Civil War Unpacked

Episode 0 – “The Siege That Shaped the End”

6 min · 18 de oct de 2025
Portada del episodio Episode 0 – “The Siege That Shaped the End”

Descripción

Before the trenches, before the Crater, before ten months of siege turned the Virginia clay red — there was a plan. In this introductory episode, host William Kellett sets the stage for Civil War Unpacked: The Petersburg Campaign. Through vivid narration and the voices of soldiers and civilians, we explore why the siege of Petersburg became the longest and most consequential operation of the American Civil War. Discover how Grant’s bold crossing of the James River and Lee’s desperate defense would reshape not only the course of the war, but the very nature of modern combat. Civil War Unpacked — where every campaign has a heartbeat, and every battle a voice. #CivilWarUnpacked #PetersburgCampaign #SiegeOfPetersburg #GrantVsLee #CivilWarPodcast #AmericanHistoryPodcast #TrenchWarfareBegins

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2 episodios

episode Episode 0 – “The Siege That Shaped the End” artwork

Episode 0 – “The Siege That Shaped the End”

Before the trenches, before the Crater, before ten months of siege turned the Virginia clay red — there was a plan. In this introductory episode, host William Kellett sets the stage for Civil War Unpacked: The Petersburg Campaign. Through vivid narration and the voices of soldiers and civilians, we explore why the siege of Petersburg became the longest and most consequential operation of the American Civil War. Discover how Grant’s bold crossing of the James River and Lee’s desperate defense would reshape not only the course of the war, but the very nature of modern combat. Civil War Unpacked — where every campaign has a heartbeat, and every battle a voice. #CivilWarUnpacked #PetersburgCampaign #SiegeOfPetersburg #GrantVsLee #CivilWarPodcast #AmericanHistoryPodcast #TrenchWarfareBegins

18 de oct de 20256 min
episode In the Trenches: The Human Cost of the Petersburg Campaign artwork

In the Trenches: The Human Cost of the Petersburg Campaign

During the grueling nine-month Siege of Petersburg (June 1864 – April 1865), the lines between Union and Confederate soldiers blurred in unexpected ways. Amid the mud, gunfire, and endless trench warfare, acts of fraternization—moments of contact, conversation, and even compassion—emerged across the no-man’s-land dividing the two armies. This episode explores how exhausted soldiers on both sides reached across enemy lines to trade tobacco for coffee, share news and laughter, and, for brief moments, recognize one another’s shared humanity. Drawing on firsthand accounts from soldiers like Corporal Henry W. Tisdale of the 35th Massachusetts Infantry and Sam Watkins of the 1st Tennessee Infantry, as well as reflections by Captain Robert Stiles and others, the episode reveals the deeply human undercurrents of a campaign often remembered only for its brutality. Through period music and primary-source narration, In the Trenches: The Human Cost of the Petersburg Campaign examines how these fleeting exchanges reflected both defiance and empathy—and what they tell us about the endurance of humanity even amid the darkest days of war. * Henry W. Tisdale, Diary of Henry W. Tisdale, 35th Massachusetts Infantry, entry from September 1864, Massachusetts Historical Society. * Sam R. Watkins, Company Aytch: Or, a Side Show of the Big Show (1882), p. 242. * Robert Cruikshank, Letters, 50th New York Engineers, in George C. Rable, Civil Wars: Women and the Crisis of Southern Nationalism (University of Illinois Press, 1989), p. 114. * Confederate General Orders, Army of Northern Virginia, September 30, 1864, in Official Records, Series I, Vol. 42. * Robert Stiles, Four Years Under Marse Robert (New York: Scribner’s, 1903), p. 343. * A. Wilson Greene, The Final Battles of the Petersburg Campaign: Breaking the Backbone of the Rebellion (University of Tennessee Press, 2008), p. 77.

6 de oct de 20253 min