Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2012/12/09
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On the other hand, my great-great-however-many-greats-grandfather was a general in the Union army from Rhode Island. I still have his sword and the desk that he took to war with him and a photo of him at the desk with his sword. Pierce Legare Wiggin was his name, my father was also Pierce Legare Wiggin. But they settled in the South and one of his decendents, Pierce Legare Wiggin, was a judge in Beaufort, South Carolina, buried in the Episcopal graveyard there. The South is complicated. Tina On Sun, Dec 9, 2012 at 7:59 PM, Bill Larsen <von-ohlen at sbcglobal.net> wrote: > Douglas Barry the answers you are getting here are somewhat simplistic. > And I am not quite knowledgeable enough to really furnish any light. The > term is "war of northern aggression" as other have wrote is much more > complex. It really wasn't about slavery other than in a tangential manner. > It was a civil war. And like all civil war very nasty. I might point out > that there was not a totally uniform opinion about it in any state. > Brothers were pitted against brothers (and I mean in the family rather > than the society). States like North Carolina and Virginia had people > fighting in both armies. And apparently it is not a conflict that has > healed yet. > > On 12/9/2012 4:15 PM, Don Dory wrote: > >> Ric, while slavery was the proximate cause of the war, most of the >> response >> was the truly great debate about the nature of the union. Many in the >> Southern States truly believed in the State first and the union second. >> Lee is the perfect example of one who abhorred slavery but so loved his >> Virginia that he declined the honor of leading the Union Armies in the >> invasion of Virginia. >> >> Of course political power and the wealth that flowed from that had a lot >> to >> do with the ultimate war. With Lincoln as president there was no doubt >> that the new states joining the union would be free states that would >> ultimately change the balance of power in the Senate and the House. If >> you >> were wealthy in the South, in no small part due to slavery, then the idea >> that the industrial northern states combined with the new states in the >> west could take your wealth away was worth the expenditure of thousands of >> lives. Of course not their own. I say that, but if you visit the >> University of Virginia you will see that most of the classes near the >> Civil >> War died in the war: if you could go to the University you were part of >> the >> ruling class. >> >> >> On Sun, Dec 9, 2012 at 7:05 PM, Don Dory <don.dory at gmail.com> wrote: >> >> Ken, I just had a good friend tour the Blues sites in Mississippi near >>> Greenwood. Most are still there in all their grubby glory. The Delta >>> is a >>> place of great poverty with pockets of vast wealth. Good ingredients for >>> the Blues. Most of the worst poverty is invisible now. It doesn't mean >>> that it isn't there but it is poor politics to have rows of shotgun >>> shacks >>> with no running water and no interior toilet facilities visible from the >>> road. >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> On Sun, Dec 9, 2012 at 7:00 PM, Don Dory <don.dory at gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>> I knew that term would draw fire. Many residents of the Southeastern >>>> U.S. use that term as from their perspective the Northern States >>>> violated >>>> the long term agreement about slavery. It is important when moving >>>> between >>>> cultures to understand their perspective on how things happened and more >>>> important the why. Whether it fits the facts on the ground the personal >>>> reality is the sum of the society, it's myths, dreams, and the >>>> origination >>>> stories that culture tells itself. >>>> >>>> As to the American Civil War as most know the conflict of the early to >>>> mid 1860's it was eighty years in the making more or less and proof that >>>> even know horrendous human undertakings require just as horrendous a >>>> response to change. My opinion is that is why change is so hard, the >>>> price >>>> of change is often as horrendous as the objected to activity. Consider >>>> the >>>> Second World War, we remember the Holocaust as 6 million Jews, Gypsies, >>>> and >>>> mental defectives being slaughtered but it took the lives of some 20 >>>> million Russians, 12 million Germans, half a million French citizens, >>>> half >>>> a million Americans, almost 600,000 Poles. I could go on but certainly >>>> a >>>> very high price to resolve European issues starting in 1914. >>>> >>>> As to the question of the pictures, if you browse the images of the >>>> Civil >>>> War there are a few still available of the "hospitals" where the only >>>> known >>>> treatment for 58 caliber bullets smashing bone and flesh was amputation; >>>> hence the piles of arms and legs. The United States suffered more >>>> deaths >>>> and injuries during the Civil War than it did in any other conflict: new >>>> estimates are at 750,000 casualties. >>>> >>>> >>>> On Sun, Dec 9, 2012 at 6:24 PM, Tina Manley <images at comporium.net> >>>> wrote: >>>> >>>> I love the South and would miss it terribly. There are plenty of us who >>>>> don't fly Confederate flags, support Obama, vote Democratic, and don't >>>>> stereotype others. >>>>> >>>>> Tina >>>>> >>>>> On Sunday, December 9, 2012, Bill Pearce <billcpearce at cox.net> >>>>> wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> Usually pronounced Wah uv Nawthen Agression, this is the term that >>>>>> >>>>> residents of the US South (Sore Loosers) use to describe the American >>>>> Civil >>>>> War. These can be, but not always are the same people that have large >>>>> Confederate flag decals on their pickup trucks. It is an inaccurate >>>>> description. President Lincoln was brilliant and far seeing, and >>>>> realized >>>>> that if this succession was to become fact, there would be no end, and >>>>> what >>>>> is the USA would become a hodgepodge of tiny nations led by who knows >>>>> what. >>>>> There are many of us, however, who wouldn't miss the south a bit. >>>>> >>>>>> -----Original Message----- From: philippe.amard >>>>>> Sent: Sunday, December 09, 2012 5:10 PM >>>>>> To: Leica Users Group >>>>>> Subject: Re: [Leica] Desensitization >>>>>> >>>>>> could it be Vietnam? >>>>>> ph >>>>>> >>>>>> Le 9 d?c. 12 ? 23:39, Douglas Barry a ?crit : >>>>>> >>>>>> "Don Dory" <don.dory at gmail.com> wrote >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> nasty deaths from smallpox and ebola. Or consider the images from >>>>>>>> >>>>>>> the >>>>> War >>>>> >>>>>> of Northern Aggression where there were stacks of limbs outside the >>>>>>>> >>>>>>> medical >>>>> >>>>>> tents. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>> Don, as an Irishman living in Ireland and unfamiliar with many terms >>>>>>> >>>>>> used in the States, what was the War of Northern Aggression? Do you >>>>> mean >>>>> the Korean War? I never saw those images. >>>>> >>>>>> I presume you don't mean the American Civil War as I thought that >>>>>>> >>>>>> started with the Confederacy attacking Fort Sumter? Well it did >>>>> according >>>>> to all those school history books (European) I read 50 years ago. >>>>> >>>>>> Maybe school books are different in the USA.... >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Douglas >>>>>>> _________ >>>>>>> Douglas Barry >>>>>>> Bray, Co. Wicklow >>>>>>> Republic of Ireland >>>>>>> >>>>>>> ______________________________**_________________ >>>>>>> Leica Users Group. >>>>>>> See >>>>>>> http://leica-users.org/**mailman/listinfo/lug<http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug>for >>>>>>> more information >>>>>>> >>>>>> ______________________________**_________________ >>>>>> Leica Users Group. >>>>>> See >>>>>> http://leica-users.org/**mailman/listinfo/lug<http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug>for >>>>>> more information >>>>>> >>>>>> ______________________________**_________________ >>>>>> Leica Users Group. >>>>>> See >>>>>> http://leica-users.org/**mailman/listinfo/lug<http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug>for >>>>>> more information >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> -- >>>>> Tina Manley, ASMP >>>>> www.tinamanley.com >>>>> >>>>> ______________________________**_________________ >>>>> Leica Users Group. >>>>> See >>>>> http://leica-users.org/**mailman/listinfo/lug<http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug>for >>>>> more information >>>>> >>>>> >>>> >>>> -- >>>> Don >>>> don.dory at gmail.com >>>> >>>> >>> >>> -- >>> Don >>> don.dory at gmail.com >>> >>> >> >> > > ______________________________**_________________ > Leica Users Group. > See > http://leica-users.org/**mailman/listinfo/lug<http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug>for > more information > > -- Tina Manley, ASMP www.tinamanley.com