This is a 1st
person account given by a U.S. Marine participating in war games at Fort Bragg
in Fayetteville, North Carolina.
In March of 1978 I was a part
of a field exercise in the woods at Fort Bragg. My buddy and I were hold up in a
foxhole in a forward position charged with the task to report any sounds or
movement we might observe to headquarters.
We had done this in the past
and after we checked our radios we settled in for a long wait. It was early
morning around 4:30 a.m. and the damp mist that surrounded us seemed to permeate
my bones.
My buddy caught a few winks
as I looked into the dense fog. The time crept by so slowly I felt myself
nodding off but I caught myself determined to fight the boredom.
After a while I heard the
faint sounds of a conversation in the woods near me. I then smelled the aroma
of hot coffee. I quietly listened for the next 15 minutes as the voices became
gradually louder.
I then saw several men
wearing blue uniforms nearby. I rubbed my eyes for all our men wore green
uniforms not blue. I checked and these men were definitely wearing blue old-fashioned
uniforms.
It dawned on me that their
uniforms looked like the type worn by Union soldiers during the Civil War.
These men moved so close to
my position that I could have reached out and touched them. I clamped my hand
over my buddies’ mouth waking him.
He sat quietly and watched
these men as they went about their morning chores--his mouth was wide-open.
We then heard gunshots and
men shouting. We saw a group of Confederate soldiers in worn and tattered grey
uniforms attack the Union camp.
It grew colder as we watched
this battle. The Union soldiers managed to drive the Confederate soldiers back
into the surrounding pines. Then all these men just faded away into the mist.
I looked at my buddy and
asked, “Did you see that?” He nodded yes. We both agreed that it would probably
be best if we didn’t mention what we had seen. We never did tell anyone.
After we got back to our post
in Jacksonville, North Carolina I decided to do some research on the history of
the area.
I discovered that on the spot
where our foxhole was located a Civil War battle was fought on
March 10, 1865. Two Confederate brigades had attacked a Union Division at a
place called Monroe’s Cross.
The sights, sounds and smells
that I experienced that morning were very real.
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