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Edgar W. Clark fought in 13 of the most famous battles of the Civil War for the 3rd Michigan Infantry Regiment. Over 40 days of combat, he survived the battles of Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, Spotsylvania and Petersburg. He was shot in the left knee at Petersburg and survived amputation and gangrene. Thanks to 181 letters sent home to his wife, Catherine, in Lansing, Mich., his great-great-grandson, Michael P. Clark, takes us on Edgar’s journey, including commentary on the military, political and social issues of the time. WEB PHOTO: Monument to 3rd Michigan in Peach Orchard at Gettysburg. LOGO PHOTO: Hazel Grove at Chancellorsville.
Episodes

Wednesday Jul 03, 2024
Civil War Survivor - Episode 13
Wednesday Jul 03, 2024
Wednesday Jul 03, 2024
We examine the most powerful, influential and consequential propaganda campaign in American history, the Lost Cause myth of the Civil War. With religious-style fervor, Confederate apologists turned fiction into history, villains into heroes and created rationalizations for enslaving 4 million human beings. Several historians and authors are interviewed.

Wednesday Apr 03, 2024
Civil War Survivor - Episode 12
Wednesday Apr 03, 2024
Wednesday Apr 03, 2024
Mary Todd Lincoln is one of the most interesting characters in the Civil War. She turbocharged Abraham Lincoln's ambition, especially when his political career seemed at a low ebb. Yet her strong personality could rub people the wrong way. To better understand her, I interviewed one of the nation's premier experts on Abraham Lincoln, Michael Burlingame. He is the author of many books, including "An American Marriage: The Untold Story of Abraham Lincoln and Mary Todd." This book is diligently researched and thus sorts fact from rumor. Burlingame is a history professor at the University of Illinois - Springfield.

Wednesday Mar 27, 2024
Civil War Survivor - Episode 11
Wednesday Mar 27, 2024
Wednesday Mar 27, 2024
One of the most interesting and important characters in America's Civil War history is Henry Clay of Kentucky. Like Thomas Jefferson, he made antislavery statements and yet enslaved many people. Clay also was instrumental in developing compromises between slave states and anti-slave states. Though the compromises eventually had to fail -- there is no compromise on freedom -- the delays made possible the presidency of Abraham Lincoln. To understand Clay, I interviewed Eric Brooks, curator at Ashland, the Henry Clay Estate. The expertise of Brooks is on display here. Follow my website: civilwarsurvivor.com.

Monday Mar 25, 2024
Civil War Survivor -Episode 10
Monday Mar 25, 2024
Monday Mar 25, 2024
When I discovered that a female nurse, basically acting like a medic, heroically called Union troops forward at Chancellorsville for the 3rd Michigan Infantry Regiment, I realized there was an interesting tale. The story of women who fought as men in combat units in the Civil War had only been superficially examined in modern times. But DeAnne Blanton and Lauren Cook did a masterful job of getting to the bottom in their groundbreaking book, "They Fought Like Demons: Women Soldiers in the American Civil War." What follows is my interview with Blaton.

Sunday Mar 24, 2024
Civil War Survivor - Episode 9
Sunday Mar 24, 2024
Sunday Mar 24, 2024
In a slight departure, we examine the maternal branch of my family. My mother's ancestors, the Hamlins of Sussex County, freed their enslaved people. Four members of the Hamlins freed 17 people ranging in age from six months to 57 years in 1782 and 1788. This was no coincidence. For 24 years, from 1782 to 1806, the state of Virginia made it relatively easy to free enslaved people. To put this into context, I interviewed two experts: Tom Costa is a history professor at the University of Virginia-Wise and Eva Sheppard Wolf is a history professor at San Francisco State University and the author of "Race and Liberty in the New Nation: Emancipation in Virginia from the Revolution to Nat Turner's Rebellion." Wolf masterfully explains the contradictions and ironies in the slave system.

Friday Mar 22, 2024
Civil War Survivor - Episode 2
Friday Mar 22, 2024
Friday Mar 22, 2024
Edgar W. Clark left his home in Lansing, Mich., his wife and two daughters, ages 1 and 3, to join the 3rd Michigan Regiment. Though it was organized out of Grand Rapids, the roster shows soldiers from all over Michigan. Edgar almost at once became homesick but found that a soldier's life initially was pretty easy. Finally, the author explains why primary sources prove the Civil War was fought over slavery. For more info on this project, see the website: civilwarsurvivor.com.

Friday Mar 22, 2024
Civil War Survivor - Episode 6
Friday Mar 22, 2024
Friday Mar 22, 2024
A month after Gettysburg, Edgar W. Clark is sent along with the 3rd Michigan Infantry Regiment to protect draft offices in New York. He survives the winter and then joins the continuous battles of the Overland Campaign in the summer of 1864. For more info on this project, see the website: civilwarsurvivor.com.

Friday Mar 22, 2024
Civil War Survivor - Episode 7
Friday Mar 22, 2024
Friday Mar 22, 2024
For the first time, Gen. U.S. Grant outsmarts Gen. Robert E. Lee, brilliantly moving his forces across the James River to the railroad center of Petersburg, south of Richmond. But poor generalship reduces the advantage. Edgar W. Clark meets his fate on the second day's battle. For more info on this project, see the website: civilwarsurvivor.com.