Article: Times restore gloss to Lee's damaged image; Core values he embodied needed again.(SATURDAY)(THE CIVIL WAR)

Byline: James I. Robertson Jr., SPECIAL TO THE WASHINGTON TIMES

It is a story that, if not true, ought to be. During the three-day battle of Gettysburg, Union soldier Gamaliel Bradford fell wounded with a shattered leg. Bradford was lying unattended on the field when a group of Confederate horsemen approached. The figure in the lead was white-haired and immaculately dressed. The aura about him led Bradford to conclude he was Gen. Robert E. Lee.

In pain and embittered, Bradford raised a fist and shouted: "Hurrah for the Union!"

Lee pulled his horse to a stop, dismounted and walked toward the Union soldier. Bradford thought Lee intended to kill ...

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