I think Mississippi, my home state, has done the right thing. We need a flag that speaks to unity and a bright future.
The Confederate Battle Flag has a place in history and it is in museums and other similar places where the flag should be displayed. It ought not appear in whole or as a part of a state flag on state or local government properties like courthouses or city halls.
National battlefields where the Civil War battles were fought should be included among those locations where the battle flag in proper historical context may be displayed. If we erase history we learn nothing from it.
The KKK and other more modern hate groups co-opted the battle flag and have turned it into a symbol associated with overt racism. That’s why it ought to go.
Allow me to say that as an alumn of the University of Mississippi I appreciate that it has long since banned the flag from use on campus and at sporting events. This was done even though the battle flag’s significance to that school has a strong historical link because of what happened on July 3, 1863 at Gettysburg.
Company A, 11th Mississippi Infantry Regiment, Army of Northern Virginia, held the left flank of the Confederate Army’s “Pickett’s Charge” that day. So what?
Well, Company A was the entire student body of the university, or what was left of it after fighting in most of the major battles in the East. It was the only unit on either side to have sustained 100% casualties that day. Wiped out.
It is the only unit at the Gettysburg National Park that the park commission permits to have two monuments - one where the charge began and the second at the stone wall of the Union line where they ended the charge. Their colors (that Battle Flag) were captured there. By distance, it was the greatest advance of any unit on the field that day.
Appropriately, their charge ended at Bryan’s Barn, on the property of a free black man!
So, it is the colors of the student body, Company A, 11th Mississippi, that became a memorial to those students and became associated with their school.
Many people, including most of its students, do not know why the battle flag (actually regimental colors) became associated with the school.
But, since it’s original intent, to honor the students who died under those colors that day, has been co-opted by racist bigots, it’s time to retire the flag from public use for all but museums and battlefields in proper historical context.
The South was wrong. It was about slavery. I’m glad the North won. We still have much healing to do. But it’s not wrong to remember that there was duty, honor, and valor in those young men, as misguided as the bigoted politicians were that caused the war that put them there that day. Originally Posted by Brer Rabbit
You are absolutely correct, WD, the American Civil War was fought over the issue of state’s rights... Interestingly, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, Andrew Jackson, Martin Van Buren, William Henry Harrison, John Tyler, James Polk, Zachary Taylor, Andrew Jackson and Ulysses S. Grant were all slave owners... I guess we just have to demolish Washington D.C.The Civil War was absolutely fought over states’ rights. They were fighting for the right of autonomy. They wanted to determine their own destiny and not let the federal government determine how they lived their lives. They were fighting for the right to secede from the Union that they had just voted to joined in 1817.
Most recently, the protesters were trying to tear down a statue of Abraham Lincoln... whatever... he was a Republican, ironically Originally Posted by Steel Wheels
Bass Cat, you should also read “Thithes of Blood” which is about the 11th Miss Infantry from one participants perspective. By Billy Ellis. Originally Posted by jofmsThanks for the heads up Jofms I just found a copy on ebay. I wish I had a copy of university grays still. I let a friend borrow it and it never returned. Its rather hard to find a copy these days.
Thanks for the heads up Jofms I just found a copy on ebay. I wish I had a copy of university grays still. I let a friend borrow it and it never returned. Its rather hard to find a copy these days.
I came to possess the book in the same manner so I guess its apropos that I lost it the same way.
I only read non fiction biographies and the like. I just finished "Home before morning" by Lynda Va Devanter. She was a nurse in Vietnam. A very good read also if you like those type books. Originally Posted by BassCat
Dang Bass, guys like me just thought you were all about finding top shelf poon. Here you are showing your entillect, intillect, er, ah.....smarts! Originally Posted by o2flyhiI live on the ms gulf coast where top shelf poon rarely makes the rounds. When it does I do my best to get in line as often as possible though.