July 06, 2005

Funnel of Death, in Perspective

By Demosophist

Bloody Angle

The Bloody Angle: Photo by Demosophist, September 2003

The next day, I stood in a tiny rut, a small bend in a shallow, grassy berm, where for sixteen hours men cursed and killed each other at point-blank range, where musket balls flew so furiously that they cut down a foot-thick oak tree. Here, at the Bloody Angle of Spotsylvania, the fighting was hand-to-hand from the break of dawn to almost midnight; uninterrupted horror that to this day remains for me the most appalling single acre in human history. There, on that unassuming, peaceful, empty field – it might as well have been the back of a high school -- men had become so agitated that they climbed the muddy, blood-slick trenches, clawed their way to the parapets to shoot at a man a foot or two away, then hurled their bayoneted muskets like a javelin into the crowd before being shot down and replaced by other half-mad, raving automatons.

What trick of time and memory, what charm or spell does history possess, that can turn such fields of unremitting violence and terror into places of religious awe and wonder? Why are some people called to these places, in America and around the world, to stand in wonder – not only at the brutality of war, but at the transcendental, ennobling power of them? How does slaughter and death turn into nobility and sacrifice? Why can we recite the names of places like Roanoke, Harrisburg, Phoenixville, Marseille, Kiev, Vanuatu and Johannesburg with no more passion than we muster while reading the ingredients on the back of a cereal box, while names like Antietam, Gettysburg, Valley Forge, Verdun, Stalingrad, Guadalcanal and Rorke’s Drift thunder through time as if the earth itself were being rung like a bell? -- (from Bill Whittle's History)

(Cross-posted by Demosophist to Demosophia and Anticipatory Retaliation)

Posted by: Demosophist at 08:55 PM | Comments (5) | Add Comment
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1 I have some names for you: Chickamauga. Lookout Mountain. Missionary Ridge. Three monumental battles, each deserving of its own unique place in that awful tale, yet were merely lesser actions in the Battle of Chattanooga. Also unique to Chattanooga is the fact that at either end of Market Street there were recruiting booths; at the North end was the Union's, and at the South end, the Confederates'. Often brothers would leave home seperately in the morning, enlist, and return at night to inform their families, only to find that they wore different uniforms. We have no reference in our times for tragedy on such a scale.

Posted by: Improbulus Maximus at July 07, 2005 12:58 AM (0yYS2)

2 One other thing; is it just me, or does it seem that the really important or horrible battles happen at places with names that have a more poetic quality than the average? Stalingrad was no worse really than Kiev, or Moscow, but has a more rhythmic quality to it.

Posted by: Improbulus Maximus at July 07, 2005 01:12 AM (0yYS2)

3 I just spent some time at the Yorktown Battlefield and had similar thought.

Posted by: CDR Salamander at July 07, 2005 08:04 AM (PJ4Iq)

4 What I find interesting is that so many battle fields have the same names within them. The Bloody angle, the wheatfield, cemetary hill. One other thing I found very disappointing was when I was stationed in Quanico, Va., I took a trip to go see Chancellorsville. One of the greatest turning points of the war due to Jackson's wounding in eventual death. All I found was a single statue where Jackson was wounded. I was very disappointed.

Posted by: Butch at July 07, 2005 10:38 AM (Gqhi9)

5 That should be "and eventual death". Also one more note, on Myth Busters last night, they proved that the miracle bullet that went thru a Cavalryman's family jewels into a woman bystander's womb and got in a family way, could not happen. The bullet had the power to travel the distanct after going through cloth, skin and bone. But all hitchhikers on the bullet was fried before coming to a stop.

Posted by: Butch at July 07, 2005 10:44 AM (Gqhi9)

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