Fort Pillow caused a sensation in the North. It was at once the war’s most lurid atrocity and the one that everyone knew about. Images that rocketed through newspapers in the North showed white rebel soldiers hacking wounded, surrendering Black soldiers to pieces with sabers. They showed Southern soldiers in a fury killing the thing they had subjugated, the thing that was now rising up against them. There was something at once horrifying and futile about these acts, and this was the meaning of Fort Pillow and the new war of Black liberation.
Interesting read. Cry with me.
That was just the beginning of the South's revenge. The entire region's morally, socially, and economically retarded today due to a continuing racist culture which focuses more on keeping Blacks down than it does on opportunity for development of all people in the region.
The South's haters have long been hurting the South.
When WW2 ended, one of Mississippi's US senators said if the Bill has any benefits for even one black veteran, he would vote against the Bill for every veteran.
Source: A history of the American Legion veterans organization. The Bill lacked one vote and the Legion contacted every absent senator. They found one in Jacksonville, Florida, and flew him to Washington so he could vote.
rewatched the Ken Burns series over the weekend. Even he uses it as a cementing block in the Northern resolve to finish the war despite everything. If not for this, Lincoln might have lost election and the North might have dropped out of the war. People can be easily ugly, it's best to turn over the rock and show the slime underneath to attempt to stop it.
It's a commonplace to say things like, "There are atrocities on both sides," and many bring up the bloody guerrilla warfare in Kansas as evidence that Northern troops were far from innocent. But the fighting in the Kansas theatre was in large part a continuation of the internecine conflict before the war, going back over a decade and involving local factions and grudges with little connection to the overall conflict.
The Southern attitude toward Black soldiers was an unvarnished atrocity. Their regard of Blacks as sub-human (even as Southern men frequently raped Black women under their power, who had no realistic ability to resist) is a stain on their conduct as a military and as human beings in general. Beyond the massacre at Fort Pillow, Confederate troops as a rule became enraged whenever they found Black soldiers fighting against them, often refusing to give quarter, and on the occasions when they did accept surrender, it was only to send those soldiers into slavery (many of whom were actually free men from the North who had never been enslaved to begin with). And their refusal to include captured Black soldiers in prisoner exchanges led directly to the barbarous conditions at prison camps like Andersonville, where POWs died in squalor, disease and starvation.
The refusal of Southern Whites- indeed, of White people from whatever region- to admit that this is what the Confederate flag stood for, is an act of willful ignorance. They would not fly the Nazi flag (mostly, anyway, although even that isn't a sure bet anymore), but they display this banner as a sign of "heritage". Yet they refuse to face the fact that it is a heritage of racism and slaughter.