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Statue of Abe Lincoln: "...a slap in the face of a lot of brave men..."
The Cincinnati Enquirer ^ | Friday, December 27, 2002 | AP

Posted on 12/27/2002 6:50:38 AM PST by yankeedame

Friday, December 27, 2002

Lincoln statue won't be embraced by all

The Associated Press

RICHMOND, Va. - Abraham Lincoln is returning to the capital of the Confederacy, much to the chagrin of the Sons of Confederate Veterans.

Five days before the Civil War ended in April 1865, the president and his youngest child, Tad, traveled to still-smoldering Richmond soon after Southern forces abandoned the city in flames. On April 5, 2003, the 138th anniversary of that visit, a bronze statue of the pair commissioned by the United States Historical Society will be unveiled at the Civil War Visitor Center of the National Park Service.

"Here is a national hero, a small boy, and a beautiful city by the James River, all united again," said Robert Kline, chairman of the nonprofit group society, which works on behalf of museums and other groups on projects of historic and artistic value. "This time Lincoln's in Richmond for all time."

Richmond, home to towering statues of Confederacy figures including Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson and J.E.B. Stuart, was abandoned after Union forces led by Gen. Ulysses S. Grant attacked on April 2, 1965.

The Sons of Confederate Veterans view the Lincoln statue as "a slap in the face of a lot of brave men and women who went through four years of unbelievable hell fighting an invasion of Virginia led by President Lincoln," Brag Bowling, the SCV Virginia commander, said Thursday. The group had only recently learned of the statue, and had no immediate plans to protest.

The life-size statue by sculptor David Frech will show Lincoln and his son on a bench against a granite wall. The words "To Bind Up The Nation's Wounds" will be etched into a capstone.


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: dixie
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To: thatdewd
WOW, the black guy said that Lincoln treated him nice.

That's not exactly what he said, was it?

He said that Lincoln was the -only- great man he had met in the United States who in no way reminded him of the different color of his skin.

Walt

341 posted on 12/29/2002 3:22:03 PM PST by WhiskeyPapa
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To: yankeedame
When is someone going to commission a sculpture of a 50 tentacled Federal octopus squeezing the life out of the Soverign States?
342 posted on 12/29/2002 3:26:35 PM PST by fightu4it
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To: 2/75 RANGER
but I am quite sure the denizens of that city do not like it one bit. No more than some of the citizens of Richmond care to have a statue of Lincoln in their midst.

Then you must have been quite pleased when the arabs crashed the plane into the Pentagon in occupied Virginia and killed all those Yankees in New York.

343 posted on 12/29/2002 3:27:26 PM PST by Cogadh na Sith
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To: WhiskeyPapa
In the -same- speech, Douglass said:

"Viewed from the genuine abolition ground, Mr. Lincoln seemed tardy, cold, dull and indifferent; but measuring him by the sentiment of his country, a sentiment he was bound as a statesman to consult, he was swift, zealous, radical and determined."

I'd be glad to leave it there.

So would I, because it proves how ridiculously false and imaginary your revisionist claims are that he was "very advanced" in regards to race. Bwaaaahaaaaahaaaaa!!!! Douglass is pointing out that Lincoln was the opposite of "very advanced" in his attitude about race from the standpoint of those who wanted to abolish slavery!!! Thank you for finally agreeing with me. Here's the other quote from that speech:

"In his interests and associations, in his habits and thoughts and his prejudices, he was a white man, he was preeminently the white man's president."

344 posted on 12/29/2002 6:16:22 PM PST by thatdewd
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To: WhiskeyPapa
Of course not; you were ignorant of the fact. And yet the fact that Booth was at this last public address would be known to anyone even generally familiar with Lincoln's life. That set of people wouldn't include you.

This post of yours is so stupid I really don't know why I'm responding other than to tell you that you're a darn liar. So far I have been very kind and have not pointed out your extreme ignorance in regards to the Lincoln assassination. If you truly believe that Booth just got pissed about something Lincoln said and then peppered his head a few days later, then you must obviously obtain the bulk of your historical knowledge from comic books or the back of cereal boxes. It is a very complex and fascinating subject, and historians can still not agree on exactly how deep the conspiracy went. One thing I think most of them would agree on, however, is that your overly simplistic explanation is childish at best.

345 posted on 12/29/2002 6:16:31 PM PST by thatdewd
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To: WhiskeyPapa
That is a modern day judgment. It is silly to apply modern day standards to historical people.

NO it is NOT a modern day 'judgement'. It was a precise comparison for his time. Re-read my post, I made it quite clear I was keeping things relative to the historical period. I even gave him credit for being a moderate, which he was. I kept everything in context so you could not post some crap line, but you did anyway. Arrghhh.

It's hard to tell with Lincoln though. He also once went to a hospital full of wounded confederate soldiers and offered to shake hands with any that would shake his.

And General Lee showed compassion to wounded and captured yankees.

After the surrender at Appomattox he was shown a picture of General Lee. He said Lee had a good face.

Lee did have a good face.

You may not know that the evening before his final public address, a jubilant crowd gathered at the White House and requested a speech. He made a short speech; he also said "Dixie" was one of his favorite tunes, and had the band play it.

Yes, he did, and you obviously don't know the history behind that little 'joke' of his. Immediately after he requested the song, he said this: "I insist that on yesterday, we fairly captured it. I referred the question to the attorney-general, and he gave it as his legal opinion that it is now our property." - He was not being nice, Walt. He was being a smart-ass, and the crowd loved it.

346 posted on 12/29/2002 6:16:43 PM PST by thatdewd
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To: WhiskeyPapa
That's not exactly what he said, was it? He said that Lincoln was the -only- great man he had met in the United States who in no way reminded him of the different color of his skin.

He also called Lincoln a fraud in 1864, and said ten years after his death that he was prejudiced. But here's the quote in question as you provided it:

"[He was] the first great man that I talked with in the United States freely, who in no single instance reminded me of the difference between himself and myself, of the difference of color."

You see, Walt, you're wrong again. He didn't say Lincoln was the -ONLY- great man he had met in the US that was nice to him, he said Lincoln was the -FIRST-. But that is a minor point. Yes, Douglass says in that quote that Lincoln was nice to him when they met. I didn't dispute it the first time you mentioned it. Here, I'll even say WOW again: "WOW". Just for fun, here's what Douglass said in 1876 at that monument dedication:

"In his interests and associations, in his habits and thoughts and his prejudices, he was a white man, he was preeminently the white man's president."

347 posted on 12/29/2002 6:17:13 PM PST by thatdewd
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To: thatdewd
He also called Lincoln a fraud in 1864, and said ten years after his death that he was prejudiced...

I'm betting 'prejudiced' is a more modern word also. Did you post quotes from Douglass where he used these words? Maybe I missed it.

Walt

348 posted on 12/30/2002 2:46:08 AM PST by WhiskeyPapa
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To: thatdewd
You see, Walt, you're wrong again. He didn't say Lincoln was the -ONLY- great man he had met in the US that was nice to him, he said Lincoln was the -FIRST-. But that is a minor point.

The word "nice" was never used, but thanks for the correction. I misread it myself.

Walt

349 posted on 12/30/2002 4:26:33 AM PST by WhiskeyPapa
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To: AppyPappy
Lincoln was a known racist by today's standards.

So where Lee, Davis, Jackson, and every single other southern leader, military and civilian. Should their statues be banned, too? Or are only confederate racists permissible?

350 posted on 12/30/2002 4:43:48 AM PST by Non-Sequitur
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To: wideawake
Putting a statue of Lincoln in the middle of Richmond is intended to provoke people. In historical terms it's as relevant as putting a statue of Custer in the middle of a Sioux reservation or a statue of Daniel Webster in Seattle.

Or putting a statue of Jefferson Davis in Washington, D.C.? Oh wait, they did that.

351 posted on 12/30/2002 4:45:09 AM PST by Non-Sequitur
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To: wideawake
And Bismarck actually marched into Paris - but curiously, there are no statues erected to him there.

Paris was a city in a foreign country, Richmond was not.

352 posted on 12/30/2002 4:49:00 AM PST by Non-Sequitur
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To: billbears
Within 20 years or so. Slavery was becoming quickly unprofitable. Look at how emancipation was handled throughout the Western Hemisphere. Everywhere except these United States it was handled peacefully over time. For you to assume that it would not have followed the same course would be to insult ancestors of both sides. The writing was on the wall and eventually it would have disappeared.

And been replaced by what? The south would have been as dependent on plantation agriculture in 1881 as it was in 1861. Who would have gotten the crop in?

Hmmmm, well let's see how it was under the almighty Empire. For suggested reading you might want to read all of the Slave Narratives collected in the 1930s. Not just the selected ones that paint the South in a bad light but all of them. Doesn't paint your precious union in a good light.

Amazingly enough in all the Slave Narratives I've read not a single person says that they wish that they were still slaves. They speak well of their old owners, and since most slave owners did not mistreat their chattle why wouldn't they? They talk about how hard times were and how their treatment was, but since almost all of them remained down south that is every bit a condemnation of southerners as it is northerners. But not one says, "I wish slavery hadn't ended."

Let's discuss how states that fought for the north as late as 1859 were passing laws banning the very existence of blacks in their state.

Shall we talk - again - about how southern states as late as 1861 were putting bans on free blacks in their state constitutions?

Or shall we talk about Deconstruction? Those wonderful ten years that many whites were disenfranchised to vote and blacks were all but required to vote Republican.

Shall we talk about the Black Laws prior to Reconstruction, or the Jim Crow laws, those wonderful 90-odd years that blacks were disenfranchised?

What aspects of northern ers treatment of blacks would you like to discuss?

Stay on task, bill. I believe that the question was how blacks would have been treated down south. But I'll discuss the way that they were treated, North and south, all day if you want too.

353 posted on 12/30/2002 5:03:22 AM PST by Non-Sequitur
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To: Non-Sequitur
Paris is a foreign country for Germans? How so? They don't need a passport there. They can live and work their legally for as long as they want. They use the same currency, they both vote in the European Parliamentary elections, etc., etc.

About the only thing they don't have in common is that they don't have a common army - kind of like the USA and the CSA!

354 posted on 12/30/2002 5:03:57 AM PST by wideawake
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To: dts32041
"if the assisnation had occured in 64 or 63 the rats would have rolled over much as they do today and negotiate for a truce."

If it had happened in 63 or 64, the Rats would not have had a chance in the 64 elections, IF there were elections held at all. Hamlin, a radical Republican would have been President, not the war democrat Johnson. Aside from the sympathy vote the Republicans would have had if there would have been elections, IMHO there would have been no elections in 1864. Seward or Stanton would likely have taken over as dictator with Hamlin as a figurehead, and the Copperheads would have been in prison, not running for office.

No nation in history had ever held elections in the midst of a crisis such as the Civil War. That elections were even held in 64, that there was never a thought of canceling them even when it appeared inevitable that the incumbent party would be rejected, was amazing and totally to the credit of Lincoln and his devotion to the Constitution. Sherman’s taking Atlanta in September changed the dynamics of that election. At that point, the Rats even changed their campaign rhetoric from “peace on any terms and to hell with Union” to “Union first and then peace”. The only thing they kept from their earlier platform was support for slavery. Can you even begin to imagine what the assassination of a President would have done to the dynamics of the nation at that point in time? The entire South would have paid a frightful price. The results and reactions were traumatic enough in April of 65 when the war was already won.

355 posted on 12/30/2002 5:23:25 AM PST by Ditto
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To: talleyman
We all agree slavery was evil - in both the North and the South. The Southern fixation with preserving it was a direct result of some in the North seeking to force its abolition in the South and the Territories.

You should read the words of southern leaders of the time. They preached slavery as a positive good, God's way, and the natural right of freemen to hold inferiors in bondage "for their own good" and for the betterment of society. They saw it as the foundation of their culture, or as Little Alec Stephens said, the Cornerstone of their nation. They did not see it as an evil by any means.

356 posted on 12/30/2002 5:28:36 AM PST by Ditto
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To: wideawake
I imagine that if you presented your view of Germany and France to a German or a Frenchman then they would spend hours explaining just how wrong you are.

The long and the short of it is that Germany and France are independent, soverign nations. The confederacy was not.

357 posted on 12/30/2002 5:47:01 AM PST by Non-Sequitur
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I think the important thing to remember is that Lincoln is definitely offensive to conferderate states. Thats why they don't use $5 bills down there.

But the stars and bars are NOT offensive to blacks, they are just messing with us.
358 posted on 12/30/2002 5:49:43 AM PST by KneelBeforeZod
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To: Non-Sequitur
The Confederacy was an independent, sovereign nation for a few years by any empirical definition. If the mere assertion of a territorial claim by the USA negated the effective sovereignty of the CSA, then many countries aren't sovereign nations at all.

The strongest argument against any Frenchman or German arguing that their respective nations are independent and sovereign is the existence of the EU with its common currency and fungible citizenship. For every Frenchman or German willing to argue the point, there are two who will gladly take the other side.

The argument of any Frenchman or German against the effective consolidation of their nations will be: (1) their cultural distinctiveness and (2) the fact that their armies are not yet consolidated (although this is in the planning stages). Those arguments redound in favor of the Confederacy's sovereignty - not against it.

359 posted on 12/30/2002 6:37:25 AM PST by wideawake
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To: wideawake
The Confederacy was an independent, sovereign nation for a few years by any empirical definition.

I would disagree with that. Any definition would require other nations recognizing your sovereignity, and not a single nation recognized the confederacy as an independent country. Richmond was, and always has been, a city in the United States so Lincoln had every right to go there.

360 posted on 12/30/2002 6:47:09 AM PST by Non-Sequitur
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