|
Legends Home
Site
Map
What's New!!

American History
Ghost Towns
Ghostly Legends
Historic People
Native Americans
The Old West
Photo
Galleries
Roadside
Attractions
Rocky Mtn Store
Route 66
Travel
Destinations
Treasure Tales
Legends Blog
Free E-Newsletter
Facebook
Fanpage
Twittering

Contact Us
Please report
broken
links, missing pictures, or
other problems online by
clicking
HERE or send us
an
email. Thanks!
| |
|
|
|
AMERICAN
HISTORY
Civil War - The Curtain
Drawn Aside |
|
|
|
By
Michael Russell |
|
When the republicans won in the 1860
election and Abraham Lincoln was the President-elect, the leaders of
the Cotton Belt in the deep South knew perfectly well that although he
was not an abolitionist and had never advocated the destruction of
slavery in the states, slavery was not safe with him in the White
House. They knew the tide was going to turn with a president and a
dominant political party in Washington committed to the checking of
slavery in the territories. They knew that if slavery was no longer
able to expand, it eventually would have to die.
If the Southerners did not feel that they
were going to war to defend slavery, they did have a deep feeling that
the race question that would confront them if slavery were abolished
was more than they could handle. They had been brought up, despite the
quietness of their slave population, to suspect that under the surface
dangerous violence lurked.
|

Abraham Lincoln.
This image available for
photographic prints and downloads
HERE!
|
|
| The example of Santo
Domingo, where the slaves rose in revolt and massacred all the white
people they could get their hands on, was something they never forgot.
The Nat Turner Rebellion had pointed in that direction. A few other
outbreaks in the South seemed to point the same way. And most
Southerners frankly confessed that they did not see how the two races
could get along together if the institution of Slavery were removed.
If the Southerners were not fighting to preserve slavery, then they
were at least fighting to preserve a situation in which they did not
have to be afraid of a sudden violent uprising by the slave
population. What made John Brown,
for instance, such a hated character in the South, was the fact that
his strange abortive raid at Harpers Ferry was designed as a step to
stir up a slave rebellion. If it had succeeded, it would undoubtedly
have gotten out of hand. Brown was the man to start something like
that; not the man to control it. Fortunately, it did not succeed and
the country was spared what would have been a very tragic, bloody
experience. But the fact that such a tragic, bloody experience seemed
to lie below the surface of their lives was a frightening thing to the
people of the South and helped persuade a great many that safety, for
them, lay in getting out of the Union.
The black man in the North was not a
slave, but he was very definitely not merely a second-class citizen,
but a third or fourth-class citizen. He had few rights, practically no
privileges and no social standing whatever. In general, the poorest
jobs, the lowest wages and the worst housing were reserved for him. In
some cases, indeed, it was possible to argue that some slaves in the
South might be better off than black people were in the North,
strictly from the standpoint of food, clothing, housing and general
treatment. Of course, that argument missed the point because, above
everything else, the slave wanted his freedom and he was willing to
pay a high price for it; and he did. The rest of the country paid an
equal price to get it for him.
When the war began and Northern armies
moved down into the South, the soldiers in the Northern armies
discovered that the black men who were all around them were somehow on
their side. The soldiers felt that they were in a foreign country,
simply because slavery did not exist there. They passed the
plantations with their slave quarters behind the big house and the
work gangs out in the field. This was not life in Ohio or
Pennsylvania.
|
|
|
|
This was foreign; it was different. The people
here were enemies and yet, somehow these black folk were friendly. If a
soldier was lost from his unit, or had straggled after a battle and did
not know where he was or how to get back, it was the black people who
would help him. They would give him something to eat, they would put him
on the road, they would help him dodge the Confederate patrols; they were
always on his side. Furthermore, they soon clustered round the camps and
the Northern soldier began to realize that there was something wrong with
the argument that the slaves were contented with their lot.
Added November, 2006
|
|

John Brown, in an attempt to amass arms for a
slave insurrection, attacked the federal armory and arsenal at Harpers
Ferry, Virginia on October 16-18, 1859. Less than two months later, on
December 2nd, he was hanged for murder and treason at Charles Town,
Virginia.
This image available for
photographic prints and downloads
HERE!
|
About the Author:
Michael Russell Your Independent guide to
Civil War. Additionally, Mr. Russell has
been involved in online business since early 2001, and whilst spending
countless hours each month running his business still finds time for
various hobbies and interests.
Article Source:
Ezine Articles
|
|
From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Civil
War & Military Photographs - From our personal
Photo Print Shop, you can now order prints that provide
dramatic glimpses into the Civil War and
other military expeditions and battles that occurred during the days of
the
Old West
.
From battlegrounds, to generals, Indian
Campaigns, the cavalry, and everything in between, you'll find it here
and check back often as this varied collection grows daily.
|
| |
|