yo TERRY! its getting cold out and i havent seen any of those tim travels skullys on the shelves at the local loves or pilots yet....wtf is up with that😂🤔
How do they know where to place the civil war markers? Was the documentation that good on positions? Are they general, as in we know this regiment was somewhere east of the hill and then who was next to them or is it more accurate? Very interesting. I have to go see it.
I like civil war history but really am into rev war history ever since my dad was stationed in New London. We used to watch the Battle of Fort Griswold every year. Fucking Arnold. Dude was from Norwich.
Samuel Churchill Clark, the grandson of famed explorer William Clark and the son of noted designer-architect Meriwether Lewis Clark, was born in St. Louis in 1842. He entered West Point in 1859, but left the academy when the Civil War began and enlisted as a private in the Missouri State Guard. He fought as an artilleryman at the Siege of Lexington in September 1861, and became the commander of a State Guard artillery battery [later transferred to Confederate service in January 1862 as the 2nd Missouri Light Artillery]. On March 8, 1862, at the Battle of Pea Ridge, the nineteen-year-old Clark was decapitated by a Union artillery round. Churchill Clark was mourned by the Missourians in the Confederate ranks, including General Sterling Price. When he learned of Clark’s death, Price exclaimed, “My God, is my boy dead?”
Excellent film sir Terry 👏
Hey Terry I was all set for that Christopher Columbus history lesson. 😅. Stay safe
Very interesting info and video about Gettysburg 👍
You will never die of thirst in Gettysburg.
yo TERRY! its getting cold out and i havent seen any of those tim travels skullys on the shelves at the local loves or pilots yet....wtf is up with that😂🤔
@@412hwc I know I’m letting you down…
@@timtravels116 mannn are u😔
They’re Indian.. not Canadian
If they are currently residing in Canada, and driving a licensed vehicle out of Canada, they are Canadian.
@@JR-lb4ngNo. If they are a citizen, they are Canadian.
@@AHNH538 either way they need to stay in Canada. Canadians are some of the worst drivers I have encountered, both Canadian and those that live there
How do they know where to place the civil war markers? Was the documentation that good on positions? Are they general, as in we know this regiment was somewhere east of the hill and then who was next to them or is it more accurate? Very interesting. I have to go see it.
@@mrcain6894 They use after action reports, correspondence, first hand accounts and even notes taken by burial details.
Awesome video!!!!!
You find a gig yet?
This is awesome! Thanks!
Hi!
New career being foreshadowed?
Yeah. But I don’t know the timing or what it’ll look like. Yet.
Also b-1 drivers
I like civil war history but really am into rev war history ever since my dad was stationed in New London. We used to watch the Battle of Fort Griswold every year. Fucking Arnold. Dude was from Norwich.
Spent 3 hours or so yesterday walking around the battlefield at Pea Ridge Arkansas.
I was there once years ago. My memory is it’s pretty big.
@@timtravels116 yes it is. A lot of interesting story’s from that battle.
Samuel Churchill Clark, the grandson of famed explorer William Clark and the son of noted designer-architect Meriwether Lewis Clark, was born in St. Louis in 1842. He entered West Point in 1859, but left the academy when the Civil War began and enlisted as a private in the Missouri State Guard. He fought as an artilleryman at the Siege of Lexington in September 1861, and became the commander of a State Guard artillery battery [later transferred to Confederate service in January 1862 as the 2nd Missouri Light Artillery]. On March 8, 1862, at the Battle of Pea Ridge, the nineteen-year-old Clark was decapitated by a Union artillery round. Churchill Clark was mourned by the Missourians in the Confederate ranks, including General Sterling Price. When he learned of Clark’s death, Price exclaimed, “My God, is my boy dead?”
Professor Terry!