Brief Thoughts on Sherman
As I keep mentioning, I'm currently reading W.T. Sherman's memoirs. They are excellent. I've just reached what has to be the most interesting thing in them yet (even more interesting than his stories about California before and during the gold rush, which were awesome). Sherman reprints in full a four way exchange of letters between himself and Halleck (who was Sherman's superior, stationed in Washington DC, and therefore the voice of what the president et al wanted) on the one hand, and between Sherman, Confederate general J.B. Hood, and the mayor of Atlanta on the other hand. Sent just after the fall of this city, I think I could probably write a book on the intricacies of these 10 pages or so of letters, which contain some of the most famous Sherman quotes of the war (multiple passages that were familiar to me). It's great to get to read the entire exchange in full, and it speaks to a lot of issues that I think we still face - in particular, a question I think echoes through the last one hundred and fifty years - whose fault was it, really, that the war took place?
Being a northern girl meself - raised in NYC, and a descendant of a (granted rather pathetic) Union soldier - I'm inclined to think that Sherman has the right in these letters, and that the South is to blame. Indeed, from the point of view of a historian, despite my biases, I find it difficult to see how any other case could be made. Reading Hood's letters to Sherman feels like reading the first salvos of the battle that starts after the war, and ends in the development of the "Lost Cause" mythos that still drives so many Southerners even today.
I'd love to get the opinions of my friends on this matter, but I haven't the time or energy to go into the depth that would really be necessary to elucidate the many layers of this - like I said, I think I could write an entire book about it and still not really do it justice. Deep stuff. And still very relevant.
Being a northern girl meself - raised in NYC, and a descendant of a (granted rather pathetic) Union soldier - I'm inclined to think that Sherman has the right in these letters, and that the South is to blame. Indeed, from the point of view of a historian, despite my biases, I find it difficult to see how any other case could be made. Reading Hood's letters to Sherman feels like reading the first salvos of the battle that starts after the war, and ends in the development of the "Lost Cause" mythos that still drives so many Southerners even today.
I'd love to get the opinions of my friends on this matter, but I haven't the time or energy to go into the depth that would really be necessary to elucidate the many layers of this - like I said, I think I could write an entire book about it and still not really do it justice. Deep stuff. And still very relevant.
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http://pics.livejournal.com/nekomata/pic/0016fsaf
http://pics.livejournal.com/nekomata/pic/0016g6k5
And my in-laws still think I'm a Yankee. *sigh*
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But I also like
Also "Texas! The only state to secede in defense of slavery -- twice!" (First time from Mexico. Though there were other issues, like forced Catholicism and illegal immigration -- from the US.)
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Slavery was instrumental for the South to continue to function economically and psychologically. Any attempt to muck with the right of a State's self-governing, such as the Wilmot Proviso in 1846, would fundamentally weaken a southern State's ability to provide Safety and Happiness for itself. Southern fears to this would only be aggravated when presented with the proxy conflict of Bleeding Kansas and the popularizing of John Brown. Here was a potential future for every Slave state unless a balanced agreement for the steady expansion of slavery could be agreed upon. With the election of someone who refused to compromise on the expansion of slavery, the only viable alternative to secure Safety and Happiness is to absolve it and start again.
Whee! Went a bit more formal than I wanted to =3
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