Shared by:rmoor

Nathan Bedford Forrest and Fort Pillow

Written by
Format: M4B
Bitrate: 128 Kbps

The battlefield reputation of Confederate general Nathan Bedford Forrest, long recognized as a formidable warrior, has been shaped by one infamous wartime incident. At Fort Pillow in 1864, the attack by Confederate forces under Forrest’s command left many of the Tennessee Unionists and black soldiers garrisoned there dead in a confrontation widely labeled as a “massacre.” In The River Was Dyed with Blood, best-selling Forrest biographer Brian Steel Wills argues that although atrocities did occur after the fall of the fort, Forrest did not order or intend a systematic execution of its defenders. Rather, the general’s great failing was losing control of his troops.

A prewar slave trader and owner, Forrest was a controversial figure throughout his lifetime. Because the attack on Fort Pillow—which, as Forrest wrote, left the nearby waters “dyed with blood”—occurred in an election year, Republicans used him as a convenient Confederate scapegoat to marshal support for the war. After the war he also became closely associated with the spread of the Ku Klux Klan. Consequently, the man himself, and the truth about Fort Pillow, has remained buried beneath myths, legends, popular depictions, and disputes about the events themselves.

Wills sets what took place at Fort Pillow in the context of other wartime excesses from the American Revolution to World War II and Vietnam, as well as the cultural transformations brought on by the Civil War. Confederates viewed black Union soldiers as the embodiment of slave rebellion and reacted accordingly. Nevertheless, Wills concludes that the engagement was neither a massacre carried out deliberately by Forrest, as charged by a congressional committee, nor solely a northern fabrication meant to discredit him and the Confederate States of America, as pro-Southern apologists have suggested. The battle-scarred fighter with his homespun aphorisms was neither an infallible warrior nor a heartless butcher, but a product of his time and his heritage.

Announce URL: udp://tracker.leechers-paradise.org:6969/announce
This Torrent also has several backup trackers
Tracker: udp://tracker.leechers-paradise.org:6969/announce
Tracker: udp://tracker.coppersurfer.tk:6969/announce
Tracker: udp://tracker.open-internet.nl:6969/announce
Tracker: udp://tracker.opentrackr.org:1337/announce
Tracker: udp://tracker.tiny-vps.com:6969/announce
Tracker: udp://open.demonii.si:1337/announce
Tracker: udp://tracker.torrent.eu.org:451/announce
Tracker: udp://thetracker.org:80/announce
Tracker: http://open.trackerlist.xyz:80/announce
Tracker: http://tracker2.dler.org:80/announce
Tracker: http://googer.cc:1337/announce
Tracker: http://open.acgnxtracker.com:80/announce
Tracker: udp://exodus.desync.com:6969/announce
Tracker: udp://open.stealth.si:80/announce
Tracker: udp://opentor.org:2710/announce
Tracker: udp://tracker.dler.org:6969/announce
Creation Date: Sun, 02 Jan 2022 13:38:55 +0100
This is a Multifile Torrent
The River Was Dyed with Blood .cue 883 Bytes
The River Was Dyed with Blood .nfo 1.24 KBs
The River Was Dyed with Blood .jpg 79.62 KBs
The River Was Dyed with Blood .m4b 293.58 MBs
Combined File Size: 293.66 MBs
Piece Size: 512 KBs
Comment: Updated by History Audiobook
Encoding: UTF-8
Info Hash: 840a4a115bdf6335426b27955ee63747ad98a6fd
Torrent Download: Torrent Free Downloads
Tips: Sometimes the torrent health info isn’t accurate, so you can download the file and check it out or try the following downloads.
Direct Download: Start Direct Download
Tips: You could try out alternative bittorrent clients.
Secured Download: Download Files Now
AD: