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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Ilaine who wrote (53060)10/18/2002 7:20:45 PM
From: Bilow  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Hi CobaltBlue; A lot of my ancestors were directly involved in the Civil War, and the stories that I hear is that we were beaten fair and square, and that they all knew it, and saw no real reason to continue to fight.

As to what Robert E. Lee's men told him, I have no doubt that they gave him complete support. That's what you always say to the commanding General, and they were, after all, the ones who had not already deserted and gone home:

At critical times in the war the extent of desertion prevented the South from following up victories or half-victories in the field; it was both the cause and effect of lowered morale; the amount was "appalling, incredible." Many who withdrew from the army "had little conception of the gravity of their offense." For such men desertion bore no stigma; and, in sum, it appears that this factor (which, after all, was but a reflection of many other factors) "contributed definitely to the Confederate defeats after 1862 and . . . [to] the catastrophe of 1865."

Source: "The Civil War and Reconstruction" by Randall and Donald

civilwarhome.com

-- Carl

P.S. How many links do you want from me proving that the South was falling apart in 1865? I mean really, I thought my family cherished a few myths about the South, yours must be something else. Here's a classic book on the subject:
search.barnesandnoble.com



To: Ilaine who wrote (53060)10/18/2002 7:28:08 PM
From: Bilow  Respond to of 281500
 
Hi CobaltBlue; More on desertion of Lee's troops:

Refusing Comfort
Drew E. VandeCreek, Ph.D
...
By the spring of 1865 Grant's siege of Peterburg had reduced its Confederate defenders to near-ruin. Lee's army of 55,000 slowly shrank as southern deserters returned to their homes and farms.
...
dig.lib.niu.edu

-- Carl

P.S. Also see original documents like this diary showing Southerners deserting late in the war:
lihistory.com

The fact is that the war was over, and anyone in the South knew this for a fact. It's a fact of human nature that desertions tend to pick up from the losing side late in a war. The US is no exception to this fact of human nature. When you cut us, do we not bleed?