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A perfect memorial for an imperfect man, Ulysses S. Grant

Posted on 3/7/20 at 12:58 pm
Posted by RollTide1987
Augusta, GA
Member since Nov 2009
65113 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 12:58 pm
The Ulysses S. Grant Memorial out in front of the U.S. Capitol Building is probably my favorite on the Mall, and that includes the Washington Monument and Lincoln Memorial.

quote:

The statue of Ulysses S. Grant in front of the Capitol might just be the greatest equestrian statue on Earth. It is perfect: From any angle, in any light, under any weather, the monument conjures its subject’s humanity.

Grant and his horse, Cincinnati, have come to a stop. A cold wind blows the horse’s tail back underneath it. Grant holds the reins lightly in his lap with his left hand. His head is angled down so the brim of his hat can block a western sun. He scans the enemy and weighs his men. His right arm is bent, and his hand rests on his hip like that of a mother lecturing a child. Really, though, the arm seems to be propping him up, as if otherwise the weight of the moment might cause him to falter.


quote:

The Lincoln Memorial and Washington Monument are iconic, but while their grandeur preserves their namesakes’ legacies, it also distances us from the men, as though Lincoln and Washington were gods atop Mount Olympus. In contrast, stand close enough to Grant’s statue and you can see the steam rise from Cincinnati’s twitching flanks and smell a cocktail of cigar and sweat.

If the Capitol is the people’s house, then Grant is that house’s sentry. His statue is the centerpiece of a larger memorial located in front of the Capitol Reflecting Pool. To the north and south of Grant, a battle rages within sculptures titled “Cavalry Charge” and “Artillery.” It would be hard to exaggerate the terror captured in these works. On one side, men charge and a horse is cut down by enemy fire, its rider thrown forward to certain death. On the other side, soldiers and draft animals strain to drag artillery to within range of the fight. In the center of this fog: Grant.


quote:

On some of my visits, Grant is looking down on one of the thousands of dead littering the field after his disastrous assault at Cold Harbor. Other times, he appears on the cusp of deliverance, about to dismount to meet Robert E. Lee, only to pause first as he considers the sacrifices required to get to that point. During every visit, I see the anguish of war, the fortitude of purpose and Grant’s enduring humanity.

What does it say about the man that he faced fear, failure and victory with seemingly equal temperaments? It shows he was a leader with courage, but not bluster, a leader of conviction, but not folly, of mercy, not revenge; a leader who asked for no more than he was willing to give.

What does it say about our nation that we chose to fete our most glorious warrior, a man who defeated a rebellion and took the first steps toward a reconciliation, with such a modest pose? It shows that we believe in duty and honor but understand that those qualities flow from competence and humility. It shows we recognize that occasionally we will fail, but that so long as we own that failure and learn from it, sacrifice and grief are not in vain. This is what it means to be perfect.


LINK
Posted by Cdawg
TigerFred's Living Room
Member since Sep 2003
59525 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 1:03 pm to
Posted by Tigerbait357
Member since Jun 2011
67928 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 1:03 pm to
Democrats be like



This post was edited on 3/7/20 at 4:32 pm
Posted by X123F45
Member since Apr 2015
27419 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 1:03 pm to
Actually always enjoyed this statue, and I always enjoyed Lee's pose in New Orleans as well. They both captured men. For good or ill they were men
Posted by PrivatePublic
Member since Nov 2012
17848 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 1:05 pm to
White? Check
Statue? Check

Tear it down.
Posted by Ricardo
Member since Sep 2016
4889 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 1:09 pm to
(no message)
This post was edited on 6/14/20 at 8:38 pm
Posted by Strannix
District 11
Member since Dec 2012
48931 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 1:11 pm to
He was a drunk and a buffoon
Posted by el Gaucho
He/They
Member since Dec 2010
53010 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 1:13 pm to
It was really gross reading the love letters between grant and Lincoln

Kind of pathetic Lincoln would start a war over gay marriage
Posted by ExtraGravy
Member since Nov 2018
794 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 1:25 pm to
(no message)
This post was edited on 1/3/21 at 8:54 pm
Posted by Strannix
District 11
Member since Dec 2012
48931 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 1:30 pm to
quote:

well he beat the Confederates when no other Union general could, so I guess you must really think low of Lee to lose to a man like Grant


Grant would have been better off retiring instead of becoming the worst president ever
Posted by agdoctor
Louisiana
Member since Dec 2004
3142 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 1:31 pm to
Grant had overwhelming forces and supplies. His strategy was he could afford the deaths Lee couldn’t. He was correct. Previous Generals couldn’t stomach the slaughter. Staying drink made Grant immune
Posted by Lawyered
The Sip
Member since Oct 2016
29316 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 1:33 pm to
Grants basically trying to finish his Memoirs to provide for his family as he’s dying of lung cancer from all the cigars he smoked throughout his life .

Always fascinated by that.
Posted by prostyleoffensetime
Mississippi
Member since Aug 2009
11437 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 1:36 pm to
quote:

Grants basically trying to finish his Memoirs to provide for his family as he’s dying of lung cancer from all the cigars he smoked throughout his life .

Always fascinated by that.


Basically the first page: I’m broke as frick. This is a last ditch effort to drum up some cash.
Posted by MISSOURI WALTZ
Wolf Island, MO
Member since Feb 2016
746 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 1:38 pm to
Posted by X123F45
Member since Apr 2015
27419 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 1:42 pm to
quote:

quote:
He was a drunk and a buffoon


well he beat the Confederates when no other Union general could, so I guess you must really think low of Lee to lose to a man like Grant



Grant is the perfect example of the question I posed the other day. Is it better to lose as a gentleman or win no matter the cost?

I'll give him this, he understood logistics better than all but one man in the confederacy.

And that man was just as able to remove morality from logical choices.

Eta: and the poster above me posted the picture.
This post was edited on 3/7/20 at 1:44 pm
Posted by SavageOrangeJug
Member since Oct 2005
19758 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 1:45 pm to
That statue must have hurt your tender pussy pretty bad?
Posted by Strannix
District 11
Member since Dec 2012
48931 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 1:45 pm to
NBF is tGOAT
Posted by SavageOrangeJug
Member since Oct 2005
19758 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 1:47 pm to
The Wizard of the Saddle. The true GOAT!
Posted by RollTide1987
Augusta, GA
Member since Nov 2009
65113 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 2:02 pm to
quote:

Grant had overwhelming forces and supplies.


So did every other Union general who came before him.

quote:

His strategy was he could afford the deaths Lee couldn’t.


That was most definitely not his strategy. His strategy was to get the Union army around Lee's right and position himself between Lee and Richmond, thus forcing Lee to fight a battle on Grant's terms. Lee, with his smaller force, was able to maneuver his army more quickly and thus beat Grant to the punch. So Grant pitched into Lee and tried to break through his line the old-fashioned way. By this point in the war, however, trench warfare had become a thing. So instead of standing up in the open and duking it out man for man, Lee's men dug trenches and fought from behind fortified positions.

The disadvantages to an attacking force against trenches are well known thanks to the First World War. The Civil War saw similar results. Lee's attack against Grant's position along the Brock Road during the second day of the Battle of the Wilderness saw similar results. Union troops of Hancock's Corps fought from behind entrenchments and slaughtered the attacking southerners.

This post was edited on 3/7/20 at 2:08 pm
Posted by TigerstuckinMS
Member since Nov 2005
33687 posts
Posted on 3/7/20 at 2:02 pm to
quote:

The Wizard of the Saddle. The true GOAT!


The GRAND Wizard of the Saddle.

Forrest was an uncomplicated man who will be entwined with the historical complexity of his times as long as he is remembered.
This post was edited on 3/7/20 at 2:05 pm
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