Posted on 10/12/2012 11:00:08 AM PDT by BigReb555
America mourned the death of Gen. Robert E. Lee on Wednesday, October 12, 1870 and Friday, October 12th marks the 142nd anniversary of his death.
(Excerpt) Read more at canadafreepress.com ...
Of course it is. By definition an uprising against a government is treason against that government.
Of course, if you win you become the new government and are heroes, not traitors. At least to your new nation.
Need I quote the old saw about why treason never prospers?
I think you are confused about the Vicksburg campaign. Grant had superior numbers throughout relative to Pemberton, and even, though not by much, against the separate forces of Johnston and Pemberton, who of course were never able to combine forces against him.
Per southern regiments in the Union army. SC was the only state that didn’t produce at least one such (white) regiment.
Some can be justified, as the US Revolutionary War was justified (The war was begun by the British, and only after war began was independence declared.) In general, good causes attract support. Bad causes don’t, and the rebellion and insurrection of 1860-65 is a classic bad cause.
When conducting a river crossing there is a time when small forces have crossed, and others have not. So it was at Vicksburg, when Grant had crossed at Bruinsburg with small forces, Pemberton did nothing. Grant’s larger forces west of the river could do nothing. Eventually more of Grant’s forces got across, and yes, then he had superior forces.
You are right, I did make the error using Pendleton instead of Pemberton. Pendleton was a confederate artillery officer, but not the Pennsylvanian in command of the defenses of Vicksburg.
If you were for slavery, then the success of the rebellion would look good to you. If you were opposed to slavery, the failure of the rebellion was success.
Certainly the sins of slavery were not original to the US. The northern states which forbade slavery (beginning with Vermont) led the world. Britain, belatedly declared slavery illegal in 1833, and Wilburforce played a key role in removing theological justifications.
No slavery was not an American creation. But it certainly was here when America was created.
I desire to stir old wounds? Surely you jest. It isn’t me who posted this article or any other Civil War thread. Whom ever does should know to expect disagreement. Who have I insulted? A man who has been dead for 142 years? And sorry to disappoint you but I am not ‘anti-Southern’’. I’m anti-Confederate and again to old wounds, it’s those who put up these paeans of praise to Southern secessionists who are keeping the wounds open. American conservatives honoring Southern Dixiecrats, now there’s irony for you. And what in the name of Sam Hill does anything of this have to do with getting rid of Obama? Myself, my friends and family will be beating down the doors on Election Day to vote the scoundrel out of office. Are you trying sub-rosa here i to imply I’m a Democrat? Please, get real.
Oh, what? A book where the South had won?
General I’d strongly suggest you look and see where and when slavery ended in the North.
Actually, the Congress of the Confederation led the way. In 1787 it prohibited slavery in the territories NW of the Ohio River.
So you're saying that Stonewall Jackson and his party were shot because they had donned Union uniforms to reconnoiter the Army of the Potomac's lines? I've never heard that version of what happened.
Some confusion here is understandable, since Virginia had the possibly unique practice of naming places with the suffix "Court House", thus, "Fairfax Court House," "Culpepper Court House," plus the still-named "Charlotte Court House," nearby to "Appomattox Court House," etc.
So the place is named "Appomattox Court House", the surrender signing was in Wilmer McLean's home there.
Reconstruction of "Old Appomattox Court House":
Wilmer McLean's home in Appomattox Court House:
McLean House surrender room:
Paintings of surrender showing officers known or thought to be present:
Appomattox Court House National Park is must see for anyone interested in Civil War history and battlefields.
Driving distance from Gettysburg, PA to Appomattox, VA is about 265 miles, figure roughly five hours if you don't stop along the way... ;-)
Confederates imposed import tariffs of 12.5% starting in early 1861, which included goods "imported" from the North.
A combination of the U.S. Navy blockade of southern ports and rampant smuggling between North and South prevented their import tariff from raising much money for the Confederate government.
-btw I don't know why anyone would bother referring to the CSA Constitution since the Confederates themselves really didn't pay much attention to it.
You are still asserting that the South went to war over slavery. For reasons I set forth previously, as well as those given by other posters in this thread, this is not the case. Again, slavery was a factor, but not the factor. Please read Mr. Scruggs article on the Morrill Tariff which I previously cited. The vast majority of Confederate soldiers didnt own slaves; most of them were farmers or laborers. Why would they go to the trouble, as you call it, to risk their lives for an issue in which they had no stake? No, they went to the trouble to defend their country and to stand up for an honorable cause in which they believed.
The Confederate government was not illegitimate, nor was it more evil than that of Lincolns. Im sure you wouldnt make this claim if the seceding states had stayed in the Union and continued to pay extortion, or rather the oppressive tariffs, imposed upon them by the federal government to keep it running. As long as the money kept flowing from the south to the north, the north wasnt concerned about the manner in which it was generated Lincoln repeatedly said that he had no intention of interfering with the institution of slavery. And of course the seceding states would create an entity to govern their free and voluntary association of states this is what you call illegitimate. I suppose you would make the same claim if the secession threatened by Massachusetts and others at the Hartford Convention were accomplished.
As I said, I was not born in the South, and growing up, I had the same revisionist history crammed down my throat which was written by the victors in the WBTS. As a kid in school, I didnt know any better and so of course bought into the same slavery propaganda. Its only within about the last 7 years, since I became involved in researching for a book in progress, that I sought out books and other materials published either during or immediately after the WBTS that set forth accurate accounts, written by people who were there, that I reached the intellectual conclusion that the Souths position was correct and that the Confederate states should have been allowed to secede and form their own government and realized that much I had been taught was wrong. But Im just a researcher; the South certainly has more capable advocates and defenders than me.
Proponents of both sides can debate these issues forever and neither will convince the other side otherwise. Even if those of you in the pro-north position are not persuaded, perhaps you may wish to investigate the truth further, if for no other reason than to satisfy your curiosity or expand your knowledge.
You can find a listing of Union generals here.
By my count, of some 550 Union generals, roughly 20% were Southern-born.
Of those, about 1/3 came from Kentucky, followed (in descending order) by Virginia, Maryland, Washington DC, Tennessee, Alabama, and the Carolinas.
Even Georgia, Florida & Delaware each contributed one or two Union generals.
I could find no record of Union generals born in Mississippi, Louisiana or Texas.
Nor have seen reports of a Confederate general (out of 400 appointed) born outside the Confederacy.
Of Union generals, perhaps 10% were born in other countries, especially Prussia.
George Meade, the victor at Gettysburg, was interestingly born in Cadiz, Spain, son of a Philadelphia merchant naval agent for the US government.
After his father's death in 1828, Meade's family returned and lived in the South, where he also spent most of his civilian and military careers.
There were a few, not many. Two that come to mind are Samuel Cooper, who was a full general in the Confederate army and served as Adjutant General for the duration of the war. He was born in New York. And Josiah Gorgas was the head of the Confederate Ordinance department and promoted brigadier general in the later half of the war. He was from Pennsylvania.
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