1:00:02
To whom do I have the pleasure
of speaking, sir?
1:00:06
Charlie Anderson's
my name.
1:00:08
You better decide later,
Colonel, whether speaking
with me is a pleasure or not.
1:00:13
Got business with me,
Mr. Anderson?
Yes, sir, I do.
1:00:16
All right, Mr. Nelson.
What can I do for you,
sir?
1:00:20
You can return my son
for a start.
1:00:23
And then you can issue
some kind of an order,
whatever it is you do,
1:00:27
and instruct your people
to keep off my farm
and leave my family alone.
1:00:31
Your son?
My youngest son.
1:00:34
Your people came on my farm,
and they took him.
Why?
1:00:38
That's what I'd like to know.
But he's a prisoner,
and your army's got him.
1:00:43
He isn't a Confederate?
No, sir.
1:00:46
He's an Anderson,
and that's all he is.
1:00:49
How old is he?
He's sixteen.
1:01:01
Could you show me on the map
where your farm is?
1:01:05
Well, it's
Shenandoah Gap.
1:01:09
It shows here.
Right there.
1:01:12
It couldn't have been any
of my men who took your son,
Mr. Anderson,
1:01:16
because we haven't been
in your section.
1:01:19
But I think you
should understand something.
1:01:22
My men fought a battle
with rebels
who threw stones at them...
1:01:27
'cause that was all
that they had.
1:01:29
We took 1 ,5OO prisoners...
1:01:32
and there wasn't 5O rounds
of ammunition among them.
1:01:36
What are you tellin' me,
Colonel?
1:01:39
Only that what
you're trying to do
is nearly impossible.
1:01:41
Every corps in our army
is taking thousands
of prisoners each day.
1:01:46
How do you expect to find
one sixteen-year-old boy?
1:01:53
[ Army Officer ]
Hut, hut,
hut, two, three, four.
1:01:56
Hut, hut,
hut, two, three, four.