a few weeks and the content your putting out is getting me more excited about going!!

    @tylerpiovesan1248@tylerpiovesan124811 ай бұрын
  • I remember my grandfather taking me to Gettysburg and standing right where you are standing in the beginning of the video. I was like 8

    @MilitantMerican@MilitantMerican9 ай бұрын
  • You guy's never dissapoint. Great work.

    @jefferyfowler7860@jefferyfowler786011 ай бұрын
  • That is one of the most interesting stories I've heard about Gettysburg. Thanks.

    @MCB9537@MCB953711 ай бұрын
  • Wow, what a story. Gettysburg is on my bucket list

    @dwhallon21@dwhallon2111 ай бұрын
  • I am so thankful for the older folks taking the time to comment. You are all treasures and have a wealth of knowledge in your minds. Thank you for sharing it!

    @TRaider66@TRaider663 ай бұрын
  • Great family story, which will be preserved for future generations. Those of us who have photos of great and great-great-grandparents are so fortunate. Interesting to see the lay of the land at this battlefield site. Thanks for sharing this.

    @SpanishEclectic@SpanishEclecticАй бұрын
  • Amazing story. I'm from the area and have done a lot of hiking in the mountains there and played around at Devil's Den (a popular skip day location). The Appalachian Trail in that area is the most spooky of all the trails and old farms I've walked on in 50 years of doing so (all over the country and some overseas hiking). There's energy there around Gettysburg, Harper's Ferry, and Gathland.

    @jayp6888@jayp688810 ай бұрын
    • Pennsylvania has some very old energy in certain places, I’ve noticed that as well.

      @laurelmalinowski1676@laurelmalinowski167610 ай бұрын
    • yes, Gettysburg is very alive. You feel it the moment you enter the Battlefield. I have never been there and heard a bird sing.

      @marianneleach918@marianneleach9184 ай бұрын
  • always so much info from all your vids, thank you

    @greggriffin1@greggriffin111 ай бұрын
  • I encourage everyone interested in US history to try and visit Gettysburg . It's a very somber experience while standing on the battlegrounds

    @jeffreykindron7162@jeffreykindron716211 ай бұрын
  • Wow. Great story on the Sniper. Finding the Bayonet some three generations ago - 120 years ago (?) - 1903. 20 years after the Battle. Cool.

    @benjaminrush4443@benjaminrush444311 ай бұрын
  • Great story! I remember Erik talking about this during another video. Those bayonets are huge and look like they could do some mean damage in close quarters

    @Jerry-fn5nx@Jerry-fn5nx11 ай бұрын
  • We found a bayonet just like that in my woods back in the early 1970s (probably 1972). Though it was much more rusted and eroded than that one. The closest battlefield to where it was found would have been Pender or Manassas.. a neighbor kid kept it because he was the one who first spotted it.

    @bonanzatime@bonanzatime11 ай бұрын
    • Nova huh, ain't much left of the Pender farm area is there? Not much of old Fairfax either for that matter, and data centers are pressing up against the Manassas battlefields and not enough people care.

      @81cb750fss@81cb750fss11 ай бұрын
    • @@81cb750fss Unfortunately that is true

      @bonanzatime@bonanzatime11 ай бұрын
    • ​@@81cb750fss life keeps going. Some day all of our wars will be forgotten and built over the same as ancient Rome and the histories we lost in the times before. Nothing of this earth is eternal.

      @user-wi9hv2pb2q@user-wi9hv2pb2q11 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for everything you post. Brilliant stuff

    @billyshane3804@billyshane380411 ай бұрын
  • I just found your channel. I love history, especially the Revolutionary and Civil War eras. This was fascinating. Thank you and I look forward to watching more of your videos.

    @cvent8454@cvent845410 ай бұрын
    • Thanks!

      @TheHistoryUnderground@TheHistoryUnderground10 ай бұрын
  • Good morning from Syracuse NY brother and everyone else thank you for sharing your information and adventures and details

    @earlshaner4441@earlshaner444111 ай бұрын
  • Wow what a story!

    @beverlyrichards728@beverlyrichards72811 ай бұрын
  • Great great grandfather was in NC 45th. Wounded and captured in Gettysburg. Exchanged and went back to unit. Severely wounded at Ft. Stedman VA, but made it and wound bothered him for rest of life. Pased in 1907 at the age of about 70.

    @marvinjohnson424@marvinjohnson4249 ай бұрын
  • Love the panorama and you talking about the Slaughter Pen specifically. Thank you for doing this video.

    @b.o.4492@b.o.449211 ай бұрын
  • Fascinating story. My conjecture is the man in the tree was a sniper, and likely was spotted and killed? Dropped his weapon (this the bayonet) and eventually, as the body decomposed, the leg (femur? Tibia / fibula?) somehow became dismembered and fell to the ground… Just my thoughts… Thanks for the great Content!

    @bobgerhardt5616@bobgerhardt561611 ай бұрын
    • It seems the remains of the rifle the bayonet was on would have been found nearby. A bayonet in a tree without a rifle is useless.

      @ellieprice3396@ellieprice339611 ай бұрын
    • @@ellieprice3396 that makes sense. But my understanding was that they found the bayonet and leg bone on the GROUND below the other remains in the tree. Perhaps I was mistaken… Cheers!

      @bobgerhardt5616@bobgerhardt561611 ай бұрын
    • The bayonet was unlikely to be attached to the rifle. Sharpshooters did not attach the bayonets to their rifles (impairs free movement of the muzzle in the tree, and reduces accuracy of the bullet by interfering with the gases released in the shot). It was likely secured somehow not on the rifle, or to his belt (not sure what they did with bayonets not on the rifle though). The rifle may have been picked up shortly after the soldier was killed and dropped it to the ground, maybe even during the battle. The bayonet and leg dropped from the tree, but the rifle was probably long gone.

      @wnchstrman@wnchstrman6 ай бұрын
    • All good points. That said, designated snipers were fairly sparse on both sides (excepting US Sharpshooter regiments 1 and 2), but I’ll wager there were plenty of folks climbing trees and using their primary weapons to try to pick off “juicy” targets. While I agree that I’d remove my bayonet prior to taking a firing position, I wouldn’t assume that choice for everyone. Just sayin’…

      @bobgerhardt5616@bobgerhardt56166 ай бұрын
  • Great personal story tied to the artifact. Thanks for sharing 👍

    @Wreckdiver59@Wreckdiver5911 ай бұрын
    • 👊🏻

      @TheHistoryUnderground@TheHistoryUnderground11 ай бұрын
  • This mas has made a lifetime studying this battle. I study the Civil War, been to Gettysburg 20 or more times, but I couldn't polish this guys shoes. You have to want to pay extreme detail to minutia to gather this information.

    @donburton9078@donburton907811 ай бұрын
  • The stories really bring history to life, and connect it to the present day. Very interesting, thank you for posting!

    @borisvos1971@borisvos197111 ай бұрын
  • That was quite an interesting story. Thanks for sharing!

    @johnstup4479@johnstup447911 ай бұрын
  • Thats one heck of a story Eric!!!! Just WOW!!!!!

    @nanetterolph2972@nanetterolph297211 ай бұрын
  • Terrific historical presentation Thanks for being so informative for us who haven’t visited

    @davidedutremblay5050@davidedutremblay50504 ай бұрын
  • Thanks Eric for sharing your family history! Very cool!

    @lthom5158@lthom515811 ай бұрын
  • Wow. That story gave me goose bumps. Epic 👍🏼😎

    @mrDCunningham@mrDCunningham11 ай бұрын
  • I love these mostly unknown local stories

    @jeffreyg4626@jeffreyg462611 ай бұрын
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