khaosworks: (Default)
khaosworks ([personal profile] khaosworks) wrote2002-09-25 02:02 am

Shouting the battle cry of Freedom

The better angels
Why Americans are still fighting over who was right and who was wrong in the Civil War
Who won the Civil War? You'd have a hard time finding out at Gettysburg. Sure, there are plenty of artifacts in the dilapidated vistor center: cases full of gray and blue uniforms, fading regimental flags, and rows of shining rifles. Step outside, and you'll learn about the flanking movements and angles of fire, the storied charges and tactical gambits that decided the momentous three day battle. The 1,320 monuments, markers, and memorials that dot the fields of Gettysburg National Military Park pay special attention to troop movements and casualty lists, emphasizing the valor and courage of those who fought. Only a few mention the preservation of the Union; none celebrate the end of slavery.

For almost 2 million visitors each year, the Pennsylvania battlefield confirms everything they know from documentaries, Hollywood, and popular fiction: that the war was America's epic, a heroic conflict both sides fought for freedom. The same tale is told at battlefields across the country. And it's wrong.

In trying to honor the soldiers who died, Civil War battlefields have historically avoided referring to what the two armies were actually fighting about. As a result, say scholars and park service officials alike, the message of most Civil War parks is subtly pro-Confederate, alienating many people who should find the parks compelling. What's missing, they say, is a moral element, what Abraham Lincoln referred to as "the better angels of our nature." The Civil War was a fight over slavery. The South was for it, the North against it. Not talking about slavery, they say, erases right and wrong from history–not only in the parks but in the national memory itself.

[identity profile] khaosworks.livejournal.com 2002-09-24 10:07 pm (UTC)(link)
And yet even that isn't the whole picture - wars and their reasons tend to be complicated things. While states' rights were guaranteed under the 10th Amendment, nothing in the Constitution truly legitimizes the Confederacy's "right" to secede. It wasn't so much that the South was concerned about the independence of states, it was also the fact that they refused to live under the compact of the Constitution which established a central government, i.e. the rule of the majority. They were outvoted and outnumbered and decided to pack up their toys and go home rather than work within the system.