- Joined
- Jul 30, 2018
- Location
- Germany
"For every Southern boy fourteen years old, not once but whenever he wants it, there is the instant when it's still not yet two o'clock on that July afternoon in 1863…"
~William Faulkner, Intruder in the Dust
When I first read Tony Horwitz's Confederates in the Attic, I had just spent an amazing weekend at the 2020 Olustee reenactment. It was the second reenactment I went to and the first I participated in as reenactor. So when I read the two chapters where Horwitz himself reenacted (in a way), I could fully understand the feelings he described.
But what really captured my attention and imagination was Horwitz with Rob Hodge and some of his friends reenacting Pickett's charge on July 3, at the same time the charge happened historically. Horwitz describes what it was like for him to huddle in the shade with his fellow reenactors, just like the Confederates did during the cannonade. He describes what he felt like when stepping out into the sun, Cemetery Ridge shimmering in the distance. He took note of the gravel under his shoes and the rubbing of his haversack against his cotton shirt. His attention to detail took me in and let me experience their reenacted charge for myself in my imagination, including the swarm of tourists filming and taking pictures of them all the way to the Angle. And then I read this passage:
"Watching the rapt crowd, I began to feel less resentful of the gawkers we'd attracted all along the charge. From their questions, it was clear that Rob's interrogators felt deeply drawn to Gettysburg. But visiting the place, on a July day thick with gnats and tour buses, they seemed vaguely disappointed and didn't know quite what to do with the empty fields, the silent cannons, the mute blocks of marble. By charging across the landscape in our rebel uniforms, we'd given a flesh-and-blood boost to their imagination, a way into the battle that the modern landscape didn't easily provide. For one of the few times during my brief reenacting career, I felt I'd done something worthwhile by putting on a uniform."
It reminded me of when I was at Gettysburg last summer and beforehand visited a whole bunch of battlefields in northern Virginia and Maryland. It was a great vacation, especially in regard to getting a feel for the lay of the land that was so important to how the battles unfolded. But from time to time, especially on the larger battlefields, I had trouble positioning the troops in my mind and seeing the directions they went. A little inspiration like what Tony Horwitz, Rob Hodge and his friends did would've been truly welcome in these moments.
But it also made me wonder what our reenactors feel, especially during the battle reenactments. How much do you notice from the crowd watching the battle? What does it feel like for you?
Source:
- Confederates in the Attic by Tony Horwitz
Photo of the Gettysburg reenactment taken by me in July 2019.
