I take a certain amount of pride in contributing to the ongoing effort; no one can honestly claim to be completely unbiased, but I attempted to report fairly on both the battlefields and the chambers where decisions were made.
And as far as I am concerned you were very unbiased.
"I hate newspapermen. They come into camp and pick up their camp rumors and print them as facts. I regard them as spies, which, in truth, they are. If I killed them all there would be news from Hell before breakfast."- W.T. Sherman
In 1864, Confederate General Patrick Cleburne warned his fellow southerners of the historical consequences should the South lose their war for independence. He was truly a prophet. He said if the South lost, “It means that the history of this heroic struggle will be written by the enemy. That our youth will be trained by Northern school teachers; will learn from Northern school books their version of the war; will be impressed by all of the influences of History and Education to regard our gallant dead as traitors and our maimed veterans as fit subjects for derision.” No truer words were ever spoken.
I wanted to handle this one separately, since I can't claim to be neutral. Cleburne was actually wildly off base. The American Civil War is easily the most written-about war that human beings have ever fought, and there is good reason to think that it will hold this record until humanity ceases to record history. It is also one of the few wars in which the losers wrote as much or more of the history as the winners. Nearly everybody who survived wrote memoirs (with the disappointing exception of Robert E. Lee), and of course most of them tried to make themselves look good (and their opponents look bad). The Southerners wrote such a huge number of works that it became known as the "Lost Cause" school of writing, and the textbooks of the great majority of Southern schools followed the line. George C. Marshall once remarked that when you compared Northern and Southern books it was hard to realize they were about the same war.
When I first started the thread, I only expected to write until the bombardment of Fort Sumter. (Or even less, since many of my other threads ended up locked.) I thought that the ground had already been well-covered by better writers than myself, and indeed there have been some superb works over the years. But the encouragement I received, and the realization that there was also an enormous amount of biased and less-than-accurate writing on the subject made me decide to keep going. One of the reasons for my including so many of the speeches and documents of the time is that the writing during the war is more trustworthy than the writing after the war. (e.g. the contemporary accounts of the Fort Pillow massacre compared with later material.)
In a real sense, the struggle over the Civil War is not over. The questions of "why?" and "what did it all mean?" are very much with us. I take a certain amount of pride in contributing to the ongoing effort; no one can honestly claim to be completely unbiased, but I attempted to report fairly on both the battlefields and the chambers where decisions were made.
warspite1
Well I think you did a great job. I have tried on numerous occasions to "get into" the US Civil War - without success until now. It is a fascinating subject, not least because - unlike our civil war that is long forgotten - the US civil war still seems to provoke heated debate from both sides after all this time.
Now Maitland, now's your time!
Duke of Wellington to 1st Guards Brigade - Waterloo 18 June 1815
Divers are starting to recover artifacts from the ironclad CSS Georgia, scuttled in Savannah harbor to prevent Sherman's forces from seizing her when the Northerners took the city at the end of the "march to the sea". http://www.cnn.com/2015/07/21/us/savann ... index.html
What is especially interesting is the discovery of a Dahlgren cannon. Those generally belonged to the Union, being invented by (later Admiral) John Dahlgren, USN.
Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any foreign war? Isn't every war fought between men, between brothers?
Dang, a Dahlgren. I wonder how on earth it got there? Obviously from a prize, but off the top of my head I know of only a couple off possibilities, and those ships sank.