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Safeway/Albertsons Advertiser
This week at Safeway and Albertsons. Red, green or black seedless grapes are $1.99 per pound limit six pounds. Member price with coupon and fresh boneless pork shoulder Country Style ribs. Value packs are $2.49 per pound. Member price plus selected sizes and varieties of General Mills cereals or Treat bars. Nature Valley Granola bars, Mott's Fruit by the Foot or gushers are $1.99 each. Member price when you buy. 3. Hurry in. These deals won't last. Visit safewayoralbertsons.com for more deals and ways to save.
Lindsey Graham (History Daily Host)
It's June 1, 1864, in Hanover County, Virginia, during the fourth year of the American Civil War. 19 year old Confederate Private Green W. Hodge creeps through the thick woods on the lookout for Union soldiers. As he glances left and right, a bullet ricochets off the tree next to him, splintering the wood. Hodge ducks down beside the nearest trunk and makes himself as small as possible, all too aware how close he just came to being hit. Yesterday, Union soldiers targeted a strategically important crossroads in Virginia known locally as Cold Harbor. Private Hodge's regiment was instructed to keep the attackers at bay until reinforcements arrived, but the vastly outnumbered Confederates were pushed back into the woods. There they began digging new defensive positions. And now, while his compatriots continue to fortify these defenses, Private Greene has been sent to patrol the woods. And judging by how close that gunshot was, the enemy isn't far away. Private Hodge checks his weapon and scans all around. He can't see the enemy, but 30ft away through the trees, he can just make out his fellow Confederates barricaded behind a hastily built wall of mud. After one last check around him, he makes a run for it, but he isn't fast enough. Before he can reach the barricade, a bullet strikes his leg and sends him crashing to the ground. As Private Hodges writhes in agony, he hears footsteps approaching. It's a Union captain, and believing the enemy soldier has come to deal the final blow, Hodge braces himself. But the Union man doesn't shoot. Instead, he kneels down and ties a tourniquet around Hodge's leg to stop the bleeding. Then he scrapes up some dirt into a mound and gently rests Hodge's head on it. Finally, he holds a canteen of water to Hodge's lips and lets him drink. Without a word or even a nod, Hodge's savior disappears back into the woods. After Private Green W. Hodge crawls back to the safety of the Confederate lines, he'll recount in amazement the story of the Union captain who who saved his life rather than kill him. But thousands of other soldiers on both sides will not be so lucky, and the Battle of Cold harbor will rage on for another 11 days before it finally comes to an end on June 12, 1864.
Safeway/Albertsons Advertiser
This week at Safeway and Albertsons. Red, green or black seedless grapes are $1.99 per pound limit 6 pounds member price with coupon and fresh boneless pork shoulder country style ribs. Value packs are $2.49 per pound member price plus selected sizes and varieties of General Mills cereals or Treat bars, Nature Valley granola bars, Mott's Fruit by the foot or Gushers are 199 each member price when you buy three. Hurry in. These deals won't last. Visit Safeway or Albertsons.com for more deals and ways to save. I started Ornod in 2013 and we make bike apparel. The best part of Shopify for me is our ability to run the business as essentially non technical people. We we're able to admin everything on the back end, front end and sell things online easily. If Shopify were a bike accessory, I think it would actually be the bicycle. It's the thing that you do the thing on. We run the business on Shopify. Start your free trial on Shopify.com this week at Safeway and Albertsons. Red, green or black seedless grapes are $1.99 per pound limit 6 pounds member price with coupon and fresh boneless pork shoulder country style ribs. Value packs are $2.49 per pound member price plus selected sizes and varieties of General Mills cereals or Treat bars, Nature Valley Granola bars, Motts Fruit by the Foot or gushers are $1.99 each member price when you buy three. Hurry in. These deals won't last. Visit Safeway or Albertsons.com for more deals and ways to save the Farm City
Farm City Pro Rodeo Announcer
Pro Rodeo has raised the bar again, $60,000 in added money per a month, solidifying Hermiston's place as a top 15 paying rodeo in the PRCA. New this year, Saturday night's performance will be a true championship round, guaranteeing you get to see the best of the best in one place on one night. Tickets go on sale June 1st and they will go fast. Visit farmcitypro rodeo.com for tickets and more information. Experience the action Feel the history of the Farm city Pro Rodeo August 12th through the 15th
Lindsey Graham (History Daily Host)
from Noiser and Airship. I'm Lindsey Graham and this is History Daily. History is made every day on this podcast. Every day we Tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world. Today is June 12, 1864. Retreat from cold Harbor. It's 2am on June 2, 1864 in Hanover County, Virginia, two days after the Battle of Cold harbor began. 40 year old Union General Winfield Hancock curses as a stray branch whips him in the face. It seems like the 10th time this has happened in the past hour. With a resigned sigh, he dismounts his horse and hands the reins to an orderly. Hancock will have to join the rest of his men as they slog through these dark woods, woods on foot, but he's barely gone 10 yards before his boot catches on a tree root and he almost trips. General Hancock curses again, louder this time, and calls the halt to the March. He has 15,000 men under his command and they snake back for more than a mile. But leading them through these trees with only moonlight to guide them is painfully slow. With the amount of ground his men have covered so far, General Hancock thinks they should have hit the southern Chickamee river by now. But they haven't. And in fact, Hancock thinks they may still be several miles west of Cold harbor, the key crossroads taken by Union forces only two days ago in the place that General Hancock has been ordered to rendezvous with the rest of the Union army. So Hancock points in the direction that he thinks they need to go and orders his officers to resume the march. The soldiers climb warily to their feet. Even in the darkness, Hancock can tell that his men are exhausted. But as they begin to trudge again through the woods, they finally get some good news. A Union soldier on night patrol emerges from the gloom and informs General Hancock that the Union base camp is just up ahead. If they get there soon, they should be able to get a few hours rest before they're asked to join the fight against the Confederates. The United States has been at war with itself since April 1861. But the tide of this Civil War is slowly turning. Eleven months ago, at the Battle of Gettysburg, a Confederate attempt to invade the north was pushed back. Following this pivotal battle, US President Abraham Lincoln appointed the more aggressive General Ulysses S. Grant to overall command of Union forces. And ever since, General Grant has been grinding the Confederacy down with Union superior manpower and industrial capacity. Now Northern armies are edging further and further into Confederate territory. The end of this destructive civil war seems closer than ever. And if Grant's army can get hold of the territory around Cold harbor, it will cut off a vital supply route to the Confederate capital of Richmond, Virginia, just 10 miles away. But the fighting around the Crossroads is fierce, and the Union position is not secure yet. After General Hancock finally gets his men into the Union camp, General Grant orders him to immediately ready his troops for battle. They are to attack at dawn. But the punishing overnight march has taken its toll on Hancock's men, and many of them can barely stand, let alone fight. The Union army is also running short on ammunition, and the weather is not on their side either. A storm is due to break, and Hancock fears that heavy rainfall would bog down his troops and make attacking the Confederate defensive positions even more difficult. With so much going against them, Hancock persuades General Grant to hold off on the attack 24 hours. Grant grudgingly agrees and issues new orders to commence the assault at dawn the next day. But that decision plays perfectly into the hands of his enemy, the Confederate commander, Robert E. Lee. The more time that General Lee has to prepare his defensive positions, the more confident he is that the Confederates can withstand the Union attack at Cold Harbor. So with no sign of General Grant's forces that morning, Lee instructs his troops to ford fortify a 7 mile defensive line between two rivers. Totopotomy Creek in the north and the Chickahominy in the south. So over the course of the day, the Confederate soldiers work tirelessly, digging trenches and building barricades. And just before the last of daylight fades, General Lee examines the newly dug fortifications. He's happy with his men's progress, because now if the Union army wants to reach Richmond, they'll have to fight their way through miles of heavily defended territory. But the work to strengthen the Confederate defenses will continue long into the night, and by morning, both sides will be expecting a fight. But the battle of Cold harbor will not be a quick encounter, and General Grant's decision to delay the Union attack will prove to be a deadly one
Safeway/Albertsons Advertiser
this week at Safeway and Albertsons. Red, green or black seedless grapes are $1.99 per pound limit 6 pounds member price with coupon and fresh boneless pork shoulder. Country style ribs. Value packs are are $2.49 per pound member price, plus selected sizes and varieties of general Mills cereals or treat bars. Nature valley granola bars, Mott's fruit by the foot or gushers are $1.99 each member price when you buy three. Hurry in. These deals won't last. Visit safewayoralbertsons.com for more deals and ways to save the farm.
Farm City Pro Rodeo Announcer
City pro rodeo has raised the bar again, $60,000 in added money per amend, solidifying Hermiston's place as a top 15 paying rodeo in the PRCA. New this year, Saturday night's performance will be a true championship round, guaranteeing you get to see the best of the best in one place on one night. Tickets go on sale June 1st, and they will go fast. Visit farmcityprodeo.com for tickets and more information. Experience the action Feel the history of the Farm City Pro Rodeo August 12th
Safeway/Albertsons Advertiser
through the 15th this week at Safeway and Albertsons. Red, green or black seedless grapes are 199per pound limit 6lb member price with coupons and fresh boneless pork shoulder country style ribs. Value packs are $2.49 per pound member price, plus selected sizes and varieties of General Mills cereals or Treat bars, Nature Valley granola bars, Mott's Fruit by the Foot or gushers are $1.99 each member price when you buy three. Hurry in. These deals won't last. Visit safewayoralbertsons.com for more deals and ways to save.
Grainger Advertiser
Grainger knows when you're a procurement manager for an office park, you're not managing one building, you're managing all of them. And to stay ahead, you need to see through walls and around corners. Lights about to fail, Filters ready to clog H Vac on its last leg. If you wait until something breaks, you're already behind. Count on Grainger for quality products, easy reordering and 24. 7 support. Call 1-800-GRAINGER click grainger.com or just stop by Grainger for the ones who get it.
Lindsey Graham (History Daily Host)
It's early on June 3, 1864, in Hanover County, Virginia, the day after General Winfield Hancock brought his men into the Union camp. 46 year old James Ricketts, a brigadier general in the Union army, wipes the rain from his eyes as he inspects his division. General Ricketts has around 2,000 men under his command, but he can't see them all. Both ends of the line are hidden. Thick fog. The section in front of him, at least, is neatly formed up with weapons drawn, and he's confident that his subordinate officers will have the rest of his men ready to attack, too. General Ricketts division has a reputation for hard fighting, so today they've been entrusted with leading the vanguard. If they can break through the center of the Confederate line, the enemy's resistance will hopefully crumble and the Union army will have a clear run at Richmond. A bugle rings out and General Ricketts troops cheer. It's time for the attack to begin. The rain that's been falling all night suddenly stops, and Ricketts leads His soldiers forward in double time. He hopes their speed will catch the Confederate defenders by surprise. But the neat line of soldiers Ricketts just inspected quickly falls apart as his men slip and fall in the mud. Ricketts keeps moving forward though straining his eyes to spot the Confederate positions through the mist. Bullets then begin to whistle around him, but he can't tell exactly where the shots are coming from. And as the Confederate fire intensifies, rifle smoke mixes with the low hanging mist making visibility even worse. Then the Confederate artillery opens up. Shells fall all around Ricketts, sending clods of wet earth and shrapnel flying through the air. Men scream out as they're hit. Slipping in the mud, General Ricketts falls to his knees and crawls forward to a tiny ridge that offers some protection as bullets thud into the ground around him. The mist clears for a moment and for the first time since the attack began, Ricketts finally gets a glimpse of the enemy. The Confederate soldier he sees is barely visible, only his head protruding from a trench. But that's enough. Ricketts takes aim with his weapon and fires. There's a quick splash of blood and the Confederate soldier falls back out of view. Then General Ricketts tries to take stock of the situation to his right. He can't see anything at all through the fog, but to his left his soldiers seem to have made more progress. The Confederate trench has been overrun and his men are fighting hand to hand with the enemy for every yard of territory. So Ricketts rises to his feet and keeping low, he hurries through the mud toward them. He slides into the trench and joins a fight. Ricketts senses that the momentum of the battle is not turning. If his men can gain a foothold here, then they can use it to break through the enemy line. But just then the Confederate artillery turn their fire on the captured trenches. Cannons force the Union soldiers to take cover. The earth shakes around them and the pounding continues relentlessly for hours. General Ricketts eventually has no choice but to order his men to withdraw. They retreat from the hard won trenches, back through the sludgy field they crossed earlier that morning. Morning. But now the mud is covered with the bodies of their fallen comrades. Wounded soldiers moan in pain, reaching out to clasp at Ricketts legs as he passes. But Ricketts knows his men can't stop. They have to leave the dead and dying behind. By 12:30pm he and his men are back in the safety of the original Union lines. There General Ricketts discovers the terrible cost of the failed attack. During the first 40, 45 minutes of the assault, as they slogged blindly through the fog toward the Confederate defenses. Over 1,000 Union soldiers were killed and 7,000 more were wounded. But the battle isn't over yet. With no chance of breaking through the Confederate line now, Union commander General Ulysses S. Grant orders his troops to dig their own defensive trenches. And over the next nine days, both sides bombard the other with their artillery as sharpshooters pick off any soldiers, soldiers who dare leave the trenches. While this standoff continues, General Grant swaps messages with his counterpart, General Robert E. Lee. But they can't agree on terms for a ceasefire. So the wounded Union soldiers between the lines are left to suffer and die. Eventually, General Grant will find a way to break the stalemate. But rather than advancing on Richmond from Cold harbor, as he hoped, he'll be forced to go in a completely different direction.
Grainger Advertiser
Grainger knows when you're a procurement manager for an office park, you're not managing one building. You're managing all of them. And to stay ahead, you need to see through walls and around corners. Lights about to fail. Filters ready to clog H Vac on its last leg. If you wait until something breaks, you're already behind. Count on Grainger for quality products, easy reordering and 24. 7 support. Call 1-800-Grainger click granger.com or just stop by Grainger for the ones who get it done.
Safeway/Albertsons Advertiser
I sold my car in Carvana last night.
Lindsey Graham (History Daily Host)
Well, that's cool.
Safeway/Albertsons Advertiser
No, you don't understand. It went perfectly. Real offer down to the penny. They're picking it up tomorrow. Nothing went wrong.
Lindsey Graham (History Daily Host)
So what's the problem?
Safeway/Albertsons Advertiser
That is the problem. Nothing in my life goes as smoothly. I'm waiting for the catch.
Lindsey Graham (History Daily Host)
Maybe there's no catch.
Safeway/Albertsons Advertiser
That's exactly what a catch would want me to think.
Lindsey Graham (History Daily Host)
Wow. You need to relax.
Safeway/Albertsons Advertiser
I need to knock on wood. Do we have wood? Is this table wood?
Lindsey Graham (History Daily Host)
I think it's laminate.
Safeway/Albertsons Advertiser
Okay. Yeah, that's good. That's close enough.
Lindsey Graham (History Daily Host)
Car selling without a catch. Sell your car today on Carvana. Pick up.
Grainger Advertiser
Fees may apply. Granger knows. When you're a procurement manager for an office park, you're not managing one building. You're managing all of them. And to stay ahead, you need to see through walls and around corners. Lights about to fail. Filters ready to clog H Vac on its last leg. If you wait until something breaks, you're already behind. Count on Grainger for quality products, easy reordering, and 24. 7 support. Call 1-800-GRAINGER Click grainger.com or just stop by Grainger for the ones who get it done.
Farm City Pro Rodeo Announcer
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Lindsey Graham (History Daily Host)
It's late on June 12, 1864, in Hanover County, Virginia, nine days after the start of the Battle of Cold Harbor. As night cloaks the battlefield, General George Meade mounts his horse as quietly as he can. All around him, fellow Union officers do the same, and the soldiers of the rank and file silently shoulder their packs. General Ulysses S. Grant has finally given the order that many of his soldiers had hoped to hear. The Union army is withdrawing. General Meade checks the rear guard that's staying behind to cover their retreat, then leads his men away from the trenches. But they're not going home. Instead, Meade has been told to head 40 miles south to the city of Petersburg. There, a vital railroad runs to Richmond, and the Union army will try again to capture and hold a strategic supply route to the Confederate capital. But the Union army's retreat has been predicted by the Confederate general Robert E. Lee. Lee. Still, what Lee has not foreseen is that the 100,000 strong Union army could withdraw in a single night, and over the course of eight dark hours, the entire force crosses the James river undetected. The Confederates won't realize the Union army is gone until dawn, and by then it'll be too late to stop them from reaching Petersburg before their withdrawal. The Union army took over 10,000 casualties at Cold harbor, and General Grant will not immediately learn from his mistakes. He'll launch a similar full frontal assault on Petersburg, and it will only be when his troops are pushed back at great cost again will Grant try a different tactic. He'll copy the Confederates by digging trenches of their own around the city, and for almost a year he'll have Petersburg under siege. Only after that city finally surrenders in early April 1865 will Richmond, Florida, fall within a week. By early summer that year, the American Civil War will be over. But the collapse of the Confederacy will not bring back those who lost their lives and General Grant's haste to end the war when almost 2,000 Union soldiers were killed and thousands more wounded in a failed attack that ended in retreat at cold harbor on June 12, 1864. Next on History Daily June 15, 1873. An amateur archaeologist causes a stir when he claims to have uncovered the long lost riches of ancient Troy. From Nouser and Airship. This is HISTORY Daily hosted, edited and executive produced by me, Lindsey Graham Audio editing by Mohammed Shazi Sound design by Gabriel Gould Supervising sound designer, Matthew Filler Music by Thrum. This episode is written and researched by Owen Quall Nichols. Edited by Scott Reeves Managing producer, Emily Byrne Executive producers are William Simpson for Airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
Grainger Advertiser
Granger knows when you're a procurement manager for an office park, you're not managing one building. You're managing all of them. And to stay ahead, you need to see through walls and around corners. Lights about to fail, Filters ready to clog H Vac on its last leg. If you wait until something breaks, you're already behind. Count on Grainger for quality products, easy reordering and 24. 7 support. Call 1-800-GRAINGER click grainger.com or just stop by Grainger for the ones who get it done.
Episode Date: June 12, 2026
Host: Lindsay Graham
This episode of History Daily transports listeners to June 12, 1864, as the bloody Battle of Cold Harbor draws to a costly close. Host Lindsay Graham vividly recounts the misjudgments, heroism, and human cost of this pivotal campaign in the American Civil War, focusing on the failed Union assault ordered by General Ulysses S. Grant and the harrowing experiences of ordinary soldiers. The episode weaves personal anecdotes with military strategy, illuminating the tragedy and futility of the battle and its consequences on the broader war.
[00:40 – 03:01]
[05:05 – 10:02]
[12:14 – 16:36]
[18:46 – 21:39]
Unexpected Mercy:
Confusion in the Ranks:
Costly Miscalculation:
Tragedy of Battle:
Stark Assessment:
This episode of History Daily masterfully retells the devastating events at the Battle of Cold Harbor—an emblematic moment of misguided strategy, resolute defense, and immense suffering during the American Civil War. The host captures the futility of mass charges against entrenched positions, the fleeting moments of compassion between adversaries, and the somber realization of the conflict’s cost carried by survivors long after the cannons fall silent.