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Symposium to honor Lee, villain or 'the noblest ever' ?
Washington Times ^ | April 25, 2007 | Robert Stacy McCain

Posted on 04/25/2007 10:11:37 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur

Winston Churchill called him "one of the noblest Americans who ever lived," and Theodore Roosevelt called him "the very greatest of all the great captains that the English-speaking peoples have brought forth." But has political correctness turned Robert E. Lee into a villain? That will be the question explored by six historians this weekend at a symposium commemorating the bicentennial of the Confederate commander's birth. "We were afraid that Lee would not receive the honors he should get because of the prevailing political correctness," says Brag Bowling, a Richmond resident who helped organize Saturday's event at the Key Bridge Marriott Hotel in Arlington. The symposium will be the largest event of its kind this year honoring Lee, who was born Jan. 19, 1807.

(Excerpt) Read more at washingtontimes.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: bragbowling; civilwar; confederacy; confederate; dixie; north; robertelee; south
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To: TBP
So you’re claiming that Lincoln didn’t run on a program of increasing Federal power for “internal improvements” and other purposes?

Well, Here's The Platform he ran on. Where's the part about increasing Federal Power?

161 posted on 04/25/2007 2:35:56 PM PDT by Ditto (Global Warming: The 21st Century's Snake Oil)
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To: Timothy
Sherman is a “good general” because his side won. If they had lost, he would have been hung for war crimes.

What crimes is he supposed to have committed? Can you point them out to me.

162 posted on 04/25/2007 2:39:05 PM PDT by Non-Sequitur (Save Fredericksburg. Support CVBT.)
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To: xxqqzz
I guess that is what they teach in the schools in New England or somewhere. It wasn’t entirely clear that secession was treason or rebellion. The north certainly could have taken a harder approach of legally prosecuting Confederates.

The Supreme Court had no problem finding their acts if unilateral secession to be illegal. And their actions could be certainly considered treason as defined by the Constitution.

There were several southern officers executed, including Henry Wirz, the commander of Andersonville prisoner of war camp.

To the best of my knowledge Wirtz was the only man tried for his crimes committed during the war and convicted.

I am sure Sherman would have been tried if he was captured by the Confederacy.

No doubt.

This was due to the collapse of Confederate currency and Confederate government securities, the freeing of the slaves, the union naval blockade, and the union policy of burning, looting, shooting livestock, and destroying railroads and factories.

Stripped to its most basic terms, it was due to the fact that the Southern states chose war to further their aims and then going and losing that war. Had they not initiated the conflict over Sumter nothing would have happened.

163 posted on 04/25/2007 2:45:57 PM PDT by Non-Sequitur (Save Fredericksburg. Support CVBT.)
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To: xxqqzz
Quantrell, the leader Quantrell’s raiders was killed when trying to flee to Mexico and refusing to surrender to union soldiers,

Only if the route to Mexico runs through Kentucky. From the Texas State Historical Society:

Lt. Gen. Edmund Kirby Smith,qv commander of the Trans-Mississippi Confederacy, approved of Quantrill and ordered McCulloch to use Quantrill's men to help round up the increasing number of deserters and conscription-dodgers in North Texas. Quantrill's men captured but few and killed several, whereupon McCulloch pulled them off this duty; McCulloch sent them to track down retreating Comanches from a recent raid on the northwest frontier. They did so for nearly a week with no success. Quantrill is credited with ending a near-riot of county "war widows" who were convinced that the Confederate commissary in Sherman was withholding from them such "luxury goods" as coffee, tea, and sugar. During this winter Quantrill's lieutenant, William (Bloody Bill) Anderson, took some of the men to organize his own group. With two such groups in the area, residents of Grayson and Fannin counties became targets for raids, and acts of violence proliferated so much that regular Confederate forces had to be assigned to protect residents from the activities of the irregular Confederate forces.

Finally, General McCulloch determined to rid North Texas of Quantrill's influence. On March 28, 1864, when Quantrill appeared at Bonham as requested, McCulloch had him arrested on the charge of ordering the murder of a Confederate major. Quantrill escaped that day and returned to his camp near Sherman, pursued by over 300 state and Confederate troops. He and his men crossed the Red River into Indian Territory, where they resupplied from Confederate stores. Except for a brief return in May, Quantrill's activities in Texas were at an end. His authority over his followers disintegrated completely when they elected George Todd, a former lieutenant to Quantrill, to lead them. In an attempt to regain his prestige Quantrill concocted a plan to lead a company of men to Washington and assassinate President Abraham Lincoln. He assembled a group of raiders in Lafayette County, Missouri, in November and December 1864, but the strength of Union troops east of the Mississippi River convinced him that his plan could not succeed. Quantrill returned, therefore, to his normal pattern of raiding. With a group of thirty-three men, he entered Kentucky early in 1865. In May or early June of that year a Unionist irregular force surprised his group near Taylorsville, Kentucky, and in the evening battle Quantrill was shot through the spine. He died at the military prison at Louisville, Kentucky, on June 6, 1865.


164 posted on 04/25/2007 2:52:12 PM PDT by Bubba Ho-Tep
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To: Non-Sequitur; Colonel Kangaroo
To the best of my knowledge Wirtz was the only man tried for his crimes committed during the war and convicted.

Champ Ferguson. I'm sure Colonel Kangaroo can fill in the details on what a nasty piece of work he was.

165 posted on 04/25/2007 2:58:51 PM PDT by Bubba Ho-Tep
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To: Non-Sequitur
Because it wasn't his job to?

Yeah, that was poorly written on my part. Thanks for catching that.

166 posted on 04/25/2007 3:07:11 PM PDT by GOP_Raider (hosts the Singles thread this weekend. Join the festivities!)
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To: Non-Sequitur

My point was that the south was devastated by the war, and that the southern states were occupied after the war and controlled by notherners. Anyone who had served in the Confederate military was not allowed to vote, so most of the voters were black. So it is not entirely true that the south got off easy.

If the Union had hanged Lee, it would not have gone over well in the south, the north, or outside the US. He is regarded as one of the greatest military commanders ever, and as a great man. He was not an instigator of secession. He made a difficult, and some would say treasonous, decision to side with the Confederacy, rather than make war on his own state.

Some of the Confederate political leadership fled the country. Those who were captured could have been put on trial and executed or given long prision sentences. Presumably their sentences would have been appealed to the Supreme Court, which would determine the legalities. Again, I am sure that the union leadership was concerned by how this would appear to the south and to the world.


167 posted on 04/25/2007 3:28:24 PM PDT by xxqqzz
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To: Virginia Ridgerunner

The act of owning another human being would abuse enough. “Slavery wasn’t all sugar sweetness,” you say. Thanks for clearing that up.


168 posted on 04/25/2007 3:32:38 PM PDT by usafsk ((Know what you're talking about before you dance the QWERTY waltz))
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To: SWEETSUNNYSOUTH

Gen Sherman was a True Military Man who was ahead of his times.
His vision of war was a war that is total war. He believed that if you want war to end, you make it as cruel and inhumane as Possible. If we had Sherman in Iraq, and gave him a free hand,It would have ended sooner.
But when the Southern Gen went to talk terms, Sherman was very understanding, offering terms that was even better than what Grant offered Lee. Sherman was rebuked by Warhawks in Congress and told to revoke the terms.
Another thing that should speak to his character..he never got involved in Politics.
Sound like people in the south are still smarting from the beating old Billy Sherman put on Ya All....


169 posted on 04/25/2007 3:55:55 PM PDT by Yorlik803 ( When are we going to draw a line a say"this far and no farther")
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To: swmobuffalo
Actually no it wouldn’t have because at the time of the proclamation the North had no control over the areas the proclamation attempted to cover. It also didn’t free those enslaved in the North.

Emancipation required a Constitutional amendment & Lincoln didn't have the power to emancipate the slaves in territories under Union control. It would have been an unlawful "taking". Territories in rebellion were either gonna win, making the proclamation irrelevant or they were gonna lose & become reconquered territory. They weren't going to be allowed back into the Union under the same terms they had when they left.

Northerners were tired of having their state's sovereignty violated by the Federal government & agents of Southern states while the Fugitive Slave Act was being enforced.

170 posted on 04/25/2007 4:11:06 PM PDT by GoLightly
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To: TBP

South had no problem using the big club of Federal power when it had the numbers to make the Fed serve its interests.


171 posted on 04/25/2007 4:14:32 PM PDT by GoLightly
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To: Madstrider

Meigs always saw himself as a Southerner who remaned loyal to the Union. Ever hear of books?


172 posted on 04/25/2007 4:17:01 PM PDT by PzLdr ("The Emperor is not as forgiving as I am" - Darth Vader)
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To: Madstrider

“remaned” = “remained”. Sorry for the typo.


173 posted on 04/25/2007 4:17:37 PM PDT by PzLdr ("The Emperor is not as forgiving as I am" - Darth Vader)
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To: PzLdr

Meigs was born in Georgia and his family was from Georgia, but he moved to Pennsilvania as a young child. He was Quatermaster General of the Union army.


174 posted on 04/25/2007 4:36:23 PM PDT by xxqqzz
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To: Non-Sequitur

Let’s See.....

Slavery.....ummm!

I support the troops but I don’t support the mission (slavery).

Where have I heard this before? Am I on the right forum? Has my computer mysteriously taken me to DU land?


175 posted on 04/25/2007 4:57:43 PM PDT by TheInvisibleMan
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To: Non-Sequitur
This was due to the collapse of Confederate currency and Confederate government securities, the freeing of the slaves, the union naval blockade, and the union policy of burning, looting, shooting livestock, and destroying railroads and factories.

Pretty much the same thing that happened to German and Japan. The lesson is, don't start a war if you can't win it.

176 posted on 04/25/2007 6:10:58 PM PDT by Ditto (Global Warming: The 21st Century's Snake Oil)
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To: Bubba Ho-Tep
Ferguson was a man with a murder tally in the dozens. He well earned the death sentence. I'm more familiar with Champ's protege, John Gatewood. After service under Ferguson early in the war, Gatewood started his own Confederate murdering franchise under the sponsorship of General Wheeler to harass Sherman's rear in North Georgia. From the Georgia mountains, his gang would sweep into Tennessee for fun and profit. (murdering Unionists and robbery) On his well documented raid into Polk County Tennessee his gang murdered at least a dozen men in cold blood, the higlight perhaps being when they pumped a half dozen bullets into the face of a wounded man right in front of his mother. Besides large raids like this other guerrilla gangsters in small free lance groups often operated in the wake of the regular reb cavalry.

At the end of the war Gatewood and much of his gang fled to Texas where I suspect they did their part in the making of the legend of the lawless West.

It's ironic to hear the latter-day whining about Sherman when the Confederacy fostered outlaws like Ferguson, Gatewood, Anderson and Quantrill not to mention the routine oppressiveness of local Confederate government.

177 posted on 04/25/2007 7:41:48 PM PDT by Colonel Kangaroo
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To: Non-Sequitur

“Had Lee’s chattel then run off to Union lines they could not have been returned to slavery if caught.”

that’s a laugh. have you ever read about the type of treatment those “freed” slaves were subjected to behind Federal lines?


178 posted on 04/25/2007 8:10:56 PM PDT by swmobuffalo (The only good terrorist is a dead terrorist.)
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To: Non-Sequitur

For now Yank. For now.


179 posted on 04/25/2007 8:18:26 PM PDT by BigCinBigD (You "abort" bad missile launches and carrier landings. Not babies.)
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To: ConservativeDude
There is a long tradition of all Americans honoring both North and South. That is a good tradition and should be continued. It doesn’t make the South right. It just means that all were Americans before, and after.

Nicely put.

180 posted on 04/25/2007 11:01:41 PM PDT by Mr. Silverback (A pacifist sees no distinction between the arsonist and the fireman--Freeper ccmay)
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