My wife and I just traveled to Port Hudson, Louisiana. The reason was that my great-grandfather was one of the defenders of that last Confederate stronghold on the Mississippi River. He survived and was surrendered just as had happened at Fort Donelson. He was first paroled and then exchanged, I think. At any rate, he was in on the actions around Atlanta with Hood's Army. His last action was the great, but ill-fated charge that Hood foolishly ordered at Franklin, Tennessee. After suffering a cannon ball wound to his leg, he was captured. He wouldn't fight again as the Yankees kept him in prison in Ohio until well after the war ended. The historian at the state park at Port Hudson told me where his unit, the 1st Mississippi, had been, which was the object of a fierce Federal attack on June 14, 1863. The attack didn't go well for the northerners. The historian said my great-grandfather "probably killed a lot of Yankees." And he was a native of Ohio - born near Cincinnati - who ran away from home to Mississippi as a teenager.