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To: LadyJD
In the 1913 Confederate Veteran magazine published by the UCV.... First I have heard about this. How widepread was this sentiment?
70 posted on 01/20/2002 2:34:04 PM PST by RobbyS
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To: RobbyS
That I can't answer because I don't have enough information. I do know that there are several monuments that were erected across the South to the faithful slaves who suffered and in many cases remained loyal to "their" families after the WBTS.

I am sorry that a quick "Google" search didn't turn up the URL I wanted to post on that subject. There is a very nice monument somewhere in the Lowcountry of South Carolina that is dedicated to loyal slaves.

I did find this:

Commentary by Douglas M. Schauer
"That Home is Here"
By Douglas M. Schauer: schauer@lowcountry.com

In early 1861, Colleton County, like most areas of the South, sent its young men off to war. It was a war fought for many reasons. Many of the men did not return; they died at Chickamauga, Pocataligo, Drury's Bluff, Weldon Railroad, Petersburg, Gettysburg, and many other untold places. They died of disease, they died of the musket, they died of the bayonet, they died of the sword. They were citizens of Colleton County and as such deserve to be honored, like the dead of our other wars, with the monument that now stands on the courthouse grounds.

It is said that the monument promotes racism and division. Inanimate objects cannot do this. Only the hearts of men can do this. It is unfortunate that today many groups, both black and white, promote this philosophy, but I can assure you it's not this monument. The fact remains that 94% of the men who fought for the South during the War Between the States did not own slaves. Of the 6% who did, only 3% can be considered large slaveholders; most worked the fields alongside their servants. It does not make sense that 94% of the men would fight and possibly die so that only a few could hold men captive.

If you read the countless memoirs, diaries, letters and other first person accounts of the War, you will find a variety of reasons why they chose to go off to war. They went because they thought it would be fun. They went because they did not want to miss the adventure of their generation. They went to protect their homes. They went because they thought of themselves as patriots just as the Founding Fathers did. They went because if they didn't, others would think they were cowards. And they went so that their families and sweethearts would be proud of them. All of these reasons can be found in the first person accounts of all our other wars, too. They were no different. In all the first person accounts I have read, not one mentions that they were fighting to promote slavery - not one!

It's not just a white monument. A Colleton County African-American joined C Company, 24th South Carolina Volunteer Infantry as a cook. His name was James Russell. He joined of his own free will, he wasn't forced. He was a free man, not a slave. And he didn't just stay in the rear. On November 25, 1863, he followed his comrades into battle at Missionary Ridge and laid down his life with them. He is listed as killed in action. So you see, this monument does represent us all. Different races, different backgrounds, different ideas, and different dreams. To forget our Confederate dead is to forget Mr. Russell and the contributions he made for Colleton County.

Some say the monument represents what is shameful and undesirable. Some say it reinforces thoughts and actions better buried and forgotten. To this I say - the monument represents duty, honor, courage, and sacrifice. These things should not be forgotten or buried. These are desirable traits that should be instilled in all our youth: black and white. The men who fought and died sacrificed everything for their homes. The men who fought and lived came home different people. And all of them helped define our national character.

If this monument is removed, it will dishonor the dead of this county by judging them with a label they do not deserve. It is fitting that this monument is erected on the county courthouse grounds; the men who died were citizens of this county; they are our kin and should not be forgotten. If this monument is removed, it will not only dishonor those who fought in the War Between the States, but it will dishonor those who fought in all other American wars as well for you see, they all are comrades in death and as we all know death is colorblind.

For many reasons, as illustrated above, soldiers go off to war. It is rarely for political ones. But once at war, the only thought on a soldier's mind is home. Home is what motivates all soldiers whether from the War Between the States of the Gulf War.

Vietnam soldiers always thought of home. They didn't care about communism, or about the VC, or about the Gulf of Tonkin resolution. All they cared about was surviving their tour and coming home. I remember my dad telling me about getting off the plane in America after his tour in Vietnam. He stood proudly in his officer's uniform with medals shining in the sun. Then some student walked up to him and spit on him. His own people spit on him because they assumed he was a baby-killer and was evil. They didn't take the time to ask why he went or what actually happened over there. They believed their own propaganda. Vietnam veterans really didn't get to come home until recently with the construction of the Vietnam Memorial in Washington. You know we lost that war, too.

The same is true with this monument. Many of the dead of Colleton County lay in cemeteries and battlefields strewn throughout the Nation, including Mr. Russell who is buried at Missionary Ridge in Tennessee. This monument lets them come home. For those veteran's who survived and their descendants, it gives them closure and a way to cope with the tragedy of the War. For the families of those who didn't come home, it allows them to proclaim to the world that their father, their brother, their husband, their son gave everything they had for home.

To those who want this monument removed, I challenge you. Read the letters, the diaries, the memoirs of those soldiers. Learn about them. Dr. Martin Luther King fought and died so that his children would be judged not by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character. I ask you now not to judge these Confederate soldiers on the color of their skin but by the content of their character as witnessed by the writings they left behind. Writings meant only for family or self and therefore a true judge of what they felt. I guarantee you that these men thought only of one thing. They didn't care about slavery, or state's rights, or politics, or race, or hatred; they thought only of home. And that home is here.

82 posted on 01/20/2002 4:16:33 PM PST by LadyJD
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