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Battlefield Travels

Battlefield Travels

De : Mick Prictor
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260+ battlefields on six continents. 2,500 years of conflict. I have walked the ground on every one of them. And I am still exploring!

A military history resource like no other.

Original analysis drawn from primary sources, GIS terrain analysis, and fieldwork on every battlefield covered on this podcast. Deep dives into the battles, campaigns, and tactical innovations that defined the conduct of warfare — from ancient warfare to the modern era.

From the Pass of Thermopylae to Frederick the Great's Silesian campaigns, Caesar's battles for Gaul to the jungles of Vietnam. I have walked every one of them. BattlefieldTravels goes where the secondary sources don't.

The podcast is produced from original research by a retired Australian Army officer, former Black Hawk pilot, and doctoral researcher at the Australian National University — bringing four decades of operational experience and rigorous primary source scholarship to military history that is too often told at second hand.

The full archive of battle studies, tactical innovations articles, primary source analysis, battlefield photography, and GIS terrain mapping is at www.battlefieldtravels.com

Episodes use AI-generated audio from original research and analysis.

For listeners who take military history seriously.

Michael Prictor
Épisodes
  • Lee's Greatest Victory: Chancellorsville, Virginia, 1863
    Jun 11 2026

    This episode examines the Battle of Chancellorsville from 30 April to 6 May 1863, Robert E. Lee's most audacious victory of the American Civil War and a masterclass in aggressive manoeuvre against a superior force.

    General Joseph Hooker's 130,000 strong Army of the Potomac, crossed the Rappahannock and Rapidan Rivers and positioned itself on Lee's flank at Chancellorsville in what Hooker described as the finest movement in military history. Lee, with fewer than 60,000 men, responded by dividing his Army to face the Union force to his front at Fredericksburg, and on his left flank around the Chancellor House crossroads. Lee then divided his army a second time — sending Lieutenant General Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson on a 12-mile flank march through the Wilderness to strike Hooker's exposed right flank held by the Eleventh Corps under General Oliver Howard.

    At 1715 on 2 May 1863 Jackson's 28,000 men emerged from the tree line and rolled up the Union right flank in one of the most devastating surprise attacks in American military history. The Eleventh Corps collapsed. The attack drove the Union army back toward the river. The Confederate seizure of Hazel Grove, the commanding high ground, gave Confederate artillery the platform to dominate the battlefield the following day.

    The victory cost Lee more than he could afford. Returning from a night reconnaissance on 2 May, Jackson was accidentally shot by his own men, North Carolina troops of the 18th Infantry Regiment who mistook his party for Union cavalry. His left arm was amputated. He died of pneumonia eight days later on 10 May 1863. Lee's response, "I have lost my right arm", became one of the most quoted statements of the entire war.

    Drawing on the official records of both armies, the after-action reports of Jackson's Corps commanders, personal exploration of the Chancellorsville battlefield and the site where Jackson was wounded on the Plank Road, and GIS terrain analysis of the flank march route and the Hazel Grove position, the episode examines Hooker's plan and its failure of nerve, the mechanics of Jackson's flank march, the collapse of the Eleventh Corps, and why Chancellorsville is simultaneously Lee's greatest tactical triumph and the beginning of the Confederacy's irreversible decline.

    The Chancellorsville battlefield is preserved as part of the Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park. The site where Jackson was wounded on the Orange Plank Road is marked. The Chancellorsville visitor centre holds one of the finest collections of Civil War campaign maps in existence.

    The full article including primary source analysis, GIS terrain mapping of the flank march route, and battlefield photography is at:

    https://battlefieldtravels.com/Battle-of-Chancellorsville/

    This podcast is produced entirely from original research by BattlefieldTravels using AI audio generation.

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    33 min
  • Battle of Cowpens, South Carolina, 1781: Dan Morgan’s Tactical Masterpiece!
    Jun 11 2026

    This episode examines the Battle of Cowpens on 17 January 1781, one of the most tactically sophisticated engagements of the American Revolutionary War and one of the rare examples in military history of a deliberate double envelopment executed by an outnumbered force against a superior enemy.

    American Brigadier General Daniel Morgan, commanding approximately 1,900 Continental regulars and militia in the South Carolina backcountry, chose his ground carefully at a cattle grazing area called Hannah's Cowpens. Facing Lieutenant Colonel Banastre Tarleton's British Legion, one of the most feared and aggressive cavalry and infantry formations in the southern theatre, Morgan devised a three-line defence that weaponised his militia's perceived weakness. Rather than placing his unreliable militia in the rear where flight would be disastrous, he positioned them at the front with explicit orders to fire two volleys and withdraw, a controlled retreat that Tarleton's advancing troops would interpret as collapse and pursue aggressively into a prepared killing zone.

    The plan worked with extraordinary precision. The militia fired, withdrew as ordered, and Tarleton's force surged forward in pursuit, directly into the disciplined fire of Morgan's Continentals. Lieutenant Colonel John Eager Howard's infantry delivered a controlled about-face and volley at close range that shattered the British advance. Colonel William Washington's Continental dragoons simultaneously swept around the British right flank. The result was a textbook double envelopment, the same manoeuvre Hannibal executed at Cannae in 216 BC, and achieved in under an hour against a force that had never been defeated.

    Tarleton lost approximately 110 killed, 200 wounded, and 500 captured from a force of 1,100; a 75% casualty rate. Morgan lost 12 killed and 60 wounded.

    Drawing on Morgan's own after-action report, the pension statements of militia veterans, personal exploration of the Cowpens National Battlefield, and GIS terrain analysis of the ground Morgan chose and the lines of advance and withdrawal, the episode examines the tactical conception, the psychology of the militia deployment, Howard's about-face manoeuvre, Washington's flanking charge, and why Cowpens is studied in military academies as a model of combined arms tactics and troop psychology.

    The Cowpens National Battlefield in Cherokee County, South Carolina preserves the ground largely as Morgan left it. The terrain that made the double envelopment possible is still readable today.

    The full article including primary source analysis, GIS terrain mapping, and battlefield photography is at:

    http://battlefieldtravels.com/battle-of-cowpens/

    This podcast is produced from original research by BattlefieldTravels using AI audio generation.

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    42 min
  • The Dalton Gang Raid on Coffeyville, Kansas, 5 October 1892
    Jun 10 2026

    This episode examines the Dalton Gang raid on Coffeyville, Kansas on 5 October 1892, the most dramatic bank robbery in the history of the American West, and the event that ended the Dalton Gang in a single fifteen-minute gunfight.

    Bob, Grat, and Emmet Dalton, along with Bill Power and Dick Broadwell, rode into Coffeyville that morning intending to rob two banks simultaneously: the First National Bank and the Condon Bank. This audacious plan was intended to surpass the legendary exploits of the James-Younger Gang. The plan had a fatal flaw: the gang was riding into their own hometown, where they were personally known. Despite crude disguises (fake beards), they were recognised almost immediately. By the time the gang emerged from the banks, armed citizens had retrieved weapons from the Isham Hardware store and positioned themselves in the alley behind the banks, the narrow passage that would become known as Death Alley.

    In fifteen minutes of close-quarter street fighting, four gang members were killed: Bob Dalton, Grat Dalton, Bill Powers, and Dick Broadwell. Four Coffeyville defenders also died, including Town Marshal Charles Connelly and the beloved city marshal Charles T. Connelly. Emmett Dalton survived with twenty-three buckshot wounds, was convicted of murder, and served fourteen years in the Kansas State Penitentiary before receiving a full pardon in 1907. He later wrote a memoir, When the Daltons Rode, and became a vocal opponent of the outlaw life he had led.

    Drawing on the contemporary newspaper accounts of the Coffeyville Journal, the inquest testimony of survivors and witnesses, personal exploration of Death Alley and the preserved Coffeyville sites, and analysis of the tactical geometry of the ambush that destroyed the gang, the episode examines the Dalton family history, their connection to the Younger brothers, the specific plan for the double bank robbery, and why the citizens of Coffeyville ended one of the most feared outlaw gangs of the frontier era.

    The original Condon Bank building still stands in Coffeyville. Death Alley is preserved with CSI-style chalk markers indicating where each gang member fell. The Dalton Defenders Museum holds weapons, photographs, and artefacts from the raid. The graves of the Dalton Gang members are in the Coffeyville cemetery.

    The full article including primary source analysis, battlefield photography, and terrain analysis of Death Alley is at:

    https://battlefieldtravels.com/dalton-gang-raid-on-coffeyville-2/

    This podcast is produced entirely from original research by BattlefieldTravels using AI audio generation.

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    17 min
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