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Colonel Turner G. Morehead 106th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry |
Stephen
Vincent Benet recounts the futility and frustration of smoothly translating a
military plan of execution into the hard and cold reality of battle as he
describes the Battle of Bull Run in his poem John Brown’s Body.
This poem
opens William Hasslers classic book George
B. McClellan Shield of the Union.
"If you take a flat map and move wooden blocks upon it
strategically, The thing looks well, the blocks behave as they should.
The science of war is moving live men like blocks
And getting the blocks into place at a fixed moment.
But it takes time to mold your men into blocks
And flat maps turn into country where creeks and gullies
Hamper your wooden squares. They stick in the brush,
They are tired and rest, they straggle after ripe blackberries,
And you cannot lift them up in your hand and move them.
A string of blocks curling smoothly around the left
Of another string of blocks are slow
To move, when they start they take too long on the way –
The General loses his stars and the block-men die
In unstrategic defiance of martial law
Because still used to just being men, not block-parts
As one of a priveleged number of people - rangers, volunteers and battlefield guides who humbly look forward to supporting
the commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the Battle of
Antietam, it will be our challenge, and our honor to turn the abstract
battlelines on a map, and the little wooden block-men as Benet refers to them,
into the living breathing men like Colonel Morehead pictured above and a hundred thousand others who fought ferociously, demonstrated unbelievable
bravery, feared for their lives, witnessed indescribable carnage, died in
droves, were wounded and maimed by the thousands, or who survived to fight
other battles, and maybe even survive this terrible war, to forever change
America forever. It is in large measure
to them that we work so hard to get it right at this years battle anniversary now
only 50 days away. Come to Sharpsburg in September.
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