Category Archives: Video

After the War: The Post-War Lives of Civil War Leaders

Stan was recently interviewed by Roger Smith of The Learning Center of Senior Citizens, Inc. in Savannah for an expansive conversation about post-Civil War America. How did the United States re-unite—and remain divided—after the deadliest conflict in US history? Were Confederates guilty of treason? Why weren’t there widespread executions? What happened to ex-Confederate leaders and what, exactly, happened during Reconstruction? This pre-recorded talk aired as the series debut of a collection of programs at The Learning Center entitled “After the War.” The conversation delves into the harshness—or ease—with which former Confederates were woven back into the fabric of society, the birth of the Lost Cause, and the history of political “second acts” in American history. For more information about the series, visit https://seniorcitizensinc.org/the-learning-center.

 

Governing Georgia Across Three Centuries, Part 2: Founding of the Georgia Colony

Off the Deaton Path presents a special series exploring the theme of the 2023-2024 Georgia History Festival: Governing Georgia Across Three Centuries. The second video in this series focuses on the establishment of government in Georgia when James Oglethorpe and the first colonists arrived in 1733 to what became Great Britain’s final colony in mainland North America.

Classroom worksheets that pair with each Governing Georgia Across Three Centuries video are available on the Georgia History Festival website.

Dispatches from Off the Deaton Path: Sherman’s March to the Sea and the Gift of Savannah

December 21 marks the anniversary of the end of General William Tecumseh Sherman’s March to the Sea, the surrender of Savannah to United States armed forces during the Civil War, and Sherman’s Christmas “gift” of Savannah to President Abraham Lincoln. Sherman’s March was also an important part of the history of emancipation. This Dispatch examines that controversial event and its legacy in American history.