Episode 193

full
Published on:

30th Mar 2026

A Civil War "Band of Brothers"? | The Trumbull County Boys book with Vlogging Through History

➡️ Help history. 2 minutes for 7 questions 🫡

We host Chris Mowery of YouTube’s Vlogging Through History on Talk With History, discussing his path from history major to youth ministry, then pivoting during COVID to popular reaction videos and full-time content creation.

Chris shares how his genealogy background led to a 500-page book, Trumbull County Boys, focused on Company H of the 20th Ohio and his ancestor Sam Hughes, using extensive primary sources like letters, newspapers, journals, sketches, and National Archives records.

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🎥 Vlogging Through History on YouTube

00:00 Meet Chris Mowery

01:19 From Ministry to YouTube

03:12 Writing the Company H Book

04:54 Hidden Stories in Records

06:14 Finding Sam Hughes

08:11 Shiloh Burials and Disease

10:51 Scout Stories and Lore

15:40 Civil War Journals Sketches and Letters

20:08 Last Minute Discoveries

21:43 What Research Changed

22:46 Wagoner Ammo Run

24:53 Archives Research

28:20 Pension Files Stories

29:44 Battlefield Travel Insights

33:12 Duval Family Letter

37:12 Book Title and Release Date

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Transcript
Speaker:

All right, so we are joined by Chris Mowery here on Talk With History, you

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guys as Jen, if you haven't watched our video yet and you're coming onto

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this podcast video a little bit later, um, Jen jokingly says in a video where

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she's recording with Chris at Shiloh.

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She jokingly introduces vlogging through history and she says, you probably

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know vlogging through history, you're probably just learning about us.

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So again, you probably know vlogging through history from his channel on

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YouTube and, and our kind of our history content creator circle that we are in.

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We're on, uh, each other's videos every once in a while.

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Very happy to have Chris.

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We had the opportunity to go out and meet Chris, Jen did out at Shiloh.

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So we live in Tennessee, the Memphis area.

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Chris is doing some kind of final wrap up research and, uh,

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a tour,

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a tour, uh, out at Shiloh, but also took the opportunity to, to

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go out there and show Jen where a couple of his ancestors are buried.

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So Chris, thank you so much for joining us here on Talk With History, our podcast.

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Um, so tell us a little bit about yourself.

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You don't have to talk too much about vlogging through history.

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Again, hopefully this is your audience watching, watching

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our video and our, our audience already who already knows you, but.

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Tell us about, a little bit about your channel, kind of what drove

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you to write this book that's possibly available right now.

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I know you have some more details on that, and then the, the trip out to Shiloh.

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Yeah, so, um, I, uh, majored in history in college, but ended up

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going into youth ministry instead.

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Um, I know you're a PK yourself, so Yeah,

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yeah, yeah,

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yeah.

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Oh yeah.

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My kids can relate to you having grown up in that.

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But, uh, I, uh, I didn't youth ministry for 14 years.

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Full time.

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And then I actually for the last 10 years have been a speaker for an organization

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called Rachel's Challenge, which uh, uh, was founded by one of the con victims.

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And we share Rachel's story.

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Uh, she was a person who was known for going out of her way to show

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kindness and compassion to people.

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And so we share her story as a way to encourage students to do that.

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And since I was kind of traveling.

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Like part of the year, but then only for about nine months every year I was

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looking for something else to do and I fell back to my history background and,

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uh, started making gaming videos, uh, on a channel called The History Guy.

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And I would talk about the history behind whatever game I was playing.

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And, you know, I was playing a game about Gettysburg.

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I talk about the Battle of Gettysburg, that kind of stuff.

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That morphed into doing a channel that was dedicated to like what you

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guys, you go to a historic site, talk about what happened there.

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At least that was the plan part of vlogging through history and

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right about the time I set up that channel, COVID happened,

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and so now I wasn't traveling and

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mm-hmm.

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You know, when you're speaking to large audiences in a confined space for a

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living, that's not happening during COVID.

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So someone suggested that I start.

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Doing reaction videos from my home to other people's history content while

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we waited for travel to open Olympics.

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So I did that and it became super popular and, you know, hit a hundred

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thousand subscribers in like three months and haven't looked back.

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Been doing it full time ever since.

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Uh, over time I started thinking about other things I could be doing

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that I was working for myself and the idea of a book up and I decided to.

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Fall back onto another thing that I, uh, am very comfortable

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with, which is family history.

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And so I decided to write a book initially about, uh, the 20th Ohio volunteers

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because that was a regiment that my, I had an ancestor in my fifth great grandfather

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and they were in all the major battles and we theater under Grant Sherman.

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And then as I started digging into the story, I realized there was

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so much there that I could really.

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Zero in on one single company.

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And so I wrote just about Sam's Company, Sam, my ancestor, Sam Hughes, uh,

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and, and wrote a whole 500 page book, just about one company of 130 guys.

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And that's how we got here.

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No, I, I love it.

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And that's one of the things you know, is just before we started the recording

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here, you know, Jen was telling you, Hey.

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Chris just heads up, Scott's not the history guy.

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Right?

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Um, so Jen's got her her graduate degree in, in history.

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But one of the things as I've been on this journey in diving deeper

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and deeper into, into history with, you know, folks like obviously with

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Jen and with folks like you, is.

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How much there is to learn about one unit, one company, one battle.

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I mean, they, there's whole channels and podcasts and industries just around

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Gettysburg, you know, and that's one of the things that I found so fascinating.

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So the fact that you wrote a 500 page book, you know,

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just on, on this, this unit.

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Yeah.

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I'm not surprised by what I've learned as I've kind of just been diving deeper

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down the, the history rabbit hole.

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Yeah, so interesting.

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Just to give you an example of what's out there when you start digging into

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a topic is, uh, when I looked, looked at the 20th Ohio, and you look at their

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regimental history, it has this one entry where it says that they did Garrison, duke

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Boulevard, Tennessee for a couple months.

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Right?

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So you guys know it's not too far from you.

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Yeah, and that's all it said.

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It just said they were Garrison.

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But as I dug into that.

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I found this incredible story about a day that a 6,000 man Confederate cavalry

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raid threatened the union supply lines at Bolivar and the 20th Ohio, along

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with elements of two other regiments.

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About a thousand guys went out.

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Fought for seven hours against 6,000 cavalry, six to one odds

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and And won and drove them off.

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Wow.

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And none of that was in the regimen history.

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It just said Garrison duty at Boulevard.

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But in that sentence, there was all these incredible stories about stuff

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that was going on during that little fights that nobody knows anything about.

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So that's one of the things that I'm able to do with this book is to expand

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on those sentences and turning them into entire chapters of the book, telling, like

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you said, stories and been tapped into.

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And that's so you could do this a thousand times over and still not

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scratch the surface of the civil War.

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Yeah.

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So Chris, when did you first hear about this ancestor of yours?

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Like was this like a childhood story you grew up with?

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No, actually.

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Nobody in my family knew about him.

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Um, it, it was one of those things where I was a senior in high school and I got

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introduced for family history by my best friend's dad and I started, and because

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the war was one of my main interests, one of the first things I did or try

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to find out how many of my ancestors fought in the Civil War, and I have

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this kind of absurd number compared.

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You know, I've researched the family histories of hundreds of people.

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Wow.

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And I've never found anyone who had as many Civil war direct ancestors as I do.

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I'm talking like great-great-great grandfathers right after 13.

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Yeah.

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Uh, that's

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a lot.

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Yeah.

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My ex-wife has one one.

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Oh, that's,

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I,

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that's a

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lot more normal.

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I think I have, I might have one.

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You probably have more.

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I may have.

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Oh my gosh.

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I may.

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But the thing is, and what people don't realize is that most of the

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men who fought in the Civil War.

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Didn't fight at Gettysburg, didn't fight at Gica, Maga, or mm-hmm.

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V or Vicksburg.

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They were, you know, in eastern Kentucky fighting against Confederate

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gorillas for the entire war, you know?

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Yeah.

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They were on Garrison duty at some port that never saw any action.

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Uh, yeah.

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So that's the, the story from o people.

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And so what drew me to Sam Hughes then was that he was one of those

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guys who was in all of those big battles in the Western theater.

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Um, he was at Shiloh.

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Vicksburg and Atlanta and, uh, Chattanooga and Ken Strong,

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and then the March to the Sea.

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So I think that was why I was on so much to his story, because he experienced a lot

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of what we learned about the Civil War.

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Yeah.

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He could be in a movie, make a movie outta him.

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Well, my friend jd, who I know you guys know from the history underground

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to keep wanting it to be turned into a TV series, but he hasn't

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read it yet, so he's gonna get his copy in a couple days in Gettysburg.

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Nice.

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I'm gonna bring you guys one too.

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Oh,

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thank you.

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Yes, yes.

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We're looking forward to seeing you.

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So tell me, Chris, like when we went to Shiloh, there was a group

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of the 20th Ohio buried at Shiloh.

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Is that the biggest group of the 20th Ohio in one location buried together?

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Yes, by far.

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Um, there are not, now that I've done the math, I think there are 40 guys from

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the 20th Ohio buried at that cemetery.

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Wow.

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And as near as I could tell, 39 of them died of disease.

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Yeah, one item, battle 39 of

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disease one.

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One was killed in the Battle of Shiloh.

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Uh, and, and over the course of the war, uh, the 20th Ohio

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had 360 deaths, which ranks it.

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One of the deadliest units in Ohio, Ohio had, um, per capita, more men serve

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in the Civil War than any other state.

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Uh, and the unit that had the most deaths had 365.

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There was one with 360 3 and then the 20th, Ohio was third out of 200 regiments

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with 360, 270 of those were from disease.

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Yeah.

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And that, that's the story of the Western Theater, though, especially.

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Yes.

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These units that were camped out at Shiloh for months, that that was a

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disease factory, that, that location, because you got the swamp there and, uh,

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it was just, it was miserable and, uh,

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miserable.

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Yeah.

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It ended up just killing more guys in that one place in the couple

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months they were there than did it.

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And more, more men will die from disease than battle in the Civil War anyway.

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Yeah.

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So it's just a good example of that,

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right?

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Yeah.

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And that, and that's kind of the standard two to one, three to one, uh mm-hmm.

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Disease deaths versus battle deaths.

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Company age, which is the company I wrote about, is this weird

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anomaly in that, in that Yes.

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Um, their battle deaths and their disease deaths are identical, which,

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yeah.

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And we talked about this on the video.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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So,

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yeah.

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They, I did the math.

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They had 15% of the regiment's battle deaths.

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They had 5% of the regiment's, disease deaths.

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And I've got a lot of theories on that.

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One of which is that that company came from a different part of Ohio than all

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the other companies in the regiment.

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I don't know if there's something about bringing and their back.

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Sure.

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And that kind of, the other thing is that I know that a lot of those

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guys, when they got sick, that were sent home on furlough to recover.

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Mm. Instead of being kept in a military hospital.

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And I think maybe that helped too.

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I don't know if the other companies did that as much as the, as company H did.

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That's awesome.

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So 500 pages, what, there's always something that you're

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like, oh my gosh, this is amazing.

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So what was the thing that you like, oh my gosh, I have to tell this like this.

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Oh yeah, this makes the hair on my arm stand up.

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Like, tell me that.

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So when, when I first started researching the book, I found out

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pretty early that the primary.

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Behind the lines scout for the entire army of the Tennessee.

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The guy that Grant and Sherman used more than anybody was a guy

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in company age of the 20th Ohio.

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Oh.

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Name was Lorraine Ruges.

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And he wrote a book in 1865 about his experience.

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And it was, it had endorsements, uh, like, you know, letters of endorsement

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from Grant Sherman, Legett mc person.

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All these guys that in high command who basically said, if we had a tough job,

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Ruggles is the guy we asked to do it.

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Holy

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cow.

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Um, and he wrote all of these incredible, like, little stories that

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would've been impossible to tell about this company if I hadn't found it.

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Like, uh, he tells a story from Camp Chase or from, uh, camp King, which

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is where they were stationed up outta Kentucky in, uh, the winter of 61,

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62, about this woman who rides by, in a carriage, a civilian shouts out the

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window at them or offer Jeff Davis.

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And here they are defending Northern Kentucky and this woman's cheering

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for the Confederate president, so

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mm-hmm.

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Uh, Ruges tells the story about some unknown unidentified union soldiers

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who that night showed up at her house, stole all her chickens, and he heavily

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implies that it was him and a group of guys from company H that did it.

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But.

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He never admitted to.

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Yeah.

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He's like,

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I

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don't

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know.

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I heard through the

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grapevine that,

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that's awesome.

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Yeah, and he, and he tells the story about manning force, who was at the

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time, their lieutenant colonel who showed up the next day and this woman came to

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camp to complain, showed up and was like inspecting all their tents and looking for

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chicken bones and rug was basically said.

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The people, whoever did it, did a great job of hiding because

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there was no evidence whatsoever.

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And so little stories like that.

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And he tells a story about one time that he was behind enemy lines and

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he was trying to get his hands on a confederate colonel's uniform.

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And he found the body of a Confederate colonel.

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And when he lifted it up to try and take the, uh, the uniform off, he let out this

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when this air released, freaked him out.

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And he said that.

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Last time I tried to get a Confederate Colonel's uniform.

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Oh my gosh.

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Oh my gosh,

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that's so

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crazy.

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Like little things like that that just really add life to the story of company

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H that I wouldn't have been able to find and, and finding that book and I

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have it on my shelf, was just a treasure that really made all the difference.

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That is a treasure now.

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He's your, almost like your dick winters.

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Yeah.

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'cause you have so much about him.

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Um, where's he buried at?

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So

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Lorraine Ruges is buried in Michigan of all places.

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Really?

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Oh wow.

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Uh, there's a lot of these guys who ended up in the west.

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I mean, there's guys buried in like Nebraska and, uh, California and Oregon.

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Um, even my, in my own family.

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Uh, so my fifth great grandfather who unfortunately we don't know

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where he's buried, he's in an unknown grave here locally somewhere,

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died in 1868, right after the war.

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Uh, his son was the last living.

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Survivor of company H and he died in Oregon in 1935.

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So yeah,

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all that westward.

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He was the drummer expansion after the war.

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Yeah, he was a drummer.

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Very cool.

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Well, and and it's, that's so neat to hear you say that too, that you kind of found,

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you know, Ruges and kind of all, all these short stories that he wrote because

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we've had the opportunity to interview a few book authors, you know, over the

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course of the past couple years and.

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That's actually like a semi common trend behind books that make it to light.

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It's somebody who discovers this little treasure trove of information.

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That then you're like, oh my gosh, this is amazing.

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I need to, I need to help share these stories and this is gonna help

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me create the context around this other story that I had started with.

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And I discovered this other thing.

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I think it was the Jeep Show.

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Mm-hmm.

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One in, uh, there was some enlisted kind of entertainment specialist

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that was traveling with Mickey Rooney back in the day, during World War ii.

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And he had written down a bunch of his experiences and all that stuff.

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And that was one of the, one of the.

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A book that he put together that he gave to his family, that his daughter

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published, and then this guy found it and he wrote a book about it.

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And so similar thing that you're doing with starting off with this story of,

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you know, this unit out of Ohio, and then you discover, you know, hey, they

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were just on guard duty over here.

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Nope.

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There was a whole lot more, you know, behind that for, for their garrison duty.

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Oh, and by the way, here's this scout that everybody.

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Relied on and oh, I discovered, you know, all this stuff that he's writing.

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And so that to me, that's a, that's a hallmark for those listening or

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watching of what's bound to be a good book because there's, that's

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primary source material right there.

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Yeah.

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Like life is so often stranger than fiction and more exciting.

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And that's a, that's a good note, right?

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I mean that's, to me, that's, that's gonna be, I think something that

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really brings your book to life.

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Yeah.

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And that's.

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Primary source material is what really is the bulk of this book.

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Uh, one of the other things Edward down to was the captain who commanded

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the company for a good bit of the war.

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Wrote letters home to the local newspaper all the time, and I've got

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all of those letters from the newspaper.

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Other guys, enlisted men, wrote letters home to the newspaper.

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I ended up finding letters that are in existence.

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Like that are owned by family members that I was able to track down

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and, and get just little details.

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Like there was a guy, Franklin Rickard, who wrote a letter on New

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Year's Day 1862 home, giving all the details about what they were eating

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in camp and what the experience was like, and he died three months later.

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He wrote that letter and so,

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wow.

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One of the things that I tried to do is, you know, we all love Band of Brothers.

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I think what attracted people to Band of Brothers was that element of.

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It's not telling the story of the whole war from the top down, talking about

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generals and divisions moving on a map.

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It's a single company of guys that we followed from the time they started

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training through the end of the war.

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And we were even interested in learning what they did after the war because

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we got connected to these guys and we wanted to know their stories.

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When one of 'em died, we felt it.

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Yeah.

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And that's what I wanted with this story.

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And so for example, in the chapter about their training in campaign.

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Franklin Rickard is very heavily involved because of that letter that

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he wrote and I'm introducing them.

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And then the next chapter, boom.

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Oh by the way, he died, uh, at Shiloh.

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Uh, you know, he was one of those guys who died of illness, uh, in

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late March at Pittsburgh Landing.

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Uh, and so right away it's like that gut punch of uh, uh, getting connected

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to this guy and reading this letter he wrote to his parents, and oh, he

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died before he ever fired a shot.

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Oh, man.

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Um, and one of the other people who I relied on walk was a guy

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named Henry Dwight, who was.

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He was born in Constantinople, Turkey.

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Oh, wow.

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His parents were missionaries.

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They were New England missionaries, and he came home in 1860,

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had never been in the us.

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Grew up in Turkey, comes to Ohio in 1860 to attend Ohio Wesleyan University to

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get a a degree, and the war breaks out.

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And he enlists in the 20th Ohio.

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He is a sergeant within a month.

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And within a couple months after that, it's right around the time of

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Fort Donaldson, he gets a Battlefield Commission to Second Lieutenant and he's

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transferred in company H And not only did he keep a journal during the entire

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war, but he also did hundreds of sketches and had photographs in his journal.

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Oh wow.

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And so, for example, I'll just show you one of them right here.

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Yeah.

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Um, this is a sketch.

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I don't know how clear it's gonna get.

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Lemme try to zoom in and then, um, it's kind of hard to see, but Yeah.

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Um.

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There you go.

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Uh,

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gotta buy the book.

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So this is a sketch that he made of the confederate bodies piled

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up in front of their earthworks after the Battle of Atlanta.

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Oh my gosh.

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And, um, I'll give you another one here from, or Donaldson, their first experience

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with the war comes when they are called into the field for the Battle of Fort

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Donaldson, and they're coming down on the.

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By the way, here's Lorraine Les.

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We talked earlier.

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Oh, cool.

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Oh, cool.

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Try to Yeah.

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Give you a little view of him.

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I know.

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There we go.

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There we go.

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Yep.

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Oh, that's

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awesome.

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Um,

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definitely an actor could play him.

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He's got a Christian,

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they're coming down on these Steamboats, uh, down the river, uh,

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the river or up the river toward where Donaldson, they hear the gunfire,

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but they don't see anything, and then they come around the corner.

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Around the bend in the river and they see the gunboats firing on Fort Donaldson and,

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and Dwight do a scratch of that moment.

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Oh my gosh.

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Yeah.

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So these, these little things like that that, you know, you can

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try and imagine in your mind what they saw, or I can just show you.

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Here's a guy in the company who drew what they saw, and it just brings

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it to life in a really cool way.

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I think.

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Oh, Chris, you got such great.

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Sources.

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I,

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I, I really looked out, not, like I said, when I started I was gonna

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write on the whole regiment and then I found all that stuff and I was like,

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no, I can do this on one company.

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Yeah.

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I've got two guys who have journals, one of 'em writing all kinds of sketches.

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I've got like 10, 10 or 12 guys who wrote letters that we have copies of.

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Uh, and, and even guys in other companies who wrote letters that I

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was occasionally able to lean into.

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Two weeks before I sent the book off for publishing, I found a letter from a

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guy in another company that completely changed a whole chapter of the book.

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Oh, wow.

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Um, because he was writing about, because I knew that their Lieutenant Colonel Major

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had both resigned around the same time.

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And I thought it was weird that the lieutenant Colonel, as soon

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as he finally got command of the company just up and resigned.

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Yeah.

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And the records don't say anything about why he resigned.

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And then I found this letter from a guy in another company.

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Who described how this lieutenant colonel was perpetually drunk and that even one

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time they showed out that you like a dress parade in front of everybody, and

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he couldn't even lift his sword straight because he was so drunk on the field.

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Oh my gosh.

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He was quietly encouraged to resign before he led the men in combat and that, that I

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had no idea about the alcoholic connection with that particular lieutenant colonel.

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And I found that letter two weeks before I published the, uh, the book.

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So who knows what I'll find that I wish was in there.

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Yeah.

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Well, and, and it's one of those things you kind of always, you

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know, you're, you're never complete.

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You're just kind of done.

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Right.

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You kind of, eventually you just have to send it off.

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And that's so amazing because one of the things that I always like to ask

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folks when we talk to book authors is, is there anything that you kind

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of started off believing that as you did your research that you were then?

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Oh, I was like, oh, I was proven wrong and.

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For good, for better or for worse.

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Right.

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You started off with, I think this is what happened, and then as you did

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your research again kind of akin to, to what you were just talking about.

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You were, you were proven, you were proven wrong.

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I was like, I just, I didn't know that.

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Was there anything else like that as you went through this book?

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There was one thing that really shocked me, and this is really kind of a macro

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view of the Civil War, that when I took that micro view of a single company that

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I understood a lot better, which was that.

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You know, just how much, when you look at the muster rolls for a regimen

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and you see, for example, okay, they've got 70 guys in the company.

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That doesn't mean that there were 70 of 'em fighting when they went

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into battle at any given time.

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Out of those 70 guys in the company, maybe half of 'em were available for

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action in battle because there were guys that were on duty as crooks and wagoners.

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Detached on guard duty for a while, or, you know, things like that.

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When, when company H went into the expert campaign, their

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captain wasn't even with them.

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They went into one of their deadliest battles, the Battle of

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Raymond, without their captain.

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'cause their captain was left back at Milliken's Bend in Louisiana,

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guarding the supplies for the division.

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He was in command of the guards program.

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And when you look at the roster of the company, it shows that he was on there.

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And so I just assumed he was at the Battle of Raymond, for example.

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But then I Oh wow.

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Dig into his military roles at the National Archives and I find out, no,

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he was on detached service and you know, so I tried to reflect that as

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much as I could and get an accurate feel for where these guys were.

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So, the one guy who was the company Wagoner, I do a whole section, uh, in

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one of the chapters just talking about.

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What his job would've been as a wagoner, what that would've entailed.

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And, and specifically, there's this battle, it's part of IOA

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in northern Mississippi there.

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Mm-hmm.

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Yep.

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Um.

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When the Confederates briefly take I uca, and then they're marching away,

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the union tried to inter step the Confederate army and cut them off and

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try to surround them and destroyed them.

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And so they moved these guys rapidly into position and they're fighting this

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battle and they're running outta ammo.

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And so they send a message back that they need ammunition to keep this battle going.

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And so the 20th Ohio is the unit that is deployed to deliver the ammunition

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front, and they're 28 miles away.

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Oh my

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gosh.

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And they cover 28 miles in six hours with the ammunition for an entire army.

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And so I, I look a marathon at that story.

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Through the lens of Colgate Busty, who was the company Wagoner?

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'cause he would've been the guy driving the wagon that's bringing all this

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ammunition and how difficult that was because they were covering 28 miles

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in six hours, when normally you would cover about half that distance and

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six hours with a loaded way because of all the things that can go wrong.

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Just talked about him taking care of the animals and all the things and the

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ways in which his life would've been different than average guy on the line.

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So I tried to give a very complete picture.

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Of what a Civil War company goes through, just the private fighting on the.

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That's amazing.

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I mean, that's almost like a marathon because

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it's Yeah, it's totally a marathon.

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I mean, obviously they'd do it in two hours, but Yeah,

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yeah, yeah.

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Well, I mean, I can't run it.

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I ran my marathon in like five, so they're like, which is great.

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I mean,

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that's cool.

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Am music.

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Yeah.

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I was like, wow.

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An hour more.

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And they went, uh, two more miles than me and they had ammunition.

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Wow.

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Jen, you're really outta shape and

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wearing wool uniforms.

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Yeah.

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In the south.

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Exactly.

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Wool carrying all their stuff.

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Oh my gosh.

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Well, I hear you say you went to the National Archives.

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I hear you say, you know, you're, you're writing families and you're

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getting newspaper, uh, you know, newspaper copies and letter copies.

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How long did all of this research take and where's the farthest place

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you went to, to gather information?

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So I spent three years doing the research.

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Um, wow.

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I, I am a researcher by nature.

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I, you know, I've been doing genealogy research professionally

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for almost 30 years.

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So I, I leaned very heavily on online resources for a long time.

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There's a lot of stuff that's digital.

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One of the things that's frustratingly not digitized for Ohio, that is for most

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of the country are the military records.

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Um, so you have what are called the compiled military service records,

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the C CSRs, which are these, um, try to show you a picture they look like,

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um, but they're like the muster rolls.

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They're the enlistment forms there.

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Any, like if a guy had a leave pass copy of the leave path in his

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military record, that kind of stuff.

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I was holding in my hands.

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For example, a leave pass that had been passed up to chain of command.

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And so it was signed by General mc first and General Legget in

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General Force, you know, the company commander and the regimental

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commander all on one piece of paper.

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Um.

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Almost all of those military records are digitized and on a website

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called fold three.com, except for Ohio, New York, and Pennsylvania.

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Oh geez.

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Sent the most, uh, to the Union Army.

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So you have to go to national to get 'em.

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Um, and in this case you're talking about.

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They'll bring out the Hulk part with the entire 20th Ohio.

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And so I've got military service files for 1500 guys.

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Wow.

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And then I gotta dig through for the 130 that were in company

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h uh, throughout the war.

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And then each one of those is gonna have 25 or 30 pages in

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it with all of the records.

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And so, um, here we go.

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So here's the cart that had,

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oh my gosh.

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All of the, uh, my gosh, that's the entire 20th Ohio.

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And so for, for our listeners who are listening to this podcast, so he just

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showed us basically what you would see, like a library cart, like, like a library

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cart with just big boxes of files.

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And then this is, so this is the envelope that has Dan Hughes military

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and, and inside of that are like 25 cards with all the information.

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And it tells me if he was.

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And the hospital's sick at some point.

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It tells me when his promotion was, tells me how tall he was and what

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he did for a living before the war, and what eye color and hair color

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and all these physical descriptions.

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And I, I work a lot of that into the book too.

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You know, when a guy's six feet tall and he's one of the

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tallest guys on the regiment, I try to describe that, you know.

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Yeah, when a guy is a blacksmith by trade and he gets detached to work

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at company headquarters, I know he is probably working on the horses and

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things like that, you know, so just those little details that you can only

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find by going to the national archives and sitting in a room for eight or

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10 hours just flipping through pages.

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Yeah, so let, talk to me about that.

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So you, first of all, you have to send a request in, right?

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So they know what you're coming in for.

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So you can request those.

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To be sent to you, but it's like $80 for a single one and it takes several months.

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Yes,

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yes.

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Uh, so I can go to Washington, you know, four and a half hour drive, and I

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can walk in and I can fill out a form.

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So for those records, it's one form.

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I fill it out and they bring me the cart.

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With the entire 20th Ohio, you can request an entire regimen at once.

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Okay.

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For the pension files, which can often be a hundred pages or more.

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And I got into some of those.

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Um, those, you have to fill out individual forms and you can

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only get about 20 of them a day.

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Um, and, and you could spend all day going through 'em.

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I mean, I, I, you know, in single day I got through half of company H'S military

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files and to go through all their pensions would take me probably a week.

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Oh my God.

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But there's so much there, you know, there's little details.

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Amos Wright, who was a private, is describing.

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The night, uh, they spent between the two days of the Battle of Shiloh on

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the side of a hill, uh, in sight of the enemy, so we couldn't have fires.

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And he's talking about how there was sleet falling down.

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And he says, alls I have was this rubber blanket to lay on

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the ground and try to sleep.

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And none of us got any.

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And that was in his pension file.

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And he was talking about how stick he got from his service and he

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talked about this 18-year-old named Theodore Nurnberger was a German kid.

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From northeast Ohio, who from on the march to Shiloh, got rheumatism.

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And he said his feet gave out and he could never walk after that

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and he ended up being discharged.

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Uh, so those little details are in pension files?

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Yes.

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So you have to re So basically you have to research all of that.

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Yeah.

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You have to take all that time.

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That means you gotta stay there.

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For all those hours, get a hotel.

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Like, it's a lot.

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It's a, I I know when you research it's a lot.

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It's a, it's an experience.

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It's almost like you rode your, yeah.

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And, and you asked about distance wise.

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I mean, I, I tried to go to as many of the battlefields where they fought as I could

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because as you know, you understanding the place changes when you visit that place.

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Yes.

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Uh, great example for listeners that I always use with people

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is, um, if you go to Deley Plaza where President Kennedy was shot.

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I dunno if you've ever been,

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we haven't done it yet.

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Yeah,

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we still

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need to go

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in

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Dallas.

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We haven't done, well completely change your perspective on that event.

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When you go there, it's so small and the distance between like the school book

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depository window and where Kennedy was hit is so much closer than I realized.

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It was the distance from where Zapruder was standing when he filmed

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and where Kennedy was standing.

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Was so close.

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It was like 50 feet.

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It was so close.

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Yeah.

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Oh my gosh.

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You know, seeing the videos and watching it, you don't get that perspective.

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And then standing there, you understand it going to Shiloh.

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Mm-hmm.

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And seeing how broken the terrain is and seeing how uphill the

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confederates were attacking helps you understand that battle a lot better.

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Yeah.

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You know, just, I had to try and see those places as many as I could anyway.

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So what's the furthest one you went to?

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The furthest place I went that the 20th went was South Carolina,

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Charleston, South Carolina.

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And that was, that's another area that people don't talk about.

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'cause there weren't really any big battle fought during what they call

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the Carolinas campaign until they got into North Carolina and fought at

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Bentonville near the end of the war.

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But some of the most difficult days for the 20th Ohio was marching through the

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swamps of South Carolina in January.

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Oh wow.

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Where there are waste.

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Sometimes chest deep in water, holding their guns for hours,

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walking through these swamps and having to camp in those areas.

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And there's a description other place when, when they're in Louisiana, across

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the river from Vicksburg, where they're describing how they couldn't even eat

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their food because the bugs were so bad.

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That you opened your mouth and you flew in.

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Oh

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my gosh.

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So they would do these things where they would surround a campfire.

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They would sit around the campfire, and then they would surround behind them

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with cotton bales and they would light 'em on fire and try to use the smoke.

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The smoke, yeah.

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To protect them so they could open their mouths long enough to eat.

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Just little things like that.

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That's, that's wild.

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And, and one of the things that I thought was kind of neat that you talk about

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going to the location, kind of really understanding it that much more is when

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you and Jen went out to Shiloh, the park service was doing some controlled

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burns, and so there was, it was smokey, like it was smokey everywhere.

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And so I'm watching the footage.

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I didn't, I didn't have the opportunity to go.

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But I was watching the footage and Jen, I remember Jen coming home and

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she said, you know, it was smokey.

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They were doing all these controlled burns, and both of you

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guys commented like, we were both

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excited.

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I was like, that you guys were both excited because this is must have

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been what it looked like, right?

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Yeah.

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When they're firing these cannons and the smoke off in the air and all this stuff.

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And even just from me watching back some of the footage of, of you guys, you

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know, chatting and, and walking around some of the cemeteries, um, was, was

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really neat to, to see some of that.

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Yeah.

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It, uh, another one of those things you don't think about is that this is the

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era of before they had smokeless powder.

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Mm-hmm.

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And so couple thousand guys firing off a couple ies and pretty

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soon you can't see anything.

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Yep.

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And you can understand how quickly command and control can break down.

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You can understand how friendly fire incidents can become much common.

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You know, there's even description by some of the 20th Ohio guys

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after a long march, their uniforms looked gray just from all the dust.

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Sure.

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And then if you go into battle like that.

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You know, so stuff you don't think about.

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Yeah.

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Now one of the other things, so you guys, you on, on the video that where

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Jen and, and you were, were talking together, you went to where the 20th Ohio

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was, but you also went off to another area where you had, I believe another.

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Ancestor there.

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Was it, uh, the only part of the name that I can remember was

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Rob Robert Duval was last name.

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Oh

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yeah.

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Yeah.

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So Andrew Jackson Duval.

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Yeah.

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Andrew Jackson Duval.

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So can you tell us about him?

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So, Andrew Jackson Duval is from, uh, area right around Steubenville, Ohio.

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So it's about an hour south of me, but he was the, he was a brother

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to my third great grandfather and

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Okay.

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Um, he come from a military family.

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His father, Maureen Duval, uh, was.

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A colonel in the war of 1812, and he is a relative of Robert Duval.

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They, they have common ancestry.

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That's so cool.

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Um, but Andrew Jackson Duval is a really tough looking dude who, um, I'll try

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to pull up the picture for you, at least for the people that we want here.

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Uh, who was in the 77 Ohio and was killed, uh, on April 8th, 1862.

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So this would've been what they call the.

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The Battle of Fallen Timbers, which was this little skirmish with Nathan

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Bedford Forest right after, yeah.

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The Battle of Shiloh, the 77th Ohio was involved in.

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And here's him.

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He's a, I just think he's kind of a tough looking dude.

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Yeah.

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He, he looks like he could, uh, he could do some damage.

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Yeah.

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He was a sergeant and I did his pension file years ago, and when I

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got into his pension file and I opened up, there was a letter he wrote to

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his parents in the pension file.

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And I thought, why on earth their son was killed early in the war?

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Why would they give up this letter?

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And the reason why is because a lot of these guys were sending their money home

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to their families, to their parents,

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to support

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them.

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And in order to get a, for your child who was killed, you had to prove that

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they were financially supporting you.

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Gotcha.

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And so they sent this letter into the government because he wrote in there, here

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I'm put the money to help you guys out.

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And so they had to prove that.

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So there was this letter written a week before he was killed.

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Wow.

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That I'm holding in my hand.

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And it was like, it was brand new because it had been in this folder for 160 years.

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It was amazing.

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God, that's

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amazing.

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That's that's so, that's so cool.

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I mean, that's amazing.

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Like, that's just amazing.

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The sources are there, right?

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They're there for you.

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You just have to go find, find him.

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That's so much out

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there.

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Yeah.

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Like I always say like, people, you know, we're history content creators and, and

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people are always more content creators are coming and they always ask me, well.

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I feel like it's saturated.

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I'm like, yeah, but there's still a lot of history that needs to be seen and done.

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There's so much.

Speaker:

So you're fine.

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Don't worry.

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Right, right.

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So, um,

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and I think that's one of the things, and you, you guys know this too, is

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you try to find the angle that hasn't

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mm-hmm.

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Been given or you know, the lens through which to view.

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Because even at the big events that everybody talks about, there are still

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unique ways to tell those stories.

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Oh yeah.

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You know, so I'm telling the story of Vicksburg, which lots of people

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have written books about Vicksburg, but I'm looking at Vicksburg

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through the lens of one company.

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And their experience was different than other companies.

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Uh, you know, they were on the, they were right in the center of the line,

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and I was all excited to tell the story of them witnessing the surrender,

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because the surrender happened right in front of their position.

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If you go to the spot where the 20th Ohio was positioned at Vicksburg.

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You can see the, the marker for the surrender site.

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Yeah.

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But they weren't there anymore researching the book.

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I found out that two weeks before the surrender, there was a rumor that

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Joe Johnston was back in Jackson, Mississippi gathering an army.

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Mm-hmm.

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And so they put together this group called the Army of Observation to

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go keep an eye on Johnston so they didn't attack them from the rear.

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And the 20th Ohio was, was the only regimen in there.

Speaker:

Division that was pulled out of the line to go be a part

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of this army of observation.

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Oh gosh.

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So they didn't even get to see the surrender.

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Oh.

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Oh man.

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So, you know, before I wrote the book, I didn't know that.

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I just went there.

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I saw the marker for where they were stationed and assumed they saw

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the whole thing and they didn't.

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Yeah.

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And everybody's experience was different.

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That's so cool though.

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So, so tell me, what's the title of the book?

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How can we Get It?

Speaker:

I wanna know all about this.

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I, I can't wait

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to hear it.

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Yeah, so it's, uh, Trumbull County Boys and I'll, I'll show a picture here.

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This is my, um.

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My art, my like author's copy.

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And so like yeah.

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You know, there's a line in the middle of it says Be not, which won't be there in

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your copy

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can buy

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it.

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Yeah.

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In this, this picture for those who are watching, uh, the video, um, is actually

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a picture of four sergeants from the company in Company A. It was taken in

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Memphis, ah, in uh, January of 1863.

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Uh, and uh, this guy here, uh, this is William Downs, who was the first

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sergeant, ended up in Andersonville.

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Nine months.

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Oh my gosh.

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The war was captured in Atlanta.

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Um, and then this guy up here, uh, this is Zer Kraken book who has an amazing

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name, and he was actually Mortally wounded at the Battle of Atlanta.

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Um, so yeah, him and his, his nephew both were, um, sergeants in the company.

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They were the same age, but I called, called Trump County Boys because, um.

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The re the company was raised in Trumbull County, which is,

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I grew up in Trumbull County.

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Um, and Edward Downs, the company commander who wrote a lot of

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these letters home, often refer to them as the Trumble County Boys.

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It was what he called them.

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And so I just thought it was the perfect name for, uh, for it, even though they

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didn't all county, most of them did.

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That's how they got referred to in letters.

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Um, it trumbull county boys.com is the website.

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You can actually get an autographed copy of the book,

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hardcover copy of the book there.

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Now, um, it also has a sample chapter of the book you can read.

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It has a breakdown of every chapter of what you'll be reading

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about in each chapter, so you can see what the whole story is.

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Uh, and then I've got photos as many of the guys as I found

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photos for from the company.

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So you can kind of learn, you know, get this their faces and learn

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who these guys were a little bit.

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Um, it's also gonna be available on Amazon.

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Uh, the release date is April 6th.

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So by the time people watch this, there is a chance that

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it's available on Amazon already.

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Um, uh, both hardcover and uh, paperback.

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But if you wanna get that signed copy, you can do that now on trumble account

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voice.com or just watch for on Amazon.

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Very cool.

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And of course, vlogging through history.

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You can still see you on YouTube and, uh, we will have a

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collaboration video coming out soon.

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Yes.

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So people will learn about me.

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No, I'm joking.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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I obviously.

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I want as many people as possible to, to follow you guys.

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And one of the things I just love, uh, Jen in particular for you, is

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that I, I say this all the time.

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We need more women doing history.

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Thank

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you.

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Uh, we don't have nearly enough women.

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You know, my channel, I look at the demographics, my channel's

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92% male, the audience.

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Uh, so we need women telling these stories from a woman's perspective.

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And of course, you guys both have the military perspective as well.

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Yeah.

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Which gives you a unique lens through which.

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To view all of this and, uh, I just, I think it's needed and, and I love what you

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guys do and I love watching your channel and I love that we're gonna get to hang

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out, uh, all of us, uh, the three of us plus some other friends in Gettysburg.

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Yeah, I'm super excited.

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Thank you, Chris.

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I mean, that's one of the things I love about being a history content creator.

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We've all helped each other.

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Because I think historians like the, again, the authenticity of your book,

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the authenticity of real people's lives being there, what they went through, what

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they ate, what they saw, what they drew.

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We understand even telling these stories, the authenticity of it.

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And so I think we see like kindred spirits in each other.

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And so, um.

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Yeah, working together is always a treat, and I was very excited to be

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able to meet you and to tell this story, and I'm looking forward to the book

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and then seeing you next weekend too.

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Yeah.

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Well, for our listeners and our watchers, um, again, thanks

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for, for hanging with us.

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If you guys wanna find the book, remember it's called Trumble County

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boys@trumblecountyboys.com, where you can look it up on Amazon.

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I encourage you guys to go check it out because again, as the

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non-story nerd, uh, in this part, in the part of this conversation.

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One of the things I enjoy is learning about those stories and those amazing

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stories and uncovering this stranger than fiction real life stories,

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these just amazing things that, that, uh, the researchers and the

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historians in the room, which is not me, but that you guys uncover.

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And so I sounds to me like there's gonna be plenty of those in this book.

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So that's Trumble County Boys.

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Head over to trumbull county boys.com and uh, I'll include

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links in our show notes and we'll, we'll talk to you guys next time.

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Thank you.

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Thank

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you.

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Awesome.

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Thank you.

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This has been a Walk with History, production Talk with History is

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created, hosted by me, Scott Benny, episode Researched by Jennifer Benny.

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Check out the show notes for links and references mentioned in this episode.

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Talk with History supported by our community at the History Road trip.

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Dot com, our return.

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Thanks.

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Go out to our lifetime members to help keep us going.

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Thank you to Doug Liberty.

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Larry Myers.

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Patrick Benny, Gail Cooper, Christie Coates, Calvin Gifford, Courtney Sini,

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Jean Noah, Larry Mitchell, Tommy Anderson, Susan Soles, Bruce Lynch, Dino Garner,

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Mark Barrett, Don Kennedy and John Zsi.

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Make sure you hit that follow button in that podcast player

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and we'll talk to you next time.

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About the Podcast

Talk With History: Discover Your History Road Trip
A Historian and Navy Veteran talk about traveling to historic locations
Helping you explore historic locations to personally connect with the past.

🔎 Uncover the stories behind history's most fascinating places!

🗺️ 🧳 Travel with Scott (the host) and Jenn (a historian and former Navy pilot) as they give you the inside scoop on exciting journeys to iconic battlefields, hidden historical landmarks, renowned museums, and more. ️

➡️ 📝 Plan your next history adventure.
➡️➡️ 📖 Brush up on history before your next trip!
➡️➡️➡️ 🎧 Learn fascinating stories from experts and fellow travelers.

📍 Save what you want. Our episode show notes are packed with map links, video resources, and helpful information.

If you made it here - you chose wisely.

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About your hosts

Scott B

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Host of the Talk With History podcast, Producer over at Walk with History on YouTube, and Editor of TheHistoryRoadTrip.com

Jennifer B

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Former Naval Aviator turned Historian and a loyal Penn Stater. (WE ARE!) I earned my Masters in American History and graduate certificate in Museum Studies, from the University of Memphis.

The Talk with History podcast gives Scott and me a chance to go deeper into the details of our Walk with History YouTube videos and gives you a behind-the-scenes look at our history-inspired adventures.

Join us as we talk about these real-world historic locations and learn about the events that continue to impact you today!