It is sad to see the present desecration of history now taking place led as usual by the ignorati.
More to the point we need globally a complete reform in the teaching of acceptable histories. The majority needs to be a people's history. There is so much useful detail and from that detail come natural sustainable respect.
i know that a band of medieval Saxons tramped into the mountains of Slovakia shortly after the mongols came through and wiped out the local populations. Their village Neuhau (literally new clearing ) is still there although vacated at the end of the second war. The simple oral tradition is already eight centuries old.
Yet that knowledge is valuable while the activities of local kings is useless. One informs archeology and genetic studies while the other is like sand..
Here we see how close readings and folk knowledge creates a rich and local tapestry.
Atlanta’s leaders are right! Don’t erase the Old South’s history.
A editorial opinion based on my perspective as a professional architect, city planner and urban designer
A city without history is like a zombie with amnesia . . . lost in time and space.
Textbooks
in the United States are not telling the true and complete history of
the “Old South” . . . just caricatures of a handful of politicians and
generals, who are also seen in the statues that dot cityscapes. The
textbooks are saying too little about the people’s history. Thus,
demagogues, with aspirations of being America’s Hitler, are able to
attract masses of Southerners with bogus history and delusional
political beliefs. On the other side of the political spectrum, people
also treat their political beliefs as a religion, without really
understanding the true history of the Southeast.
These
same textbooks define Native Americans in terms of a few chiefs, a lot
of broken treaties and the Trail of Tears. After the Trail of Tears,
the authors of history books assumed Southeastern Native Americans to be
extinct. Of course, there are very, very few statues of Native
Americans in the Southeast, so we don’t have to worry about them being
torn down. Nevertheless, we are stuck with the myths that our non-Native
American neighbors believed to “gospel” truths.
Like
most of you Creek, Uchee and Seminole readers, all of my
gg-grandfathers fought in the Confederate Army. Being hard-working
yeoman farmers, they had no choice – unlike the sons of wealthy
planters. All of my Creek ancestors were in Cobb’s Legion, Army of
Northern Virginia. They fought in all of the major battles of the Civil
War in Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania.
This is the famous
regiment featured in the movie, “Gods and Generals.” Their regimental
flag is now the official state flag of Georgia. For our tribes, the
American Civil War is very much part of the Native American experience.
My
Uncle Hal and I were in the Sons of Confederate Veterans, until the
organization was taken over by fascists and began using the Nazi salute
for saying the Pledge of Allegiance. So . . . this essay is not by a
dilettante talking about someone else’s heritage.
Approximately
two weeks ago, the Atlanta History Center, Central Atlanta Progress
and Atlanta Chamber of Commerce issued a joint communique to their
metropolitan area, urging government officials not to jump on the
current bandwagon, seen in several cities in the Southeast, of tearing
down 19th century statues of Civil War leaders. The position of
Atlanta’s leaders is that although these leaders represented the social
values of their times, which may seem repugnant today, they are still
landmarks that define that era. They also add greatly to the quality of
life in cities. The civic leaders urged government officials to tell
the complete history of the Atlanta Area with public art.
That is so true. We need more statues and public art in Southeastern cities, not fewer.
It
started over a year ago, when the New Orleans City Council approved
plans to remove statues of Southern Civil War leaders from lands owned
by the city. The tourism industry, architects and city planners in
Louisiana should have raised heck about this plan, but stayed strangely
reticent . . . not wanting to appear racist. Neo-Nazi’s seized on the
issue by saying that removing the statues was stealing their White,
Southern, Christian heritage. Their involvement made it impossible for
more rational thinkers in New Orleans cool down leaders of New Orleans
African-American community. It became a football game like almost
everything else these days. History and politics wedded to become a
pseudo-religion.
At that
point, tearing down Robert E. Lee’s statue became a symbolic lynching
of “white history” to get revenge for all the atrocities committed by
white Louisianans against blacks at the past. What did they get in its
place? In their minds they perceived the destruction of public statues
as great victories for “civil rights.” What they actually received were
a lot of bills to pay. They got a big dent in their municipal budget
that could have paid for at least three statues honoring the city’s rich
African-American heritage. The cost of removing the statue, putting up
security fencing, blocking traffic and providing 24/7 police security
was astronomical. But again, this was all about the 21st century
America’s pseudo-religion . . . not about a rational way to beautify a
city.
In regard to the public
arena, what African-American leaders need to concentrate on is
sponsoring public art that will inspire their children to follow in the
footsteps. Most likely, few citizens in New Orleans would complain if
the city started a program of sponsoring a statue of a famous
African-American a year on the median of St. Charles Avenue. The
program would also create income for local artists.
What to do about Emancipation Park in Charlottesville, VA
Thanks
to the traumatic events of this past weekend there is now too much
blood shed and hatred sown, just to do nothing. Tearing down Robert E.
Lee’s statue, as planned, would be a crime against civic art. It is not
destruction of Southern history as claimed, because Lee is one of the
few Southerners, who is consistently mentioned in American history
books. He despised slavery, had no slaves and opposed Virginia’s
secession from the Union. However, he could not bear the thought of
waging war against his relatives, neighbors and friends. After Abraham
Lincoln announced plans to invade Virginia with a 100,000 man army, Lee
declined the offer to command that army and instead was offered a staff
job with the Confederacy. Lee did not take command of the Army of
Northern Virginia until Federal troops were about to capture Richmond in
1862.
Paul Goodloe McIntire
(1860-1952) was a Charlottesville boy, who became a multi-millionaire
trading stocks and commodities on Wall Street. He was a principal
donor to the University of Virginia, but in 1917 also purchased a city
block to be a park to house a magnificent statue of Robert E. Lee. The
Charlottesville City Council recently voted to change the name of the
park from Lee Park to Emancipation Park and to remove this large,
beautiful statue of Robert E. Lee.
As
the reader can see above, the park is already divided into many
segments. It is ideally suited to tell the complete story of slavery
and the American Civil War. There is plenty of room to install statues
or sculptures that honor all of the participants in history. The story
should include the anonymous young privates and sergeants on both sides,
who had nothing to gain from the war, but did the bulk of the dying.
Terrorist victim Heather Heyer’s memorial should be placed at the foot
of Robert E. Lee’s statue so all will remember that terrible day.
George
Thomas is considered by many historians as the most competent general
in the Union Army in the Civil War. David Faragut is considered the
Union’s ablest admiral. Both men were from Virginia and both men were
persecuted by Abraham Lincoln because they were Southerners. Their
statues should be in this park, too because their families disowned them
when they remained loyal to the Union.
Teaching myths to generations of Southerners
Thanks
to our history books being used to create a mythological South that
never existed and apparently a general incompetence among many political
science teachers, we have produced a large number of Americans, who
have a delusional understanding of the world. That was quite evident in
Charlottesville this past weekend. The Rightwing marchers literally
said that the enemy in the war they are fighting are the “Marxist
liberals.” Their goal is “to return America back to the conservative
government of our founding fathers.” “Marxist Liberals” is an
incredibly stupid oxymoron. Hitler and Lenin both hated Liberals. The
word is the Anglicization of the Latin word, which means “those who free
slaves.” Most of our founding fathers were Liberals. The remainder
were Radicals. Their enemies were the Conservatives, who were typically
called Tories.
To illustrate
how ignorant, people in the United States about the history of the
Southeast, we will close with a list of facts, which are well
documented, but never seen in public school history books.
(1)
Prior to the Civil War, Georgia was the most socialistic (Marxist)
state that ever existed in the Union. The state constructed and owned
the railroads and canals. Georgia still owns most of the principal rail
right-of-ways. The state was the real estate developer and land
planner for most of large towns built on former Creek Indian lands. The
state owned manufacturing plants and most of the major roads. The
state was a part owner in many manufacturing plants. The state owned
the docks in Savannah, Darien and Brunswick back when such things were
privately owned in the rest of the world.
(2)
Charleston and Savannah were the only ports in the United States open
to Irish immigrants during the Great Potato Famine. Southern
communities and the Choctaw Tribe sent large quantities of food to aid
the Irish, while England was intentionally starving them. A very high
percentage of enlisted Confederate soldiers from Mississippi, Alabama
and Georgia were first generation Irish-Americans.
(3)
Summing up all the states below the Mason-Dixon Line, the majority of
Southerners (white men, of course) voted against Secession.
(4)
The citizens of Georgia voted against secession in a plebiscite.
Secessionists ignored the vote and bribed state legislators into
seceding.
(5) Many North
Alabama, North Georgia and East Tennessee counties formed pro-Union
militias when their states seceded. General William Sherman’s army
would have been defeated in several battles and probably not taken
Atlanta without the critical assistance of Pro-Union Georgia militia
cavalry units, who were issued Union uniforms by Sherman. It is
strongly suspected that Tennessee Union cavalry also made possible the
capture of Knoxville and Chattanooga by Union troops.
(6)
The vast majority of neo-Nazis and KKK members in Alabama and Georgia
live in counties that were pro-Union in the Civil War and even today
have very few African-American residents. It is so ironic to see young
Billy Bobs riding around with Confederate Battle Flags on their pickups
in counties, where they would have been shot on sight for such an
offense in the Civil War.
(7)
Jews and Native Americans were generally not allowed to be officers in
the Union Army, whereas they were commonplace among the Confederate
officer corps. Jews were not allowed to serve in higher positions in
the United States government, whereas two of the most powerful men in
the Confederacy were Secretary of War Judah P. Benjamin and Senator
David Levy of Florida. All members of the Five Civilized Tribes were
declared citizens of the Confederacy and had the right to elect members
of the Confederate Congress. The United States would not give this
right of citizenship until the 1920s.
(8)
Members of a special elite platoon of cavalry, who were supposed to
escort the Confederate gold reserve and President Jefferson Davis to
South Georgia, disappeared shortly before he was captured. As soon as
the war ended, the unit’s officers began buying up vast tracts of prime
bottomland in the Georgia Mountains and southeastern Tennessee. That’s
why “the Confederate gold disappeared.”
(9) Southern armies lost far more men to desertion than combat deaths.
(10) By the last year of the Civil War, there were more white Southerners in the Union Army than in the Confederate Army.
(11)
The last Confederate unit in the field was the Cherokee and Creek
Mounted Rifles. It never really surrendered . . . just went home. Its
commanding officer was Colonel Stand Watie (Cherokee), who was born in
Pine Log, GA. Its second in command was Major Chillie McIntosh (Creek)
who was born near Carrollton, GA. Both of their fathers and several of
their brothers had been executed for signing treaties that ceded all
tribal lands and moved their respective tribes to Indian Territory.
Both of these men also signed the treaties, but were able to escape
execution.
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