Episode notes
Imagine a Civil War monument that isn't a pristine bronze statue erected decades later by grandchildren, but a small, angry stone fortress built by survivors while the gunpowder was still thick in the air. In this episode of pplpod, we conduct a structural archaeology of the Hazen Brigade Monument at Stones River National Battlefield. We deconstruct the "Hell’s Half Acre" stand of December 1862, where 1,300 men held the hinge of a collapsing Union line against four waves of Confederate assaults. We unpack the transition from memory to immediate reaction, analyzing why soldiers returned to the "meat grinder" in the summer of 1863 to stack hand-hewn limestone blocks while the war was still undecided. We explore the literary connection to Ambrose Bierce, the young topographic engine ...