Saturday, March 31, 2018

The Importance of a Good Death

 Image result for Conversations with Shelby Foote, William C. Carter, editor, University Press of Mississippi,

Southern historian Shelby Foote explained that “the best historical reading is the source material . . . written by people who saw it.” And he recognized that the people who made up the Confederacy, the especially the yeoman farmers, were fiercely independent. “He was not only convinced that he was as good as you were, but if you questioned it, he would shoot you off your horse.” Men like these made for a fearless army few wanted to contend with.
Bernhard Thuersam, www.Circa1865.org   The Great American Political Divide

The Importance of a Good Death

“You don’t want to overlook something that the [South] did have and that was tremendous courage. I’ve studied and studied hard the charge at Gettysburg, the charge at Franklin, the charge at Gaines Mill, or the Northern charge at Fredericksburg, wave after wave, and I do not know of any force on God’s earth that would have got me in any one of those charges.

It absolutely called for you to go out there and face certain death, practically. Now, I will do any kind of thing like that under the influence of elation and the adrenalin popping; it’s just inconceivable to us nowadays that men would try tactics that were fifty years behind the weapons.

They thought that to mass your fire, you had to mass your men, so they suffered casualties. Some battles ran as high as 30 percent. Now that’s just unbelievable, because 4 or 5 percent is very heavy casualties nowadays. You go into a battle and suffer 30 percent . . . at Pickett’s charge, they suffered 60 percent and it’s inconceivable to us . . . the stupidity of it, again.

Originally, the South had a big advantage. They were used to the castes of society and did not take it as an affront that a man had certain privileges. They didn’t think it made him any better than they were. But those privileges came his way, and they were perfectly willing for him to have them as long he didn’t think he was any better than they were.

But the Northern soldiers, they weren’t putting up with any privileges. A Massachusetts outfit spent its first night in the field and damn near had a revolution because the officers wanted to put their bedrolls out of the line. Well, the Southerners never had that problem. It seemed to them sensible that the officers should be over here, and the men there.

Of course, 99.9 percent of that war was fought by home folks. The fighting men were of very high quality, too. You see, those units were together for four years, many of them, and they became superb fighting machines.

You take an outfit like the Twenty-third Virginia: after four years and large numbers of casualties great battles, it becomes a very skillful military instrument. They never went home. Very few furloughs were given – some during the winter months to a few people.

The Civil War was an interesting time. It was very important to make what was called a “good death.” When you are dying, the doctor says you are dying, he [says] you will die about 9 o’clock tonight. You assemble your family around you and sing hymns, and you are brave and stalwart and tell the little woman that she has been good to you and not to cry. And you tell your children to be good and mind their mother. Daddy’s fixing to go away.

That was called a good death, and it was important. It was of tremendous importance.”

(Conversations with Shelby Foote, William C. Carter, editor, University Press of Mississippi, 1989, excerpts pp. 29-31)

8 comments:

  1. The South was great. It is sad that it was crushed in spirit after the war.

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  2. Thanks Brock,..
    For posting this.... as I read on a "Easter Sunday Morning" ..about the time "Jesus" opened his eye and said to him self... "WOW!! I'm not Dead any more!!!" If I was He, I would probably add a line I recall my old "Physical Therapist" said after she landed after her "First Ever Tandem SKYDIVE!!" (I have it on VHS Tape!!) She's out of her gear, takes off her helmet and goggles, takes a deep breath and says,"WOW!.... What a Rush!!!" It's about the "Feeling!!"
    Yes, there is DEATH!! But there is "Rebirth" and "Life Everlasting!!" As Our late President said,"Truth crushed to the earth is still truth still and like a seed will rise again!!!"
    Easter 2018,
    skybill
    PS 'Don't mean to make "Light' of a very solemn time... But!! sometimes ya gotta' tell it like ya' see it!!

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    Replies
    1. :) https://freenorthcarolina.blogspot.com/2015/10/im-good-ol-rebel-revisited.html

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  3. The Lord had a good death, which we remember today. Happy Easter, Brock.

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  4. a good death has always been important, just not always recognized.
    in the chronicles of narnia, by c. s. lewis, a soldier says, 'an honorable death is a treasure affordable to even the poorest of men.' [paraphrase]

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  5. Good point and hadn't heard it before.

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