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Jack Hinson's One Man War - The Story of a Confederate Sniper
Old Virginia Blog ^ | 02/14/2009 | Richard Williams

Posted on 02/14/2009 3:18:19 PM PST by Davy Buck

"Jack Hinson never planned to become a deadly sniper. A prosperous and influential plantation owner in the 1850s, Hinson was devoted to raising his growing family and working his land. Though a slaveowner, Hinson was opposed to secession. But after a unit of Union occupation troops moved in on his land and summarily captured, executed, and placed the decapitated heads of his sons on his gateposts, Hinson abandoned his quiet life for one of revenge. . ."

(Excerpt) Read more at oldvirginiablog.blogspot.com ...


TOPICS: Books/Literature; Education; History; Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS: civilwar; confederacy; coward; damnyankees; jackhinson; northernaggression; sniper; terrorist; tit4tat; titfortat; yankeescum
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To: tall_tex

It’s a pretty damn good underrated movie. Liam Neeson and Pierce Brosnan are awesome in it.


21 posted on 02/14/2009 4:13:29 PM PST by randomhero97 ("First you want to kill me, now you want to kiss me. Blow!" - Ash)
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To: randomhero97

Thanks, I will check it out.


22 posted on 02/14/2009 4:16:58 PM PST by tall_tex
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To: randomhero97
...."The revisionists tend to leave out the atrocities committed by the invading union armies"....

The winners write the history.

23 posted on 02/14/2009 4:17:16 PM PST by chuckles
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To: randomhero97
Shenandoah was the more cleaned up version of this story.
24 posted on 02/14/2009 4:24:04 PM PST by Regulator (Welcome to Zimbabwe! The looting begins in five minutes...)
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To: Texas Fossil

My folks were burned out of Atlanta. Wouldn’t live there now if you paid me, it’s a cesspool!


25 posted on 02/14/2009 4:27:24 PM PST by SWAMPSNIPER (THE SECOND AMENDMENT, A MATTER OF FACT, NOT A MATTER OF OPINION)
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To: willgolfforfood

“We thought about it for a while. And we had thought long enough, we declared war on the Union.”


26 posted on 02/14/2009 4:33:14 PM PST by patton (SPQA - the last, the least and the lost)
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To: Twotone

You’re welcome!


27 posted on 02/14/2009 4:34:26 PM PST by Davy Buck
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To: randomhero97

There was a Colonel Turchin of the 19th Illinois who was known for his aggressiveness towards civilians. Reports of his atrocities against the civilian population of Athens, Alabama got back to senior Union officers who immediately condemned Turchin and eventually stripped him of his command. However, that consumate reprobate Abe Lincoln not only reinstated Turchin but promoted him to Brigadier general.

I do wish to point out that in general senior Union officers went pretty much by the book when it came to the treatment of civilians and did not tolerate their abuse(though, for example, the murders of civilians by order in Palmyra, Missouri civilians would prove that not all Union generals thought that way). But, generally speaking, senior Union officers, especially West Point graduates, adhered to the established rules of war vis-a-vis civilians and did not tolerate crimes against them).

Sherman’s idea of “total war,” though, caused great suffering among the civilians of the South, including starvation, but that is explained away by saying his actions were directed against the entire Confederacy (within his area of operations) with the intent to bring it (the Confederacy) to its knees. Thus, it was reasoned that his actions did not specifically target civilians, as did those of Turchin and others.


28 posted on 02/14/2009 4:42:10 PM PST by ought-six ( Multiculturalism is national suicide, and political correctness is the cyanide capsule.)
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To: randomhero97

“Have you ever seen the movie Seraphim Falls?”

No, I haven’t. What’s it about?


29 posted on 02/14/2009 4:44:25 PM PST by ought-six ( Multiculturalism is national suicide, and political correctness is the cyanide capsule.)
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To: patton

“I guess I’m not quite as old as I thought I was.” The Chief had most of the really funny lines in that show, but almost everyone got to toss in a couple. Even Granny had that one that was something like “Never had much use for no Hoosiers, neither.”


30 posted on 02/14/2009 4:53:04 PM PST by willgolfforfood
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To: willgolfforfood

LOL. I was a great movie.


31 posted on 02/14/2009 4:58:24 PM PST by patton (SPQA - the last, the least and the lost)
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To: Davy Buck

Looks interesting.

Hope the library stocks it.


32 posted on 02/14/2009 5:00:42 PM PST by CriticalJ
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To: randomhero97

Amen!


33 posted on 02/14/2009 5:04:16 PM PST by southernerwithanattitude ({new and improved redneck})
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To: Davy Buck
. . . a unit of Union occupation troops moved in on his land and summarily captured, executed, and placed the decapitated heads of his sons on his gateposts . . .

That'll do it.
34 posted on 02/14/2009 5:13:46 PM PST by WorkingClassFilth (Actually, it all started back in Mayberry. Helen Crump was a traveler and Floyd, well, you know...)
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To: ought-six
"That’s a fact. The history books used in the public schools never mention the Yankee tactic of forced starvation enacted upon the Southern civilian population. They never mention the few reported incidents of starving people being reduced to cannibalism. But, the victors get to write the history books, so it’s no wonder some things were ignored or glossed over".

The "North" (The northern states from the Civil War plus the 3 west-coast states)no longer has the will to fight. 100,000 armed and determined men could overthrow this government if they were US Citizens. Of course invaders would be crushed.

35 posted on 02/14/2009 5:15:16 PM PST by Mariner
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To: Davy Buck

I have always been pro Southern but in the last few years have come to believe the war between the states was what ultimately resulted in the mess we are in now.

It was basically the decision of whether we would have A strong and eventually all powerful central government or one in which power was decentralized.

I also for the first time a few years ago came across some old newspaper stories still housed in sn old courthouse in Georgia.

I was researching one of my ancestors who came from SE Georgia and came across newspaper archives with many stories of the brutality towards civilians by the Union Army in the post-war time period.

Black troops were quite literally murdering, raping, burning houses,etc. pretty much at will. Local people literally begged the Union Army General in charge to replace them. For some time, he refused but eventually did replace them.

I don’t know this to be true but suspect that general had pressure from above to keep those Black troops in charge.


36 posted on 02/14/2009 5:17:52 PM PST by yarddog
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To: yarddog

In Falls Church, VA, the union army occupied the town. Then, they literally ripped Geo. Washington’s pew out of the church, and used the chapel as a stable.

The Church is “The Church at the Falls”, or, more commonly, “The Falls Church.”

Always seemed a metaphore for the civil war to me.


37 posted on 02/14/2009 5:33:50 PM PST by patton (SPQA - the last, the least and the lost)
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To: SolidWood; Davy Buck
The sign that started it all, in the "depopulated" area in the Land between the Lakes. I'll bet there are a lot of stories to be told about that area.

The last paragraph is especially poignant in our current circumstance:

RW: Did Jack Hinson teach you anything and is there anything in particular you'd like for readers to learn from the story?

Tom McKenney: The Jack Hinson story includes at least three important lessons in life:
1. It takes two to make peace, but only one to make a fight; he didn't want the war, but the war came to him.
2. A brother offended is harder to be won than a strong city (Prov 18:19). The bitterest enemies are friends whom we have betrayed.
3. Vengeance has a high price. It cost him at least 6 of his children, his plantation, businesses, and life as he had known it before the war.
Additionally, in a military sense, guerrilla warfare works. By the end of the war, the Union had committed elements of 9 regiments and an amphibious task force of Marines against that one old man, and they never got him.

RW: Thank you Colonel.

38 posted on 02/15/2009 6:17:18 AM PST by texas booster (Join FreeRepublic's Folding@Home team (Team # 36120) Cure Alzheimer's!)
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To: Davy Buck

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MZJMRF9-evI


39 posted on 07/04/2015 8:06:13 AM PDT by NKP_Vet
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