I am intrigued by the question: what did the mothers (and fathers) say to their sons as they were thinking about joining the Confederate army? The title of my favourite Civil War Book, James M McPherson’s “Battle Cry of Freedom” in its title seems to offer the answer to this question but does not really offer much inside! The same author’s (small) book “What they fought for 18611865”
is more help. In this paper I will look at the cultural issues that propelled many soldiers into the War – concentrating on the Scots who made North and South Carolina home in the years before 1861.
North Carolina is a good place to start this discussion, as it supplied at least 125,000 troops to the
Confederacy – far more than any other State. Wilmington, NC was the last major port for the blockaderunners until it fell in the Spring of 1865. The Carolinas were pretty much in the thick of the start and finish of the War. As we know, Virginia, which, later, saw much of the fighting, delayed declaring for War.
South Carolina was the first to secede (20 December 1860) and North Carolina the second last – a few days after the action at Fort Sumter. Also, some of the last battles of the War were fought in North Carolina. Signs of Scottish migration are all over this part of the world – North Carolina today even has a County called “Scotland” ‐ on its border with South Carolina ‐ named in honour of the many Scots who settled there. It is said Lowland Scots settled nearer to Wilmington – while many of the Gaelic‐speakers from the Scottish Highlands settled in the Cape Fear River valley. The 2001 movie “Songcatcher” was about a music teacher collecting Celtic and other traditional music in the Appalachian Mountains – “preserved by the secluded mountain people”. Today about 35,000 people, in July each year, attend the “Highland Games at Grandfather Mountain” in backcountry North Carolina.
More @ ACWRT
NC custom knifemaker Mike McRae was a descendant of those NC Scots, makes his home in Mint Hill:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.scotiametalwork.com/
You should contact him, I think you have Vietnam service in common?
Thanks and his stuff looks exceptional and if he was in Vietnam, yes we have that in common.
DeleteAnother interesting article from the link you posted. Never knew there were so many Scottish immigrants in the South. I had just assumed (wrongly) that they came from the colonies up north. Learned something new. Thanks!
ReplyDelete& thank you for reading! Terry mentioned that I'm turning you into a Southerner.:) Gotta come visit.
DeleteI think you are, too! Please tell Terry that everyone would know the minute I stepped on Dixie soil and opened my mouth that I'm a Yankee.
DeleteI have the worst North Jersey accent you have ever heard ... :0)
:) Still, come on down!
DeleteWell of course the Scots were well represented in the WBTS! Thanks to damned England, Scots were weaned on tyranny and schooled in warfare. God Bless them. Now, pass the blue face paint.
ReplyDelete;)
Miss Violet, or maybe we should go with purple, wink, wink. ;)
Praise the Lord and pass the face paint!:)
Delete