Posts Tagged ‘ American Civil War ’

Ku Klux Klan

February 12, 2012
By
Ku Klux Klan

At the end of the American Civil War radical members of Congress attempted to destroy the white power structure of the Rebel states. The Freeman’s Bureauwas established by Congress on 3rd March, 1865. The bureau was designed to protect the interests of former slaves. This included helping them to find new employment and to improve educational and...

Read more »

The Birth of a Nation

February 9, 2012
By
The Birth of a Nation

lso known as “The Birth of a Nation; or the Clansman“. Controversially racist D.W. Griffith film depicting the lives of two families, one Northern and one Southern, from before the Civil War and into Reconstruction. The families’ servants epitomize the worst racial stereotypes and as the nation is ravaged by war, the slaves and...

Read more »

Tulsa attorney, Civil War authority Murray Stewart dies at 80

February 5, 2012
By
Tulsa attorney, Civil War authority Murray Stewart dies at 80

“I was the guy you see in the movies who got out of the car, went up to the house and rang the doorbell to – you know,” the former Army captain recalled solemnly in a 1993 Tulsa World story. Over his career, Stewart, a member of the Army’s Judge Advocate General Corp., would...

Read more »

Confederate Railroad to play Povlitzki’s Saturday; Hillbilly Voodoo Dolls bassist passes

January 28, 2012
By
Confederate Railroad to play Povlitzki’s Saturday; Hillbilly Voodoo Dolls bassist passes

​If you’ve read this here weekly piece over the years, you probably know ’90s country is firmly situated in the softest spot of my heart — for all its good, bad, and ugly. I saw ’90s country hit-makers Confederate Railroad at South Dakota‘s Brown County Fair the summer of 1993; our grandstand buttons also...

Read more »

Ceremony marks Confederate Heroes Day

January 23, 2012
By
Ceremony marks Confederate Heroes Day

Gainesville — Cooke and Denton counties members of the Texas Division United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC), plus members of the Texas Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV), honored the state holiday, which launched in 1973, conjunctive with the birthday of Gen. Robert E. Lee. The memorial morning included a presentation of flag colors and paid...

Read more »

United in Remembrance: Confederate Heroes Day

January 21, 2012
By
United in Remembrance: Confederate Heroes Day

The America founded by George Washington and his allies was consigned to history by the winners of the Civil War, the keynote speaker at a Confederate Heroes Day service said Wednesday. “It’s Abraham Lincoln who is the father of what we currently call the United States,” Tom Clinkscale, commander of the North East Texas...

Read more »

Jan 19, 1807: Robert E. Lee born

January 19, 2012
By
Jan 19, 1807: Robert E. Lee born

Confederate General Robert Edward Lee is born in Westmoreland County, Virginia. Lee commanded the Army of Northern Virginia during most of the Civil War and his brilliant battlefield leadership earned him a reputation as one of the greatest military leaders in history as he consistently defeated larger Union armies.

Read more »

Southern Horizon pays tribute to Robert E. Lee Jan. 21

January 18, 2012
By
Southern Horizon pays tribute to Robert E. Lee Jan. 21

WILLIAMSBURG – The DeWitt Wallace Decorative Arts Museum will celebrate the the 205th anniversary of the birth of Robert E. Lee, Jan. 19, 1807, by featuring “The Lee Moment” program on Saturday, Jan. 21 at 4 p.m. The hour-long program will feature Southern Horizon, a Civil War-era band, as well as a narrative to...

Read more »

Relics of all kinds, and some fakes, at Civil War Show

January 8, 2012
By
Relics of all kinds, and some fakes, at Civil War Show

Shortly after the 19th annual Civil War Show opened Saturday, a long line formed at the table of Charleston Underground Civil War Relics, where dealer Bryan Davis was giving free feedback to owners on an array of relics, as well as a few fakes. Among the owners was Joe Roberts, who wanted to find...

Read more »

Preserving Nashville’s past

January 7, 2012
By
Preserving Nashville’s past

Group seeks to add to its roster of Civil War sites in Nashville On a chilly January morning in Nashville, Ellen McClanahan and her father, Philip Duer, toured Shy’s Hill and talked about possible locations for six new signs that will outline the details of the Civil Warbattle that happened there. The two sit on...

Read more »