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Command Post What is this?
Posted on Mar 18, 2016
COL Sam Russell
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LCDR Sales & Proposals Manager Gas Turbine Products
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Excellent post, Sir.

My own ancestors hail from Scotland, Ireland and England...we found ourselves on opposite sides from Naseby and Culloden, to King's Mountain and Shiloh. I think that when it's all said and done, a person will fight for the cause closest to home.The exceptions (and there have been a few in our family history) probably arise when issues of moral principle are at stake. During the Revolution, one of my ancestors chose to remain loyal to the Crown...his son fought for Liberty. During the Civil War, one of my ancestors fought for the North, despite being a Southerner; mostly because he and his family were opposed to slavery on religious grounds. I'm sure that on the other side of the stone wall at Fredericksburg were Irishmen who believed that any President that could raise an army to force his own people to compliance was no different from a British king. Some of their countrymen charging up the slope doubtless felt the presumed right of one group of people to lord over another was what had propelled them to leave Erin to begin with.
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Capt Walter Miller
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The whole war effort of the Slave Power was dependent on getting the poor whites to fight for them. To some degree the poor whites cherished their social position, if not real high, above that of blacks. So they fought against their own best interests.

Walt
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LTC Paul Labrador
LTC Paul Labrador
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I think this issue is glossed over or ignored by many folks who say that the Civil War was not about slavery because most of the Southern soldiers were poor non-slave owners.
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Capt Walter Miller
Capt Walter Miller
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If you get to the right sources it is plain enough. The poor whites simply couldn't tolerate being social equals with the blacks.

Walt
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PO2 Ron Burling
PO2 Ron Burling
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At the height of "The Lost Cause" literary movement, a Southern group dedicated to revising the history of the Confederacy, no less a figure than John Singleton Mosby wrote a letter refuting their best efforts, stating the reason for the war was the South's only argument with the North, slavery.
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SSG Don Maggart
SSG Don Maggart
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Money plain and Simple the Bonuses paid at their entrance to the War were Small but they think they made a big difference ... Research instead the Scots/Irish in America on Youbloob We have never Surrendered and we recover our Dead...
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LTC Paul Labrador
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I think a lot of who they fought for was based simply on where they landed and settled in the US. Irish in the North generally adopted Northern attitudes and supported the North, the same for those in the South. Regionality was much stronger back in those days.
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SGT(P) Supply Sergeant (S4)
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I agree sir. Granted my family were all 3rd and 4th generation by the time of the civil war, but they fought for the south simply because Grandpa bought a ticket to SC and its where we live now.
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PO2 Ron Burling
PO2 Ron Burling
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Spot on, Sir! Americans of that era didn't see themselves as we do today, their first loyalty was to their state, that is why so many officers resigned the US Army and joined the Confederate service, like Robert E. Lee, usually via the militia of their respective states. I am uncertain just when we started to view ourselves as we do today, the modern outlook was widely adopted by WWII, but seemingly less so for WWI.
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LTC Paul Labrador
LTC Paul Labrador
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PO2 Ron Burling - We started seeing ourselves as "Americans" right around the turn of the century, during the Spanish-American war.
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