Pickett's Souls | Gettysburg National Cemetery

Pickett's Souls | Gettysburg National Cemetery

25:53 Feb 10, 2026
About this episode
Join host Kristin as The Grim descends into Gettysburg National Cemetery — where blood-soaked Pennsylvania earth became the birthplace of America's first national cemetery and a monument to the true cost of war.Before national cemeteries existed, soldiers were buried where they fell. The Civil War changed everything. At the Battle of Gettysburg — the deadliest battle in American military history — over 50,000 casualties fell in just three days as outdated battlefield tactics collided with modern repeating rifles. On July 3, 1863, nearly 12,000 Confederate soldiers marched across open ground during Pickett's Charge, met by devastating Union fire, marking the high-water mark of the Confederacy and the turning point of the war.In the aftermath, Elizabeth Thorn — six months pregnant and left alone with her elderly father — buried nearly 100 soldiers in the summer heat before a national cemetery even existed. Landscape architect William Saunders designed the Soldiers' National Cemetery with quiet dignity, where officers and enlisted men were buried side by side. Four months after the battle, Abraham Lincoln stood before 15,000 people and delivered the Gettysburg Address — 271 words that consecrated the ground and redefined the meaning of the war.Today, more than 3,500 Union soldiers rest here, among them 979 unknowns. Confederate dead were largely exhumed and reburied in Southern cemeteries, though some are believed to remain in rocky, inaccessible corners of the battlefield.But Gettysburg's dead may not all be resting. The surrounding battlefield and cemetery are considered among the most haunted locations in America. Visitors report phantom cannon fire, the scent of gunpowder in the dark, and shadowed figures moving between headstones. A spectral Union soldier is said to linger among the rocks at Devil's Den, while the ghosts of hanged soldiers reportedly haunt Sachs Covered Bridge. And Jennie Wade — the only civilian killed during the battle — is said to remain forever bound to the home where her life ended.At Gettysburg, the past does not vanish. It waits.Support the showSupport The Grim by buying a cup of our next Grave Grind!https://buymeacoffee.com/kristinlopesFind All of The Grim's Social Links At:https://www.the-grim.com/socialmedia
Select an episode
0:00 0:00