Directions: for each group
For this activity, you have been assigned to a group with a document to review. You will also use the interactive maps, click the button above, in this activity. Each group will first review an excerpt from Walt Whitman and a letter from General William T. Sherman, before moving on to examine their individual document and completing the accompanying worksheet.
As you examine the Whitman excerpt, keep in mind that Whitman worked as a nurse with wounded Union soldiers while living in Washington, D.C. during the war. He was so deeply moved by Abraham Lincoln’s assassination that, in response to it, he composed the famous poem, “Oh Captain! My Captain!” He was strongly pro-Union, but also deeply troubled by the devastation of the war.
- What does Whitman mean by saying that “the real war will never get in the books”? Keeping Whitman’s point in mind, how can you come to a better understanding of the “real war”? As you read through Sherman’s letter addressed to the then mayor and members of the city council of Atlanta, Georgia consider his explanation for the devastation his army must bring.
- Why does Sherman believe that the civilian population of Atlanta should vacate the city? What does Sherman mean when he says “War is cruelty, and you cannot refine it . . .”? Consider these two statements as your group works through the selection from a Southern partisan who suffered through the devastation of the war.
- How do they compare?
1892
And so good-by to the war. I know not how it may have been, or may be, to others—to me the main interest I found, (and still, on recollection, find,) in the rank and file of the armies, both sides, and in those specimens amid the hospitals, and even the dead on the field. To me the points illustrating the latent personal character and eligibilities of these States, in the two or three millions of American young and middle-aged men, North and South, embodied in those armies—and especially the one-third or one-fourth of their number, stricken by wounds or disease at some time in the course of the contest—were of more significance even than the political interests involved. (As so much of a race depends on how it faces death, and how it stands personal anguish and sickness. As, in the glints of emotions under emergencies, and the indirect trait and asides in Plutarch, we get far profounder clues to the antique world than all its more formal history.)
Future years will never know the seething hell and the black infernal background of countless minor scenes and interiors., (not the official surface-courteousness of the Generals, not the few great battles) of the Secession War; and it is best they should not—the real war will never get in the books. In the mushy influences of current times, too, me fervid atmosphere and typical events of those years are in danger of being totally forgotten. I have at night watch’ d by the side of a sick man in the hospital, one who could not live many hours. I have seen his eyes flash and burn as he raised himself and recurr’d to the cruelties on his surrender ’d brother, and mutilations of the corpse afterward. (See, in the preceding pages, the incident at Upperville—the seventeen kill’d as in the description, were left there on the ground. After they dropt dead, no one touch’ d them—all were made sure of, however. The carcasses were left for the citizens to bury or not, as they chose.)
Such was the war. It was not a quadrille in a ballroom. Its interior history will not only never be written—its practicality, minutiae of deeds and passions will never be even suggested. The actual soldier of 1862-’65, North and South, with all his ways, his incredible dauntlessness, habits, practices, tastes, language, his fierce friendship, his appetite, rankness, his superb strength and animality, lawless gait, and a hundred unnamed lights and shades of camp, I say, will never be written—perhaps must not and should not be.