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re: What Happened to Confederate Leaders After the Civil War
Posted on 3/3/24 at 6:24 pm to Spoonbilla
Posted on 3/3/24 at 6:24 pm to Spoonbilla
Well, Forrest was the first Grand Wizard of the KKK...LOL.
Posted on 3/3/24 at 6:29 pm to Auburn1968
What’s 750,000 or so dead between friends, right? Just a little hiccup. Meanwhile. 159 years later in the same country, 20 year old kids will kill a man for using a plastic straw or saying the wrong pronoun.
Posted on 3/3/24 at 6:30 pm to tiger81
I was at Gettysburg for the 125th anniversary of the battle. All I can say is, Confederates must have been crazy to march in formation across that huge open field. Cannon and rifle fire cut them to pieces. Civil War had to be the most brutal war ever.
Posted on 3/3/24 at 6:37 pm to Tiger Ugly
quote:
Totally off topic but for decades Longstreet was the fall guy for Gettysburg because Lee was untouchable. But the reality is that Lee fell under the timeless trap of believing his accomplished troops could do anything and he eschewed Longstreet’s advice at Gettysburg and then Longstreet had to try to make chicken salad out of the chicken shite plan Lee handed him.
Exactly! Lee was canonized and beyond criticism for many. But had he absolutely erred in eschewing Longstreet's advice at Gettysburg.
This is true. However, Longstreet did not exactly perform well when he was given an independent command and sent to try and take back Knoxville.
Posted on 3/3/24 at 7:28 pm to tiger81
quote:
Well, Forrest was the first Grand Wizard of the KKK...LOL.
They just used his name for recruiting. In reality he wasn't really associated with it. In fact, the only time he did associate himself with it, he shut it down due to the radical elements within.
He actually advocated for rights for blacks after the war.
The entire narrative with him is complete BS.
Posted on 3/3/24 at 7:51 pm to Nature Boy
He was half Italian. His mother was a Reggio.
Posted on 3/3/24 at 8:02 pm to tiger81
quote:
I was at Gettysburg for the 125th anniversary of the battle. All I can say is, Confederates must have been crazy to march in formation across that huge open field. Cannon and rifle fire cut them to pieces. Civil War had to be the most brutal war ever.
World War I has entered the chat. You had the same tactics as those employed by Lee at Gettysburg, but with the addition of machine guns, bolt-action rifles, far more artillery with much more lethal shells, poison gas, and, to top it all off… barbed wire.
Posted on 3/3/24 at 8:04 pm to DreadDub
quote:
And they still pulled his statue near City Park in NOLA…some people would rather delete history than really discuss
Mitch the Bitch Landrieu. frick that POS.
Posted on 3/3/24 at 8:15 pm to Epaminondas
quote:
How'd that work out?
They changed Camp Beauregard's name
Posted on 3/3/24 at 8:20 pm to Auburn1968
Many of them had graduated in the same classes. They had known each other before the war.
Posted on 3/3/24 at 8:44 pm to FutureCorridor49
quote:
Longstreet was arguably the South’s best general yet there are no monuments to him for some reason
I am not so sure Longstreet's men pushed really hard for monuments
Posted on 3/3/24 at 8:47 pm to Bobby OG Johnson
i would like a link or subscription that would provide more info on such matters, Good Sir
Posted on 3/3/24 at 8:51 pm to Auburn1968
They all knew each other and served alongside each other in the US military prior to succession. They all went to West Point together.
Posted on 3/3/24 at 8:56 pm to OWLFAN86
quote:
i would like a link or subscription that would provide more info on such matters, Good Sir
I like watching Ranger Matt Atkinson give lectures and battlefield walks
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=matt+atkinson+longstreet+gettysburg+pickett%27s+charge
Ol Baw is from Mississippi
This post was edited on 3/3/24 at 8:57 pm
Posted on 3/3/24 at 9:45 pm to WeeWee
Longstreet was a pragmatic man even as a general. He thought the strategy at Gettysburg was a bad idea. After the war he thought continuing to discriminate and harassing the black man after the Civil War was unrealistic and stupid. He embraced the Republicans and he was good friends with Grant. I think he was somewhat related to him by marriage.
Posted on 3/3/24 at 9:48 pm to Auburn1968
After being released from prison Jefferson Davis traveled internationally and then settled in Biloxi, MS. He died in a house on First Street in New Orleans while visiting friends.
Posted on 3/3/24 at 10:11 pm to deeprig9
quote:many of them fought together in Mexico.
They all knew each other and served alongside each other in the US military prior to succession. They all went to West Point together.
Lee ended up under Winfield Scott as an engineer and Grant was a lieutenant in the infantry on advance from Vera Cruz.
Posted on 3/3/24 at 10:13 pm to Auburn1968
Joseph Wheeler returned to the US Army as a general during the Spanish American War. Another ex Confederate general volunteered his services for WWI, but was declined. I used to know his name but can't place him now.
Posted on 3/3/24 at 10:15 pm to KiwiHead
quote:
He thought the strategy at Gettysburg was a bad idea.
Delaying the attack on July 3 by hours was a bad idea
Leaving soldiers in the direct sunlight to the point of heat stroke/exhaustion & vomiting was a terrible idea
Laying down for a nap in front of a British War Observer & many of your own men in the middle of this was a terrible idea & a very bad look for a leader
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