Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Here Lies an American Hero

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The first commander-in-chief of the United Confederate Veterans, General John B. Gordon of Georgia, tried repeatedly to retire from his high office, “but his comrades would not consent.” Below, he spoke in 1890 of the necessity of maintaining unblemished the heroism, sacrifices, suffering and memory of the American soldiers in grey – and as noble defenders of the Founders’ Constitution.

Bernhard Thuersam, Chairman
North Carolina War Between the States Sesquicentennial Commission
www.ncwbts150.com
"The Official Website of the North Carolina WBTS Sesquicentennial"
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Here Lies an American Hero:

“[The United Confederate Veterans] was created on high lines, and its first commander was the gallant soldier, General John B. Gordon, at the time governor of Georgia, and later was United States senator. General Gordon was continued as commander-in-chief until his death. The note…struck in the constitution of the United Confederate Veterans were reechoed in the opening speech of the first commander-in-chief. General Gordon, addressing the Veterans and the public, said:

“Comrades, no argument is needed to secure for those objects your enthusiastic endorsement. They have burdened your thoughts for many years. You have cherished them in sorrow, poverty and humiliation. In the face of misconstruction, you have held them in your hearts with the strength of religious convictions. No misjudgments can defeat your peaceful purposes for the future. Your aspirations have been lifted by the mere force and urgency of surrounding conditions to a plane far above the paltry considerations of partisan triumphs.

The honor of the American Government, the just powers of the Federal Government, the equal rights of States, the integrity of the Constitutional Union, the sanctions of law, and the enforcement of order have no class of defenders more true and devoted than the ex-soldiers of the South and their worthy descendants. But you realize the great truth that a people without the memories of heroic suffering or sacrifice are a people without history.

To cherish such memories and recall such a past, whether crowned with success or consecrated in defeat, is to idealize principle and strengthen character, intensify love of country, and convert defeat and disaster into pillars of support for future manhood and noble womanhood.

Whether the Southern people, under their changed conditions, may ever hope to witness another civilization which shall equal that which began with their Washington and ended with their Lee, it is certainly true that devotion to their glorious past is not only the surest guarantee of future progress and the holiest bond of unity, but is also the strongest claim they can present to the confidence and respect of the other sections of the Union.

It is political in no sense, except so far as the word “political” is a synonym for the word “patriotic.” [It will] cherish the past glories of the dead Confederacy and transmute them into living inspirations for future service to the living Republic; of truth, because it will seek to gather and preserve, as witness to history, the unimpeachable facts which shall doom falsehood to die that truth may live; of justice, because it will cultivate…that broader and higher and nobler sentiment which would write on the grave of every soldier who fell on our side, “Here lies an American hero, a martyr to the right as his conscience conceived it.”

(The Photographic History of The Civil War, Vol. 5, Robert S. Lanier, editor, Blue & Grey Press, 1987, pp. 298-299)

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Here Lies an American Hero
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THE LAST HOURS/DEATH & FUNERAL OF GENERAL JOHN B. GORDON

The Attack On Fort Stedman, And (My Great Grandfather)

5 comments:

  1. Such beauty and noble values as our standard. It is a blessing to read these words from one so honorable.
    Thank you so very much for keeping your site available. It is a treasure trove.

    Miss Emma

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    1. Thank you for the kind words and it is a pleasure. I’m from NC, how about you? By the way, I have another site, but you cannot use the search and many links are bad as I am rebuilding it. You can access it on the WayBackWhen web site by typing in NAMSOUTH.com and then going to Memories of Dixie.

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    2. The reply was from….Brock.

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  2. Thank you for your labors of love.
    I checked the Wayback Machine, and in clicking a bit, found that some of the Dixie web pages of NamSouth are there. I hope that archive keeps them.

    I am currently out West where snowbirds appear in winter. :)
    God bless you and yours.

    Miss Emma



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    1. Thank you and I go to San Clemente the 22nd of next month. Have a fat Thanksgiving! :)

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