In answer to your question was it just a "few" Northerners, the answer I give is a flat no, there were many. And the fortunes that were founded on the bedrock of slavery, albeit "international slavery"
or
"Southern slavery"
remains tainted money.
The Biltmores, Astors, etc. still have beautiful monuments to their "supposed generosity". Names of the rich and famous of that era were kept out as best they could, but are coming to light now. And we still have Churchill Downs, the Belmont Stakes, etc., these playthings for the
"rich and famous"
are still with us all these years later.
To think that it was
all built on Southern aristocracy is a fallacy. There are very few plantation homes left and
noneever came close to rivaling the
"summer homes of New Yorkers"
who needed to
"escape"
the heat of the summer.
There was a show on television a few years back that showed these homes, with their 18kt. fixtures, ballrooms, etc.
A plantation home usually consisted of twin parlors, bedrooms, and some of the bigger ones had a ballroom because when these people got together they'd traveled many miles and intended to stay for weeks "visiting" with their relatives. Every family looked forward to these occasions.
The difference, is that once the war was lost for the South, so was their economy, and those homes were sold for taxes or passed into different hands.
The South was reduced to rubble because the war had been fought on its lands. And the song
"The Homespun Dress"
became a reality every day.
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