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nikimcbee
07-01-08, 01:47 PM
July 1, 1863

Day ! of probably the most important battle in US history.
Huzzah to the Iron Brigade!


http://youtube.com/watch?v=eQvj2HfEokE&feature=related

http://youtube.com/watch?v=m2YgGN_DjiE&feature=related

http://youtube.com/watch?v=qs7yqj4xnfA&feature=related

http://youtube.com/watch?v=OE-BKmlr3OI

http://youtube.com/watch?v=1Hpn-puqnKk&feature=related

UnderseaLcpl
07-01-08, 02:13 PM
I will contend that the civil war was one of the U.S.'s most useless wars. It was started over a tax. Specifically a tax on imports from Britain. Had the North been constitutionalist this never would have happened.
I would like to add that Abraham Lincoln was not a good president. If he was so good why could he not avoid a war. Furthermore, why did the emancipation proclomation free slaves in the states he had no legal authority over? The two states where he could have freed them (West Virginia and Kentucky) were excluded.
Lastly I posit that the preservation of the Union did more harm then good, as compared to a Union of States. Which would you prefer; your own state's excessive taxation and limited gubernatorial ability, or that with an incompetent federal government passing regulations on top of those you are already beset by?

August
07-01-08, 02:42 PM
I will contend that the civil war was one of the U.S.'s most useless wars. It was started over a tax. Specifically a tax on imports from Britain. Had the North been constitutionalist this never would have happened.
I would like to add that Abraham Lincoln was not a good president. If he was so good why could he not avoid a war. Furthermore, why did the emancipation proclomation free slaves in the states he had no legal authority over? The two states where he could have freed them (West Virginia and Kentucky) were excluded.
Lastly I posit that the preservation of the Union did more harm then good, as compared to a Union of States. Which would you prefer; your own state's excessive taxation and limited gubernatorial ability, or that with an incompetent federal government passing regulations on top of those you are already beset by?

a. Lincoln could not avoid a war because by the time he was elected war was pretty much an inevitability. It had been building for over a decade.

b. Had the south won I firmly believe the nation would have continued to fragment eventually leading to 48 independent countries most likely constantly at war with each other and at least unable to unite against 20th century enemies.

c. Had the south won Seward would never have purchased Alaska which would have put Soviet tank divisions on the North American continent. Not a pretty thought.

d. All the post civil war achievements of the United States, landing man on the moon for example, do not happen because at 1/50th of the budget no single state would be able to afford it.

Takeda Shingen
07-01-08, 03:01 PM
a. Lincoln could not avoid a war because by the time he was elected war was pretty much an inevitability. It had been building for over a decade.

b. Had the south won I firmly believe the nation would have continued to fragment eventually leading to 48 independent countries most likely constantly at war with each other and at least unable to unite against 20th century enemies.

c. Had the south won Seward would never have purchased Alaska which would have put Soviet tank divisions on the North American continent. Not a pretty thought.

d. All the post civil war achievements of the United States, landing man on the moon for example, do not happen because at 1/50th of the budget no single state would be able to afford it.

I would also add:

e. The Civil War accelerated the US's industrialization, leading to the economic boom of the late 19th Century, and expanding the industrial revolution to a degree unseen anywhere else on earth.

f. The emphasis on centralized federal government combined with an economic boom (see e) made the US a much larger player on the world stage.

and the obvious:

g. The end of formalized slavery.

In short, you do not have the United States of the 20th Century without the American Civil War.


To the topic, I have had the opportunity to take several walking and automotive tours of Gettyburg. They have all been wonderful, and I highly reccomend a trip to the park as something you will never forget.


EDIT: Oh, and Abraham Lincoln was probably the greatest president and orator the country has ever seen.

Sailor Steve
07-01-08, 04:35 PM
There's not much I can add to the two excellent summations above, but I would like to address a couple of specific points.

I will contend that the civil war was one of the U.S.'s most useless wars. It was started over a tax. Specifically a tax on imports from Britain.
This seems like an attempt to focus on one single issue when there were many more involved. If you want to be truly specific and ignore the rest, then you could claim the war started over the same thing most wars start over: a piece of land.

Abraham Lincoln said that he would not fire the first shot. Being a canny politician he knew that the South would open fire on Fort Sumter, and he would have an excuse to respond. If Jefferson Davis and Francis Pickens had been half as astute, they would have responded that the Union could keep that fort, and they would make money supplying and entertaining the Federal troops, and eventually buy the fort, and that they would take that as a token of Lincoln's good faith that he would let them go peacefully. But Lincoln knew that would never happen.

Had the North been constitutionalist this never would have happened.
How exactly was the North not constituionalist? I have my own ideas, but would love to hear yours.

I would like to add that Abraham Lincoln was not a good president. If he was so good why could he not avoid a war.
Benjamin Franklin's words: "We must all hang together, or most assuredly we will all hang separately". Lincoln was a member of the very next generation, and was reasonably certain that none of the states could survive as less than a whole. Right or wrong, he did what he could to save the United States. That he succeeded says much in his favor.

nikimcbee
07-01-08, 05:13 PM
Ha, I was wondering Steve how long it would take you to find this thread:lol: .

@ TS, you're a lucky guy, I really want to do the Gettsburg trip:yep: , escpecially since I do the Civil War reenacting.

I always reflect on this battle this time of year. What a price for freedom! I find it very interesting to talk CW with Southerners, it makes for a lively discussion:cool: . I love debating the most critical part of the battle.

Was it:
1. Day one, stalling the Southern advance.
2. 1st Minnesota charging in the Weatfield. (2nd Day)
3. 20th Maine holding the Little Round top (2nd Day)
4 High Water Mark (Pickett's Charge) 3rd Day)
5. JEB Stuart not showing up til late in the battle (no accurate intel for Lee)
6. All the resources sank in to Culp's Hill.

What do you think? One thing is for sure, Sailor Steve will have no opinion on this subject.:rotfl: . Well maybe just a small opinion.

nikimcbee
07-01-08, 05:21 PM
http://www.littlestregular.com/blog/uploaded_images/holdatallcosts-778689.jpg

1st MN!
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f4/1st_Minnesota_Monument_Gettysburg.jpg

1st Texas (Cornfield, @Antietam)
http://www.texas-brigade.com/lonestar.jpg

1480
07-01-08, 05:26 PM
T S : "and the obvious:

g. The end of formalized slavery."

I agree with most of the counter points that you and SS bring up to USLC's argument. As I'll summarize what a great history proffessor once told us during a lecture on the foundation that the civil war was based upon: "A pissing match between cousins over who got what, when their rich uncle died." He went on to explain a bit more; there were two seperate America's based upon economy. The south had the labor intensive, but lucrative cotton/tobacco trade.

The north which was not as "blessed" tried the other way: innovation. Human nature being as it is, why screw with something that works? The profits were up because you didn't pay the work force and even better yet, once you establish a young adult work force you encourage them to reproduce, so you don't have to buy your next labor force.

Since growing certain cash crops were next to impossible to grow north because of the climate a certain underlying jealousy arose. The south was popular with Europe because of trade (around 70% of total export) and the north was getting left out. How do you level the playing field? Attempt to impose restrictions to let the other team play without their "ringers."

It became a battle of one uppence, with various laws passed and others voted down. Until it all came to head. So yes, USLC is very correct by positing that it was a "useless war", because if anyone ever had a level head, I firmly believe slavery would have been abolished in time, the economies would have balanced out for both sides and over 1 million AMERICANS would not have died due to fighting, disease and starvation.

Though ULSC's supporting arguments did leave a lot to be desired.... just my 2 pennies!

mapuc
07-01-08, 05:29 PM
I remember when I saw Gettysburg for the first time on TCM(had a different name then)

have seen it two or three times since then.

What I understand, from what I've heard, then this movie Gettysburg is the 2nd movie in a triology about the civilwar

Markus

nikimcbee
07-01-08, 05:49 PM
I remember when I saw Gettysburg for the first time on TCM(had a different name then)

have seen it two or three times since then.

What I understand, from what I've heard, then this movie Gettysburg is the 2nd movie in a triology about the civilwar

Markus

The first one (movie "Gods and Generals") is awful.

mrbeast
07-01-08, 06:39 PM
I saw Gettysburg at the cinema many years ago, was qite a marathon too IIRC it runs to about 5 hours or thereabouts.

Saw Gods and Generals a couple of years ago (got a DVD set with Gettysburg for my dad for Christmas) and I agree Niki, it wasn't the best was it. :-?

I would love to see the battlefield some day, hope I could take my dad to see it too, hes been interested in the Civil War since he was a lad.

August
07-01-08, 07:15 PM
Was it:
1. Day one, stalling the Southern advance.
2. 1st Minnesota charging in the Weatfield. (2nd Day)
3. 20th Maine holding the Little Round top (2nd Day)
4 High Water Mark (Pickett's Charge) 3rd Day)
5. JEB Stuart not showing up til late in the battle (no accurate intel for Lee)
6. All the resources sank in to Culp's Hill.

What do you think? One thing is for sure, Sailor Steve will have no opinion on this subject.:rotfl: . Well maybe just a small opinion.

My answer would be that they were all equally critical, since a reversal on any one of them meant a defeat for the Union.

That's what has always fascinated me about the battle of Gettysburg, just how many unlikely things had to go right for the Union to win, even the screw ups.

Take the bayonet charge by the 20th Maine for example:

Before the battle began Chamberlain sent his B Company down the hill just east of their main position to guard against end around flank attack. While they were heading to their position they nearly ran into the main body of the advancing Confederates and were forced to duck behind a stone wall to keep from being attacked and overrun. Chamberlain, having lost contact with them, then seeing the Confederates appear in the area they had just disappeared into figured they had all been captured or killed.

The bayonet charge itself was a far more dicey affair than is depicted in the movie. It was a desperate last ditch action that should have failed. What actually saved them was Company B popping up from behind that wall at just the right moment to fire into the Confederate flank throwing them into confusion and enabling the rest of the regiment to maintain the momentum and initiative.

Had Chamberlain not screwed up and sent Co B out there. Had they been spotted and overrun by the Rebels before they could take cover. Had they not stood up from behind that wall and fired at just the right moment. Had Chamberlain decided not to order a Banzai suicide bayonet attack. Had ANY of those things not happened and the outcome of the entire battle would have been much different.

orwell
07-01-08, 09:25 PM
@ TS, you're a lucky guy, I really want to do the Gettsburg trip:yep: , escpecially since I do the Civil War reenacting.

If the Civil War re-enactment didn't involve shooting at Southerners, I'm not quite sure why anyone would do it. :p

On a more serious note, what uh... Is the appeal exactly? Perhaps it's just living out here in the PNW, but I don't really get it. Is it more common for states in the south, than the north?

UnderseaLcpl
07-01-08, 10:18 PM
a. Lincoln could not avoid a war because by the time he was elected war was pretty much an inevitability. It had been building for over a decade.

b. Had the south won I firmly believe the nation would have continued to fragment eventually leading to 48 independent countries most likely constantly at war with each other and at least unable to unite against 20th century enemies.

c. Had the south won Seward would never have purchased Alaska which would have put Soviet tank divisions on the North American continent. Not a pretty thought.

d. All the post civil war achievements of the United States, landing man on the moon for example, do not happen because at 1/50th of the budget no single state would be able to afford it.

a) Good point but inevitability of the war is debatable, what exactly made it inevitable?

b) If peace were established and we were to form again as a union of states, what would make us unlikely to unite? 20th century enemies? Which ones? WW1 posed no threat to the U.S. just as WW2 did not. The Japanese never would have attacked us had it not been for the oil sanctions we imposed on them, and look what victory got us, Communist China.
The Germans certainly could not have invaded England. Everyone talks about the Battle of Britain as being the linchpin of invasion but many forget there was a substantial Royal Navy at the time. Add to this the lack of seaworthy German landing craft.
Furthermore, with such difficulty in invading England (even if Hitler HAD really wanted that) how would the Germans ever make a Trans-Atlantic invasion force?
WW2 was won on the Eastern front by the Soviets facing 98% of the Wehrmacht by the time D-Day rolled around (Armageddon, Clive Ponting) and what did that get us? A communist superpower and a nuclear weapon crisis.
c. The U.S. bought Alaska from the Soviet Union. We didn't preclude an imminent invasion by doing so. That's like saying that if Canada bought France the Germans wouldn't have invaded.
d. Landing a man on the moon was economically worthless. The "repute" gained from such an undertaking is dubiously valuable even from a government point of view. Did the Soviets concede superiority to us after the moon landing?


e. Actually, it didn't. The US industrialization process was made by the smuggling of the Bessemer steel refining process and the fact that just because Britain had outlawed exports of industrial processes did not make them unavailable. Research Germany, 1860.

f. The U.S economic boom was made possible largely by the inventiveness of U.S. inventors and the stagnation of British industry in developing new products/industries in an attempt to maintain the status quo ( The Red Queen, Matt Ridley) This was also a function of war debt from the Napoleonic Wars. This same problem led to the downfall of the British Empire from WW1-WW2.

g. Slavery did not require a war to end. Look at the civil rights movement in America in the 50's-70's. There was already a strong anti-slavery movement in the North just as the was a strong civil rights movement in the North during the aforementioned period. Mechanization would have made slavery obsolete anyway. Consider the lot of the sharecropper, who was virtually worthless, compared to a slave who was very expensive. If a slave dies or is sick one must purchase another whereas a sharecropper can be replaced for almost no cost by a multitude of willing laborers.

Slavery was merely an excuse to get the citizenry to pursue a cause that their leaders felt they would not understand. Just as communism taking over the world was the motivation for Korea and Vietnam, just as the Germans taking over the world and murdering babies and all that garbage was an excuse to get people to fight the world wars.

I agree that Gettysburg was a great battle and the men who served on both sides deserve their place in history as did all who fought. Like many wars however, it is a tragedy that they fought and died for something much different than what they believed they fought for.


edit: this is, of course my personal opinion. While controversial, I submit it for consideration.

1480
07-01-08, 11:19 PM
And now I will withdraw my last comment, after the argument was fully expounded upon.

August
07-01-08, 11:43 PM
a) So you agree then that the north and south were on a collision course before Lincoln was elected. Exactly my point.

b) Now why would the Confederacy, assuming they didn't soon fracture themselves as was likely, ever want to reunite with the North? A lot of southerners died fighting the civil war and I seriously doubt they'd be in any kind of mood to consider reuniting with the north for at least several generations. Meanwhile the rest of the continent would be free to go their own way. Some would go north, some south, and some would go independent. In every scenario I could think of they soon would be at each others throats.

c. When the US bought Alaska from the Czar (FYI about 50 years before the Bolsheviks came to power in Russia) it did indeed prevent a Soviet controlled Alaska in the latter part of the 20th century. That means Soviet tank and and infantry divisions on north American soil. Do you really think they'd be staying on their side of the border for very long with no natural barriers and no significant military opposition?

d. Worthless? The moon landings? We'll just have to agree to disagree there..[/quote]

UnderseaLcpl
07-02-08, 12:31 AM
a) So you agree then that the north and south were on a collision course before Lincoln was elected. Exactly my point.

b) Now why would the Confederacy, assuming they didn't soon fracture themselves as was likely, ever want to reunite with the North? A lot of southerners died fighting the civil war and I seriously doubt they'd be in any kind of mood to consider reuniting with the north for at least several generations. Meanwhile the rest of the continent would be free to go their own way. Some would go north, some south, and some would go independent. In every scenario I could think of they soon would be at each others throats.

c. When the US bought Alaska from the Czar (FYI about 50 years before the Bolsheviks came to power in Russia) it did indeed prevent a Soviet controlled Alaska in the latter part of the 20th century. That means Soviet tank and and infantry divisions on north American soil. Do you really think they'd be staying on their side of the border for very long with no natural barriers and no significant military opposition?

d. Worthless? The moon landings? We'll just have to agree to disagree there..

a) I thought our difference of opinion was whether they could have avoided war. Yes I do agree they were on a collision course but that does not mean that war was unavoidable.
b) That is assuming there was a war. Had the federal government not imposed tariffs on English goods (and I think some southern exports as well) the issue of states' rights would not have been a problem and there would have been no seccession. Of course, it may have happened again with some different issue, but I believe proper diplomatic response could avert war to any such crisis. Of course this is all speculation, no matter how reasoned it may be.
c) My bad. I didn't think before I used Soviet Union interchangeably with Russia.
Nonetheless, even if we didn't buy Alaska there is no reason to believe that the presence of Soviet tanks in Alaska would mean anything bad. Communist Cuba is only 90 miles from our borders, closer than Alaska. We had tanks, and allies on the Asian continent and in Europe. None of this precipitated a war with the Soviet Union.
d) Respect agreeing to disagree. I will cede that they were not worthless, just economically so. Not one dollar of gross income has ever been generated by exploitation of the moon.

Iceman
07-02-08, 01:39 AM
On one of my birthdays ,can't remember which...about 20 yrs ago now,I saw the movie Glory (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=caklkRcY0A8).To me this was an eye opening movie not in it's exactly correct story telling but from what I have looked into this units battles and such it is pretty accurate.At the end of the movie it shows the colonel being buried with his black troops after the battle,which I would think would have been a priority on both sides to bury the dead soon as possible.What struck me about it is that reading actual letters and accounts of this that the confederates offered to go and find the body of the colonel so he did not have to be buried with the blacks and his mother told them no,that Col. Robert Gould Shaw would have wanted to be buried with his troopers....to me this captures the essence of brotherhood in fighting against something that is wrong regardless of color.

Similiar to many other things in history...the fight against Nazi Germany and Japan..taking a stand against something that is screwed up takes alot of courage.

P.S....I consider Abraham Lincoln to be my country's greatest president.

The Gettysburg Address


Gettysburg, Pennsylvania


November 19, 1863



Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.







Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this. But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate -- we can not consecrate -- we can not hallow -- this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us -- that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion -- that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain -- that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom -- and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.



Fort Wagner Assault (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z2c_BvVBd-Q)

Takeda Shingen
07-02-08, 07:00 AM
T S : "and the obvious:

g. The end of formalized slavery."

I agree with most of the counter points that you and SS bring up to USLC's argument. As I'll summarize what a great history proffessor once told us during a lecture on the foundation that the civil war was based upon: "A pissing match between cousins over who got what, when their rich uncle died." He went on to explain a bit more; there were two seperate America's based upon economy. The south had the labor intensive, but lucrative cotton/tobacco trade.

The north which was not as "blessed" tried the other way: innovation. Human nature being as it is, why screw with something that works? The profits were up because you didn't pay the work force and even better yet, once you establish a young adult work force you encourage them to reproduce, so you don't have to buy your next labor force.

Since growing certain cash crops were next to impossible to grow north because of the climate a certain underlying jealousy arose. The south was popular with Europe because of trade (around 70% of total export) and the north was getting left out. How do you level the playing field? Attempt to impose restrictions to let the other team play without their "ringers."

It became a battle of one uppence, with various laws passed and others voted down. Until it all came to head. So yes, USLC is very correct by positing that it was a "useless war", because if anyone ever had a level head, I firmly believe slavery would have been abolished in time, the economies would have balanced out for both sides and over 1 million AMERICANS would not have died due to fighting, disease and starvation.

Though ULSC's supporting arguments did leave a lot to be desired.... just my 2 pennies!

No one has argued that the northern states were 'blessed' or even teeming with aboltionists. Despite the obvious slave-based agricultural economy of the south, the poor climate of the north and the philosophical concept of man's betterment, the bottom line is that Abraham Lincoln needed a political imperative for what at the time was an unpopular war. He siezed upon emancipation. No war, no emancipation, and the 2 million+ African slaves and their descendents would have continued their bondage for at least several decades, dying due to starvation and disease in their own right. If you like math, then the argument remains in my favor.

Takeda Shingen
07-02-08, 07:08 AM
e. Actually, it didn't. The US industrialization process was made by the smuggling of the Bessemer steel refining process and the fact that just because Britain had outlawed exports of industrial processes did not make them unavailable. Research Germany, 1860.

That's the product, not the industrial infrastructure. The vast materiel requirements of the war was responsible for that infrastructure. Without it, large-scale refinement and manufacturing would have been an impossibility.

f. The U.S economic boom was made possible largely by the inventiveness of U.S. inventors and the stagnation of British industry in developing new products/industries in an attempt to maintain the status quo ( The Red Queen, Matt Ridley) This was also a function of war debt from the Napoleonic Wars. This same problem led to the downfall of the British Empire from WW1-WW2.

Regardless of international affairs, the boom would still have been impossible without the industrial complex of the late century. That complex was a product of Civil War industry.

g. Slavery did not require a war to end. Look at the civil rights movement in America in the 50's-70's. There was already a strong anti-slavery movement in the North just as the was a strong civil rights movement in the North during the aforementioned period. Mechanization would have made slavery obsolete anyway. Consider the lot of the sharecropper, who was virtually worthless, compared to a slave who was very expensive. If a slave dies or is sick one must purchase another whereas a sharecropper can be replaced for almost no cost by a multitude of willing laborers.

Research Eli Whitney and the Cotton Gin for mechanization's effect on slavery.

Slavery was merely an excuse to get the citizenry to pursue a cause that their leaders felt they would not understand. Just as communism taking over the world was the motivation for Korea and Vietnam, just as the Germans taking over the world and murdering babies and all that garbage was an excuse to get people to fight the world wars.

Correct. No one claimed that Lincoln's motives for emancipation were pure. Still, immediate emancipation was the result of the Civil War.

I agree that Gettysburg was a great battle and the men who served on both sides deserve their place in history as did all who fought. Like many wars however, it is a tragedy that they fought and died for something much different than what they believed they fought for.

That's true for every war.

August
07-02-08, 07:21 AM
a) but your original statement was "If he was so good why could he not avoid a war?" Well obviously he could not have affected those chances either way BEFORE he was elected in late 1860, and by then war was indeed inevitable.

b) You keep changing the argument. We were discussing a post civil war world where the south wins. Now suddenly there was no war at all? Then if there was no war then would have been no secession either.

c) Not only tanks but 48 fractured independent states with a history of warfare and mistrust. I think you're barking up the wrong tree if you think the Soviets were not expansionist or opportunist.

d) Not one dollar? Obviously you aren't counting the billions of dollars made through spin off technologies. I myself had a glass of Tang just last night.

1480
07-02-08, 07:28 AM
Iceman, you also bring up some great points but let me one question: Would the USA have ever gotten involved in WWII if Japan never attacked Pearl Harbor? Before you answer with your heart, think about it: 1. FDR was running for reelection. 2. We were in the middle of an economic depression. 3. No popular support to assist the Allies. 4. The Lend Lease act, FDR's way of helping England, was quid pro quo. Had to be, otherwise see #1 and #2.


Just as was pointed out about the Battle of Gettysburg, the stars had to be
perfectly aligned for us to get involved.

UnderseaLcpl
07-02-08, 07:51 AM
Takeda, 1st and 2nd point. What I gather is that you think without a war there would have been no industrial revolution. I can't even begin to enumerate all the reasons that makes no sense. The first one that comes to mind is that markets decide the success or failure of industry.
3rd point- Even with the cotton gin cotton was a labor-intensive industry so the effects of its mechanization were not enough. Also this completely discounts every crop that is not cotton. Of course, the end of slavery in such circumstances is pure speculation. However, I think most people would agree it would not have continued long.
4th point- not immediate emancipation, remember that W.Virginia and Kentucky, the only two slave states in the union, had slavery all the way to the end of the war. Of course, it could be argued that ending slavery sooner was worth the most bloody war in American history but then you get into all kinds of questions like 'what's a life worth?' and it gets sticky and difficult to discuss.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

August;

a) It is true that the south seceded before Lincoln took office but that by no means would make avoiding war and reconciling impossible. My main point is that if he were as great as we believe, why did we get into a civil war on his watch? Of course, congress has a role to play too so it may not be all his fault.
b) I do see a couple of things I said that could be interpreted to mean "if the south won" but that was not my intent. From the beginning I intended only to say that the war was wasteful and should not have even happened. Of course, hindsight is 20/20.
c) Saying the states would be 'fractured' is a bit of a logical leap. Especially if there was a common perceived threat. As is 'a history of warfare and mistrust'. This is all supposed to be in the event the war never occurred. Where do the war and mistrust come from?
d) Firstly, I said through exploitation of the moon. Tang does not exploit the moon for its production. In addition, Tang was around before the moon flights, but its adoption by NASA gave it a marketing boost.

Finally, even if that and similar products did eventually recoup the massive investiture of money in the moon landings, it would be in spite of government waste, not because of it.

To re-seummarize, Lincoln was not as good as we all think he was and the war was wasteful.

1480
07-02-08, 08:52 AM
Hold back USLc, if it wasn't for the billions of dollars spent on NASA and it's ancilliaries, I'd be stabbing myself a lot securing my Depends with a safety pin!

August
07-02-08, 09:18 AM
Similiar to many other things in history...the fight against Nazi Germany and Japan..taking a stand against something that is screwed up takes alot of courage.

Great point! It's something we often tend to miss when we debate what historical figures should have done in a particular situation. As Lcpl says "hindsight is 20-20" but it's also the sheer guts required to embark on a course of action when the result is in doubt.

Lincoln did what he had to do to to keep the Union together. Did he make mistakes? Well he was human so of course he did, but what is important is that he prevailed and in doing so put my country on the path to greatness.

Takeda Shingen
07-02-08, 09:33 AM
Takeda, 1st and 2nd point. What I gather is that you think without a war there would have been no industrial revolution. I can't even begin to enumerate all the reasons that makes no sense. The first one that comes to mind is that markets decide the success or failure of industry.

Ha, I never said that the industrial revolution was the product of the Civil War, nor did I imply it. Even a superfluous overview of American history will show you that the industrial revolution had its origins prior to the war. However, once again, that same overview will also demonstrate that the large-scale industrial complex responsible for the economic boom of the late 19th century was, by and large, a product of the industrial requirements of the American Civil War. In short, we had factories and industries, they were not nearly as numerous as they were in the years during and the decades after the war. This was due to two factors: 1) The materiel requirement of fighting the war, and 2) the material requirement of reconstruction in the years following the war. Both factors forever changed American industry, and both were products of the American Civil War.

3rd point- Even with the cotton gin cotton was a labor-intensive industry so the effects of its mechanization were not enough. Also this completely discounts every crop that is not cotton. Of course, the end of slavery in such circumstances is pure speculation. However, I think most people would agree it would not have continued long.

Now you're dancing. You theorized that mechanization would have, at least, contributed to the end of slavery. The cotton gin geometrically multiplied cotton output, and yet the demand for slaves soared. You can't have clearer evidence than this. In terms of other crops, cotton was the cash crop of the southern states, so much that it alone was what nearly brought Great Britian into the war on their behalf. Much of Europes textile industries depended on southern cotton.

4th point- not immediate emancipation, remember that W.Virginia and Kentucky, the only two slave states in the union, had slavery all the way to the end of the war. Of course, it could be argued that ending slavery sooner was worth the most bloody war in American history but then you get into all kinds of questions like 'what's a life worth?' and it gets sticky and difficult to discuss.

In 1860, the United States was the only major country in the world to still allow for legalized slavery. Even Russia had begun to emancipate the serfs. While slavery may have been phased out without a war, it ended within 4 years with one. That, in the long scale, is immediate. This is not to say that the war was fought over slavery, as it was not. None-the-less, it was yet another effect of a war that, contrary to your point, begins to sound less and less useless as we go on.

Sailor Steve
07-02-08, 11:36 AM
b) That is assuming there was a war. Had the federal government not imposed tariffs on English goods (and I think some southern exports as well) the issue of states' rights would not have been a problem and there would have been no seccession. Of course, it may have happened again with some different issue, but I believe proper diplomatic response could avert war to any such crisis. Of course this is all speculation, no matter how reasoned it may be.
Sorry to isolate a single part of a post, but everyone has been carefully dancing around the slavery question, and I have to jump into it here.

This is not to say that the war was fought over slavery, as it was not.

The war was fought over secession and reunion. That much is obvious. But the state's right's and slavery problems date to the Constitution. Delegates from the northern states wanted to outlaw the importation of slaves. Delegates from the southern states threatened to abandon the convention if outvoted on that question. The Virginia Plan had representation being totally proportional to population. The smaller states wanted equal representation for each state. This led to the system we still have today, with the upper house (Senate) having equal representation for each state and the lower house (House of Representatives) having proportional representation. In either case Southern delegates argued that their populations were so small that slaves should be part of the enumeration (hence the 3/5ths rule, in which five slaves count as three free men for representation purposes). When the northern states objected, the southern states refused to take part unless they were accomodated. The northerners, realizing that unless they acted as a whole they would likely fail (there's that "hang together" thing again), were forced to compromise. The southerners agreed that importation of slaves would cease by 1807.

Side-note: did you know that a coalition of Federalists attempted to implement the secession of several New England states as a protest to the War of 1812?

The main argument of the early 1800s between North and South was the question of equality in numbers, the Southern states complaining that the vast majority of new states were 'Free' states. This lead to the Missouri Compromise of 1820, which artificially forced the balance to remain equal. The Compromise of 1850 included the Fugitive Slave Act, which required Free States to return runaway slaves.

In 1854 South Carolina threatened to secede if John Fremont were to become president, simply because he represented the new Republican Party, and they were Abolitionist.

In 1860 South Carolina again threatened to secede if Abraham Lincoln was elected, for the same reason. They carried out this threat.

Of the original seven seceeding States, virtually every one of their Ordinances of Secession lists the leading cause as the refusal of certain Northern States to obey the Fugitive Slave Law, and South Carolina's refers to them directly as 'The Slave-Holding States'.

I don't argue that slavery was the only cause, or disagree with the concept that most of the soldiers and many of the leaders on both sides didn't have it in mind as a reason to go to war, but the war was fought over secession, and the Southern States seceded almost exclusively over the idea that the Northern States wanted them to give up their way of life, specifically slavery, and were willing to use Federal power to do it. Nowhere in their listed causes can I find mention of tariffs imposed on English goods.

Sorry to rant, but I think they stated their causes quite plainly, and nowhere in their listed causes can I find mention of tariffs imposed on English goods.

Takeda Shingen
07-02-08, 12:54 PM
You're absolutely right, Steve. I should have been more clear that my intention was to cut off the counter-argument that I was oversimplifying the cause of the war by insisting that it was the abolition of slavery foremost. It was really about repesentation in government, in which the southern states were hindered by the fact that their economy was largely based on slave labor, which greatly impacted their population. So, yes, slavery can been seen as the root of the problem. Still, 'let's free the slaves' was hardly the rallying cry of the Union, at least at the onset.

Dan D
07-02-08, 01:17 PM
Side-note:
Some interesting facts and thoughts with regard to the American Civil war I found here: http://usaerklaert.wordpress.com/2007/02/07/das-wirkliche-nationale-trauma-der-usa/
It is a blog run an American expat in Germany. I would have simply quoted the whole piece but it is not written in English, so I tried to roughly sum up some of the many points the author makes:

A popular claim: “Europeans and Americans have drawn different conclusions from WWI and WW II. Because American civilians never suffered the consequences of the horrors of war on their own soil, they have no idea what war really means. This explains the different attitudes of America and Europe towards using military forces to solve conflicts”.

The author tries to put things into perspective and points out that such statements tend to irritate Americans. If there is a national trauma of the USA, it is not Vietnam but the Civil war.
The most costly war in the history of the USA was the Civil war which took place in …well, America. More than 550.000 soldiers died. 23.000 Americans alone died in the 12 hours lasting battle of Antietam..That is more than the combined American, British, Canadian and German casualties during the Normandy landing 1944.

The Civil war marks the beginning of “modern”, industrialised warfare. In the face of advanced weapons technology the old infantry tactics of Napoleon times which still were used in the beginning turned out to be obsolete.

A consequence: trench war in Virginia
http://712educators.about.com/cs/historycw/l/blcwphcas7.htm


It was also the beginning of “total war”, Sherman’s “march to the sea”, where you do not only try to beat the enemy armies on the field but also directly aim to destroy the enemies economic resources and infrastructure. Heavy suffering amongst the civilian population is the consequence.

Sherman: “Until we can repopulate Georgia, it is useless to occupy it, but the utter destruction of its roads, houses and people will cripple their military resources…I can make the march and make Georgia howl”.

“Sherman’s neckties”:
http://ngeorgia.com/ang/Sherman's_Neckties


Richmond destroyed:
http://www.archives.gov/research/civil-war/photos/images/civil-war-118.jpg



So, you could say at least that when WW1 broke out, it was the Europeans who were sticking flowers to their guns and had naďve and romantic misconceptions of war while Americans probably knew better what this war would ”feel“ like because of the experiences they had made in the Civil war and therefore they were not so eager to join in the fight.

GlobalExplorer
07-02-08, 02:14 PM
So, you could say at least that when WW1 broke out, it was the Europeans who were sticking flowers to their guns and had naďve and romantic misconceptions of war while Americans probably knew better what this war would ”feel“ like because of the experiences they had made in the Civil war and therefore they were not so eager to join in the fight.

I think it is exactly as you say. At that time many people were still alive who had witnessed the horrors firsthand or through their parents. Not so in europe. Germany for instance had fought a cheap war in 1871 and people thought it would be the same in 1914. Of course we also had a radically different education at that time.

However we have other examples for post WWII, the USSR and Germany both had extreme losses in WWII and still took opposite directions in that respect, so exlaining all with psychology is not so simple.

Some excellent posts from all participants. I cannot contribute much on that level, though I have studied the subject a bit. So I'd better read and leave this to the US guys.

But it's obvious that a different outcome would have destabilized the situation in North America, lead to more wars and have repercussions for a still likely WW 1+2.

MothBalls
07-02-08, 02:29 PM
Good thread.

Makes me wonder. What would the world be like today if the south had won?

UnderseaLcpl
07-02-08, 02:55 PM
Good points made so far. I think I will amend my views a bit, esp. due to SailorSteve's post. Takeda, you made some good points as well but I don't feel you are really addressing my arguments.
In brief response to your last reply to me;

a) All I said was that the market is the ultimate determining force in the growth of industry. I cede that the American Civil War may have accelerated it but was not a prerequisite.

b) Your cotton gin counterpoint still does not address the fact that many other crops were grown in the south, nor the fact that the process remained labor-intensive. When I say mechanization would have made slave labor less desirable I mean that when machines become more efficient than expensive slaves, the economic desire to utilize them vanishes. Granted I am omitting possible cultural/racial motivations to maintain slavery, but I believe these would have vanished just as oppression to the Civil Rights Movement essentially did.

c) Going to have to disagree with the "slavery ending sooner was worth the most bloody war in American history" argument. Having never been a slave or owned one, my limited perspective encourages me to believe that a life lost is a greater sacrifice then a life enslaved. But, then again, that is a matter of personal opinion and impossible to resolve in debate.

Thanks for challenging my points and making me think a little though. I really do love to be questioned and/or proven wrong.