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What Motivated Southerners To Defend The Indefensible?
The Virginian-Pilot | 23 April 2002 | Rowland Nethaway

Posted on 04/24/2002 9:33:49 AM PDT by wasp69

RICHMOND - It's only a two-hour drive from the White House on Pennsylvania Avenue to the White House here on Clay Street.

It took four years and more than 600,000 lives to make that same journey during the second American Revolution, now officially known as the US Civil War.

It's odd that this nation's bloodiest war, a war between brothers, stretched from 1861 until 1865 when the capital of the COnfederate States of America in Richmond is only 100 miles south from the capital of the United States of America in Washington.

Thousands of Americans annually visit Civil War battlefields, museums and monuments.

Enthusiasts study in passionate detail the leaders, military strategy and battles of the Civil War.

My fascination with the Civil War has less to do with military engagements than with the motivations of up to 1.5 million Southern men and boys wiling to die to tear the nation in two in defense of slavery, an utterly indefedsible institution.

Had the conflict, also known as the War of the Southern Planters, been fought only by Southern slave owners, it would have been over in weeks rather than years.

As it was, brilliant and charismatic Confederate Generals such as Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson led armies of poor, non-slave-owning Southerners into battle and came dangerously close to winning the war.

My mother's and father's ancestors were Southerners who fought for the Confederacy. I'm pleased that their side lost.

As a young man I fought for passage of civil rights laws that would eliminate the vestiges of slavery and the continued denial of equal rights to black Americans. What, I wondered, could my Confederate ancestors have been thinking?

I did not find the answer during my tour of the White House of the Confederacy or in the next-door Museum of the Confederacy.

A curator at the museum understood my state of perplexity but could only tell me that it's impossible to judge the decisions of my Confederate ancestors based on todays standards.

Although slavery was central to the decision by the Southern states to break away from the Union, many causes over the years led to conflict.

Sectional rivalry developed as the North became industrialized and gained population with European immigration.

The North wanted to build roads, canals and railroads to accommodate growing industries. Without personal or corporate taxation, revenue was raised by tariffs, which protected Northern products and increased prices of imported goods needed by the nonindustrialized South.

Southerners felt they were being gouged by their Northern brethern. They also felt that the states, not the federal government, had the authority to regulate commerce and other affairs. They also felt that the states had the right under the Constitution to separate from the Union, an idea that had strong supporters in both the North and South.

Deciding whether new territories and states would be slave or nonslave became a North-South fight for power in Congress and within the federal government.

Northern abolitionists demonized the Southerners and backed them into their own regional corner. Many Americans in the early years of the nation felt stronger regional and state pride than national pride.

Lee, who did not want to break up the Union, declined an offer to command the Union Army. He chose fight for Virginia and the South.

There must be lessons to be learned from the Civil War that can be applied to current and future conflicts.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: confederacy; csa; slavery
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To: ArneFufkin
He may look "older than his age," but he's probably voted for fewer D*mocrats over the years than our friend Walt...

;>)

201 posted on 05/03/2002 8:42:33 PM PDT by Who is John Galt?
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To: WhiskeyPapa
In '92 I DID vote for Clinton...In '00, I did vote for Al Gore.

Walt

780 posted on 2/28/02 10:49 AM Pacific by WhiskeyPapa

Clinton AND Gore?

ROTFLMAO!

;>)

202 posted on 05/03/2002 8:47:34 PM PDT by Who is John Galt?
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To: wasp69
So, did you do anything special for Lee-Jackson Day, Rowtund Ne'erdowell?
203 posted on 05/03/2002 8:47:45 PM PDT by Barry M. Titanate
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To: ArneFufkin;Who is John Galt?
"Who won the Winston Cup points race in 1862?

Had to have been Dave Marcus....

204 posted on 05/03/2002 8:47:58 PM PDT by Vigilantcitizen
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To: Who is John Galt?
Dang...Walt just knocked those closet doors slap off the hinges...
205 posted on 05/03/2002 8:49:46 PM PDT by Vigilantcitizen
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To: viligantcitizen
Had to have been Dave Marcus....

What would he have been driving that year?

;>)

206 posted on 05/03/2002 8:50:05 PM PDT by Who is John Galt?
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To: Who is John Galt?
"What would he have been driving that year?

Bowtie appaloosa of course...

; ^ )>

207 posted on 05/03/2002 8:52:31 PM PDT by Vigilantcitizen
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To: viligantcitizen
Dang...Walt just knocked those closet doors slap off the hinges...

Where do you think he'll 'find a home' in '04 - Lieberman?

Or maybe Feinstein?

;>)

208 posted on 05/03/2002 8:54:20 PM PDT by Who is John Galt?
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To: viligantcitizen
Bowtie appaloosa of course...

Now, I hate to admit it, but I would have to leave that kind of horsepower to guys like Dave - way to hot for me...

;>)

209 posted on 05/03/2002 8:57:40 PM PDT by Who is John Galt?
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To: viligantcitizen
Regards Kermit .... I'd love to hang around here but there are some local pub bands that need a listenin! Old Milwaukee beer on tap ... could it possibly get better?* Cheers!

*Don't answer that.

210 posted on 05/03/2002 9:03:55 PM PDT by ArneFufkin
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To: ArneFufkin
"Old Milwaukee beer on tap ... could it possibly get better?* Cheers!

*Don't answer that.

Sorry Arnie, I can't resist...

Old Mule Hockey??? C'mon man work with me here.

I'm havin' crown and sprite...Cheers back at ya...

211 posted on 05/03/2002 9:15:05 PM PDT by Vigilantcitizen
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To: Who is John Galt?
"Where do you think he'll 'find a home' in '04 - Lieberman?

Or maybe Feinstein?

If I were a gamblin man, and I am, I'd bet he's a Mckinney man...

; ^{/>

212 posted on 05/03/2002 9:18:48 PM PDT by Vigilantcitizen
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To: viligantcitizen
OOops...

Left off that /I>...sorry...

213 posted on 05/03/2002 9:20:11 PM PDT by Vigilantcitizen
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To: WhiskeyPapa
Would you sign off to the posulate that irrespective of whether the slave states had a right to succeed, that it was necessary to crush them and their adherence to a peculiar institution nonetheless when they exercised such "right?"
214 posted on 05/03/2002 9:26:56 PM PDT by Torie
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To: Torie
posulate = postulate
215 posted on 05/03/2002 9:33:22 PM PDT by Torie
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To: wasp69
The War of Northern Agression was due to the attack by the Liberal "Al Gore" types on the peace loving people of the South.
216 posted on 05/03/2002 9:40:05 PM PDT by Doe Eyes
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To: Non-Sequitur
Southern men marched off in rebellion to protect their way of life and the biggest threat that they saw to it, regardless of their social status, was an end to slavery and freedom for the black man. What, you thought that only the North was racist?

My ancestors were slave owners in Cuba. Slavery was a cancer in Cuba and it was a cancer in America.

It would have been much better if Southern Americans had picked their own cotton and Cubans had cut their own sugar cane. It would have been much better if we had not grown either cotton or sugar cane. The North's blessing was the fact that it had poor agricultural land that forced it into manufacturing as the road to wealth.

Slavery undermined free labor and created a perpetually embittered underclass that later contributed to a Communist Cuba and to blighted American inner cities. Over a century later, we are still paying the price.

That being said, it must be pointed out that neither Lincoln nor the North initially saw the Civil War as a war to end slavery. The initial war aim was to “preserve the Union”. Only later was the Civil War portrayed as a war to end slavery.

217 posted on 05/03/2002 10:01:17 PM PDT by Polybius
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To: Polybius
That being said, it must be pointed out that neither Lincoln nor the North initially saw the Civil War as a war to end slavery.

And I have never said that it was. What I have said is that it is was by far the single, most important reason why the south launched their rebellion.

218 posted on 05/04/2002 4:06:16 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: Non-Sequitur
What I have said is that it is was by far the single, most important reason why the south launched their rebellion.

And, as usual, having never been able to prove secession unconstitutional, you revert to your foundational assumption: that the withdrawal of the Southern States from the union was "rebellion."

To which I will respond as I have in the past:

* If secession was in fact unconstitutional (something you have been perennially unable to prove ;>), then it didn't matter a whit whether the Southern States seceded over slavery, or because they wanted to donate their entire economic output to the support of charities: the action was illegal.

* And if secession was constitutional (as suggested by the ratification documents, the Tenth Amendment, etc., etc., etc.), it also would not matter whether the seceding States were motivated by the slavery issue, or even a desire to re-institute the Aztec religion and mandate human sacrifice: their departure from the union would have been completely legal.

In other words, motivation is entirely irrelevant to the issue of constitutionality – and the actions of the federal government must be based upon the Constitution, or they are entirely illegal. If you can quote the constitutional clause that specifically 'delegates or prohibits' the right of secession, you're 'home free.' If not - well, your arguments and assurances won't amount to a hill of beans.

In fact, the advocates of 'union-at-any-cost' tend to focus on slavery for one reason: they can find no justification in the Constitution for the federal invasion of the seceded States, so they must necessarily look elsewhere. And morality provides wonderful window dressing: just ask the D*mocrats about their unceasing efforts "for the children"...

;>)

219 posted on 05/04/2002 9:42:30 AM PDT by Who is John Galt?
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To: Who is John Galt?
I can no more prove conclusively that it is unconstitutional than you can prove conclusively that it is constitutional. In the opinion of the Supreme Court, though, unilateral secession is not a right protected by the Constitution and their opinion is the only one which carries any real weight.
220 posted on 05/04/2002 9:48:31 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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