American History Series: South Sees Protests in North as an Opening
Confederate General Robert E. Lee considered the anti-war protests a sign of weakness. Lee hoped for a final, decisive blow that would bring the war to an end. Transcript of radio broadcast: 04 November 2009
Welcome
to THE MAKING OF A NATION – American history in VOA Special English.
America's civil war
in the eighteen sixties did not have the full support of the people. Many said
they did not care who won -- North or South. They just wanted to be left alone.
General Robert E. Lee
In the North, many
young men refused to be drafted into the Union army. Some of their protests
turned violent.
Southern leaders
were pleased with the anti-war movement in the North. Confederate General
Robert E. Lee saw it as a sign of weakness in the northern war effort. He also
saw it as an opening for a military victory. Lee hoped for a final, decisive
blow that would bring the war to an end.
This week in our
series, Kay Gallant and Harry Monroe talk about General Lee's campaign north to
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.
VOICE ONE:
Gettysburg was a
small town. Many roads came together there. Robert E. Lee needed those roads to
pull his army together quickly. He had seventy thousand men in all. But they
were spread over a wide area of southern Pennsylvania.
Some were at York,
to the east. Some were at Carlisle, to the north. And most were at
Chambersburg, to the west. All of them were ordered to move against the Union
force at Gettysburg.
General Robert E.
Lee had not planned to go to Gettysburg. He had planned to capture
Harrisburg, the state capital, and then Philadelphia. If successful, he
would turn south to seize Baltimore and Washington.
Lee had not worried
about the large Union Army of the Potomac. He believed it was far behind
him, in Virginia. But Lee was wrong. The Union Army had followed him. And
it had reached Gettysburg first.
VOICE TWO:
The first group of
northern soldiers formed a thin line of defense outside Gettysburg. The first
group of southern soldiers attacked this line. It was the morning of July
first, eighteen sixty-three.
When the guns began
to roar, both sides hurried more men to the front.
After hours of
fighting, the Confederates had pushed the Union soldiers back through the town.
The Union soldiers formed a new line along a place called Cemetery Hill.
General Robert E.
Lee decided not to attack the hill immediately. He would wait for more
men. But as he waited, more and more Union soldiers arrived. By
sunrise the next day, Lee's seventy thousand men faced a Union army of ninety thousand
men.
VOICE ONE:
General George Meade
The Confederates
attacked both sides of the Union line. They moved the Union soldiers a little.
But then the Union soldiers came back again. The Confederates could not
hold the line.
The fighting
stopped at sunset. Union commander George Meade met with his generals. He
said he was sure General Lee would attack again the next day. The next attack,
Meade said, would be against the center of the Union line.
Meade was right.
Lee planned to send fifteen thousand men against the Union center. They would
be under the command of General George Pickett.
(MUSIC)
VOICE TWO:
The Battle of Gettysburg
When the sun rose
on July third, the Union troops were ready. They watched as the
Confederate troops set up their cannon. More than one hundred thirty of
these big guns were aimed at the center of the Union line.
The morning passed.
The day grew hotter. A little past one o'clock in the afternoon, a Confederate
gun fired, once. Then again. That was the signal to attack.
All at once, the
Confederate artillery thundered with a deafening roar. The cannon sent iron and
smoke into the Union soldiers on Cemetery Hill. Within minutes, hundreds
lay dead or dying.
Union artillery on
the hill answered the Confederate cannon. Men lay flat on the ground.
They prayed for the shelling to stop. Finally, it did. And the smoke of battle
began to clear.
VOICE ONE:
Now the Union
soldiers could see across the valley. They watched as the Confederate
soldiers formed a long line. It was a sight to take your breath away.
Facing Cemetery
Hill, the Confederates stood shoulder to shoulder in a line almost two
kilometers long. Sunlight shone from their guns. Their battle flags
waved. Slowly, the line began to move. It seemed more like a parade than an
attack.
Shouts went up and
down the Union line. "Here they come! Here come the rebels!"
(MUSIC)
VOICE TWO:
Thousands of
Confederate soldiers moved across the valley outside Gettysburg. Union
artillery opened fire. The guns tore open big holes in the Confederate battle
line. But the southerners kept moving forward up the hill.
Union soldiers rose
up from behind stone walls and fallen trees. They poured even more gunfire into
the Confederate line. More and more bodies fell to the
ground. Still, the line moved forward.
A few Confederates
reached the Union line, but not enough to seize it. They were shot down.
Suddenly, the Confederates began racing down the hill. Many raised their
hands in surrender. Fifteen thousand began the attack. Only half
returned.
The battle of
Gettysburg was over.
The Union commander,
General Meade, was told that the Confederate attack had been broken. He
said, simply: "Thank God." The Confederate commander, General
Lee, said: "This has been a sad day for us, a sad day."
VOICE ONE:
Lee's invasion of
the North had failed. There was only one thing he could do now: retreat.
He must get his army back to Virginia. He could only hope that the Union
Army was hurt too badly to chase him.
The line of wagons
carrying wounded soldiers was twenty-five kilometers long. Many of the
wounded needed treatment. But the wagons were not permitted to stop for
any reason.
Suffering was
terrible. An officer who led the wagon train said he learned more about
the horrors of war on that one trip than he had learned in all of his battles.
Twenty thousand
Confederate soldiers were killed, wounded, or listed as missing in the battle
of Gettysburg. Twenty-three thousand Union soldiers were killed, wounded or
missing.
VOICE TWO:
General Meade lost
so many men that he was in no hurry to chase General Lee. He believed it might
be best to let Lee escape than to take a chance on losing what remained of the
Army of the Potomac.
Meade waited for a
week until his army was stronger. But by then, Lee and his men had
crossed safely back into Virginia.
President Abraham
Lincoln was angry. He had told General Meade that driving the Confederates out
of the North was not enough. The southern army must be destroyed.
"We had
them," Lincoln said. "We had only to stretch out our hands and take
them. And nothing I could do or say could make the army move."
VOICE ONE:
President Lincoln
believed that General Meade had made a mistake. But he felt that the general
had ability. Lincoln was thankful for what Meade had done at Gettysburg.
He said Meade would continue to command the Army of the Potomac.
In November of
eighteen sixty-three, President Lincoln went to Gettysburg. He attended the
opening of a new burial place for the Union soldiers who had died in the great
battle there.
VOICE TWO:
The governor of
Pennsylvania had asked the president to say a few words at the ceremony.
Lincoln agreed. He felt it was his duty to go to honor the brave men who lost
their lives to save the Union. Lincoln hoped his words might help lift
the spirit of
the nation.
Lincoln did not have
much time to prepare his speech. He wrote it down the night before the
ceremony. Lincoln was sure the speech was not a good one. But it came to be one
of the most famous speeches in American history.
We will tell the
story of Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address next week.
(MUSIC)
ANNOUNCER:
Our program was written by Frank Beardsley. The narrators were Kay
Gallant and Harry Monroe. Transcripts, MP3s and podcasts of our programs are
online, along with historical images, at voaspecialenglish.com. And you can
follow our weekly programs on Twitter at VOA Learning English. Join us again
next week for THE MAKING OF A NATION -- an American history series in VOA
Special English.
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