Re: Enlisted African Confederates
Allow me to add one more bullet point to Mr. Christiansen's post.
4. Understand that slavery wasn't as popular among poor whites in the South (no middle class) because it, slavery, competed with these folks for jobs. One big example is the court house in Vicksburg, MS. which was built by a construction company using slave labor. Most, if not all the crafts, of that period were performed by slaves under direction of master craftsmen.
Point ? Poor whites all around the South were many times edged out of jobs, contracts, and the like to companies and plantation owners who owned slaves and utilized them as their labor force outside the traditional "pickin cotton" mindset. Thus the need for patriotisim and the protection of states rights to rally the masses, not wholly the protection of slavery.
Now that statement will probably stir the pot. Being from the deep South (Louisiana) and very objective as it pertains to this topic I understand that'll fly in the face of my fellow Sons of Confederate Veteran members, but by the same token I don't find that slavery was as demonic as modern groups (NAACP, universities, and similar) tend to portray it during the Antebellum period. That is not to say that there weren't abuses', just that there's way more depth and breadth to the subject than modern Civil Rights, and other groups realize or admit.
The reason we don't have more blacks interested in this hobby is more culture related than any existence of an enthusiast being discriminatory.
Dennis Neal
Allow me to add one more bullet point to Mr. Christiansen's post.
4. Understand that slavery wasn't as popular among poor whites in the South (no middle class) because it, slavery, competed with these folks for jobs. One big example is the court house in Vicksburg, MS. which was built by a construction company using slave labor. Most, if not all the crafts, of that period were performed by slaves under direction of master craftsmen.
Point ? Poor whites all around the South were many times edged out of jobs, contracts, and the like to companies and plantation owners who owned slaves and utilized them as their labor force outside the traditional "pickin cotton" mindset. Thus the need for patriotisim and the protection of states rights to rally the masses, not wholly the protection of slavery.
Now that statement will probably stir the pot. Being from the deep South (Louisiana) and very objective as it pertains to this topic I understand that'll fly in the face of my fellow Sons of Confederate Veteran members, but by the same token I don't find that slavery was as demonic as modern groups (NAACP, universities, and similar) tend to portray it during the Antebellum period. That is not to say that there weren't abuses', just that there's way more depth and breadth to the subject than modern Civil Rights, and other groups realize or admit.
The reason we don't have more blacks interested in this hobby is more culture related than any existence of an enthusiast being discriminatory.
Dennis Neal
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