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Turner Ashby
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« Reply #169 on: March 26, 2008, 12:57:15 am » |
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First, I should say, that slavery did play it's part in the eventual split of the sections, it was not the only part though. Was it the most significant part? From all that I have gathered in my searches, not necessarily. I suppose it's from one's point of view, really. I also believe, it all depends on who you wish to put your faith in. When one has bias's, what does that tell you? It tells me that, that individual has a slant to his beliefs, that run toward either one side or the other, and not what I would call, a nescessarily objective view. So, could that individual be wrong? Now, that depends, doesn't it! It depends on just who you wish to believe.
There were numerous points of view during that great conflict, The War Between the States, and there were no shortages of views on it, or it's reasons, but one thing is for sure, each thought he was right, and was that wrong? I grew up in Mosby's Confederacy, and when he went to War, he fought for his State!, he fought for the Confederacy. Did he fight for slavery?,......................No, he did not! Was he outspoken after the War, you bet he was, and his affileation(?) with Gen Grant and the Republican party was proof of that. Was slavery the root of the War? To some, maybe, but to others, No. From hindsight, and from our point of view, to catagorically state that slavery was the cause of the War, is rediculious. Mosby gave his opinoin, just as he thought McClellen was the best Gen the North had, and you only have to read his bio to get the answer, and although he was a very intelligent man, and admired Gen Lee very much, he still had his own ideas about certain things. But, was he right about the slavery issue? Well, he didn't own any, which one can say, that he didn't think too highly of slavery, as one can see from his biography:
"Colonel Mosby never had a word to say favorable to slavery - a fact which may be attributed to the influence of Miss Abby Southwick, afterwards Mrs. Stevenson, of Manchester, Massachusetts, who was employed to teach his sisters. She was a strong and outspoken abolitionist and a friend of Garrison and Wendell Phillips. All the Mosby family were, and remained, devoted to Miss Southwick. She and young Mosby had numerous talks on the subject of slavery and other political topics. At the close of the war she immediately sent money and supplies to the family and told how anxiously she had read the papers, fearing to find the news that he had been killed".
Now, Mosby was one of the Confederacy's most ardent fighters, and still he didn't care for slavery, but he still cast his lot with the Confederacy. He also said this:
"I have given as faithful an account as Æneas did to Dido of events - all of which I saw and part of which I was. No one clung longer to the Confederacy than I did, and I can say with the champion of another lost cause that if Troy could have been saved by this right hand even by the same it would have been saved."
Anyway, does that in any way, make him an authority on what the root cause of the War was? I don't really know, but he did give us his opinion, and you may glean from that as you will. There were also others in the South that gave their opinions as well, as to the root cause of the War, so....................would you call them biased? And, why would that make them wrong? Because they were from the South? No sir, I believe, you too, just as to those you refer, are just as biased, only for the other side (North), so, does that make you right? And does the same biased view from a Southern perspective make it wrong? There again, does it come down to who you believe, and why? Does this fall under that old refrain..................North good, South bad? I see that you take the Northern side, and proclaim it right and good, and you look at the Southern side, and proclaim it wrong, or the root cause being slavery, well, there are always two sides to every story, and in this case, there surely is. I disagree with you, you disagree with me. Each side had it's champions, each side had it share of good points, and each side had it's share of bad points, And, I am, and will always be, to use a phrase I stole,......................I am an extreme defender of Southern view, on almost any site. In the end, you think you are right, and I believe I am right, and so it goes. Who wins?
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