I was reading Stephen Cushman's Bloody Promenade recently, and he spoke about the fading of degrees of separation from the Civil War as time elapses. In other words, someone in the early 20th century could have known a number of Civil War veterans, whereas today people at best will have known someone who knew Civil War veterans. As we continue to drift away in time from the central event will it continue to change the way we think about the war?
In my own particular case, I know that my attitudes early in life were strongly shaped by my grandma who knew her own grandfather who had served in Co.E of the 2nd Texas Mounted Rifles in the New Mexico campaign. She was very much a Southern chauvanist and to hear her talk our family was Rebel through and through. Certainly she made it very clear to me that the Civil War was a living issue and that she had seen the result of it (old Confederate veterans, amputee's, lost fortunes etc.). As my mother said to me when she first saw me in 'Western Federal impression:' "your Grandma is spinning in her grave!"
Yet, I would suggest today that my grandma was already being affected by attitudinal shift in her own proper generation (the Romanticization of the 'Lost Cause' `a la Gone with the Wind). I doubt her opinions were the same as those of her grandparents generation who she knew and which were actually caught up in the events. My family on that side were all Texas-Germans or Louisiana-French and while some served from the outset in 1861 others held back until drafted, or used the immigrants clause to leave service in 1862. None had owned slaves. Doing the geneaology, I found that my Grandma's Godmother (her Gr-Aunt) - her favourite person - had even married a former 9th NY Hawkins Zouave in 1866 (he died before my grandma was born), and her Gr-Grandfather was a member of the local Rebublican Reconstruction government in Galveston. So her childhood memories had probably been filtered from through the Southern revival of her youth in the 1900s and 1910s.
Despite all this, I think it was the vitalness and passion of the 'memories' of my grandparent's generation on Galveston that drove my boyhood interest in the war.
So, I invite contributions to this thread on two themes: how many folks are left with only one degree of separation from the war, and how memory received from that generation has affected us.
In my own particular case, I know that my attitudes early in life were strongly shaped by my grandma who knew her own grandfather who had served in Co.E of the 2nd Texas Mounted Rifles in the New Mexico campaign. She was very much a Southern chauvanist and to hear her talk our family was Rebel through and through. Certainly she made it very clear to me that the Civil War was a living issue and that she had seen the result of it (old Confederate veterans, amputee's, lost fortunes etc.). As my mother said to me when she first saw me in 'Western Federal impression:' "your Grandma is spinning in her grave!"
Yet, I would suggest today that my grandma was already being affected by attitudinal shift in her own proper generation (the Romanticization of the 'Lost Cause' `a la Gone with the Wind). I doubt her opinions were the same as those of her grandparents generation who she knew and which were actually caught up in the events. My family on that side were all Texas-Germans or Louisiana-French and while some served from the outset in 1861 others held back until drafted, or used the immigrants clause to leave service in 1862. None had owned slaves. Doing the geneaology, I found that my Grandma's Godmother (her Gr-Aunt) - her favourite person - had even married a former 9th NY Hawkins Zouave in 1866 (he died before my grandma was born), and her Gr-Grandfather was a member of the local Rebublican Reconstruction government in Galveston. So her childhood memories had probably been filtered from through the Southern revival of her youth in the 1900s and 1910s.
Despite all this, I think it was the vitalness and passion of the 'memories' of my grandparent's generation on Galveston that drove my boyhood interest in the war.
So, I invite contributions to this thread on two themes: how many folks are left with only one degree of separation from the war, and how memory received from that generation has affected us.
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