Mike,
Great pictures, and thanks for posting the link to them. Wish I
could?ve been there, as I had planned to be. I sincerely
appreciate your kind and generous invitation.
I am sorry to see your good effort has been met with some
misguided, politically correct, head-up-the-ass ranting about the
nature of the event. History repeats itself, and those who fail to
learn from it are likely to experience the repetition, and the
children so sheltered and protected from (meaning ignorant of) the
truth of the past are simply tomorrow?s most gullible victims.
And as one who caught a little lead himself long ago and far away,
I certainly am not in the least offended by these reenactments,
and I don?t know anyone similarly situated who would find anything
about it offensive. I would wager a good number of the reenactors
are vets. As General Lee said, "It is well that war is so
terrible; we would grow too fond of it."
Without question, at least in my opinion, this is a far more
constructive and uplifting activity than such worthless pastimes
as golfing, pilfering through the neighborly detritus at yard
sales, walking the dog to crap by somebody else?s mailbox, writing
to your congressman, or running for public office.
Thanks for the excellent pictures. You've increased my "want" for
an E20. Maybe I?ll get one and get there next year.
Walt Wayman
---------- Original Message ----------------------------------
From: "James N. McBride" <jnmcbr@xxxxxxx>
Reply-To: olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Date: Tue, 9 Apr 2002 21:10:06 -0600
>I always wonder about the mentality of people who reenact bloody
battles.
>Most people I know who experienced that horror would not ever
want to replay
>it. Maybe the reenactments should use live ammo then the wannabes
can get
>the full effect. Sorry for the mini-rant but I have had too many
friends get
>their bodies full of lead and shrapnel to see this as a form of
>entertainment. /jim
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: owner-olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>[mailto:owner-olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of mike m.
>Sent: Wednesday, April 10, 2002 9:31 AM
>To: olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>Subject: [OM] Shiloh Reenactment Photos
>
>
>Last weekend was the 140th anniversary of the Battle of
Shiloh,the first
>major battle of the American Civil War. Around 5000 reenactors
gathered
>at a location about 5 miles from the actual battle site and
performed
>two mock battles. These people take this stuff seriously and come
from
>all over the country to participate. I wandered the camps for
several
>hours before the "battle" on Saturday and talked with people from
as far
>away as Green Bay Wisconsin. The next day, after a half day
fishing trip
>with my Dad, I visited the National Park that is the actual
battle site
>and wandered through the blooming dogwood trees thinking about
the men
>that died and suffered on a beautiful spring day 140 years before.
>For those of you not familiar with the battle, there is the
Hornet's
>Nest, where a group of determined men from Iowa and Illinois held
off 12
>Confederate attacks over the span of seven hours, to finally be
>assaulted with a 62 cannon barrage and overran and forced to
surrender.
>The Peach Orchard, a 10 acre peach orchard that was in full bloom
at the
>time of the battle and defended by Union solders. A pitched
battle raged
>there for hours with the bullets cutting the peach blossoms from
the
>trees and covering the bodies of the dead with the beautiful pink
>blossoms. The Bloody Pond, adjacent to the Peach Orchard where the
>wounded and dying from both armies crawled for a drink of
water,until
>the water was stained red with the blood. And finally Shiloh
>Church,which means "the place of peace" site of heavy fighting on
the
>first day of the battle. Albert Sidney Johnston, the commander of
the
>Confederate forces was killed on the first day of battle by a
minie ball
>that severed his femoral artery. A simple tourniquet would have
saved
>his life, but moments before he was wounded, he had ordered his
personal
>physician to another part of the battlefield to attend wounded
Union
>soldiers that had been captured and needed medical attention. His
act of
>kindness cost him his life.
>After 2 days of fighting, the total casualties for both sides was
almost
>24,000 men dead, wounded and missing. It exceeded the total
casualties
>of the Revolutionary War, War of 1812 and The Mexican War
combined.
>Here are a few images of the people and events and a few of the
Park
>itself.
>
>http://www.ilikeitout.com/Shiloh
>
>All these were taken with the E-20. I also shot a roll of Velvia,
but
>the place I normally process my slide film has gone out of
business and
>I haven't had time to find another processor. I'll post those at
a later
>date if they're worth looking at.
>
>I also have a new found respect for Mathew Brady.
>
>later,
>mike m.
>
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