And in this event that we're going to talk about the battle of Fort Pillow or the massacre Port, Fort Pillow, how you want to remember it.
Speaker AThe Union is occupying the fort at the time and it's being attacked by the Confederacy.
Speaker ANathan Bedford Forrest is a Tennessee and he ends up in Memphis as a slave trader.
Speaker AAnd I use the term human trafficker.
Speaker ASo when does the fog of war turn into a massacre?
Speaker ARemember Fort Pillow, they would say those exact words.
Speaker BWelcome to Talk with History.
Speaker BI'm your host Scott, here with my wife and historian Jen.
Speaker AHello.
Speaker BOn this podcast we give you insights to our history Inspired World Travels YouTube channel Journey and examine history through deeper conversations with the curious, the explorers and the history lovers out there.
Speaker BNow, Jim, before we start into our topic today, I have some kind of long overdue things I've been wanting to cover.
Speaker BWe got some emails from listeners, listeners that I had had some really cool stories.
Speaker BSo I want to kind of tell those to the audience.
Speaker BOne of them actually both emails we recently got was in response to our bomber boys jacket interview.
Speaker BThat was with John Slimp, the photographer who had kind of like an eight year project putting together this beautiful kind of photo book.
Speaker BBut it's also kind of really like an art piece.
Speaker BIt's just a beautiful book.
Speaker BNow both of these were in response to that podcast episode.
Speaker BSo I wanted to read the first email from Doug, our friend Doug McDelivery.
Speaker BThe subject of the email was a raincoat that was treated respectfully for 47 years.
Speaker BSo he says, Scott and Jen, I love the episode about the World War II bomber flight jackets.
Speaker BI have to look up the author and purchase the book.
Speaker BHighly recommend it.
Speaker BHe was in the third Armored Division.
Speaker BLike me, he was north of Frankfurt and I was to the west in Hanau in the division artillery.
Speaker BSo my story is poignant but not as dramatic as the leather bomber jackets.
Speaker BHaving said that, I still think it speaks volumes about combat experiences and kindness.
Speaker BIn 1992, I was on my second tour in Germany.
Speaker BI was stationed in Bamberg, north of Nuremberg.
Speaker BAt the time, I was the Ops officer or S3 in a multiple launch rocket system battalion.
Speaker BOne of my collateral duties was representative to the German American Friendship Club.
Speaker BOne evening during dinner, an older German man told me the story of how he surrendered to the US army and worked for the army immediately following in the surrender.
Speaker BAs the war was winding down, he was on the Eastern front fighting the Russians.
Speaker BHe and his unit were retreating westward in hopes of surrendering to the Americans or Brits.
Speaker BThey were out of ammunition, fuel and supplies.
Speaker BSo they marched west as fast as they could.
Speaker BHe arrived in the Bamberg area and surrendered to the US Army.
Speaker BThe army gave them food, medical care, and shelter.
Speaker BThe soldier had a key skill.
Speaker BHe spoke English and German.
Speaker BSo as a US army sergeant asked him if he would like to work at the gate, helping them talk with the locals, he said yes.
Speaker BThey put him on the front gate, fed him, gave him coffee, and one day, when it started raining, a raincoat.
Speaker BThe German told me that the raincoat was the best one he ever wore.
Speaker BIt was long oliver olive drab green.
Speaker BIt was a heavy combination of cloth and rubber with metal clasps, kind of like the New England fishermen wear on lobster boats.
Speaker BWhen his watch was over, he took off the coat and was going to give it back to the sergeant of the guard.
Speaker BThe sergeant told him to keep it as a way of thanking him.
Speaker BThe man cherished the raincoat.
Speaker BAfter dinner, he.
Speaker BHe asked me to stop at his car.
Speaker BIn the trunk, he had the old raincoat carefully folded in a protective container.
Speaker BHe asked me if it was possible to trade the old raincoat in for a new one.
Speaker BI told him he would not want any of the newer raincoats, since they were nowhere near the quality of the one he had.
Speaker BI told the man I was honored to hear his story and to see his beautifully preserved coat.
Speaker BI realize this is not as heroic as the Bomber Jack stories, but it demonstrated for me the respect that German soldiers and the people had for the Americans.
Speaker BPlus, my experience was almost 50 years after the war, and to wrap it up, it happened during a German American Friendship Club dinner.
Speaker BThank you, Doug.
Speaker BSo I just thought that was so poignant that there's so much that happened immediately after the war.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSoldiers.
Speaker BYou kind of see it in Band of Brothers when that.
Speaker BThat last scene.
Speaker AYes, Right.
Speaker BWhen the German general is talking to his soldiers and he says that we are the Band of Brothers.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker BThere's.
Speaker BIt provides so much more context, and I really loved Doug's story.
Speaker BSo, Doug, thank you so much for sending that in.
Speaker BWe love hearing stories like that, especially from fellow veterans who've had experiences like this.
Speaker BThe other email is from Michael Weber.
Speaker BNow, he actually emailed in because he saw our podcast on the bomber jackets.
Speaker BHe owns one of the jackets that John photographed.
Speaker BSo he wrote in, he said, hello.
Speaker BI just saw the segment you did with John.
Speaker BI happen to have one of the jackets he put in the book.
Speaker BYou had asked about directions some take with these jackets.
Speaker BIn my case, it was to learn more about the individual that did mine.
Speaker BHis name was Harry Halls, 401st Bomb Group, 8th Air Force, England.
Speaker BHe was an armor for the unit.
Speaker BHe had some great skills.
Speaker BIt helped subsidize his army pay flyers made substantially more than the ground crews.
Speaker BHe was very prolific and created a number of these iconic jackets of the group.
Speaker BAfter the war, he opened a shop and went into the sculpture in Connecticut.
Speaker BHe remained there till he passed the jacket I have.
Speaker BI'll put some pictures up.
Speaker BIs Diabolic, Diabolical angel done for the gunner on base is a true piece of art.
Speaker BIt's beautiful.
Speaker BIf you guys are watching this video, I'll put pictures up.
Speaker BThe pictures that he sent, he said we could share them.
Speaker BIf you're listening, I encourage you to kind of come check them out or go over to the History road Trip and I'll.
Speaker BI'll do a little post over there at the history road trip dot com.
Speaker BJeff Schrader, whom John mentioned, values the jacket at $20,000.
Speaker BI'm including some photo attachments.
Speaker BI encourage you to look up the jackets of the 401st.
Speaker BGreat work.
Speaker BYou guys.
Speaker BKeep doing what you're doing to keep history alive.
Speaker BMichael Weber.
Speaker BSo, Michael, thank you so much for sharing that with us.
Speaker BThat was just really cool to see someone reach out after that episode and say, hey, here's one of the jackets that was photographed.
Speaker BAnd here's what I learned about the man who did the art, which is what we love hearing.
Speaker AIt is a beautiful jacket.
Speaker BYeah, it's gorgeous.
Speaker BAnd again, if you're watching the video, you can see pictures of it right now.
Speaker BAnd lastly, I want to shout out a new member over@thehistoryroadtrip.com so this is a shout out to a new member over there, Gail Cooper.
Speaker BAll right.
Speaker BShe's showing her support for history, travel and all things adventurous over atthehistory roadtrip.com and you're going to start hearing her name at as part of the credits now.
Speaker BSo if you're interested in supporting the podcast or in supporting our YouTube channel, if you've come from there, the history road trip.com is like a newsletter.
Speaker BWe try to provide some resources, go a little bit deeper into some of these things, and we'll put things over there that we don't normally put on the podcast or we don't put on the main YouTube channel.
Speaker BSo it's another place to kind of get to know us a little bit better.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd it really does support the channel.
Speaker AGas money, tickets to these museums, tickets into certain historical locations.
Speaker AAll of that comes out of pocket for us.
Speaker ASo anything that we receive from you guys, it goes directly back into making content and making these videos for you.
Speaker ASo thank you so much.
Speaker AWe truly appreciate all the support.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo it was long overdue to talk about those emails and stories and the new member, so I'm glad I finally got to get it in.
Speaker BWe've got some exciting new projects coming up for people to.
Speaker BTo hear about for our audience, so stay tuned for that over the coming weeks.
Speaker BAnd we'll probably give some previews to members only over atthehistory roadtrip.com for some of the things that we're working on, some things that I'm particularly excited about.
Speaker BSo there we were beneath the burning sky Both had reason.
Speaker BAll right, Jen, Fort Pillow.
Speaker BThis was a video that we did not expect to have the response that.
Speaker BThat, that it did.
Speaker BIt was interesting to say the least.
Speaker AYeah, that's a word for it.
Speaker ASo Fort Pillow is just a fort that's close to where we live now.
Speaker AAnd we thought it would be great to take the kids out there.
Speaker AIt's a state park, and if you make it out there, it's has Boy Scout camps and hiking trails and camp sites, and people go out there to picnic.
Speaker APeople go out there to hike.
Speaker AAnd so we thought this would be great to tell this story of the Civil War and its place in American history.
Speaker AIt is controversial still today, and so we thought we'll just tell that story.
Speaker AWhy is it controversial?
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker AWhat.
Speaker AWhat is the memory of Fort Pillow and how is that memory conjuring up two different side of the story?
Speaker AAnd so when we went out there and we told that story, it did bring out that controversy.
Speaker BYeah, so.
Speaker BSo there was definitely.
Speaker BThere was even some controversy around the battle at the time.
Speaker BAnd we're going to get into that.
Speaker BAnd I think that's kind of that controversy that started then because there is many primary source accounts of survivors on both sides of this.
Speaker BThis battle.
Speaker BAnd so those accounts, it kind of.
Speaker BI guess it kind of depends on which side you lean and who you believe a little more based on the comments in the YouTube video.
Speaker BAnd I encourage you to go watch the video because it actually turned out really well.
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker BIt was.
Speaker BIt's a fun place to visit.
Speaker BBut why don't you give us a little bit of the kind of context and what Fort Pillow was.
Speaker ASure.
Speaker ASo this is 40 miles north of Memphis on the Mississippi river.
Speaker AAnd it was a fort built along the Mississippi river by the Confederates, by General Pillow of the Confederacy.
Speaker ASo it's named for him.
Speaker AAnd it's there to fortify and protect the Mississippi.
Speaker AFor the Confederate army during the Civil War, it was there to protect their interests.
Speaker AYou know, when war is first declared by the Civil War, no one has ventured into each other's territories yet.
Speaker AAnd even though Tennessee is the last state to secede from the Union, that area is southern, is Confederate.
Speaker AAnd so they built this fort in 1862 to fortify that river for logistics, for transportation for the Confederacy.
Speaker ASo that's kind of what, how it starts.
Speaker AIt's high on a bluff.
Speaker AThe Mississippi has since changed course, but you can see where it once was right in front of where this fort is.
Speaker AAnd I, I kind of talk about it.
Speaker AIt's, it's arranged in three lines of entrenchments in a semicircle and they have a parapet, like 4 foot tall parapet and a ditch in front of it.
Speaker AAnd that parapet makes it difficult to defend because you have to climb up on it and it really makes you susceptible to enemy fire.
Speaker BYeah, so.
Speaker BSo the fort itself was a little bit likened to Vicksburg.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBecause of the strategic nature of where it was on the Mississippi at the time.
Speaker BNow I think the Mississippi has shifted a little bit over the years and we show that a little bit in the video.
Speaker BBut the, that was kind of the strategic nature of it.
Speaker BAnd it really wasn't as much of like a trade spot as Vicksburg was or anything like that.
Speaker BI don't think there was any major railroads that were passing directly through there like in Vicksburg.
Speaker BBut strategically on the Mississippi, that's why they had built a fort there and they had decided to kind of really dig in and try to protect that, that particular fort.
Speaker AThey did.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker ABut what happens is it's, it's abandoned by the Confederates.
Speaker AThey evacuate it in June of the same year because with the Union coming in, they feel like they're going to be cut off from the rest of the Confederate Army.
Speaker AMississippi has taken pretty, I mean, Mississippi Memphis is taken pretty early.
Speaker AAnd since this is north of Memphis, they feel like they're going to cut themselves off from the rest of the Confederacy.
Speaker ASo they evacuate fort pillow.
Speaker AOn June 4 and June 6, the union comes and takes it.
Speaker ASo what's interesting about Fort Pillow is it's it.
Speaker ABoth sides use it, both sides utilize it.
Speaker AAnd in this event that we're going to talk about the battle of Fort Pillow or the massacre of Port Fort Pillow, how you want to remember it, it happens that the Union is occupying the fort at the time and it's being attacked by the Confederacy.
Speaker ASo even though it's a Confederate built fort and was used by the Confederacy initially for the Civil War, it's, it's abandoned pretty early on and the Union has taken control of it.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo again, we, we drove out there.
Speaker BIt took us, I think it's kind of 40 miles as the crow flies, but it took us a good hour and a half to kind of get out there.
Speaker BIt's, it's, there's not a lot that's close to it.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd that's, that's the other thing.
Speaker BThere's no major city.
Speaker BIt's really close by.
Speaker BThere are some other smaller cities that we drove through.
Speaker AYeah, I mean it's, it's north of Memphis.
Speaker AThere's nothing quite out there.
Speaker AYou would know Henning, Tennessee if you are a historian, because Henning is where Alex Haley is from.
Speaker AAnd Henning is where the porch is, where Alex Haley would hear his family talk about his family stories.
Speaker AAnd he writes roots based on those stories that he heard on that porch.
Speaker ASo if you know any location that's close by this, it's Henning, Tennessee.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd so got up there and it's actually pretty good little spot to go visit.
Speaker BYou know, I'd bring a lunch if you're gonna go, but we got the kids up there and it's a great place to kind of walk around outside.
Speaker BAnd actually Fort Pillow, the park has a lot of like, it's actually in the area.
Speaker BIt's probably more visited because of the outdoor activities.
Speaker BThere's boy Scouts.
Speaker BWe had people commenting on the video saying, hey, I've never really been to the fort, but I've hiked all through there and I camp out there all the time.
Speaker BAnd so the, the state has done a good job with that area of kind of keeping that area alive through multiple avenues, which I thought was really neat.
Speaker AYeah, I mean it's well groomed.
Speaker AIt's well groomed.
Speaker AIt has water sports, it has hiking sports.
Speaker AIt has definitely campgrounds.
Speaker AI could see hiking trails and things along that nature.
Speaker AIf you go to Fort Pillow and drive in, I mean it's a ways before you even get to the interpretive center.
Speaker AAs you drive to the interpretive center, you'll see the campsites, you'll see the hiking trails, you'll see the lake and all the kayaks out there.
Speaker ASo you can tell that they use this recreationally.
Speaker AAnd it's a very well tended to state park.
Speaker AThen you'll drive to the end of the road Basically, to the interpretive center.
Speaker AAnd this interpretive center houses some of the artifacts and materials from this battle of Fort Pillow.
Speaker AAnd so they tell the story of Fort Pillow.
Speaker AAnd if you want to go in there just to get an idea of what's happening, who is here at the time and what's going on, they have a movie in there as well.
Speaker AThat's a good location to go inside and kind of get your bearings.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BNow, one of.
Speaker BI think the reasons that this battle is so controversial is one of the big names that was leading on the Confederate side, and that is Nathan Bedford Forrest.
Speaker AOh, yeah.
Speaker ASo he's our first video.
Speaker AIf you're a friend of Walk With History, you know, he's our first video on Walk With History because we had just moved to Memphis, and at the time, the Confederate statue of Nathan Bedford Forrest was still standing in downtown Memphis, and that was a controversial statue at the time, and we had no idea who he was.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd so we're like, who the heck is this guy?
Speaker BKind of knew him from Forrest Gump.
Speaker AKind of knew.
Speaker AIf you're like, oh, yeah, I've heard that name Forest from the movie.
Speaker AIs that the same person?
Speaker AAnd if you miss that blink moment in the movie where he says he's named after Nathan Bedford Forrest, like, I didn't even remember that he was named for him.
Speaker ASo Nathan Bedford Forest is a Tennessean.
Speaker AHe ends up in Memphis as a slave trader.
Speaker AAnd I use the term human trafficker.
Speaker AAnd people get very upset about me using that term because they say I'm taking.
Speaker AI'm doing present.
Speaker APresentism, which is what historians come under fire for doing.
Speaker AI try not to do that.
Speaker ATaking the.
Speaker AThe terms of the present tense and the values of the present time and impose them on the past.
Speaker ASo that's not what I'm doing when I use the term human trafficking.
Speaker AWhat I' doing is I'm trying to relay a more accurate term for what is going on.
Speaker AAnd the way I kind of explain that is, if you ever heard soldiers heart in war, in the Civil War, someone said he had soldier's heart, you'd be like, well, what is that?
Speaker AIt's ptsd.
Speaker ASo you're like, oh, I understand now.
Speaker AI'm not presentism.
Speaker ASoldier's heart.
Speaker AI'm not telling you what I'm like, making soldiers heart a more present term.
Speaker AI'm giving you an understanding of what it is, because you would not understand what that was today, but you understand what it is in their time with what we know about it today.
Speaker AAnd so the same thing with human trafficking.
Speaker AThe reason why I don't like slave trade is because it.
Speaker AIt talks about a commodity as a transfer of commodities, and humans aren't a commodity.
Speaker AAnd so even though slavery is as old as time and slavery has been done by every group of people around the.
Speaker AI just like the word human trafficking because it's.
Speaker AIt sets the term up more better than what Nathan Bedford Forest was doing.
Speaker ABut he was a slave trader in Memphis, and that is a very lucrative business pre Civil War.
Speaker AAnd so he made a lot of money.
Speaker AAnd so people get upset when I start to talk about this with Nathan Bedford Forest.
Speaker AYou know, he comes into the military as a private.
Speaker AHe.
Speaker AHe enlists, but within three months, he's promoted to a lieutenant colonel because he buys his commission.
Speaker AAnd people don't like that term, but that was done by every military at the time.
Speaker AIt's not just a confederate thing.
Speaker AEvery military, the British, the French, you.
Speaker AIf you have the means to outfit a group of men with ammunition, horses, with saddles, with supplies, you become the leader of those men.
Speaker AAnd that's what Nathan Bedford Forrest did.
Speaker AHe was able to outfit his calv with his funds, with his means, and he's promoted from private to lieutenant colonel in three months.
Speaker APeople like to say he rose through the ranks or he.
Speaker BAnd I.
Speaker BAnd I made the joke too.
Speaker BAnd I don't remember if I commented back to someone because we had a lot of comments on this video, but I said, you know, maybe it was just you.
Speaker BAs he essentially was, like, every Monday he was promoted to the next rank.
Speaker BLike, oh, it's Monday.
Speaker BTime to wrote, you know, Nate, Nate, come over here.
Speaker BYou're the next rank.
Speaker BAnd actually probably would have to been twice a week, you know, to go all the way through the enlisted up to officer ranks.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd that.
Speaker AThat didn't happen.
Speaker AHe went straight from private to lieutenant colonel.
Speaker AHe buys his commission.
Speaker AOnce the people, the higher ups, the decision makers, think of Jefferson Davis and the governor of Tennessee, realize who he is and how much money and means he has, and they need that in the Confederate army at the time.
Speaker AHe gets a commission and he gets a cavalry.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd part of it is too, is you think of.
Speaker BOf the times back then, not everybody was going through West Point, you know, if it even, you know, depending on what stage of war we were in and whether or not it existed.
Speaker BBut somebody like that, who was a businessman, regardless of the business, had management experience, and that's what they were looking for.
Speaker BThey were looking for somebody who could could manage a large group of people and understand logistics and understand the business of the Army.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd so that's what they were looking for.
Speaker BAnd that's kind of why some of these commissions were quote unquote bought, is because these men, and it was all men at the time, were landowners, were business owners, were whatever they were.
Speaker BAnd that's kind of how they had some experience.
Speaker BNot the experience you would have in the army if you had gone to West Point or if you had gone to, you know, any sort of military.
Speaker BMilitary training.
Speaker BBut it's more than the average Joe.
Speaker BAnd when they're just looking for bodies at the time, that's what they had.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd I didn't even know these con.
Speaker AThis.
Speaker AThese terms.
Speaker AAnd this history was going to be so controversial, but this is the accurate history of Nathan Bedford Forrest.
Speaker ANow what people think or what I think happens and people get, you know, upset about is I think they feel like it undermines his abilities as a cavalry leader.
Speaker BHe was pretty lauded as a.
Speaker BAs a military leader.
Speaker AAnd I'm not trying to do that.
Speaker AWhat I'm trying to do is tell you how he got to the position he was in.
Speaker AHe does have no formal military experience.
Speaker AHe is able to fund his calvary and that is how he's commissioned as an officer in the Confederate States.
Speaker BSo what was.
Speaker BWhat was his role at Fort Pillow?
Speaker BHe.
Speaker BWas he leading the troops initially or was that did.
Speaker BWas he the one who stepped up later?
Speaker BOr am I kind of getting the Union and Confederacy leadership?
Speaker ASo.
Speaker ANo.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker ASo in it, basically this is.
Speaker AYou got to think of March of 1864.
Speaker AThis is what this whole start.
Speaker AIt starts about March 1864.
Speaker AGettysburg is.
Speaker AHappens in 63.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd this turns the tides of the Civil War.
Speaker ASo the battle's being brought more Southern.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ABecause Gettysburg is as far north as the south ever gets.
Speaker AAnd then they're essentially starting to be pushed back into the south to fight.
Speaker AAnd you're going to get Grant having some big successes during that time in 64.
Speaker AAnd this, I would say is the South's final charge.
Speaker AYeah, right.
Speaker AAnd Bedford Forest is able to get a Calvary group of about 7,000Calvary troopers to kind of just make this run.
Speaker AAnd they're trying to make this this month long Calvary run into West Tennessee and Kentucky.
Speaker AAnd it's for a bunch of different things.
Speaker AMorale.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AIt's to get people behind them and it's to hit these smaller forts they also need supplies for.
Speaker APillow is really strategically hit for the supplies for the river.
Speaker AAnd so that's kind of what's happening here is this is kind of a pushback to what's been happening since 63 and Gettysburg and the Union marching into the south to take the South.
Speaker AThis is the Confederates kind of push back at this moment.
Speaker ASo mid March they start this.
Speaker ABedford Forest launches this month long Calvary raid to west Tennessee and Kentucky.
Speaker AAnd so the objectives are to capture prisoners for prisoner trade.
Speaker AThe it is to get supplies.
Speaker AIt's to, it's just I, I would think it's also like to build morale and to give some victories to the, to the South.
Speaker BAnd if I remember right, by the time he got to Fort Pillow he had about two, maybe three times the amount of troops than that were there actually like holding the fort.
Speaker ASo Fort Pillow happens about a month later.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AHe starts this raid mid March and fort Pillow happens April 12, 1864.
Speaker ANow there's conflicting numbers.
Speaker ANathabed for Forest either has 1500-2500 men.
Speaker ANot quite sure.
Speaker AThey said they peeled off some to go fight a different air in a different area.
Speaker ABut they know for sure four pillow only had 600 men.
Speaker ASo that's where you're going to hear the terms two to one or three to one.
Speaker AYou're not quite sure.
Speaker ABut know that they definitely are outnumbered the men at Four Pillow.
Speaker AAnd so what happens at Four Pillow is it's being reinforced at the time by a lot of African American or black colored troops.
Speaker AAnd that is still a very radical thing even for the Union.
Speaker ASo to give you more context of this, I mean the Emancipation Proclamation comes out in 1863 and this is just the next year, 1864.
Speaker AAnd so much so that the Confederacy has kind of answered this Emancipation Proclamation with their own law that if they, they capture any black soldiers, they're going to be sent back to enslavement.
Speaker AThey're going to capture them whether or not they're free men of the north or not.
Speaker AIt doesn't matter to them if they're captured by the Confederacy.
Speaker AThey're going back into their law and their law system into enslavement.
Speaker AAnd so once that Emancipation Proclamation comes out, the Confederacy comes out with that very clear understanding of what will happen if you're captured fighting for the north and you're, if you're a black soldier.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo Nathan Bever Forest, his troops get up there and they essentially start making the, the charge at Fort Pillow.
Speaker ASo you have to think there's.
Speaker AI want you to understand that Forest has his 1st Division Cavalry Corps for Pillow has the 6 u.
Speaker AS.
Speaker AArtillery of color troops.
Speaker AYou have Bradford's battalion, this Tennessee cavalry of the 13th Tennessee Calvary.
Speaker AAnd what I make clear in the video is Tennessee Calvary.
Speaker AWhat are you talking about?
Speaker ATennessee is a southern state.
Speaker AWell, there are some people from Tennessee who fight for the Union and you're going to see this a lot in these border state areas.
Speaker AEven when we went to Vicksburg there's a statue for Missouri, the brother to brother statue because so many people from Missouri were half Union and half Confederacy.
Speaker AAnd so that happens in Tennessee as well.
Speaker ASo you have these group of the 13th Tennessee Battalion who are white troops fighting alongside the 6th US artillery which is colored troops.
Speaker AAnd you have to understand that's still radical even for them doing that.
Speaker ASo it's a, it's still a very new concept.
Speaker ABut those are the troops that are at Fort Pillow defending Fort Pillow that day on April 12, 1864 when, when Forest attacks with his cavalry.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BNow if you visit there you actually can make it up to where the kind of recreated fort is.
Speaker BIt's a little bit of a hike depending on which way you go and, and I think we have a link and I'll put a link in the show notes to kind of where the kind of the more hiking ish type trail is.
Speaker BTrailhead is that'll get you a little closer.
Speaker BBut we got up there, it was really neat to kind of see, you know where the cannons would have been positioned and what the fort would have looked like and you, you definitely can't see you're up on this bluff.
Speaker BSo what happens over the course of the battle.
Speaker ASo I, I also want to stress too if you leave that interpretive center, it's like a what a two mile.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AHike.
Speaker BIt's a solid hike.
Speaker ASo I want people to know you can hike it.
Speaker AIt's very well groomed, it's very easy hike.
Speaker AIt wasn't.
Speaker AThere's some steps that you can tell they have cut in steps.
Speaker ASome eagle troops, scouts have done their eagle.
Speaker AThey, you can tell they've earned it by cutting in the steps.
Speaker ABut it's not a, a difficult hike.
Speaker ABut once you get out there, it's recreated almost perfectly.
Speaker BCool.
Speaker AIt's really cool.
Speaker AIt's there for you.
Speaker AIt is pretty awesome.
Speaker ASo in the morning of April 12, about 10am Forest will arrive at Fort Pillow and they surround the fort pretty easily.
Speaker AAnd by 11 o'clock they've already captured rows of barracks.
Speaker AThey're kind of out front of the fort and so they're kind of like letting them know that they're here.
Speaker AThere's the two to one to you.
Speaker AThere's three to one to you.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd they kind of, at 3:30, offer them a demand for surrender.
Speaker AAnd what happens is the man in charge of all of them, Booth, is killed early by a sniper.
Speaker ASo Forrest has put these men up in the trees, and like I told you, this parapet is pretty high.
Speaker AAnd so Booth, who's the commander, has been killed pretty early by a sniper.
Speaker AThe next in charge is Bradford.
Speaker AAnd Bradford really doesn't want force to know that their commander has been killed.
Speaker AHe's like.
Speaker AAnd he's not very.
Speaker AHe's.
Speaker AHe wasn't ready for all of this.
Speaker APlus, there is a gunboat there.
Speaker ASo the Union had a gunboat kind of.
Speaker AAgain, they're right along the Mississippi river, right?
Speaker AAnd there's a gunboat behind them.
Speaker AIt's called the new Era.
Speaker AAnd so the Union also feels like they have that to their advantage and doesn't want the Confederacy to know that it's there.
Speaker ANow Nathan Bedford Forrest asks them for the surrender.
Speaker AThey ask for time.
Speaker AAnd Forest knows the gunboats there.
Speaker ASo when he thinks they're asking for time, he's like, oh, they're asking to be fortified by this gunboat.
Speaker AThey're asking for troops.
Speaker BYeah, they're asking for backup.
Speaker AThey're asking for backup.
Speaker ASo he says 20 minutes.
Speaker ANo, you get 20 minutes.
Speaker ASo in that time, Bradford doesn't.
Speaker AHe doesn't surrender.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd it expires.
Speaker AAnd so once that 20 minutes expires, he.
Speaker AAnd Bradford says he will not surrender.
Speaker AHe fires the bugle charge.
Speaker ASo the essential calvary bugle charge.
Speaker AAnd so this is where you get the historian quarterbacks people who wanted to say, what is this?
Speaker AWhat happens now?
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThis is the whole controversy of everything.
Speaker AWhat happens now?
Speaker AEssentially, this is war.
Speaker AEssentially, this is a battle.
Speaker AEssentially, this is men fighting scared for their lives.
Speaker ASo when does the fog of war turn into a massacre?
Speaker BYeah, so.
Speaker BSo the.
Speaker BThe short version is the Confederates take over the fort.
Speaker BThey.
Speaker BThey kind of kill, massacre.
Speaker BI mean, they kill a whole bunch of the.
Speaker BThe Union soldiers after all of that.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BI'm kind of compressing things here.
Speaker BThey win, they take it over.
Speaker BThey kill a whole bunch of the Union troops.
Speaker BAfter all of that, there's a lot of accounts, firsthand accounts, that because there was testimony in Congress much, I think, a couple years later, or actually not that much later, because there were survivors on both sides that.
Speaker BThat did escape, and essentially there's test, you know, testimony saying, hey, the union troops weren't waving the white flag, so we continued to fight just like you were going to fight.
Speaker BBecause it looked like they were going to kill me.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BI killed the other guy, so he didn't kill me.
Speaker BWe talk about that, you know, in combat all the time.
Speaker BOn the union side, there was reports or accounts that said I tried to surrender or men tried to surrender.
Speaker BAnd you continued to kill them.
Speaker BYou did not allow them to surrender.
Speaker BYou massacred them.
Speaker BThere's further accounts that said black soldiers were specifically targeted, pulled out of the river as they were trying to run away and executed.
Speaker AYes, they.
Speaker AThere's firsthand primary Source testimony from Lieutenant Daniel Van Horn.
Speaker AHe's the commander of the 6th Colored Troop Cavalry and he has, he's white, but he gives testimony of watching his men unarmed, kneeling in front of confederate soldiers, asking for mercy, surrendering and being shot point blank on their knees.
Speaker ASo the numbers speak for themselves.
Speaker AYeah, right.
Speaker AYou got 600 troops at Four Pillow.
Speaker AIt's evenly African american and it's, it's evenly Black and white.
Speaker A300.
Speaker B300 on the union side.
Speaker AOn the, on the union side.
Speaker AYet you're going to have 164 black men killed to 64 white men, and the Confederates lose 14.
Speaker ASo that's nothing.
Speaker ASo you got two times more or 20% more of, of black men to two white men that are almost three times more.
Speaker AThree times more.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThree times more killed.
Speaker AIs that a massacre?
Speaker AWere they singled out?
Speaker AYou know, we have so much.
Speaker AThe racial tension at the time is huge.
Speaker AThis is what the civil war ultimately becomes about.
Speaker AAnd we know that the confederacy, the south has put out, if you're captured, you're going to go back to enslavement.
Speaker ASo what would that mean to confederate soldier?
Speaker AEither way, they, they're not going to be bargained for.
Speaker ARight, right.
Speaker AThey're not really that bargaining chip that forrest was looking for for u.
Speaker AS.
Speaker APrisoners.
Speaker ALike, this is not quite what the power that they would have in, in a war situation.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ASo you could see why maybe they were just just annihilate.
Speaker AJust, just, just killed.
Speaker BWell, and even the leadership on, on the confederate side, when they were writing their official reports, you know, kind of conflicted against what the union soldier survivors said.
Speaker BAnd on the confederate side, they were saying, hey, they weren't surrendering.
Speaker BAnd you know, they weren't.
Speaker BThey were talking about, like, how they were behaving and stuff like that.
Speaker BAnd, and so it's kind of a.
Speaker BHe said he Said type situation on each side.
Speaker BBut again, to your point, the numbers speak for themselves.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker BIt's odd, right.
Speaker BAnd you could draw certain conclusions based on the fact that there was almost three times more black soldiers killed than there were white soldiers on the Union side.
Speaker ABut so.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker AAnd that's where you get some controversy online.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AIs it a massacre?
Speaker AIs it a battle?
Speaker AIt is war.
Speaker AThey didn't surrender.
Speaker AThey didn't surrender.
Speaker ASo what are you to do in that situation?
Speaker ADoes it look like Forest is gonna lose?
Speaker ANot really.
Speaker ASo could he have just taken them prisoner?
Speaker AProbably.
Speaker ADid the gunboat ever fire?
Speaker ANo.
Speaker BSo was it, I think Bradford, he like, ran away.
Speaker ABradford actually ran away.
Speaker ASo that was kind of another issue is like there was no surrender because their commanding officer is swimming across the Mississippi.
Speaker AWhich someone thought that was actually funny that I said Bradford was swimming across the Mississippi.
Speaker AAnd I said, well, he didn't walk across.
Speaker BYeah, he didn't run away.
Speaker BHe didn't walk across the Mississippi.
Speaker ASo he gets away.
Speaker ASo when your commanding officer isn't there to.
Speaker ATo tell you to surrender, it's difficult for.
Speaker AAnd this is still like these, these elements of war where things are still pretty.
Speaker AThey have to be kind of official and they, they really follow these official rules.
Speaker AAnd that's the same thing with taking prisoners and things like that.
Speaker ABut what happens Again, the 164 black troops that are killed, the 64 white troops that are killed, they're buried in that pit right in front of the fort.
Speaker AAnd I show you that in the video afterwards, Lincoln, they decide, what do we do with this?
Speaker AAnd this is where you're going to get these testimonies that come in and you're going to get.
Speaker AGet these men who come to Congress and write in their letters or they.
Speaker AThey testify in front of Congress.
Speaker AAnd this is what becomes the rallying cry, which somebody asked me, you know, actually was it a rally cry for the color troops?
Speaker AYes, it was.
Speaker AThere is testimony of other battles where colored troops would say, remember Fort Pillow?
Speaker AThey would say those exact words.
Speaker AAnd what happens is Van Dorn, he will survive, gives this testimony that it was truly miraculous that we held that fort for one hour.
Speaker ATo the colored troops is due the successful holding out until 4pm the men were constantly at their posts.
Speaker AAnd in fact, through the whole engagement showed valor not expected from troops less than veterans, white or black.
Speaker AAnd because he gives those that kind of testimony, the whole north starts to take notice that these African American black troops are fighting for their freedom.
Speaker AAnd they are so in this fight that they are willing to die.
Speaker AThey're willing to stand up host, and not back down when it all looks lost.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd essentially it was.
Speaker AThey held their ground.
Speaker AThey did not run away.
Speaker AAnd that is what becomes the rallying cry for the colored troops.
Speaker AThis also is going to bring up a lot of enlistments for colored troops.
Speaker AThey're going to join the military, and it's going to make the north start to say this war is about more than just keeping the Union together.
Speaker AIt's about freeing these people who have been in bondage for so long.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd one of the things that I really appreciated about this, this video is there were so many firsthand primary source accounts that you can go look up online.
Speaker BLike, I mean, when you're reading that, you're reading that from a transcription of that testimony.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo you were.
Speaker BYou were reading the words from a primary source.
Speaker BSo that was really neat when we made this video, because you can't argue with fact.
Speaker BYou can argue your interpretation, but you can't argue fact.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo people will have a different opinion on a three Bedford force.
Speaker BI mean, people got a lot of opinions on him.
Speaker BYou can have an opinion on.
Speaker BOh, was this really a rallying cry or was this as big a deal as you're making it out to be?
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker BBut there's people who testified that during battles afterwards, they said, remember Fort Pillow?
Speaker BAnd that's.
Speaker BYou can't dispute that.
Speaker BSo this was kind of really interesting to be able to do.
Speaker BAnd then the comments and the feedback that we got from the video was.
Speaker BWas really, really interesting.
Speaker BSo I enjoyed making this video from that perspective.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI mean, this really.
Speaker AWhen we talk about history, a lot of times we're talking about memory and how the past is remembered.
Speaker AAnd Fort Pillow is one of those interesting battles and how it's remembered, because despite how ferocious this attack was, this was a very little significance to the Confederate Army.
Speaker ANathan Bedford Forrest will abandon it within hours of occur.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BVicksburg is way more important.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThey're just looking for some supplies and they're out.
Speaker ASo as far as, like, strategically, what this battle was to the war in general is null.
Speaker ABut what it is in memory for what it was morally as a symbol.
Speaker BReally, to the Union.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AHorrors of war, dehumanization, racial equality.
Speaker ALike, how is history remembered?
Speaker AHow is history primary sourced?
Speaker AThat's the significance of this battle and the fact that you can go there today and walk in those exact same footsteps and be there and see what they saw.
Speaker AIt is an amazing part of American history, so much so that we get to discuss it and talk about it today.
Speaker AAnd it's one of those horrors of war that that's why the argument is so difficult to make.
Speaker AWhen does a battle become a massacre?
Speaker AWhen does fighting take a turn ethically to something more?
Speaker AAnd is war even ethical in some instances like these are questions that we still ponder today.
Speaker AAnd that's why Fort Pillow is still so significant.
Speaker AAnd I'm happy we were able to do this video.
Speaker AI'm happy it raised a bunch of these questions.
Speaker AI hope you had some questions about it as well.
Speaker AAgain, you learn more about these umbrella people of history and the amazing feats that they did.
Speaker AAnd to remember those men who stood their ground and didn't back down.
Speaker AI think it's a real testimony to how brave they were at the time.
Speaker BYeah, again, it was.
Speaker BIt was fun.
Speaker BI'll leave links to both the newsletter and the audio and video versions in the show notes and YouTube video description.
Speaker BAnd if you guys have any questions on this or thoughts about this or feedback, please drop us a comment.
Speaker BIf you're watching on YouTube, please shoot us an email if you're listening to the audio podcast and we really appreciate it.
Speaker BThe Fort Pillow massacre remains a stark reminder of the brutal nature of war and the complex legacy of racial violence in American history.
Speaker BWhile historians continue to debate certain details of what happened at Fort Pillow on April 12, 18, 1964, what's clear is that this event had profound implications during the Civil War and its impact still resonates today.
Speaker BThis has been a Walk with History production.
Speaker BTalk With History is created and hosted by me, Scott Benny.
Speaker BEpisode researched by Jennifer Benny.
Speaker BCheck out the show notes for links and references mentioned in this episode.
Speaker BTalk with History is supported by our fans@thehistoryroadtrip.com our eternal thanks go out to those providing funding to help keep us going.
Speaker BThank you to Doug McLiverty, Larry Myers, Patrick Benny and Gale Cooper.