But please, tell me more of this "right side of history" you were talking about? The end justifies the means, I suppose?
60,000 enlistments for the Union army vs a third that number for the CSA?
And mainiac, what I was referring to is that I've seen more Confederate flags per square mile in western Maryland than I have anywhere this side of Stone Mountain. Could have something to do with Baltimore being placed under martial law despite the state assembly having voted against secession. Followed by the mayor of Baltimore, the city council, the police commissioner, and the Board of Police being placed under arrest without charges.
Western Maryland was diehard union territory back in the 1860s. It was eastern maryland (where I live, yay!) that was rebel scum. The confederate sympathies of appalachia have nothing to do with how they felt back in the day it's something that has changed over the past 150 years. Just like how West Virginia, East Tennessee, inland Texas and backcountry Alabama and Mississippi were all union strongholds but these days love their stars and bars.
Way to completely miss the point. Bravo.
:slowclap
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After a cursory search, it would appear most of those who were arrested were suspected of having Confederate sympathies, mostly among militiamen and officials, or who actively supported the Confederacy. The only arrests I can find out about that seem truly objectionable were the arrests of people who simply criticized the Federal government ignoring the ruling that they had no right to suspend
habeus corpus.
Given that a large proportion of the state seemed to have Confederate sympathies, they were in a strategically vital position, and there had already been bouts of violence between local rioters and soldiers the imposition of martial law actually seems rather reasonable to me.