Nope. Ancestors migrated here 70 years ago. Too late for that.
Although I wonder why are some people so obsessed with the Civil War anyways? Seems like a terrible war people would rather forget, instead people seem almost nostalgic about it.
Also, why do they name US military bases after confederate generals? (Fort Lee, ect) Why honor and memorialize traitors?
I'm a product of a Polish (White Russian?) cossack blacksmith who moved here sometime early in the 1900s, so I'm afraid I probably don't have ancestors who were in the area. I don't know much about my mom's side of the tree though as I have long since lost contact with them, other than I have a fraction of American Indian in me from that side.
Nope. Ancestors migrated here 70 years ago. Too late for that.
Although I wonder why are some people so obsessed with the Civil War anyways? Seems like a terrible war people would rather forget, instead people seem almost nostalgic about it.
Also, why do they name US military bases after confederate generals? (Fort Lee, ect) Why honor and memorialize traitors?
I'd say that for the most part nostalgia is a poor term for that war. It's more to make certain that everyone knows how terrible it was the first time that it does not happen again. It was really, really bad for the people who lived it. It's probably the greatest tragedy in our nation's history, and it lasted for four years of killing.
As for why should we memorialize traitors? While during the war they may have been fairly considered traitors, they were still American citizens, and there is no denying that the South fought as hard as it could. To deny our fellow citizens the pride in their ability to fight as they did would probably not be right even if the reasons for which they were fighting were pretty terrible. (manipulative powerful aristocracy defending their slave taking practices etc)
EDIT: Historian John Huddleston estimates the death toll at ten percent of all Northern males 20–45 years old, and 30 percent of all Southern white males aged 18–40
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Civil_WarAlso I have no idea if that includes all war related deaths; such as covering farm boys who had never left home coming into contact with one of the many diseases in the army that killed at that time.
Besides, although it was terrible and stupid and wasteful and please let it never happen again but there was such heroism shown in that war that it's impossible to forget.
It's basically the cow walking into the butcher shop. Each one of those guys is the cow when he walks towards that cannon filled with musketballs to the effect of a shotgun.