By Michael Aubrecht
JANUARY 2019 • AMERICA'S CIVIL WAR MAGAZINE
Spotsylvania grunts get their say
Folks sometimes ask me what sets Virginia’s Fredericksburg & Spotsylvania National Military Park apart from other hallowed grounds. I remind them that if you visit battlefields such as Gettysburg, Antietam, or Manassas, you will see giant equestrian statues memorializing the commanders at these engagements: Lee, Jackson, Longstreet, Meade, Reynolds—stone sentinels dominating the landscape. But when you visit the fields at Fredericksburg, you will see no such monuments. In fact, the only statue on the battlefield proper is Richard Kirkland’s “The Angel of Marye’s Heights†monument, which depicts two common infantrymen. Spotsylvania Battlefield is also vacant of these marquee statues.
By historynet
Although recognized officers on both sides were present during these battles, it is the contributions of the common soldier that are commemorated. The grunts get the credit, and it is their stories, recorded in letters home, that need to be shared.
http://www.historynet.com/blog-roll-due-credit.htm