The myth of the kindly General Lee

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The myth of the kindly General Lee

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The Atlantic
The Myth of the Kindly General Lee
The legend of the Confederate leader’s heroism and decency is based in the fiction of a person who never existed.



The strangest part about the continued personality cult of Robert E. Lee is how few of the qualities his admirers profess to see in him he actually possessed.

Memorial Day has the tendency to conjure up old arguments about the Civil War. That’s understandable; it was created to mourn the dead of a war in which the Union was nearly destroyed, when half the country rose up in rebellion in defense of slavery. This year, the removal of Lee’s statue in New Orleans has inspired a new round of commentary about Lee, not to mention protests on his behalf by white supremacists.

The myth of Lee goes something like this: He was a brilliant strategist and devoted Christian man who abhorred slavery and labored tirelessly after the war to bring the country back together.

There is little truth in this. Lee was a devout Christian, and historians regard him as an accomplished tactician. But despite his ability to win individual battles, his decision to fight a conventional war against the more densely populated and industrialized North is considered by many historians to have been a fatal strategic error.

But even if one conceded Lee’s military prowess, he would still be responsible for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Americans in defense of the South’s authority to own millions of human beings as property because they are black. Lee’s elevation is a key part of a 150-year-old propaganda campaign designed to erase slavery as the cause of the war and whitewash the Confederate cause as a noble one. That ideology is known as the Lost Cause, and as historian David Blight writes, it provided a “foundation on which Southerners built the Jim Crow system.”

There are unwitting victims of this campaign—those who lack the knowledge to separate history from sentiment. Then there are those whose reverence for Lee relies on replacing the actual Lee with a mythical figure who never truly existed.

In the Richmond Times Dispatch, R. David Cox wrote that “For white supremacist protesters to invoke his name violates Lee’s most fundamental convictions.” In the conservative publication Townhall, Jack Kerwick concluded that Lee was “among the finest human beings that has ever walked the Earth.” John Daniel Davidson, in an essay for The Federalist, opposed the removal of the Lee statute in part on the grounds that Lee “arguably did more than anyone to unite the country after the war and bind up its wounds.” Praise for Lee of this sort has flowed forth from past historians and presidents alike.

This is too divorced from Lee’s actual life to even be classed as fan fiction; it is simply historical illiteracy.

White supremacy does not “violate” Lee’s “most fundamental convictions.” White supremacy was one of Lee’s most fundamental convictions.

Lee was a slaveowner—his own views on slavery were explicated in an 1856 letter that it often misquoted to give the impression that Lee was some kind of an abolitionist. In the letter, he describes slavery as “a moral & political evil,” but goes on to explain that:

I think it however a greater evil to the white man than to the black race, & while my feelings are strongly enlisted in behalf of the latter, my sympathies are more strong for the former. The blacks are immeasurably better off here than in Africa, morally, socially & physically. The painful discipline they are undergoing, is necessary for their instruction as a race, & I hope will prepare & lead them to better things. How long their subjugation may be necessary is known & ordered by a wise Merciful Providence. Their emancipation will sooner result from the mild & melting influence of Christianity, than the storms & tempests of fiery Controversy.

The argument here is that slavery is bad for white people, good for black people, and most importantly, it is better than abolitionism; emancipation must wait for divine intervention. That black people might not want to be slaves does not enter into the equation; their opinion on the subject of their own bondage is not even an afterthought to Lee.

Lee’s cruelty as a slavemaster was not confined to physical punishment. In Reading the Man, the historian Elizabeth Brown Pryor’s portrait of Lee through his writings, Pryor writes that “Lee ruptured the Washington and Custis tradition of respecting slave families,” by hiring them off to other plantations, and that “by 1860 he had broken up every family but one on the estate, some of whom had been together since Mount Vernon days.” The separation of slave families was one of the most unfathomably devastating aspects of slavery, and Pryor wrote that Lee’s slaves regarded him as “the worst man I ever see.”

The trauma of rupturing families lasted lifetimes for the enslaved—it was, as my colleague Ta-Nehisi Coates described it, “a kind of murder.” After the war, thousands of the emancipated searched desperately for kin lost to the market for human flesh, fruitlessly for most. In Reconstruction, the historian Eric Foner quotes a Freedmen’s Bureau agent who notes of the emancipated, “in their eyes, the work of emancipation was incomplete until the families which had been dispersed by slavery were reunited.”

Lee’s heavy hand on the Arlington plantation, Pryor writes, nearly led to a slave revolt, in part because the enslaved had been expected to be freed upon their previous master’s death, and Lee had engaged in a dubious legal interpretation of his will in order to keep them as his property, one that lasted until a Virginia court forced him to free them.

When two of his slaves escaped and were recaptured, Lee either beat them himself or ordered the overseer to "lay it on well." Wesley Norris, one of the slaves who was whipped, recalled that “not satisfied with simply lacerating our naked flesh, Gen. Lee then ordered the overseer to thoroughly wash our backs with brine, which was done.”

Every state that seceded mentioned slavery as the cause in their declarations of secession. Lee’s beloved Virginia was no different, accusing the federal government of “perverting” its powers “not only to the injury of the people of Virginia, but to the oppression of the Southern Slaveholding States.” Lee’s decision to fight for the South can only be described as a choice to fight for the continued existence of human bondage in America—even though for the Union, it was not at first a war for emancipation.

During his invasion of Pennsylvania, Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia enslaved free blacks and brought them back to the South as property. Pryor writes that “evidence links virtually every infantry and cavalry unit in Lee’s army” with the abduction of free black Americans, “with the activity under the supervision of senior officers.”

Soldiers under Lee’s command at the Battle of the Crater in 1864 massacred black Union soldiers who tried to surrender. Then, in a spectacle hatched by Lee’s senior corps commander A.P. Hill, the Confederates paraded the Union survivors through the streets of Petersburg to the slurs and jeers of the southern crowd. Lee never discouraged such behavior. As the historian Richard Slotkin wrote in No Quarter: The Battle of the Crater, “his silence was permissive.”

The presence of black soldiers on the field of battle shattered every myth the South’s slave empire was built on: the happy docility of slaves, their intellectual inferiority, their cowardice, their inability to compete with whites. As Pryor writes, “fighting against brave and competent African Americans challenged every underlying tenet of southern society.” The Confederate response to this challenge was to visit every possible atrocity and cruelty upon black soldiers whenever possible, from enslavement to execution.

As the historian James McPherson recounts in Battle Cry of Freedom, in October of that same year, Lee proposed an exchange of prisoners with the Union general Ulysses S. Grant. “Grant agreed, on condition that blacks be exchanged ‘the same as white soldiers.’” Lee’s response was that “negroes belonging to our citizens are not considered subjects of exchange and were not included in my proposition.” Because slavery was the cause for which Lee fought, he could hardly be expected to easily concede, even at the cost of the freedom of his own men, that blacks could be treated as soldiers and not things. Grant refused the offer, telling Lee that “Government is bound to secure to all persons received into her armies the rights due to soldiers.” Despite its desperate need for soldiers, the Confederacy did not relent from this position until a few months before Lee’s surrender.

After the war, Lee did counsel defeated southerners against rising up against the North. Lee might have become a rebel once more, and urged the South to resume fighting—as many of his former comrades wanted him to. But even in this task Grant, in 1866, regarded his former rival as falling short, saying that Lee was “setting an example of forced acquiescence so grudging and pernicious in its effects as to be hardly realized.”

Nor did Lee’s defeat lead to an embrace of racial egalitarianism. The war was not about slavery, Lee insisted later, but if it was about slavery, it was only out of Christian devotion that white southerners fought to keep blacks enslaved. Lee told a New York Herald reporter, in the midst of arguing in favor of somehow removing blacks from the South (“disposed of,” in his words), “that unless some humane course is adopted, based on wisdom and Christian principles you do a gross wrong and injustice to the whole negro race in setting them free. And it is only this consideration that has led the wisdom, intelligence and Christianity of the South to support and defend the institution up to this time.”

Lee had beaten or ordered his own slaves to be beaten for the crime of wanting to be free, he fought for the preservation of slavery, his army kidnapped free blacks at gunpoint and made them unfree—but all of this, he insisted, had occurred only because of the great Christian love the South held for blacks. Here we truly understand Frederick Douglass’s admonition that "between the Christianity of this land and the Christianity of Christ, I recognize the widest possible difference."

Privately, according to the correspondence collected by his own family, Lee counseled others to hire white labor instead of the freedmen, observing “that wherever you find the negro, everything is going down around him, and wherever you find a white man, you see everything around him improving.”

In another letter, Lee wrote “You will never prosper with blacks, and it is abhorrent to a reflecting mind to be supporting and cherishing those who are plotting and working for your injury, and all of whose sympathies and associations are antagonistic to yours. I wish them no evil in the world—on the contrary, will do them every good in my power, and know that they are misled by those to whom they have given their confidence; but our material, social, and political interests are naturally with the whites.”

Publicly, Lee argued against the enfranchisement of blacks, and raged against Republican efforts to enforce racial equality on the South. Lee told Congress that blacks lacked the intellectual capacity of whites and “could not vote intelligently,” and that granting them suffrage would “excite unfriendly feelings between the two races.” Lee explained that “the negroes have neither the intelligence nor the other qualifications which are necessary to make them safe depositories of political power.” To the extent that Lee believed in reconciliation, it was between white people, and only on the precondition that black people would be denied political power and therefore the ability to shape their own fate.

Lee is not remembered as an educator, but his life as president of Washington College (later Washington and Lee) is tainted as well. According to Pryor, students at Washington formed their own chapter of the KKK, and were known by the local Freedmen’s Bureau to attempt to abduct and rape black schoolgirls from the nearby black schools.

There were at least two attempted lynchings by Washington students during Lee’s tenure, and Pryor writes that “the number of accusations against Washington College boys indicates that he either punished the racial harassment more laxly than other misdemeanors, or turned a blind eye to it,” adding that he “did not exercise the near imperial control he had at the school, as he did for more trivial matters, such as when the boys threatened to take unofficial Christmas holidays.” In short, Lee was as indifferent to crimes of violence toward blacks carried out by his students as he was when they were carried out by his soldiers.

Lee died in 1870, as Democrats and ex-Confederates were commencing a wave of terrorist violence that would ultimately reimpose their domination over the Southern states. The Ku Klux Klan was founded in 1866; there is no evidence Lee ever spoke up against it. On the contrary, he darkly intimated in his interview with the Herald that the South might be moved to violence again if peace did not proceed on its terms. That was prescient.

Lee is a pivotal figure in American history worthy of study. Neither the man who really existed, nor the fictionalized tragic hero of the Lost Cause, are heroes worthy of a statue in a place of honor. As one Union veteran angrily put it in 1903 when Pennsylvania was considering placing a statute to Lee at Gettysburg, “If you want historical accuracy as your excuse, then place upon this field a statue of Lee holding in his hand the banner under which he fought, bearing the legend: ‘We wage this war against a government conceived in liberty and dedicated to humanity.’” The most fitting monument to Lee is the national military cemetery the federal government placed on the grounds of his former home in Arlington.

To describe this man as an American hero requires ignoring the immense suffering for which he was personally responsible, both on and off the battlefield. It requires ignoring his participation in the industry of human bondage, his betrayal of his country in defense of that institution, the battlefields scattered with the lifeless bodies of men who followed his orders and those they killed, his hostility toward the rights of the freedmen and his indifference to his own students waging a campaign of terror against the newly emancipated. It requires reducing the sum of human virtue to a sense of decorum and the ability to convey gravitas in a gray uniform.

There are former Confederates who sought to redeem themselves—one thinks of James Longstreet, wrongly blamed by Lost Causers for Lee’s disastrous defeat at Gettysburg, who went from fighting the Union army to leading New Orleans’s integrated police force in battle against white supremacist paramilitaries. But there are no statues of Longstreet in New Orleans.* Lee was devoted to defending the principle of white supremacy; Longstreet was not. This, perhaps, is why Lee was placed atop the largest Confederate monument at Gettysburg in 1917, but the 6-foot-2-inch Longstreet had to wait until 1998 to receive a smaller-scale statue hidden in the woods that makes him look like a hobbit riding a donkey. It’s why Lee is remembered as a hero, and Longstreet is remembered as a disgrace.

The white supremacists who have protested on Lee’s behalf are not betraying his legacy. In fact, they have every reason to admire him. Lee, whose devotion to white supremacy outshone his loyalty to his country, is the embodiment of everything they stand for. Tribe and race over country is the core of white nationalism, and racists can embrace Lee in good conscience.

The question is why anyone else would.
A pretty damning indictment of the man, using many of the patterns one recognizes in the whitewashing of Generals on the eastern front.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

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As someone not versed that well in US history, this is a good find, although I always had my doubts that a man who fought for the South could be kindly towards Africans.

On another note
There is little truth in this. Lee was a devout Christian, and historians regard him as an accomplished tactician. But despite his ability to win individual battles, his decision to fight a conventional war against the more densely populated and industrialized North is considered by many historians to have been a fatal strategic error.
How should he have fought against the superior union forces given the cards that were dealt him? Guerilla tactics perhaps.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

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mr friendly guy wrote: 2018-11-05 05:15am How should he have fought against the superior union forces given the cards that were dealt him? Guerilla tactics perhaps.
Indeed - seeking set battles and open engagements with an enemy who has superior numbers, superior equipment, better supply train, and larger production capabilities is a sure sign of strategic ineptitude.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

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Well, Lee was a Napoleonic military thinker so he was always hoping to take advantage of defeat in detail tactics and strategies against the larger armies of the North. The assumptions the South always made was that the longer they could draw out the war and the more individual victories that they could amass the better chance they would have at having the North just call it quits or having either Great Britain or France recognize them as a legitimate nation. This was always Lee's goal from battle to battle. This is why he always made such massive risks in almost every battle especially in the case of Gettysburg as Lee NEEDED a major victory against the Army of the Potomac on Northern soil as both he and Davis felt that would get them the recognition they felt they needed to defeat the North.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

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Isolder74 wrote: 2018-11-05 08:08am Well, Lee was a Napoleonic military thinker so he was always hoping to take advantage of defeat in detail tactics and strategies against the larger armies of the North. The assumptions the South always made was that the longer they could draw out the war and the more individual victories that they could amass the better chance they would have at having the North just call it quits or having either Great Britain or France recognize them as a legitimate nation. This was always Lee's goal from battle to battle. This is why he always made such massive risks in almost every battle especially in the case of Gettysburg as Lee NEEDED a major victory against the Army of the Potomac on Northern soil as both he and Davis felt that would get them the recognition they felt they needed to defeat the North.
Even knowing that European recognition would never come, as the Confederacy was fighting its largest and best customer of their primary cash crop.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

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I would like to similar expose on 'Stonewall' Jackson. Everything I have read on him to date, paints him in a decent light, though, If he would have been our commanding officer he would have very likely gotten fragged.

I grew up in Tennessee, the propaganda is pervasive, though it is so ingrained in the culture that people honestly do not realize it. We took field trips to Andrew Jackson's plantation where slavery was shown in a positive light, though not out right said. Along with that rebel spirit.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

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U.P. Cinnabar wrote: 2018-11-05 08:34amEven knowing that European recognition would never come, as the Confederacy was fighting its largest and best customer of their primary cash crop.
The Confederacy always assumed that their biggest customer was Great Britain, hence the myth of King Cotton in the first place. They assumed that Britain could not ever find other sources for cheap cotton other then the South. Egyptian Cotton is a thing for a reason thanks to that attitude.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

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Zwinmar wrote: 2018-11-05 08:38am I would like to similar expose on 'Stonewall' Jackson. Everything I have read on him to date, paints him in a decent light, though, If he would have been our commanding officer he would have very likely gotten fragged.

I grew up in Tennessee, the propaganda is pervasive, though it is so ingrained in the culture that people honestly do not realize it. We took field trips to Andrew Jackson's plantation where slavery was shown in a positive light, though not out right said. Along with that rebel spirit.
And deporting sovereign nations in cross country death marches, in defiance of the Supreme Court, as well, I suppose.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

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Isolder74 wrote: They assumed that Britain could not ever find other sources for cheap cotton other then the South. Egyptian Cotton is a thing for a reason thanks to that attitude.
When they had a whole Empire to import their cotton from. Talk about having your head up your ass.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

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U.P. Cinnabar wrote: 2018-11-05 09:04am
Isolder74 wrote: They assumed that Britain could not ever find other sources for cheap cotton other then the South. Egyptian Cotton is a thing for a reason thanks to that attitude.
When they had a whole Empire to import their cotton from. Talk about having your head up your ass.
Also, since when the Civil War started British textile mills had a massive surplus of Southern cotton giving them the 2 - 3 years to set up those Empire cotton plantations(in India too) as a replacement after their supply of Southern cotton was cut off. The only concern for those textile mills was initially the Empire cotton was of lower quality thanks to the fact it was a new operation.

(PS how did Autocorrect think 'cut off' should be 'set up?')
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

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I thought India was exporting cotton to Great Britain during the antebellum period as well.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

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U.P. Cinnabar wrote: 2018-11-05 09:13am I thought India was exporting cotton to Great Britain during the antebellum period as well.
It was just not as big before the Civil War. It's where they got the seeds for the Egyptian plantations from. They expanded the Indian plantations in response to the cutoff but as since the Suez Canal wasn't a thing yet shipping from Egypt was still cheaper then India at the time. So the British response was twofold, increase India production and create new production area closer to home now undercutting the South's usual price advantage(cheaper shipping thanks to the gulf stream) at the same time.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

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Isolder74 wrote: 2018-11-05 08:08am Well, Lee was a Napoleonic military thinker so he was always hoping to take advantage of defeat in detail tactics and strategies against the larger armies of the North. The assumptions the South always made was that the longer they could draw out the war and the more individual victories that they could amass the better chance they would have at having the North just call it quits or having either Great Britain or France recognize them as a legitimate nation.
The south was also betting on the North being inept at war as they thought they had a far better officer corps and most of the US Army before had been dominated by southerners. The problem was that even if that perception had been true the immigration of many Europeans who had undergone rigorous drill in their former homelands screwed them over. In some cases the Union could just form entire units out of people who had been trained together and even fought together before.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

Post by U.P. Cinnabar »

The Confederate armed forces also had more than its fair share of egomaniacs and generals whose only qualification seemed to be how vigorously they could lick Jefferson Davis ass, for example, Leonidas Polk and Braxton Bragg.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

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U.P. Cinnabar wrote: 2018-11-05 10:33am The Confederate armed forces also had more than its fair share of egomaniacs and generals whose only qualification seemed to be how vigorously they could lick Jefferson Davis ass, for example, Leonidas Polk and Braxton Bragg.
The sad thing for the South was the Bragg had Davis so much in his pocket that even when he was constantly losing Davis never had the guts to fire him. Bragg was Davis' boy and everyone knew it the worst of all being Bragg.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

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The same, it seems, applies to Bragg's rival, Polk.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

Post by The Romulan Republic »

I'm glad the article mentions Longstreet. If the South must put up monuments to a Confederate, then Longstreet would be a far more deserving choice. But as noted, no one wants to honour him- because the purpose of honour Confederate generals is not "remembering fallen soldiers" or "history" or "Southern heritage/pride", or any of those excuses. Its about asserting white power over black people, and pretending that slavery, treason, and a war of Southern Aggression were noble causes.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

Post by LadyTevar »

The myth of Stonewall Jackson goes so far as to have his Mother's Grave be a landmark. It's in Ansted's Westlake Cemetery, and there's State Markers, a large monument on her grave, and various interpretive info.
It's also one of the few PokemonGo stops near me, so there's a bonus.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

Post by Isolder74 »

I think the South focuses so much on Jackson and Lee because of the whole 'lost cause' mythos and everything to do with it. In the minds of the Confederate apologist they always look at Gettysburg as the day that the South lost the war. They focus on Chancellorsville and how Jackson was killed as a part of that campaign and cry out that if only Jackson was there at Gettysburg on day one he would have won it for us…AND SO ON. They always do this doing the same thing that even the newspapers at the time did by overlooking the MONUMENTAL loss of Vicksburg on the very next day. They ignore the fact that even if Lee won on July 3rd there was no way he or the rest of the South is going to come back from the loss of access to the Mississippi transportation and supply network that all passed through Vicksburg.

Lee winning at Gettysburg wouldn't have even gotten the South the European recognition that they were always hoping for. By then Britain had given up on the idea and France wanted to have nothing to do with it. Ok, Lee wins at Gettysburg, the Union retreats regroups and then corners Lee AGAIN even DEEPER in Pennsylvania with the State militias and US Army even more pissed off then before. Lee is going to get trapped trying to attack/threaten Harrisburg(his original plan) and it would be even WORSE FOR THE SOUTH then when they'd lost.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

Post by The Romulan Republic »

mr friendly guy wrote: 2018-11-05 05:15am As someone not versed that well in US history, this is a good find, although I always had my doubts that a man who fought for the South could be kindly towards Africans.

On another note
There is little truth in this. Lee was a devout Christian, and historians regard him as an accomplished tactician. But despite his ability to win individual battles, his decision to fight a conventional war against the more densely populated and industrialized North is considered by many historians to have been a fatal strategic error.
How should he have fought against the superior union forces given the cards that were dealt him? Guerilla tactics perhaps.
His foremost strategic blunder was probably trying to launch full-scale invasions of the North, rather than sticking to his familiar and friendly Virginia terrain and using that terrain and fortifications to bleed the Union in a defensive war of attrition until public opinion shifted against the war. That was actually a somewhat viable approach for the South, and IIRC for a time it looked like Lincoln would lose reelection and that the Democrats (who were the white supremacy-based party at the time) would offer the South a negotiated settlement with slavery preserved. But Lee twice tried to launch an invasion of the Union, and both times he got his clock cleaned, first at Antietam and second at Gettysburg, and only got away because of overly-cautious Union generalship.

He eventually learned the lesson, but by that time the Southern defenses were rapidly disintegrating, he was up against a general (Grant) who was willing to accept the losses of protracted assaults against Southern fortifications in order to wear down Lee and bring the war to a speedy end, and while Grant was keeping Lee busy in Virginia, Sherman was gutting the South's underbelly.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

Post by Elheru Aran »

The thing is, guerrilla warfare wasn't considered a viable strategic option back in the day. It was something that peasants did against occupying forces, generally receiving horrific reprisals in return, and thus counted as little more than harassment. Lack of communications would have played a significant part in this-- without radio, there's no central direction as with the French Resistance and the coded BBC broadcasts. The only communication guerrilla groups have then is to try and sneak missives by hand; telegraph is pointless because it's going to be controlled by the occupiers.

So Lee would've been aware of the guerrilla option, but for whatever reason, he probably wouldn't have chosen it, mainly because a.) he wouldn't have wanted to take the chance of Federal reprisals against the Southern population, b.) it wouldn't have been 'gentlemanly' or whatever, c.) he had too many troops to really pull something like that off unless he spread them thinly, d.) allowing the Union troops to enter the South with relative impunity wouldn't've looked good... so he was screwed. He probably knew it, too.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

Post by Gunhead »

If my memory serves me correctly, Lee did oppose taking guerilla action and even stated this back in the day.
The Spanish had waged a very successful guerilla campaign against the French in the peninsular war of 1808-1814 which was pretty well documented, not to mention that all generals of the American civil war were highly influenced and also had studied Napoleon to at least some extent, which means there's little or no doubt Lee knew about guerilla warfare.
That said, while the idea of waging a guerilla warfare after the war would have been feasible at least on paper, it would have been futile without some actual backing force to take advantage of the chaos and confusion the guerilla forces could conceivably cause. Guerilla forces bravely taking up arms to defeat a superior force occupying is not what usually happens, if the occupying force is determined to just soak up any damage the guerillas can throw at them.

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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

Post by Captain Seafort »

Gunhead wrote: 2018-11-14 03:12pmThe Spanish had waged a very successful guerilla campaign against the French in the peninsular war of 1808-1814 which was pretty well documented, not to mention that all generals of the American civil war were highly influenced and also had studied Napoleon to at least some extent, which means there's little or no doubt Lee knew about guerilla warfare.
He would also have known, as you allude to, that despite Boney's complaints about his "Spanish ulcer", it wasn't the guerrilleros who ultimately drove the French out of Spain - it was Wellington's army.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

Post by Elheru Aran »

^Very much that, yes. Without proper communications to coordinate troop movements (insofar as you can call guerrillas and other irregulars 'troops') and a more powerful force capable of reinforcing insurgent operations and taking tactical advantages where presented, a guerrilla movement going up against a more powerful and well supported military isn't going to get a whole lot done other than annoying them. Perhaps even inflict some serious losses if they get lucky, but otherwise... yeah. no.

What doesn't often get written in the histories past a few cursory mentions is the ghastly retaliations played upon the civilian population in return for guerrilla operations. I'm fairly certain the Union wouldn't have stooped to the level of Lidice, but I would not put it past some of them (notably Sherman) to decimate towns in return for partisan violence visited upon Union troops. That, I'm pretty certain, would have been unacceptable to Lee.
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Re: The myth of the kindly General Lee

Post by Gunhead »

Northern reprisals are not the main reason why I think starting a guerilla a campaign by the SCA would have met with with limited, at best, to no success. The biggest would be the lack of support from the local population, doesn't matter if it's coerced or freely given, there's just nothing to give or take. The south was spent in all possible ways when the actual fighting was done by 1865.
I'm not an expert on the American Civil war so anyone who has better knowledge than me feel free to correct, but as I understand it the general mood of the people in the rebel states was pretty much the same as in the north "Thank god it's over". Adding to that, the whole idea of a noble guerilla warfare for the just cause of states rights is a fabrication that came about around the same time people started iconifying Lee and other people as stalwarts against oppression and tyranny.
As a more minor note but I think it is relevant is the idea of this mysterious unified south, which people use to bolster their claim that a guerilla war would have been feasible. As far as I can tell SCA wasn't nearly as unified as say the North was, but SCA basically had to fabricate this idea of a tyrannical Federal Government to get the common farmers to join up in arms. What I'm getting at is this, if you want to get people to take up arms in what is plainly a lost cause, you need something far more sturdy ideologically than what the SCA had. Now some might argue the need to maintain slavery is strong enough, but I disagree. Keeping slavery legal was no small part the reason what got people to join up in the first place, but after four years of brutal war I don't think people would be ready to risk what little they had just to keep their slaves.

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