Sherman’s
March
by
Clyde Wilson
by Clyde Wilson
DIGG THIS
The History
Channel’s recent presentation of "Sherman’s March" has
been rightly drawing a lot of criticism from those of us who care
about such things. In theory, historical events should become clearer
as time passes and the controversies they involved grow less heated.
But that is not the case in regard to the War to Prevent Southern
Independence – because the myth of a benevolent and righteous crusade
against evil and its martyred saint is the essential base of American
state worship. The myth also seems to be a deeply felt emotional
necessity for the self-love of millions of Americans.
This TV docudrama
is very peculiar. A whole team of third-string, half-baked carpetbagger
"historians" of the type that now staff all Southern universities
are presented to make the best possible case for the glory, brilliance,
justice, and benevolence of Sherman’s operations in Georgia and
the Carolinas in the winter of 1864–65. The peculiarity is that
much of the actual evidence that manages to come through contradicts
the rationale that is presented. Historians used to at least pretend
to dig into the primary sources and examine all the evidence before
making judgments, but now they are rewarded by how well they cherry
pick bits to support the already established line.
Our scholars
give us the official story, dressed up and paraded yet again.
Sherman’s
March was a great military feat. A lie. An army of 60,000 men
marched through territory undefended except for a few thousand cavalry
and home guards. Even this opposition gave Sherman trouble whenever
it became active. And he was checked whenever he met a real Confederate
force, even one greatly outnumbered.
Sherman’s
army only seized food on its march because of necessity and in keeping
with recognized rules of foraging. A stupendous lie. One does
not need to look at a single Southern commentary but only at the
words of Sherman and thousands of his men. The expedition was deliberately
intended and carried out as a campaign of terrorism against the
noncombatant population. The recognized rules of foraging did not
involve the wholesale burning of dwellings, schools, and churches,
destruction of crops and livestock, theft of everything portable
of value, molestation of women, brutality toward old men, boys,
and slaves, both male and female. This had been federal practice
since the first day of the war but had not been previously as systematized.
But, Golly, Sherman should not be criticized for burning Atlanta.
He actually destroyed only a third of it!
Sherman’s
army brought benevolent emancipation to grateful slaves. A lie.
Again, one need not consult a single Southern source to establish
beyond a doubt that Sherman and his men overwhelmingly despised
the black population of the South and preyed upon them as readily
as upon white women and children. If it had been a question of being
there to free the slaves they would have all gone home.
Any atrocities
that Sherman ordered or allowed were only just retaliation against
Southerners, because the Southerners for some unaccountable reason,
perhaps their natural depravity, were "vicious."
This lie speaks for itself.
The deliberate
sack and destruction of Columbia, after it had been peacefully surrendered,
is no big deal and Southerners are emotional and deluded to resent
it. This only works if you start with the assumption that Southerners
are inferior beings and have no right to resent anything their betters
do to them.
Much
more could be said. But let’s finish by saying that it is a bad
cause that has to be defended by lies. And it can only be defended
by lies, then and now. Those who want to understand the facts have
an invaluable new source, just published last week by Pelican Press:
Walter Brian Cisco's War
Crimes Against Southern Civilians, a concise and factual
survey of a large subject, such as has long been needed.
May
1, 2007
Dr.
Wilson [send him mail]
was a professor
of history, but is recovering nicely.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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Wilson Archives
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