A lot has been made recently of Virginia’s desire to push their Civil War history as a tourist draw, and the governor’s subsequent proclamation on the subject. At first he lauded their service in fighting against oppression in the form of a federal government which was trying to preserve the union. Then, when the public rightly condemned him for overlooking the detail of slavery, he made a hasty apology and inserted language asserting that the institution of human bondage may have been a bad thing after all. He was in keeping with the belief of many Southerners however, in that their deep denial features an understanding that slavery was only a peripheral issue, trailing “states rights” as the main cause of the conflict which cost over 600,000 American lives.
I say, let them have their fantasy. We can’t change them after all, any more than we can convince Tea Partyers that their motivation is really just that they’re racist. Let Virginians stew in their invention of a past. But let’s extoll our own past.
Connecticut enrolled 30 regiments in the Civil War. Most saw action, and a lot of it. I’ll take as example, just one of them, the 14th Connecticut Infantry Regiment. They fought in dozens of battles, including Antietam, Fredericksburg, Cancellorsville, Gettysburg, The Wilderness, Spotsylvania, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, and Appomattox. In other words, they kicked the Confederacy’s ass.
Vermont too, had many regiments which saw extensive service, and suffered losses of almost twenty percent. And don’t forget the 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, roosting chickens in the Southland.
The North served and fought, and demonstrated bravery easily on a par with anything the South had to show, and they doubled down by doing it for a good and noble cause, something the South can never claim. Freeing millions of suffering people and preserving the union somehow sounds better than a contrived tale of the preservation of the way of life for a handful of slave owning aristocrats.
You know, I’m sure that the Wehrmacht had some good guys among its ranks. They were the best army in the world, and fought bravely and well. But by no stretch would they or their descendants say today that they fought a justifiable war. At least they have that advantage over some Americans.


