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-   -   Have you ever been to a civil war re-enactment? (http://www.sonicyouth.com/gossip/showthread.php?t=11496)

sonicl 03.20.2007 11:54 AM

Have you ever been to a civil war re-enactment?
 
Well?

noumenal 03.20.2007 11:56 AM

No, but I read a good book called Confederates in the Attic: Dispatches from the Unfinished Civil War by Tony Horwitz. He participates in some re-enactments and then writes about it.

My dad is a civil war buff, so I've visited several battlegrounds. Eh.

fishmonkey 03.20.2007 11:58 AM

no i havent but i would like to.

sounds like fun.

noumenal 03.20.2007 11:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by swa(y)

i could just live in that era of time...things were so good ya know?



Yeah, back then negroes stayed in their place. :confused:??

sonicl 03.20.2007 12:02 PM

I find the people who take part in these re-enactments a little scary. History is cool, we wouldn't be where we are now without it, but some people seem to take it all a little too seriously.

jon boy 03.20.2007 12:03 PM

i went for a walk one sunday years ago and wandered into a field to see two large groups of people carrying swords and shields etc and dressed up in full lord of the rings style garb. i literally could not stop laughing when they started casting spells on eachother and trying to get eachother with their spears and stuff. my friends had to literally carry me out of the field because i was laughing so much.

noumenal 03.20.2007 12:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sonicl
I find the people who take part in these re-enactments a little scary. History is cool, we wouldn't be where we are now without it, but some people seem to take it all a little too seriously.


Man, you'd like that book I mentioned.

schizophrenicroom 03.20.2007 12:09 PM

i know a ton of band kids that are drummers in re-enactments.

pantophobia 03.20.2007 12:16 PM

no, but i have been here, not far from where Jenn lives

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antietam

The Battle of Antietam (also known as the Battle of Sharpsburg, particularly in the South), fought on September 17, 1862, near Sharpsburg, Maryland, and Antietam Creek, as part of the Maryland Campaign, was the first major battle in the American Civil War to take place on Northern soil. It was the bloodiest single-day battle in American history, with almost 23,000 casualties.[1]

After pursuing Confederate General Robert E. Lee into Maryland, Union Army Major General George B. McClellan launched attacks against Lee's army, in defensive positions behind Antietam Creek. Despite having superiority of numbers, McClellan's attack failed to achieve concentration of mass, resulting in a three-phase battle that Lee was able to counter by shifting forces to meet each challenge. Despite ample reserve forces that could have been deployed to exploit localized successes, McClellan failed to destroy Lee's army. Nevertheless, Lee's invasion of Maryland was ended, and he was able to withdraw his army back to Virginia without interference from the cautious McClellan. Although the battle was tactically inconclusive, it had unique significance as enough of a victory to give President Abraham Lincoln the confidence to announce his Emancipation Proclamation.

king_buzzo 03.20.2007 12:17 PM

no.

Everyneurotic 03.20.2007 12:22 PM

i wish i had!!!

just because the idea is so absurb, it garanties good times.

gmku 03.20.2007 12:26 PM

Hmm, there's no poll option like, "Why the fuck would I spend my time doing something so completely inane and utterly mindnumbing boring!?"

gmku 03.20.2007 12:28 PM

I'd sooner read a book about UFOs. Or cut my toenails.

floatingslowly 03.20.2007 12:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by noumenal
Yeah, back then negroes stayed in their place. :confused:??


not on my family's watch.

we were the first people to assist in the underground railroad in ohio. in fact, John Brown used to hide out in the barn. :)

the north (in general) really didn't care about slaves so much as evening out the disparity between labor costs....but some people certainly did care. it's one of the few things my ancestors did that I can be proud of.***

on topic: I've never been to one, but I'd certainly go watch. history is important and a visual representation would certainly go a long way in driving home just how bad it really was for both sides.



***my great-great-uncle (I think that's enough "greats") was General Travis (of alamo fame). I could have had a free-ride at any school in Texas due to him being a "Texas Hero", however that's blood money that I'll never touch.

Anngella 03.20.2007 03:05 PM

Yeah, I go all the time. Like every single day of the week. That's like my number one favorite thing to do of all time.

In other words, I've never been to one.

thewall91 03.20.2007 04:54 PM

i went to one a few years ago because it was "what was going on" in the next town over when i was visiting my parents. i was kind of excited to see what kind of people actually go to these things and thought i'd get to witness some cultural phenomenon. i was actually bored out of my skull. they had shooting contests and stuff but there was no "battle" re-enactment. so a guy in blue would go shoot a gun and try to hit something, then a guy in grey would. it was a nice day out and you could buy hot dogs. that was probably the most exciting part.

Hip Priest 03.20.2007 06:20 PM

I happen to be quite the student of Oliver Cromwell and the English Civil Wars, and I've been to a few re-enactments. Around the city walls in Chester is always a good place (there was a protracted siege there, back in the day). I should quite like to have a go at 17th century life, as I love so many aspects of it's culture. I'd have lolled around quite happily searching out King Charles sympathisers and despatching them fastly to their maker.

If needs ever be, I know how to use a flintlock pistol and a polearm. Very usefull in downtown Birkenhead on a Saturday night.

Quote:

Originally Posted by sonicl
I find the people who take part in these re-enactments a little scary. History is cool, we wouldn't be where we are now without it, but some people seem to take it all a little too seriously.


Ha ha, you may be right. I've talked to some of the bods from the very serious indeed Wirral Skip Felagh (or something similar) Viking re-enactment group; they spend months making chainmail armour out of those round keyring links. Great people, they are. By researching the real history and living the life, they contribute a great deal.

Apart from the re-enactment side of things, it's often people like that who do hardcore research and write the really good local history books.

In another Viking-related bit of rubbish, that has even less to do with this thread than the two preceding paragraphs, I would like to say tat I live a ten minute walk from Prenton PArk, the ground of mighty football warriors Tranmere Rovers. Tranmere Rovers are the only league team with a Norwegian Viking name, and every week many Norwegians make the trip to support the club.

Danny Himself 03.20.2007 06:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hip Priest

If needs ever be, I know how to use a flintlock pistol and a polearm. Very usefull in downtown Birkenhead on a Saturday night.


Where's downtown Birkenhead?

Hip Priest 03.20.2007 06:35 PM

I wouldn't know. But if I ever find myself there, on a Saturday night, surrounded by the assorted ne'er-do-wells who I imagine frequent that kind of area, I shall be alright as long as there's a handy flintlock or polearm.

Charing Cross or Argyle Street, I should think. When we go to the theatre, which is also at Charing Cross, there seems to be a bit of nightlife going on around and about. Makes me feel uneasy, to be quite frank.

Hip Priest 03.20.2007 06:35 PM

My partner informs me that there are several nightclubs in the Argyle Street area.


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