Re: Why did the Southern Man go to war?
Is that quote contempoary to the War period?
For this discussion, we need to throw out almost every Post-War account on why a veteran went to war. After 1865 the ownership of the War remained the almost exclusive right of white Southerners AND white Northerners. Both sides would (and did for quite some time) play down the Emancipationist legacy of the War, which meant that the South was fighting to perserve slavery. Southerners embraced the Lost Cause mentality in order to justify the cost of the War. If the War wasn't about slavery but something bigger, then the deaths of thousands of Southern men could be justified. Likewise many Northern whites were more than willing to accept a Southern view of the War (focusing solely on how both sides fought courageously) for reconciliatory purposes.
A great book that looks into this trend is David Blight's Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory.
Originally posted by Pritchett Ball
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Is that quote contempoary to the War period?
For this discussion, we need to throw out almost every Post-War account on why a veteran went to war. After 1865 the ownership of the War remained the almost exclusive right of white Southerners AND white Northerners. Both sides would (and did for quite some time) play down the Emancipationist legacy of the War, which meant that the South was fighting to perserve slavery. Southerners embraced the Lost Cause mentality in order to justify the cost of the War. If the War wasn't about slavery but something bigger, then the deaths of thousands of Southern men could be justified. Likewise many Northern whites were more than willing to accept a Southern view of the War (focusing solely on how both sides fought courageously) for reconciliatory purposes.
A great book that looks into this trend is David Blight's Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory.
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