THE MAKING OF A NATION - Abraham Lincoln, Part 12
By Fran Beardsley
Broadcast: March 24, 2005
THE MAKING OF A NATION -- a program in Special English.
The early weeks of eighteen-sixty-three gave the American Civil War a new
political direction. President Abraham Lincoln had announced the Emancipation
Proclamation. That measure freed Negro slaves in the rebel states of the south.
No longer was the Civil War a struggle just to save the Union. It had become a
struggle for human freedom.
There was a change on the military side of the war, too. President Lincoln named
a new commander for the Union's Army of the Potomac. This was the force that
would try again to capture the Confederate capital at Richmond, Virginia.
I'm Kay Gallant. Today, Harry Monroe and I report on events during the spring of
eighteen-sixty-three.
General Joe Hooker was the new commander of the Army of the Potomac. He replaced
General Ambrose Burnside, when Burnside suffered a terrible defeat at
Fredericksburg, Virginia, at the end of eighteen-sixty-two. Burnside had
replaced General George McClellan, when McClellan kept refusing to obey
President Lincoln's orders.
Hooker had one hundred thirty thousand men. They were well-trained and
well-supplied.
The Confederate force opposing Hooker's was under the command of General Robert
E. Lee. Lee had only about sixty-thousand men. They did not have good equipment.
And their supplies were low. But their fighting spirit was high. They had
defeated the Union army before. They were sure they could do it again.
Lee's army still held strong defensive positions along high ground south of
Fredericksburg. This was almost halfway between the capitals of the opposing
sides: Washington and Richmond.
General Hooker did not plan to make the same mistake which General Burnside made
at Fredericksburg. Burnside had thrown his army against Lee's defensive
positions six times. Each time, the Confederates pushed them back easily. In one
day of fighting, more than twelve-thousand Union soldiers were killed or
wounded.
General Hooker had re-built the Army of the Potomac. Now he was ready to carry
out his plan against General Lee.
Hooker left half his men at Fredericksburg, in front of Lee's army. He would
move the other half into position behind Lee's army. If Lee turned to meet him,
the troops at Fredericksburg would attack. The Confederate army would be caught
between two powerful forces. Lee would have to withdraw...or lose his army.
Hooker moved around past the end of Lee's line. Then he turned and started
marching back behind it.
It was a hard march through thick woods, and across rough hills and valleys. The
country was so wild that it was called the wilderness.
On the last day of April, eighteen-sixty-three, the Union force reached
Chancellorsville. Chancellorsville was a crossroads near the edge of the
wilderness. The next day, the soldiers would be in open country. There, General
Hooker could make the best use of his men.
Hooker was extremely pleased. Everything was going as he had planned. He told
his officers: "I have Lee in one hand and Richmond in the other."
The next day, Union soldiers began moving out of Chancellorsville and the
wilderness. They did not get far. They ran into several thousand Confederate
soldiers. Lee had sent them to slow the Union force.
The Confederate force was weak. General Hooker's officers believed they could
smash through it without difficulty. They did not get a chance to try.
Hooker sent new orders: break off the fight. Return to Chancellorsville. Put up
defensive positions.
Hooker's officers were shocked. They protested. Hooker stood firm. He said, "Lee
must fight me on my own ground."
Robert E. Lee could not understand why the Union force had returned to
Chancellorsville. But he was happy it did. Now he had time to prepare his men
for battle.
Lee met that night with his top general, Stonewall Jackson. They discussed the
best way to attack the Union force.
The center of the Union line was strong. The right side was not. Jackson was
sure he could get around behind it. Lee asked Jackson how many men he would
take. "All of them," Jackson answered. "Twenty-eight thousand."
This meant Lee would have only fourteen thousand men to face General Hooker. If
the Union force attacked before Stonewall Jackson got into position, Lee could
not possibly hold it back.
Lee was taking a huge chance. He thought about it for a moment. Then he told
Jackson to get started.
Jackson's men began to leave the next morning. Union soldiers watched as they
marched away. General Hooker thought Lee was withdrawing.
It took Jackson only half a day to get behind the Union force. He spent a few
more hours putting his troops into position. Then he attacked. It was six
o'clock in the evening.
The right end of the Union force was not prepared for an attack. The soldiers
could not believe their eyes when they saw Confederate troops running out of the
woods behind them. Many Union soldiers were killed or wounded. Thousands fled.
The sun went down. The fighting continued under a bright moon. The Confederate
troops kept moving forward. The Union troops kept falling back. One northern
soldier wrote later: "Darkness was upon us. Jackson was upon us. And fear was
upon us."
Jackson seemed to be everywhere. He rode his horse among his men, urging them
forward. He would not let the Union force escape.
As Jackson and some of his officers rode into a cleared area of the woods, shots
rang out. The bullets came from Confederate guns. The Confederate soldiers
thought they were firing on Union officers.
Jackson fell from his horse. Two bullets had smashed his left arm. Another
bullet had hit his right hand. He was hurried to the back of the line. A doctor
quickly cut off his left arm and stopped the heavy bleeding.
Jackson seemed to get better. Then he developed pneumonia. He was unconscious
most of the time. He seemed to dream of battle, and shouted commands to his
officers. Then he grew quiet. He opened his eyes and said, "Let us pass over the
river and rest in the shade of the trees."
The great Confederate General, Stonewall Jackson, was dead.
While Jackson lay dying, the battle of Chancellorsville continued.
Robert E. Lee's Confederate army was much smaller than Joe Hooker's Union army.
But for five days, Lee kept part of his army moving between Chancellorsville and
Fredericksburg. Wherever the Union army attacked, Lee quickly added more men to
his lines. The Union army could not break through.
The fighting was taking place on the south side of the Rappahannock River. The
Union army's supply lines were on the north side.
Spring rains were beginning to make the Rappahannock rise. General Hooker did
not want to get trapped without food and ammunition. So he ordered his men back
across the river.
The south had won the battle of Chancellorsville. Robert E. Lee was sure of
that. Once again, he had forced back the Army of the Potomac. But the Union army
was not hurt seriously. New soldiers would soon take the place of those lost in
battle.
Lee, however, would find it more difficult to replace his soldiers. The south
was running out of manpower. Every Confederate army needed men -- more and more
men. Yet fewer and fewer southern boys were willing to become soldiers.
Anti-war movements were, in fact, active in both the north and south. There were
a number of protests against the military draft. Some turned violent.
In the north, a political party was created to oppose the Civil War. Leaders of
this peace party were called Copperheads. They got the name because they wore a
copper penny showing the head of an Indian.
That will be our story in our next program on the Civil War.
You have been listening to the Special English program, THE MAKING OF A NATION.
Your narrators were Kay Gallant and Harry Monroe. Our program was written by
Frank Beardsley.
-----------------
THE MAKING OF A NATION is an American history series written with English
learners in mind. Developed as a radio show, each weekly program is 15 minutes
long. The series begins in prehistoric times and currently ends with the
presidential election of 2000.
Both the text and sound of each week's program can be downloaded from
voaspecialenglish.com. Past shows can also be found on the site.
There are more than 200 programs in the complete series, which starts over again
every five years. Most of the shows were produced a long time ago. This explains
why a few words here and there may sound a little dated. In fact, the series has
even outlived some of the announcers. But we know from our audience that THE
MAKING OF A NATION is the most popular of the feature programs in VOA Special
English.
VOA Special English is a radio, TV and Internet service of the Voice of America.
Programs are written with a limited vocabulary and are read at a slower speed.
The purpose is to help people improve their American English as they learn about
news and other subjects.
@