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Lost Cause of the Confederacy

The Lost Cause of the Confederacy (or simply Lost Cause) is an American pseudohistorical[2][3] negationist myth[4][5][6] that claims the cause of the Confederate States during the American Civil War was just, heroic, and not centered on slavery.[7][8] First enunciated in 1866, it has continued to influence racism, gender roles, and religious attitudes in the Southern United States to the present day.[9][10]

A St. Louis Globe-Democrat article concerning dedication of a Jackson, Mississippi, monument to Confederate soldiers in June 1891 has "Lost Cause" in its headline.[1]
Custis Lee (1832–1913) on horseback in front of the Jefferson Davis Memorial in Richmond, Virginia on June 3, 1907, reviewing the Confederate Reunion Parade
Members of the United Daughters of the Confederacy around a Confederate monument in Lakeland, Florida, 1915

Lost Cause proponents typically praise the traditional culture of honor and chivalry of the antebellum South. They argue that enslaved people were treated well and deny that their condition was the central cause of the war, contrary to statements made by Confederate leaders, such as in the Cornerstone Speech.[11] Instead, they frame the war as a defense of states' rights, and as necessary to protect their agrarian economy against supposed Northern aggression.[12][13][14] The Union victory is thus explained as the result of its greater size and industrial wealth, while the Confederate side is portrayed as having greater morality and military skill.[11] Modern historians overwhelmingly disagree with these characterizations, noting that the central cause of the war was slavery.[15][16][17]

There were two intense periods of Lost Cause activity: the first was around the turn of the 20th century, when efforts were made to preserve the memories of dying Confederate veterans, and the second was during the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s, in reaction to growing public support for racial equality. Through actions such as building prominent Confederate monuments and writing history textbooks, Lost Cause organizations (including the United Daughters of the Confederacy and Sons of Confederate Veterans) sought to ensure Southern whites would know what they called the "true" narrative of the Civil War, and therefore continue to support white supremacist policies such as Jim Crow laws.[9][18] In that regard, white supremacy is a central feature of the Lost Cause narrative.[18]

Origins

They say that history is written by the victors, but the Civil War has been the rare exception. Perhaps the need for the country to stay together made it necessary for the North to sit silently and accept the South's conception of the conflict. In any case, for most of the past 150 years, the South's version of the war and Reconstruction has held sway in our schools, our literature and, since the dawn of feature films, our movies.

— Mick LaSalle, The San Francisco Chronicle, 2015[19]

Though the idea of the Lost Cause has more than one origin, it consists mainly of an argument that slavery was not the primary cause, or not a cause at all, of the Civil War.[8] Such a narrative denies or minimizes the statements of the seceding states, each of which issued a statement explaining its decision to secede, and the wartime writings and speeches of Confederate leaders, such as CSA Vice President Alexander Stephens's Cornerstone Speech, instead favoring the leaders' more moderate postwar views.[20] The Lost Cause argument stresses the idea of secession as a defense against a Northern threat to a Southern way of life, and says that the threat violated the states' rights guaranteed by the Constitution. It asserts that any state had the right to secede, a point strongly denied by the North. The Lost Cause portrays the South as more adherent to Christian values than the allegedly greedy North. It portrays slavery as more benevolent than cruel, alleging that it taught Christianity and "civilization". Stories of happy slaves are often used as propaganda in an effort to defend slavery; the United Daughters of the Confederacy had a "Faithful Slave Memorial Committee" and erected the Heyward Shepherd monument in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. These stories would be used to explain slavery to Northerners. The Lost Cause portrays slave owners being kind to their slaves. In explaining Confederate defeat, an assertion is made that the main factor was not qualitative inferiority in leadership or fighting ability but the massive quantitative superiority of the Yankee industrial machine.[21] At the peak of troop strength in 1863, Union soldiers outnumbered Confederate soldiers by over two to one, and the Union had three times the bank deposits of the Confederacy.[22]

History

19th century

 
Henry Mosler completed his best known painting, The Lost Cause, three years after the end of the Civil War.

The defeat of the Confederacy devastated many white Southerners economically, emotionally, and psychologically. Before the war, many proudly believed that their rich military tradition would avail them in the forthcoming conflict. Many sought consolation in attributing their loss to factors beyond their control, such as physical size and overwhelming brute force.[14]

The University of Virginia professor Gary W. Gallagher wrote:

The architects of the Lost Cause acted from various motives. They collectively sought to justify their own actions and allow themselves and other former Confederates to find something positive in all-encompassing failure. They also wanted to provide their children and future generations of white Southerners with a "correct" narrative of the war.[14]

The Lost Cause became a key part of the reconciliation process between North and South around 1900[further explanation needed] and formed the basis of many white Southerners' postbellum war commemorations. The United Daughters of the Confederacy, a major organization, has been associated with the Lost Cause for over a century.[23]

Yale University history professor Rollin G. Osterweis summarizes the content that pervaded Lost Cause writings:

The Legend of the Lost Cause began as mostly a literary expression of the despair of a bitter, defeated people over a lost identity. It was a landscape dotted with figures drawn mainly out of the past: the chivalric planter; the magnolia-scented Southern belle; the good, gray Confederate veteran, once a knight of the field and saddle; and obliging old Uncle Remus. All these, while quickly enveloped in a golden haze, became very real to the people of the South, who found the symbols useful in the reconstituting of their shattered civilization. They perpetuated the ideals of the Old South and brought a sense of comfort to the New.[24]

Louisiana State University history professor Gaines Foster wrote in 2013:

Scholars have reached a fair amount of agreement about the role the Lost Cause played in those years, although the scholarship on the Lost Cause, like the memory itself, remains contested. The white South, most agree, dedicated enormous effort to celebrating the leaders and common soldiers of the Confederacy, emphasizing that they had preserved their and the South's honor.[25]

The term "Lost Cause" first appeared in the title of an 1866 book by the Virginian author and journalist Edward A. Pollard, The Lost Cause: A New Southern History of the War of the Confederates.[26] He promoted many of the aforementioned themes of the Lost Cause. In particular, he dismissed the role of slavery in starting the war and understated the cruelty of American slavery, even promoting it as a way of improving the lives of Africans:

We shall not enter upon the discussion of the moral question of slavery. But we may suggest a doubt here whether that odious term "slavery" which has been so long imposed, by the exaggeration of Northern writers, upon the judgement and sympathies of the world, is properly applied to that system of servitude in the South, which was really the mildest in the world; which did not rest on acts of debasement and disenfranchisement, but elevated the African, and was in the interest of human improvement; and which, by the law of the land, protected the negro in life and limb, and in many personal rights, and, by the practice of the system, bestowed upon him a sum of individual indulgences, which made him altogether the most striking type in the world of cheerfulness and contentment.[27]

However, it was the articles written by General Jubal A. Early in the 1870s for the Southern Historical Society that firmly established the Lost Cause as a long-lasting literary and cultural phenomenon. The 1881 publication of The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government by ex-Confederate President Jefferson Davis, a two-volume defense of the Southern cause, provided another important text in the history of the Lost Cause. Davis blamed the enemy for "whatever of bloodshed, of devastation, or shock to republican government has resulted from the war". He charged that the Yankees fought "with a ferocity that disregarded all the laws of civilized warfare". The book remained in print and often served to justify the Southern position and to distance it from slavery.[28]

Early's original inspiration for his views may have come from Confederate General Robert E. Lee. When Lee published his farewell order to the Army of Northern Virginia, he consoled his soldiers by speaking of the "overwhelming resources and numbers" that the Confederate army had fought against. In a letter to Early, Lee requested information about enemy strengths from May 1864 to April 1865, the period in which his army was engaged against Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant (the Overland Campaign and the Siege of Petersburg). Lee wrote, "My only object is to transmit, if possible, the truth to posterity, and do justice to our brave Soldiers." In another letter, Lee wanted all "statistics as regards numbers, destruction of private property by the Federal troops, &c." because he intended to demonstrate the discrepancy in strength between the two armies and believed it would "be difficult to get the world to understand the odds against which we fought". Referring to newspaper accounts that accused him of culpability in the loss, he wrote, "I have not thought proper to notice, or even to correct misrepresentations of my words & acts. We shall have to be patient, & suffer for awhile at least.... At present the public mind is not prepared to receive the truth."[29] All of the themes were made prominent by Early and the Lost Cause writers in the 19th century and continued to play an important role throughout the 20th.[30]

In a November 1868 report, U.S. Army general George Henry Thomas, a Virginian who had fought for the Union in the war, noted efforts made by former Confederates to paint the Confederacy in a positive light:

[T]he greatest efforts made by the defeated insurgents since the close of the war have been to promulgate the idea that the cause of liberty, justice, humanity, equality, and all the calendar of the virtues of freedom, suffered violence and wrong when the effort for southern independence failed. This is, of course, intended as a species of political cant, whereby the crime of treason might be covered with a counterfeit varnish of patriotism, so that the precipitators of the rebellion might go down in history hand in hand with the defenders of the government, thus wiping out with their own hands their own stains; a species of self-forgiveness amazing in its effrontery, when it is considered that life and property—justly forfeited by the laws of the country, of war, and of nations, through the magnanimity of the government and people—was not exacted from them.

— George Henry Thomas, November 1868[31]

Memorial associations such as the United Confederate Veterans, the United Daughters of the Confederacy, and Ladies Memorial Associations integrated Lost-Cause themes to help white Confederate-sympathizing Southerners cope with the many changes during the era, most significantly Reconstruction.[32][33] The institutions have lasted to the present and descendants of Southern soldiers continue to attend their meetings.

In 1879, John McElroy published Andersonville: A Story of Rebel Military Prisons, which strongly criticized the Confederate treatment of prisoners and implied in the preface that the mythology of the Confederacy was well established and that criticism of the otherwise-lionized Confederates was met with disdain:

I know that what is contained herein will be bitterly denied. I am prepared for this. In my boyhood I witnessed the savagery of the Slavery agitation – in my youth I felt the fierceness of the hatred directed against all those who stood by the Nation. I know that hell hath no fury like the vindictiveness of those who are hurt by the truth being told to them.[34]

In 1907, Hunter Holmes McGuire, physician of Confederate general Stonewall Jackson, published in a book papers sponsored by the Grand Camp of Confederate Veterans of Virginia, supporting the Lost Cause tenets that "slavery [was] not the cause of the war" and that "the North [was] the aggressor in bringing on the war". The book quickly sold out and required a second edition.[35]

Reunification of North and South

American historian Alan T. Nolan states that the Lost Cause "facilitated the reunification of the North and the South".[36] He quotes historian Gaines M. Foster, who wrote that "signs of respect from former foes and northern publishers made acceptance of reunion easier. By the mid-eighties, most southerners had decided to build a future within a reunited nation. A few remained irreconcilable, but their influence in southern society declined rapidly."[37] Nolan mentioned a second aspect: "The reunion was exclusively a white man's phenomenon and the price of the reunion was the sacrifice of the African Americans."[38]

The historian Caroline Janney stated:

Providing a sense of relief to white Southerners who feared being dishonored by defeat, the Lost Cause was largely accepted in the years following the war by white Americans who found it to be a useful tool in reconciling North and South.[39]

The Yale historian David W. Blight wrote:

The Lost Cause became an integral part of national reconciliation by dint of sheer sentimentalism, by political argument, and by recurrent celebrations and rituals. For most white Southerners, the Lost Cause evolved into a language of vindication and renewal, as well as an array of practices and public monuments through which they could solidify both their Southern pride and their Americanness. In the 1890s, Confederate memories no longer dwelled as much on mourning or explaining defeat; they offered a set of conservative traditions by which the entire country could gird itself against racial, political, and industrial disorder. And by the sheer virtue of losing heroically the Confederate soldier provided a model of masculine devotion and courage in an age of gender anxieties and ruthless material striving.[40]

In exploring the literature of reconciliation, the historian William Tynes Cowa wrote, "The cult of the Lost Cause was part of a larger cultural project: the reconciliation of North and South after the Civil War". He identified a typical image in postwar fiction: a materialistic, rich Yankee man marrying an impoverished spiritual Southern bride as a symbol of happy national reunion.[41] Examining films and visual art, Gallagher identified the theme of "white people North and South [who] extol the American virtues both sides manifested during the war, to exalt the restored nation that emerged from the conflict, and to mute the role of African Americans".[42]

Historian and journalist Bruce Catton argued that the myth or legend helped achieve national reconciliation between North and South. He concluded that "the legend of the lost cause has served the entire country very well", and he went on to say:[43]

The things that were done during the Civil War have not been forgotten, of course, but we now see them through a veil. We have elevated the entire conflict to the realm where it is no longer explosive. It is a part of American legend, a part of American history, a part, if you will, of American romance. It moves men mightily, to this day, but it does not move them in the direction of picking up their guns and going at it again. We have had national peace since the war ended, and we will always have it, and I think the way Lee and his soldiers conducted themselves in the hours of surrender has a great deal to do with it.

New South

Historians have stated that the Lost Cause theme helped white Southerners adjust to their new status and move forward into what became known as "the New South". Hillyer states that the Confederate Memorial Literary Society (CMLS), founded by elite white women in Richmond, Virginia, in the 1890s, exemplifies that solution. The CMLS founded the Confederate Museum to document and to defend the Confederate cause and to recall the antebellum mores that the new South's business ethos was thought to be displacing. By focusing on military sacrifice, rather than on grievances regarding the North, the Confederate Museum aided the process of sectional reconciliation, according to Hillyer. By depicting slavery as benevolent, the museum's exhibits reinforced the notion that Jim Crow laws were a proper solution to the racial tensions that had escalated during Reconstruction. Lastly, by glorifying the common soldier and portraying the South as "solid", the museum promoted acceptance of industrial capitalism. Thus the Confederate Museum both critiqued and eased the economic transformations of the New South and enabled Richmond to reconcile its memory of the past with its hopes for the future and to leave the past behind as it developed new industrial and financial roles.[44]

The historian Jacquelyn Dowd Hall stated that the Lost-Cause theme was fully developed around 1900 in a mood not of despair but of triumphalism for the New South. Much was left out of the Lost Cause:

[N]either the trauma of slavery for African Americans nor their heroic, heartbreaking freedom struggle found a place in that story. But the Lost Cause narrative also suppressed the memories of many white southerners. Memories of how, under slavery, power bred cruelty. Memories of the bloody, unbearable realities of war. Written out too were the competing memories and identities that set white southerners one against another, pitting the planters against the up-country, Unionists against Confederates, Populists and mill workers against the corporations, home-front women against war-besotted, broken men.[45]

Statues of Moses Jacob Ezekiel

The Virginian Moses Jacob Ezekiel, the most prominent Confederate expatriate, was the only sculptor to have seen action during the Civil War. From his studio in Rome, where a Confederate flag hung proudly, he created a series of statues of Confederate "heroes" which both celebrated the Lost Cause in which he was a "true believer",[46] and set a highly visible model for Confederate monument-erecting in the early 20th century.

According to journalist Lara Moehlman, "Ezekiel's work is integral to this sympathetic view of the Civil War".[46] His Confederate statues included:

Kali Holloway, director of the Make It Right Project, devoted to the removal of Confederate monuments, has said that:

What stands out most is the lasting impact of Ezekiel's tributes to the Confederacy—his homage to 'Stonewall' Jackson in West Virginia; his 'loyal slave' monument in Arlington; his personification of Virginia mourning for her soldiers who died fighting for a treasonous nation created in defense of black chattel slavery. Confederate monuments, including Ezekiel's highly visible sculptures, were part of a campaign to terrorize black Americans, to romanticize slavery, to promote an ahistorical lie about the honor of the Confederate cause, to cast in granite what Jim Crow codified in law. The consequences of all those things remain with us.[52]

Works of Thomas Dixon Jr.

No writer did more to establish the Lost Cause than Thomas Dixon Jr. (1864–1946), a Southern lecturer, novelist, playwright, filmmaker, and Baptist minister.[citation needed]

Dixon, a North Carolinian, has been described as

a professional racist who made his living writing books and plays attacking the presence of African Americans in the United States. A firm believer not only in white supremacy, but also in the "degeneration" of blacks after slavery ended, Dixon thought the ideal solution to America's racial problems was to deport all blacks to Africa.[53]: 510 

Dixon predicted a "race war" if current trends continued unchecked that he believed white people would surely win, having "3,000 years of civilization in their favor".[54] He also considered efforts to educate and civilize African Americans futile, even dangerous, and said that an African American was "all right" as a slave or laborer "but as an educated man he is a monstrosity".[55] In the short term, Dixon saw white racial prejudice as "self preservation",[56] and he worked to propagate a pro-Southern view of the recent Reconstruction period and spread it nationwide. He decried portrayals of Southerners as cruel and villainous in popular works such as Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852), seeking to counteract these portrayals with his own work.[53]: 510 

He was a noted lecturer, often getting many more invitations to speak than he was capable of accepting.[57] Moreover, he regularly drew very large crowds, larger than any other Protestant preacher in the United States at the time, and newspapers frequently reported on his sermons and addresses.[58]: 389 [59]: 18  He resigned his minister's job so as to devote himself to lecturing full-time and supported his family that way. He had an immense following, and "his name had become a household word."[59]: 30  In a typical review of the time, his talk was "decidedly entertaining and instructive.... There were great beds of solid thought, and timely instruction at the bottom".[60]

Between 1899 and 1903, he was heard by more than 5,000,000 people; his play The Clansman was seen by over 4,000,000.[61] He was commonly referred to as the best lecturer in the country.[62]: 50–51  He enjoyed a "handsome income" from lectures and royalties on his novels,[57] especially from his share of The Birth of a Nation. He bought a "steam yacht" and named it Dixie.[57]

After seeing a theatrical version of Uncle Tom's Cabin, "he became obsessed with writing a trilogy of novels about the Reconstruction period."[62]: 64  The trilogy comprised The Leopard's Spots. A Romance of the White Man's Burden—1865–1900 (1902), The Clansman: A Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan (1905), and The Traitor: A Story of the Fall of the Invisible Empire (1907). "Each of his trilogy novels had developed that black-and-white battle through rape/lynching scenarios that are always represented as prefiguring total racewar, should elite white men fail to resolve the nation's 'Negro Problem'."[63] Dixon also wrote a novel about Abraham LincolnThe Southerner (1913), "the story of what Davis called 'the real Lincoln'"[62]: 80 —another, The Man in Grey (1921), on Robert E. Lee, and one on Jefferson Davis, The Victim (1914).

Dixon's method is hard-hitting, sensational, and uncompromising: it becomes easy to understand the reasons for the great popularity of these swiftly moving stories dealing with problems very close to people who had experienced the Civil War and Reconstruction; and thousands of persons who had experienced Reconstruction were still alive when the trilogy of novels was published. Dixon's literary skill in evoking old memories and deep-seated prejudices made the novelist a respected spokesman—a champion for people who held bitter resentments.[62]: 75 

Dixon's most popular novels were The Leopard's Spots and The Clansman. Their influential spin-off, The Birth of a Nation movie (1915), was the first film shown in the White House and repeated the next day to the entire Supreme Court, 38 Senators, and the Secretary of the Navy.[64]: 171–172 [65][66][67][68]

From the 20th century to the present

 
The former flag of Mississippi incorporates the Confederate battle flag design. It was adopted in 1894 after the state's so-called "redemption", and relinquished in 2020 during the George Floyd protests.
 
Flag of Georgia (1956–2001)

The basic assumptions of the Lost Cause have proved durable for many in the modern South. The Lost Cause tenets frequently emerge during controversies surrounding public display of the Confederate flag and various state flags. The historian John Coski noted that the Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV), the "most visible, active, and effective defender of the flag", "carried forward into the twenty-first century, virtually unchanged, the Lost Cause historical interpretations and ideological vision formulated at the turn of the twentieth".[69] Coski wrote concerning "the flag wars of the late twentieth century":

From the ... early 1950s, SCV officials defended the integrity of the battle flag against trivialization and against those who insisted that its display was unpatriotic or racist. SCV spokesmen reiterated the consistent argument that the South fought a legitimate war for independence, not a war to defend slavery, and that the ascendant "Yankee" view of history falsely vilified the South and led people to misinterpret the battle flag.[70]

The Confederate States used several flags during its existence from 1861 to 1865. Since the end of the American Civil War, the personal and official use of Confederate flags and flags derived from them has continued under considerable controversy. The second state flag of Mississippi, adopted in 1894 after the state's so-called "Redemption" and relinquished in 2020 during the George Floyd protests, included the Confederate battle flag. The city flag of Trenton, Georgia, which incorporates the Confederate battle flag, was adopted in 2001 as a protest against the Georgia General Assembly voting to significantly reduce the size of the Confederate battle flag on their state flag.[71] The city flag of Trenton greatly resembles the former state flag of Georgia.[72][73]

On March 23, 2015, a Confederate-flag-related case reached the Supreme Court of the United States. Walker v. Texas Division, Sons of Confederate Veterans centered on whether or not the state of Texas could deny a request by the SCV for vanity license plates that incorporated a Confederate battle flag. The Court heard the case on March 23, 2015.[74] On June 18, 2015, the Supreme Court, in a 5–4 vote, held that Texas was entitled to reject the SCV proposal.[74]

In October 2015, outrage erupted online following the discovery of a Texan school's geography textbook, which described slaves as "immigrants" and "workers".[75][76] The publisher, McGraw-Hill, announced that it would change the wording.

Religious dimension

Charles Wilson argues that many white Southerners, most of whom were conservative and pious evangelical Protestants, sought reasons for the Confederacy's defeat in religion. They felt that the Confederacy's defeat in the war was God's punishment for their sins and motivated by this belief, they increasingly turned to religion as their source of solace. The postwar era saw the birth of a regional "civil religion" which was heavily laden with symbolism and ritual; clergymen were this new religion's primary celebrants. Wilson says that the ministers constructed

Lost Cause ritualistic forms that celebrated their regional mythological and theological beliefs. They used the Lost Cause to warn Southerners of their decline from past virtue, to promote moral reform, to encourage conversion to Christianity, and to educate the young in Southern traditions; in the fullness of time, they related to American values.[77]

On both a cultural and religious level, white southerners tried to defend what their defeat in 1865 made impossible for them to defend on a political level. The Lost Cause, the South's defeat in a holy war, left southerners to face guilt, doubt, and the triumph of evil and they faced them by forming what C. Vann Woodward called a uniquely Southern sense of the tragedy of history.[78]

Poole stated that in fighting to defeat the Republican Reconstruction government in South Carolina in 1876, white conservative Democrats portrayed the Lost Cause scenario through "Hampton Days" celebrations and shouted, "Hampton or Hell!" They staged the contest between Reconstruction opponent and Democratic candidate Wade Hampton and incumbent Governor Daniel H. Chamberlain as a religious struggle between good and evil and called for "redemption".[79] Indeed, throughout the South, the Democrats who overthrew Reconstruction were frequently called "Redeemers", echoing Christian theology.[80]

Gender roles

 
The United Daughters of the Confederacy helped promulgate the Lost Cause's ideology through the construction of numerous memorials, such as this one in Tennessee.

Among writers on the Lost Cause, gender roles were a contested domain. Men typically honored the role of women during the war by noting their total loyalty to the cause. Women, however, developed a much different approach to the cause by emphasizing female activism, initiative, and leadership. They explained that when all of the men left, the women took command, found substitute foods, rediscovered their old traditional skills with the spinning wheel when factory cloth became unavailable, and ran all of the farm or plantation operations. They faced apparent danger without having men in their traditional role as protectors.[81]

The popularization of the Lost Cause interpretation and the erection of monuments was primarily the work of Southern women, centered on the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC).[82]: 198 

UDC leaders were determined to assert women's cultural authority over virtually every representation of the region's past. They did this by lobbying for the creation of state archives and the construction of state museums, the preservation of national historic sites, and the construction of historic highways; compiling genealogies; interviewing former soldiers; writing history textbooks; and erecting monuments, which now moved triumphantly from cemeteries into town centers. More than half a century before women's history and public history emerged as fields of inquiry and action, the UDC, along with other women's associations, strove to etch women's accomplishments into the historical record and take history to the people, from the nursery and the fireside to the schoolhouse and the public square.

— Jacquelyn Dowd Hall[83]

The duty of memorializing the Confederate dead was a major activity for Southerners who were devoted to the Lost Cause, and chapters of the UDC played a central role in performing it.[84] The UDC was especially influential across the South in the early 20th century, where its main role was to preserve and uphold the memory of Confederate veterans, especially the husbands, sons, fathers, and brothers who died in the war. Its long-term impact was to promote the Lost Cause image of the antebellum plantation South as an idealized society which was crushed by the forces of Yankee modernization, which also undermined traditional gender roles.[85] In Missouri, a border state, the UDC was active in setting up its own system of memorials.[86]

The Southern states set up their own pension systems for veterans and their dependents, especially for widows, because none of them was eligible for federal pensions. The southern pensions were designed to honor the Lost Cause and reduce the severe poverty which was prevalent in the region. Male applicants for pensions had to demonstrate their continued loyalty to the Lost Cause. Female applicants for pensions were rejected if their moral reputations were in question.[87]

In Natchez, Mississippi, the local newspapers and veterans had a role in the maintenance of the Lost Cause. However, elite white women were central in establishing memorials such as the Civil War Monument which was dedicated on Memorial Day 1890. The Lost Cause enabled women noncombatants to lay a claim to the central event in their redefinition of Southern history.[88]

The UDC was quite prominent but not at all unique in its appeal to upscale white Southern women. "The number of women's clubs devoted to filiopietism and history was staggering", stated historian W. Fitzhugh Brundage. He noted two typical club women in Texas and Mississippi who between them belonged to the United Daughters of the Confederacy, the Daughters of the American Revolution, the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities, the Daughters of the Pilgrims, the Daughters of the War of 1812, the Daughters of Colonial Governors, and the Daughters of the Founders and Patriots of America, the Order of the First Families of Virginia, and the Colonial Dames of America as well as a few other historically-oriented societies. Comparable men, on the other hand, were much less interested in belonging to historical organizations; instead, they devoted themselves to secret fraternal societies and emphasized athletic, political, and financial exploits in order to prove their manhood. Brundage notes that after women's suffrage came in 1920, the historical role of the women's organizations eroded.[89]

In their heyday in the first two decades of the 20th century, Brundage concluded:

These women architects of whites' historical memory, by both explaining and mystifying the historical roots of white supremacy and elite power in the South, performed a conspicuous civic function at a time of heightened concern about the perpetuation of social and political hierarchies. Although denied the franchise, organized white women nevertheless played a dominant role in crafting the historical memory that would inform and undergird southern politics and public life.[90]

Tenets

[The negroes'] servile instincts rendered them contented with their lot, and their patient toil blessed the land of their abode with unmeasured riches. Their strong local and personal attachment secured faithful service ... never was there happier dependence of labor and capital on each other. The tempter came, like the serpent of Eden, and decoyed them with the magic word of 'freedom' ... He put arms in their hands, and trained their humble but emotional natures to deeds of violence and bloodshed, and sent them out to devastate their benefactors.

 
The Lost Cause ideology includes fallacies about the relationships between slaves and their masters.

Tenets of the Lost Cause movement include:[93][94]

  • Just as states had chosen to join the federal union, they could also choose to withdraw.
  • Defense of states' rights, rather than the preservation of chattel slavery, was the primary cause that led eleven Southern states to secede from the Union, thus precipitating the War.
  • Secession was a justifiable and constitutional response to Northern cultural and economic aggression against the superior, chivalric Southern way of life, which included slavery. The South was fighting for its independence. Many still want it.
  • The North was not attacking the South out of a pure, though misguided motive: to end slavery. Its motives were economic and venal.
  • Slavery was not only a benign institution but a "positive good". It was not based on economic greed, and slaves were generally happy and loyal to their kind masters (see: Heyward Shepherd). Slavery was good for blacks and whites alike, a symbiosis of races which were inherently unequal by nature. The lives of enslaved blacks were much better than they would be in Africa, or as free blacks in the North, where there were numerous anti-black riots. (Blacks were perceived as foreigners, immigrants taking jobs away from whites by working for less, and also as dangerously sexual.) It was not characterized by racism, rape, harsh working conditions, brutality, whipping, forced separation of families, and humiliation.[95]
  • Allgood identifies a Southern aristocratic chivalric ideal, typically called "the Southern Cavalier ideal", in the Lost Cause. It especially appeared in studies of Confederate partisans who fought behind Union lines, such as Nathan Bedford Forrest, Turner Ashby, John Singleton Mosby, and John Hunt Morgan. Writers stressed how they embodied courage in the face of heavy odds, as well as horsemanship, manhood, and martial spirit.[96]
  • Confederate generals such as Robert E. Lee, Albert Sidney Johnston, and Stonewall Jackson represented the virtues of Southern nobility and fought bravely and humanely. On the other hand, most Northern generals were characterized by brutality and bloodlust, subjecting the Southern civilian population to depredations like Sherman's March to the Sea and Philip Sheridan's burning of the Shenandoah Valley in the Valley Campaigns of 1864. Union General Ulysses S. Grant is often portrayed as an alcoholic.[97]
  • Losses on the battlefield were inevitable, given the North's superiority in resources and manpower. Battlefield losses were also sometimes the result of betrayal and incompetence on the part of certain subordinates of General Lee, such as General James Longstreet, who was reviled for doubting Lee at Gettysburg.
  • The Lost Cause focuses mainly on Lee and the Eastern Theater of operations, in northern Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania. It usually takes Gettysburg as the turning point of the war, ignoring the Union victories in Tennessee and Mississippi, and that nothing could stop the Union army's humiliating advance through Georgia, South Carolina, and North Carolina, ending with the Army of Northern Virginia's surrender at Appomattox.
  • General Sherman destroyed property out of meanness. Burning Columbia, South Carolina, which had been a hotbed of secession, served no military purpose. It was intended only to humiliate and impoverish.
  • Giving the vote to the newly freed slaves could only lead to political and social chaos. They were incapable of voting intelligently and were easily bribed or misled. Reconstruction was a disaster, only benefitting greedy Northern interlopers (scalawags). It took great effort by chivalrous Southern gentlemen to reestablish law and order through white dominance.
  • The order and customs of Southern society were in accordance with Christian virtue and God's will, given the inherent moral weakness of mankind.

Symbols

Confederate generals

The most powerful images and symbols of the Lost Cause were Robert E. Lee, Albert Sidney Johnston, and Pickett's Charge. David Ulbrich wrote, "Already revered during the war, Robert E. Lee acquired a divine mystique within Southern culture after it. Remembered as a leader whose soldiers would loyally follow him into every fight no matter how desperate, Lee emerged from the conflict to become an icon of the Lost Cause and the ideal of the antebellum Southern gentleman, an honorable and pious man who selflessly served Virginia and the Confederacy. Lee's tactical brilliance at Second Bull Run and Chancellorsville took on legendary status, and despite his accepting full responsibility for the defeat at Gettysburg, Lee remained largely infallible for Southerners and was spared criticism even from historians until recent times."[32]

In terms of Lee's subordinates, the key villain in Jubal Early's view was General Longstreet. Although Lee took all responsibility for the defeats, particularly the one at Gettysburg, Early's writings place the Confederate defeat at Gettysburg squarely on Longstreet's shoulders by accusing him of failing to attack at dawn on July 2, 1863, as instructed by Lee. In fact, however, Lee issued no such order and never expressed dissatisfaction with the second-day actions of his "Old War Horse". Because Gettysburg was perceived as the "high tide of the Confederacy", the loss there was seen to have led to the failure of the entire war to achieve independence for the South, the blame for which was hung on Longstreet's disinclination to attack. These charges stuck because Longstreet was already disparaged by many high-profile Southerners due to his reputation as a "scalawag", caused by postwar endorsement of and cooperation with his close friend and in-law, President Grant. Furthermore, Longstreet advised Southerners to co-operate with Reconstruction (to control the black vote) and he also joined the Republican Party and accepted a federal position.[98]

Grant, in rejecting the Lost Cause arguments, said in an 1878 interview that he rejected the notion that the South had simply been overwhelmed by numbers. Grant wrote, "This is the way public opinion was made during the war and this is the way history is made now. We never overwhelmed the South.... What we won from the South we won by hard fighting." Grant further noted that when comparing resources, the "4,000,000 of negroes" who "kept the farms, protected the families, supported the armies, and were really a reserve force" were not treated as a southern asset.[99]

"War of Northern Aggression"

One essential element of the Lost Cause movement was that the act of secession had been legitimate. Otherwise, all of the Confederacy's leading figures would have been traitors to the United States. To legitimize the Confederacy's rebellion, Lost Cause proponents challenged the legitimacy of the federal government and the actions of Abraham Lincoln as president. This phenomenon was exemplified in a treatise by Mary Scrugham, in which she presented frivolous arguments against the legality of Lincoln's presidency.[100] These arguments include his receiving a minority of the popular vote in the 1860 election and the false assertion that he made his position on slavery ambiguous. The accusations, though thoroughly refuted, gave rise to the belief that the North initiated the Civil War, making a designation of "The War of Northern Aggression" possible as one of the names of the American Civil War.[citation needed]

Thomas Dixon Jr.'s novels

The Leopard's Spots

On the title page, Dixon cited Jeremiah 13:23: "Can the Ethiopian change his color, or the Leopard his spots?" He argued that just as the leopard cannot change his spots, the Negro cannot change his nature. The novel aimed to reinforce the superiority of the "Anglo-Saxon" race and advocate either for white dominance of black people or for the separation of the two races.[62]: 68  According to historian and Dixon biographer Richard Allen Cook, "the Negro, according to Dixon, is a brute, not a citizen: a child of a degenerate race brought from Africa."[62]: 68  Dixon expounded the views in The Times of Philadelphia while he discussed the novel in 1902: "The negro is a human donkey. You can train him, but you can't make of him a horse."[101] Dixon described the "towering figure of the freed negro" as "growing more and more ominous, until its menace overshadows the poverty, the hunger, the sorrows and the devastation of the South, throwing the blight of its shadow over future generations, a veritable black death for the land and its people."[101] Using characters from Uncle Tom's Cabin, he shows the "happy slave" who is now, free and manipulated by carpetbaggers, unproductive and disrespectful, and he believed that freedmen constantly pursued sexual relations with white women.[62]: 68  In Dixon's work, the heroic Ku Klux Klan protects American women. "It is emphatically a man's book," said Dixon to The Times.[101]

The novel, which "blazes with oratorial fireworks",[101] "attracted attention as soon as it came from the press", and more than 100,000 copies were quickly sold.[57] "Sales eventually passed the million mark; numerous foreign translations of the work appeared; and Dixon's fame was international."[62]: 70 

The Clansman

 
Frontispiece to the first edition of
Dixon's The Clansman,
by Arthur I. Keller.
 
"The Fiery Cross of old Scotland's hills!"
Illustration from the first edition of The Clansman,
by Arthur I. Keller.

In The Clansman, the best known of the three novels, Dixon similarly claimed, "I have sought to preserve in this romance both the letter and the spirit of this remarkable period.... The Clansman develops the true story of the 'Ku Klux Klan Conspiracy', which overturned the Reconstruction regime."[102]

"Lincoln is pictured as a kind, sympathetic man who is trying bravely to sustain his policies despite the pressures upon him to have a more vindictive attitude toward the Southern states."[62]: 71  Reconstruction was an attempt by Augustus Stoneman, a thinly-veiled reference to US Representative Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania, "the greatest and vilest man who ever trod the halls of the American Congress",[62]: 71  to ensure that the Republican Party would stay in power by securing the Southern black vote. Stoneman's hatred for US President Andrew Johnson stems from Johnson's refusal to disenfranchise Southern whites. Stoneman's anger towards former slaveholders is intensified after the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, and Stoneman vows revenge on the South. His programs strip away the land owned by whites and give it to former slaves, as with the traditional idea of "forty acres and a mule". Men claiming to represent the government confiscate the material wealth of the South and destroy plantation-owning families. Finally, the former slaves are taught that they are superior to their former owners and should rise against them. These alleged injustices were the impetus for the creation of the Ku Klux Klan. "Mr. Dixon's purpose here is to show that the original formers of the Ku Klux Klan were modern knights errant, taking the only means at hand to right wrongs."[103] Dixon's father belonged to the Klan, and his maternal uncle and boyhood idol,[64]: 21  Col. Leroy McAfee, to whom The Clansman is dedicated, was a regional leader or, in the words of the dedication, "Grand Titan of the invisible Empire of the Ku Klux Klan".

The depiction of the Klan's burning of crosses, as shown in the illustrations of the first edition, is an innovation of Dixon. It had not previously been used by the Klan, but was later taken up by them.

"In Dixon's passionate prose, the book also treats at considerable length the poverty, shame, and degradation suffered by the Southerners at the hands of the Negroes and unscrupulous Northeners."[62]: 72  Martial law is declared, US troops are sent in, as they were during Reconstruction. "The victory of the South was complete when the Klan defeats the federal troups throughout the state."[62]: 72 

To publicize his views further, Dixon rewrote The Clansman as a play. Like the novel, it was a great commercial success; there were multiple touring companies presenting the play simultaneously in different cities. Sometimes, it was banned. Birth of a Nation is actually based on the play, which was unpublished until 2007,[clarification needed] rather than directly on the novel.

The Birth of a Nation

Another prominent and influential popularizer of the Lost Cause perspective was D. W. Griffith's highly-successful The Birth of a Nation (1915), which was based on Dixon's novel. Noting that Dixon and Griffith collaborated on Birth of a Nation, Blight wrote:

Dixon's vicious version of the idea that blacks had caused the Civil War by their very presence, and that Northern radicalism during Reconstruction failed to understand that freedom had ushered blacks as a race into barbarism, neatly framed the story of the rise of heroic vigilantism in the South. Reluctantly, Klansmen—white men—had to take the law into their own hands in order to save Southern white womanhood from the sexual brutality of black men. Dixon's vision captured the attitude of thousands and forged in story form a collective memory of how the war may have been lost but Reconstruction was won—by the South and a reconciled nation. Riding as masked cavalry, the Klan stopped corrupt government, prevented the anarchy of 'Negro rule' and most of all, saved white supremacy.[104]

In both The Clansman and the film, the Klan is portrayed as continuing the noble traditions of the antebellum South and the heroic Confederate soldier by defending Southern culture in general and Southern womanhood in particular against rape and depredations at the hands of the freedmen and Yankee carpetbaggers during Reconstruction. Dixon's narrative was so readily adopted that the film has been credited with the revival of the Klan in the 1910s and 1920s. The second Klan, which Dixon denounced, reached a peak membership of 2-5 million members.[105] The film's legacy is widereaching in the history of American racism, and even the now-iconic cross burnings of the KKK were based on Dixon's novel and the film made of it. The first KKK did not burn crosses, which was originally a Scottish tradition, "Crann Tara", designed to gather clans for war.[106]

Later literature and films

The romanticization of the Lost Cause is captured in film, such as The Birth of a Nation, Gone With the Wind, Song of the South, and Tennessee Johnson—the latter of which the San Francisco Chronicle called "the height of Southern mythmaking". Gods and Generals reportedly lionizes Jackson and Lee.[19] CNN reported that these films "recast the antebellum South as a moonlight and magnolia paradise of happy slaves, affectionate slave owners and villainous Yankees".[107]

Post-1920s literature

In his novels about the Sartoris family, William Faulkner referenced those who supported the Lost Cause ideal but suggested that the ideal itself was misguided and out of date.[108]

The Confederate Veteran, a monthly magazine published in Nashville, Tennessee, from 1893 to 1932, made its publisher, Sumner Archibald Cunningham, a leader of the Lost Cause movement.[109]

Gone with the Wind

The Lost Cause view reached tens of millions of Americans in the best-selling 1936 novel Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell and the Oscar-winning 1939 film based on it. Helen Taylor wrote:

Gone with the Wind has almost certainly done its ideological work. It has sealed in popular imaginations a fascinated nostalgia for the glamorous southern plantation house and ordered hierarchical society in which slaves are 'family,' and there is a mystical bond between the landowner and the rich soil those slaves work for him. It has spoken eloquently—albeit from an elitist perspective—of the grand themes (war, love, death, conflicts of race, class, gender, and generation) that have crossed continents and cultures.[110]

David W. Blight wrote:

From this combination of Lost Cause voices, a reunited America arose pure, guiltless, and assured that the deep conflicts in its past had been imposed upon it by otherworldly forces. The side that lost was especially assured that its cause was true and good. One of the ideas the reconciliationist Lost Cause instilled deeply into the national culture is that even when Americans lose, they win. Such was the message, the indomitable spirit, that Margaret Mitchell infused into her character Scarlett O'Hara in Gone With the Wind ...[111]

Southerners were portrayed as noble, heroic figures, living in a doomed romantic society that rejected the realistic advice offered by the Rhett Butler character and never understood the risk that they were taking in going to war.

Song of the South

The 1946 Disney film Song of the South is the first to have combined live actors with animated shorts.[112] In the framing story, the actor James Baskett played Uncle Remus, a former slave who apparently is full of joy and wisdom despite having lived part of his life in slavery. There is a common misconception that the story takes place in the antebellum period and that the African-American characters are slaves.[113][114] One critic said, "Like other similar films of the period also dealing with the antebellum South, the slaves in the film are all good-natured, subservient, annoyingly cheerful, content and always willing to help a white person in need with some valuable life lesson along the way. In fact, they're never called slaves, but they come off more like neighborly workers lending a helping hand for some kind, benevolent plantation owners."[112][19][107] Disney has never released it on DVD[112] and the film has been withheld from Disney+.[115] It was released on VHS in the United Kingdom several times, most recently in 2000.[115]

Gods and Generals

The 2003 Civil War film Gods and Generals, based on Jeff Shaara's 1996 novel, is widely viewed as championing the Lost Cause ideology with a presentation favorable to the Confederacy[116][117][118] and lionizing Generals Jackson and Lee.[19]

Writing in the Journal of American History, the historian Steven E. Woodworth derided the movie as a modern-day telling of Lost Cause mythology.[116] Woodworth called the movie "the most pro-Confederate film since Birth of a Nation, a veritable celluloid celebration of slavery and treason". He summed up his reasons for disliking the movie:

Gods and Generals brings to the big screen the major themes of Lost Cause mythology that professional historians have been working for half a century to combat. In the world of Gods and Generals, slavery has nothing to do with the Confederate cause. Instead, the Confederates are nobly fighting for, rather than against, freedom, as viewers are reminded again and again by one white southern character after another.[116]

Woodworth criticized the portrayal of slaves as being "generally happy" with their condition. He also criticized the relative lack of attention given to the motivations of Union soldiers fighting in the war. He excoriates the film for allegedly implying, in agreement with Lost Cause mythology, that the South was more "sincerely Christian". Woodworth concluded that the film through "judicial omission" presents "a distorted view of the Civil War".[116]

The historian William B. Feis similarly criticized the director's decision "to champion the more simplistic-and sanitized-interpretations found in post-war 'Lost Cause' mythology".[117] The film critic Roger Ebert described the movie as "a Civil War movie that Trent Lott might enjoy" and said of its Lost Cause themes, "If World War II were handled this way, there'd be hell to pay."[119]

The consensus of film critics of the movie was that it had a "pro-Confederate slant".[118]

Later use

Professor Gallagher contended that Douglas Southall Freeman's definitive four-volume biography of Lee, published in 1934, "cemented in American letters an interpretation of Lee very close to Early's utterly heroic figure".[120] In that work, Lee's subordinates were primarily to blame for errors that lost battles. While Longstreet was the most common target of such attacks, others came under fire as well. Richard Ewell, Jubal Early, J. E. B. Stuart, A. P. Hill, George Pickett, and many others were frequently attacked and blamed by Southerners in an attempt to deflect criticism from Lee.

Hudson Strode wrote a widely read scholarly three-volume biography of Confederate President Jefferson Davis, published in the 1950s and 1960s. A leading scholarly journal that reviewed it stressed Strode's political biases:

His [Jefferson Davis's] enemies are devils, and his friends, like Davis himself, have been canonized. Strode not only attempts to sanctify Davis but also the Confederate point of view, and this study should be relished by those vigorously sympathetic with the Lost Cause.[121]

One Dallas newspaper editorial in 2018 referred to the Texas Civil War Museum as "a lovely bit of 'Lost Cause' propaganda".[122]

While not limited to the American South specifically, the Stop the Steal movement in the wake of the 2020 US presidential election has been interpreted as a reemergence of the Lost Cause idea and a manifestation of white backlash.[123][124][125][126]

Contemporary historians

Contemporary historians overwhelmingly agree that secession was motivated by slavery. There were numerous causes for secession, but preservation and expansion of slavery was easily the most important of them. The confusion may come from blending the causes of secession with the causes of the war, which were separate but related issues.

According to the historian Kenneth M. Stampp, each side supported states' rights or stronger federal power only when it was convenient for it to do so.[127] Stampp cited Confederate Vice President Alexander Stephens as an example of a Southern leader who, when the war began, said that slavery was the "cornerstone of the Confederacy", but after the defeat of the Confederacy said, in A Constitutional View of the Late War Between the States, that the war had been not about slavery but about states' rights. Stephens became one of the most ardent defenders of the Lost Cause myth.[128]

Similarly, the historian William C. Davis explained the Confederate Constitution's protection of slavery at the national level:

To the old Union they had said that the Federal power had no authority to interfere with slavery issues in a state. To their new nation they would declare that the state had no power to interfere with a federal protection of slavery. Of all the many testimonials to the fact that slavery, and not states' rights, really lay at the heart of their movement, this was the most eloquent of all.[129]

Davis further noted, "Causes and effects of the war have been manipulated and mythologized to suit political and social agendas, past and present."[130] The historian David Blight said that "its use of white supremacy as both means and ends" has been a key characteristic of the Lost Cause.[18] The historian Allan Nolan wrote:

[T]he Lost Cause legacy to history is a caricature of the truth. The caricature wholly misrepresents and distorts the facts of the matter. Surely it is time to start again in our understanding of this decisive element of our past and to do so from the premises of history unadulterated by the distortions, falsehoods, and romantic sentimentality of the Myth of the Lost Cause.[131]

The historian William C. Davis labeled many of the myths that surround the war "frivolous" and these myths include attempts to rename the war by "Confederate partisans." He also stated that names such as "War of Northern Aggression" and "War Between the States" (the latter being an expression coined by Alexander Stephens) were just attempts to deny the fact that the American Civil War was an actual civil war.[132]

The historian A. Cash Koeniger argues that Gary Gallagher has mischaracterized films that depict the Lost Cause. He wrote that Gallagher

concedes that "Lost Cause themes" (with the important exception of minimizing the importance of slavery) are based on historical truths (p. 46). Confederate soldiers were often outnumbered, ragged, and hungry; southern civilians did endure much material deprivation and a disproportionate amount of bereavement; U.S. forces did wreck [sic] havoc on southern infrastructure and private property and the like, yet whenever these points appear in films Gallagher considers them motifs "celebratory" of the Confederacy (p. 81).[133]

See also

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  133. ^ A. Cash Koeniger, review of Gallagher's Causes Won, Lost, and Forgotten: How Hollywood and Popular Art Shape What We Know about the Civil War (2008), citing pages 46 and 81, in The Journal of Military History (Jan 2009) 73 (1) p. 286

Bibliography

  • Bailey, Fred Arthur (1991). "The Textbooks of the "Lost Cause": Censorship and the Creation of Southern State Histories". The Georgia Historical Quarterly. 75 (3): 507–533. JSTOR 40582363.
  • Bailey, Fred Arthur (1995). "Free Speech and the Lost Cause in the Old Dominion". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 103 (2): 237–266. JSTOR 4249508.
  • Barnhart, Terry A. (2011) Albert Taylor Bledsoe: Defender of the Old South and Architect of the Lost Cause. Baton Rouge, Louiisiana: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 9780807137246
  • Blight, David W. (2001). Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory. Belknap Press. ISBN 978-0-674-00332-3.
  • Boccardi, Megan B. (2011) "Remembering in black and white: Missouri women's memorial work 1860–1910" (PhD. Dissertation), Columbia, Missouri: University of Missouri—Columbia. pp. 231–57
  • Coski, John M. (2005) The Confederate Battle Flag: America's Most Embattled Emblem. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Belknap Press. ISBN 0-674-01722-6
  • Cox, Karen L. (2003) Dixie's Daughters: The United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Preservation of Confederate Culture. Gainesville, Florida: University Press of Florida. ISBN 9780813028125
  • Davis, William C. (1996). The Cause Lost: Myths and Realities of the Confederacy (1st ed.). Lawrence, Kansas, U.S.A.: Univ Pr of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0809-6.
  • Davis, William C. (2002) Look Away: A History of the Confederate States of America. New York: Free Press ISBN 0-684-86585-8
  • Domby, Adam H. (2020). The False Cause: Fraud, Fabrication, and White Supremacy in Confederate Memory. Charlottesville, VA, USA: University of Virginia Press. ISBN 9780813948553.
  • Dorgan, Howard (1972). "The doctrine of victorious defeat in the rhetoric of confederate veterans". Southern Speech Communication Journal. 38 (2): 119–130. doi:10.1080/10417947209372178.
  • Foster, Gaines M. (1988). Ghosts of the Confederacy: Defeat, the Lost Cause and the Emergence of the New South, 1865–1913. US: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-505420-0.
  • Freeman, Douglas Southall (1939) The South to Posterity: An Introduction to the Writing of Confederate History. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
  • Gallagher, Gary W. and Alan T. Nolan, editors (2000) The Myth of the Lost Cause and Civil War History. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press ISBN 0-253-33822-0.
  • Gallagher, Gary W. (1995) Jubal A. Early, the Lost Cause, and Civil War History: A Persistent Legacy (Frank L. Klement Lectures, No. 4). Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Marquette University Press. ISBN 0-87462-328-6.
  • Goldfield, David (2002) Still Fighting the Civil War. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 0-8071-2758-2
  • Gulley, H. (1993) "Women and the Lost Cause: Preserving a Confederate Identity in the American Deep South" Journal of Historical Geography 19.2: 125
  • Hall, Jacquelyn Dowd (1998). ""You Must Remember This": Autobiography as Social Critique". The Journal of American History. 85 (2): 439–465. doi:10.2307/2567747. JSTOR 2567747.
  • Hattaway, Herman (Summer 1971). "Clio's Southern Soldiers: The United Confederate Veterans and History". Louisiana History. Louisiana State University. XII (3): 213–42.
  • Janney, Caroline E. (2008). Burying the dead but not the past: Ladies' Memorial Associations and the lost cause. U of North Carolina P. ISBN 978-0-8078-3176-2. Retrieved January 24, 2012.
  • Janney, Caroline E. (2009) "The Lost Cause." Encyclopedia Virginia Virginia Foundation for the Humanities
  • Loewen, James W. and Sebesta, Edward H., eds. (2010). The Confederate and Neo-Confederate Reader: The "Great Truth" about the "Lost Cause". Jackson: University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 978-1-60473-218-4.
  • Osterweis, Rollin G. (1973) The Myth of the Lost Cause, 1865–1900 Hamden, Connecticut: Archon Books ISBN 9780208013187
  • Reardon, Carol, Pickett's Charge in History and Memory, University of North Carolina Press, 1997, ISBN 0-8078-2379-1.
  • Piston, William Garrett (1987). Lee's Tarnished Lieutenant: James Longstreet and His Place in Southern History. Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press. ISBN 0-8203-1229-0.
  • Simpson, John A. (2003). Edith D. Pope and Her Nashville Friends: Guardians of the Lost Cause in the Confederate Veteran. Knoxville, Tennessee: University of Tennessee Press. ISBN 978-1-57233-211-9. OCLC 750779185.
  • Stampp, Kenneth (1991). The Causes of the Civil War (3rd rev. ed.). New York: Touchstone Books. ISBN 9780671751555.
  • Ulbrich, David, "Lost Cause" (2000) in Heidler, David S. and Heidler, Jeanne T., eds. Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: A Political, Social, and Military History. New York: W. W. Norton & Company ISBN 0-393-04758-X.
  • Wilson, Charles Reagan, (1980) Baptized in Blood: The Religion of the Lost Cause, 1865–1920. Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press ISBN 0-8203-0681-9.
  • Wilson, Charles Reagan (1997) "The Lost Cause Myth in the New South Era" in Gerster, Patrick and Cords, Nicholas, editors Myth America: A Historical Anthology, Volume II. St. James, New York: Brandywine Press. ISBN 1-881089-97-5

Further reading

Primary

  • Early, Jubal Anderson (1866). A memoir of the last year of the War of Independence, in the Confederate States of America. Toronto, Printed by Lovell & Gibson.
  • Early, Jubal Anderson (1872). The campaigns of Gen. Robert E. Lee. Baltimore : J. Murphy.
  • Early, Jubal Anderson (1915). The heritage of the South. Lynchburg, Va., Press of Brown-Morrison co.
  • Grady, Benjamin Franklin (1899). The case of the South against the North; or Historical evidence justifying the southern states of the American Union in their long controversy with northern states. Raleigh, N. C., Edwards & Broughton.

Secondary and tertiary

  • Bonekemper III, Edward H. (2015). The Myth of the Lost Cause: Why the South Fought the Civil War and Why the North Won. Regnery History. ISBN 978-1-62157-454-5.
  • Breed, Allen G. (August 10, 2018). "'The lost cause': the women's group fighting for Confederate monuments". The Guardian.
  • Connelly, Thomas L. (1977). The Marble Man: Robert E. Lee and His Image in American Society. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 0-8071-0474-4.
  • Connelly, Thomas L. and Bellows, Barbara L. (1982). God and General Longstreet: The Lost Cause and the Southern Mind. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 0-8071-2014-6.
  • Coulter, E. Merton (1947). The South During Reconstruction, 1865–1877: A History of the South. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8071-0008-0.
  • Duggan, Paul (November 28, 2018). "Sins of the Fathers". Washington Post Magazine.
  • Fahs, Elizabeth and Waugh, Joan, eds. (2004). The Memory of the Civil War in American Culture. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-5572-0.
  • Gates Jr., Henry Louis (November 8, 2019). "The 'Lost Cause' That Built Jim Crow". The New York Times.
  • Maxwell, Angie and Shields, Todd (2019). The Long Southern Strategy: How Chasing White Voters in the South Changed American Politics. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 326–329. ISBN 978-0197579039.
  • Palmer, Brian and Wessler, Seth Freed (December 2018). "The Costs of the Confederacy". Smithsonian Magazine.
  • Rubin, Karen Aviva (2007). The Aftermath of Sorrow: White Women's Search for Their Lost Cause, 1861-1917 (PhD). Tallahassee, Florida: Florida State University.
  • Seidule, Ty (2020). Robert E. Lee and Me: A Southerner's Reckoning with the Myth of the Lost Cause. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-1-2502-3926-6.
  • Tutor, Philip (January 17, 2016). "Memory or History? Insight: Throughout the South, memorials with difficult histories pose vexing problems". Anniston Star.
  • Tutor, Philip (December 7, 2018). "How the South pays (literally) for the Lost Cause". Anniston Star.
  • Wallace-Sanders, Kimberly (June 15, 2009). "Southern Memory, Southern Monuments, and the Subversive Black Mammy". Southern Spaces. doi:10.18737/M7PK6W.
  • Waters, Dustin (December 13, 2017). . Charleston City Paper. Archived from the original on April 16, 2020. Retrieved January 26, 2019.
  • Williams, David S. (May 15, 2005). "Lost Cause Religion". New Georgia Encyclopedia. Retrieved September 9, 2021.

External links

  • Whose Heritage? Public Symbols of the Confederacy, map by SPLC, showing places dedicated to the memorial of Confederates
  • Interview with historian Adam Domby about The False Cause: Fraud, Fabrication, and White Supremacy in Confederate Memory on Half Hour of Heterodoxy
  • Origins of the Lost Cause, an academic panel at Reconstruction and the Legacy of the War the 2016 summer conference hosted by the Civil War Institute. C-SPAN.

lost, cause, confederacy, lost, cause, redirects, here, other, uses, lost, cause, disambiguation, simply, lost, cause, american, pseudohistorical, negationist, myth, that, claims, cause, confederate, states, during, american, civil, just, heroic, centered, sla. Lost Cause redirects here For other uses see Lost Cause disambiguation The Lost Cause of the Confederacy or simply Lost Cause is an American pseudohistorical 2 3 negationist myth 4 5 6 that claims the cause of the Confederate States during the American Civil War was just heroic and not centered on slavery 7 8 First enunciated in 1866 it has continued to influence racism gender roles and religious attitudes in the Southern United States to the present day 9 10 A St Louis Globe Democrat article concerning dedication of a Jackson Mississippi monument to Confederate soldiers in June 1891 has Lost Cause in its headline 1 Custis Lee 1832 1913 on horseback in front of the Jefferson Davis Memorial in Richmond Virginia on June 3 1907 reviewing the Confederate Reunion Parade Members of the United Daughters of the Confederacy around a Confederate monument in Lakeland Florida 1915 Lost Cause proponents typically praise the traditional culture of honor and chivalry of the antebellum South They argue that enslaved people were treated well and deny that their condition was the central cause of the war contrary to statements made by Confederate leaders such as in the Cornerstone Speech 11 Instead they frame the war as a defense of states rights and as necessary to protect their agrarian economy against supposed Northern aggression 12 13 14 The Union victory is thus explained as the result of its greater size and industrial wealth while the Confederate side is portrayed as having greater morality and military skill 11 Modern historians overwhelmingly disagree with these characterizations noting that the central cause of the war was slavery 15 16 17 There were two intense periods of Lost Cause activity the first was around the turn of the 20th century when efforts were made to preserve the memories of dying Confederate veterans and the second was during the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s in reaction to growing public support for racial equality Through actions such as building prominent Confederate monuments and writing history textbooks Lost Cause organizations including the United Daughters of the Confederacy and Sons of Confederate Veterans sought to ensure Southern whites would know what they called the true narrative of the Civil War and therefore continue to support white supremacist policies such as Jim Crow laws 9 18 In that regard white supremacy is a central feature of the Lost Cause narrative 18 Contents 1 Origins 2 History 2 1 19th century 2 1 1 Reunification of North and South 2 1 2 New South 2 2 Statues of Moses Jacob Ezekiel 2 3 Works of Thomas Dixon Jr 2 4 From the 20th century to the present 3 Religious dimension 4 Gender roles 5 Tenets 6 Symbols 6 1 Confederate generals 6 2 War of Northern Aggression 6 3 Thomas Dixon Jr s novels 6 3 1 The Leopard s Spots 6 3 2 The Clansman 6 4 The Birth of a Nation 6 5 Later literature and films 6 5 1 Post 1920s literature 6 5 2 Gone with the Wind 6 5 3 Song of the South 6 5 4 Gods and Generals 7 Later use 8 Contemporary historians 9 See also 9 1 Places and events 9 2 Nostalgia and pseudo historical ideologies 9 3 Other 10 References 10 1 Bibliography 11 Further reading 11 1 Primary 11 2 Secondary and tertiary 12 External linksOriginsThey say that history is written by the victors but the Civil War has been the rare exception Perhaps the need for the country to stay together made it necessary for the North to sit silently and accept the South s conception of the conflict In any case for most of the past 150 years the South s version of the war and Reconstruction has held sway in our schools our literature and since the dawn of feature films our movies Mick LaSalle The San Francisco Chronicle 2015 19 Though the idea of the Lost Cause has more than one origin it consists mainly of an argument that slavery was not the primary cause or not a cause at all of the Civil War 8 Such a narrative denies or minimizes the statements of the seceding states each of which issued a statement explaining its decision to secede and the wartime writings and speeches of Confederate leaders such as CSA Vice President Alexander Stephens s Cornerstone Speech instead favoring the leaders more moderate postwar views 20 The Lost Cause argument stresses the idea of secession as a defense against a Northern threat to a Southern way of life and says that the threat violated the states rights guaranteed by the Constitution It asserts that any state had the right to secede a point strongly denied by the North The Lost Cause portrays the South as more adherent to Christian values than the allegedly greedy North It portrays slavery as more benevolent than cruel alleging that it taught Christianity and civilization Stories of happy slaves are often used as propaganda in an effort to defend slavery the United Daughters of the Confederacy had a Faithful Slave Memorial Committee and erected the Heyward Shepherd monument in Harpers Ferry West Virginia These stories would be used to explain slavery to Northerners The Lost Cause portrays slave owners being kind to their slaves In explaining Confederate defeat an assertion is made that the main factor was not qualitative inferiority in leadership or fighting ability but the massive quantitative superiority of the Yankee industrial machine 21 At the peak of troop strength in 1863 Union soldiers outnumbered Confederate soldiers by over two to one and the Union had three times the bank deposits of the Confederacy 22 History19th century Henry Mosler completed his best known painting The Lost Cause three years after the end of the Civil War The defeat of the Confederacy devastated many white Southerners economically emotionally and psychologically Before the war many proudly believed that their rich military tradition would avail them in the forthcoming conflict Many sought consolation in attributing their loss to factors beyond their control such as physical size and overwhelming brute force 14 The University of Virginia professor Gary W Gallagher wrote The architects of the Lost Cause acted from various motives They collectively sought to justify their own actions and allow themselves and other former Confederates to find something positive in all encompassing failure They also wanted to provide their children and future generations of white Southerners with a correct narrative of the war 14 The Lost Cause became a key part of the reconciliation process between North and South around 1900 further explanation needed and formed the basis of many white Southerners postbellum war commemorations The United Daughters of the Confederacy a major organization has been associated with the Lost Cause for over a century 23 Yale University history professor Rollin G Osterweis summarizes the content that pervaded Lost Cause writings The Legend of the Lost Cause began as mostly a literary expression of the despair of a bitter defeated people over a lost identity It was a landscape dotted with figures drawn mainly out of the past the chivalric planter the magnolia scented Southern belle the good gray Confederate veteran once a knight of the field and saddle and obliging old Uncle Remus All these while quickly enveloped in a golden haze became very real to the people of the South who found the symbols useful in the reconstituting of their shattered civilization They perpetuated the ideals of the Old South and brought a sense of comfort to the New 24 Louisiana State University history professor Gaines Foster wrote in 2013 Scholars have reached a fair amount of agreement about the role the Lost Cause played in those years although the scholarship on the Lost Cause like the memory itself remains contested The white South most agree dedicated enormous effort to celebrating the leaders and common soldiers of the Confederacy emphasizing that they had preserved their and the South s honor 25 The term Lost Cause first appeared in the title of an 1866 book by the Virginian author and journalist Edward A Pollard The Lost Cause A New Southern History of the War of the Confederates 26 He promoted many of the aforementioned themes of the Lost Cause In particular he dismissed the role of slavery in starting the war and understated the cruelty of American slavery even promoting it as a way of improving the lives of Africans We shall not enter upon the discussion of the moral question of slavery But we may suggest a doubt here whether that odious term slavery which has been so long imposed by the exaggeration of Northern writers upon the judgement and sympathies of the world is properly applied to that system of servitude in the South which was really the mildest in the world which did not rest on acts of debasement and disenfranchisement but elevated the African and was in the interest of human improvement and which by the law of the land protected the negro in life and limb and in many personal rights and by the practice of the system bestowed upon him a sum of individual indulgences which made him altogether the most striking type in the world of cheerfulness and contentment 27 However it was the articles written by General Jubal A Early in the 1870s for the Southern Historical Society that firmly established the Lost Cause as a long lasting literary and cultural phenomenon The 1881 publication of The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government by ex Confederate President Jefferson Davis a two volume defense of the Southern cause provided another important text in the history of the Lost Cause Davis blamed the enemy for whatever of bloodshed of devastation or shock to republican government has resulted from the war He charged that the Yankees fought with a ferocity that disregarded all the laws of civilized warfare The book remained in print and often served to justify the Southern position and to distance it from slavery 28 Early s original inspiration for his views may have come from Confederate General Robert E Lee When Lee published his farewell order to the Army of Northern Virginia he consoled his soldiers by speaking of the overwhelming resources and numbers that the Confederate army had fought against In a letter to Early Lee requested information about enemy strengths from May 1864 to April 1865 the period in which his army was engaged against Lieutenant General Ulysses S Grant the Overland Campaign and the Siege of Petersburg Lee wrote My only object is to transmit if possible the truth to posterity and do justice to our brave Soldiers In another letter Lee wanted all statistics as regards numbers destruction of private property by the Federal troops amp c because he intended to demonstrate the discrepancy in strength between the two armies and believed it would be difficult to get the world to understand the odds against which we fought Referring to newspaper accounts that accused him of culpability in the loss he wrote I have not thought proper to notice or even to correct misrepresentations of my words amp acts We shall have to be patient amp suffer for awhile at least At present the public mind is not prepared to receive the truth 29 All of the themes were made prominent by Early and the Lost Cause writers in the 19th century and continued to play an important role throughout the 20th 30 In a November 1868 report U S Army general George Henry Thomas a Virginian who had fought for the Union in the war noted efforts made by former Confederates to paint the Confederacy in a positive light T he greatest efforts made by the defeated insurgents since the close of the war have been to promulgate the idea that the cause of liberty justice humanity equality and all the calendar of the virtues of freedom suffered violence and wrong when the effort for southern independence failed This is of course intended as a species of political cant whereby the crime of treason might be covered with a counterfeit varnish of patriotism so that the precipitators of the rebellion might go down in history hand in hand with the defenders of the government thus wiping out with their own hands their own stains a species of self forgiveness amazing in its effrontery when it is considered that life and property justly forfeited by the laws of the country of war and of nations through the magnanimity of the government and people was not exacted from them George Henry Thomas November 1868 31 Memorial associations such as the United Confederate Veterans the United Daughters of the Confederacy and Ladies Memorial Associations integrated Lost Cause themes to help white Confederate sympathizing Southerners cope with the many changes during the era most significantly Reconstruction 32 33 The institutions have lasted to the present and descendants of Southern soldiers continue to attend their meetings In 1879 John McElroy published Andersonville A Story of Rebel Military Prisons which strongly criticized the Confederate treatment of prisoners and implied in the preface that the mythology of the Confederacy was well established and that criticism of the otherwise lionized Confederates was met with disdain I know that what is contained herein will be bitterly denied I am prepared for this In my boyhood I witnessed the savagery of the Slavery agitation in my youth I felt the fierceness of the hatred directed against all those who stood by the Nation I know that hell hath no fury like the vindictiveness of those who are hurt by the truth being told to them 34 In 1907 Hunter Holmes McGuire physician of Confederate general Stonewall Jackson published in a book papers sponsored by the Grand Camp of Confederate Veterans of Virginia supporting the Lost Cause tenets that slavery was not the cause of the war and that the North was the aggressor in bringing on the war The book quickly sold out and required a second edition 35 Reunification of North and South American historian Alan T Nolan states that the Lost Cause facilitated the reunification of the North and the South 36 He quotes historian Gaines M Foster who wrote that signs of respect from former foes and northern publishers made acceptance of reunion easier By the mid eighties most southerners had decided to build a future within a reunited nation A few remained irreconcilable but their influence in southern society declined rapidly 37 Nolan mentioned a second aspect The reunion was exclusively a white man s phenomenon and the price of the reunion was the sacrifice of the African Americans 38 The historian Caroline Janney stated Providing a sense of relief to white Southerners who feared being dishonored by defeat the Lost Cause was largely accepted in the years following the war by white Americans who found it to be a useful tool in reconciling North and South 39 The Yale historian David W Blight wrote The Lost Cause became an integral part of national reconciliation by dint of sheer sentimentalism by political argument and by recurrent celebrations and rituals For most white Southerners the Lost Cause evolved into a language of vindication and renewal as well as an array of practices and public monuments through which they could solidify both their Southern pride and their Americanness In the 1890s Confederate memories no longer dwelled as much on mourning or explaining defeat they offered a set of conservative traditions by which the entire country could gird itself against racial political and industrial disorder And by the sheer virtue of losing heroically the Confederate soldier provided a model of masculine devotion and courage in an age of gender anxieties and ruthless material striving 40 In exploring the literature of reconciliation the historian William Tynes Cowa wrote The cult of the Lost Cause was part of a larger cultural project the reconciliation of North and South after the Civil War He identified a typical image in postwar fiction a materialistic rich Yankee man marrying an impoverished spiritual Southern bride as a symbol of happy national reunion 41 Examining films and visual art Gallagher identified the theme of white people North and South who extol the American virtues both sides manifested during the war to exalt the restored nation that emerged from the conflict and to mute the role of African Americans 42 Historian and journalist Bruce Catton argued that the myth or legend helped achieve national reconciliation between North and South He concluded that the legend of the lost cause has served the entire country very well and he went on to say 43 The things that were done during the Civil War have not been forgotten of course but we now see them through a veil We have elevated the entire conflict to the realm where it is no longer explosive It is a part of American legend a part of American history a part if you will of American romance It moves men mightily to this day but it does not move them in the direction of picking up their guns and going at it again We have had national peace since the war ended and we will always have it and I think the way Lee and his soldiers conducted themselves in the hours of surrender has a great deal to do with it New South Main article New South Historians have stated that the Lost Cause theme helped white Southerners adjust to their new status and move forward into what became known as the New South Hillyer states that the Confederate Memorial Literary Society CMLS founded by elite white women in Richmond Virginia in the 1890s exemplifies that solution The CMLS founded the Confederate Museum to document and to defend the Confederate cause and to recall the antebellum mores that the new South s business ethos was thought to be displacing By focusing on military sacrifice rather than on grievances regarding the North the Confederate Museum aided the process of sectional reconciliation according to Hillyer By depicting slavery as benevolent the museum s exhibits reinforced the notion that Jim Crow laws were a proper solution to the racial tensions that had escalated during Reconstruction Lastly by glorifying the common soldier and portraying the South as solid the museum promoted acceptance of industrial capitalism Thus the Confederate Museum both critiqued and eased the economic transformations of the New South and enabled Richmond to reconcile its memory of the past with its hopes for the future and to leave the past behind as it developed new industrial and financial roles 44 The historian Jacquelyn Dowd Hall stated that the Lost Cause theme was fully developed around 1900 in a mood not of despair but of triumphalism for the New South Much was left out of the Lost Cause N either the trauma of slavery for African Americans nor their heroic heartbreaking freedom struggle found a place in that story But the Lost Cause narrative also suppressed the memories of many white southerners Memories of how under slavery power bred cruelty Memories of the bloody unbearable realities of war Written out too were the competing memories and identities that set white southerners one against another pitting the planters against the up country Unionists against Confederates Populists and mill workers against the corporations home front women against war besotted broken men 45 Statues of Moses Jacob Ezekiel The Virginian Moses Jacob Ezekiel the most prominent Confederate expatriate was the only sculptor to have seen action during the Civil War From his studio in Rome where a Confederate flag hung proudly he created a series of statues of Confederate heroes which both celebrated the Lost Cause in which he was a true believer 46 and set a highly visible model for Confederate monument erecting in the early 20th century According to journalist Lara Moehlman Ezekiel s work is integral to this sympathetic view of the Civil War 46 His Confederate statues included Virginia Mourning Her Dead 1903 for which Ezekiel declined payment although another source says that he charged half of his usual fee 47 83 The original is at his alma mater the Virginia Military Institute honoring the 10 cadets students who died one Thomas G Jefferson the president s great great nephew in Ezekiel s arms at the Battle of New Market 48 109 111 It stands adjacent to the graves of six of the cadets 47 83 In 1914 Ezekiel gave a 3 4 size replica to the Museum of the Confederacy since 2014 part of the American Civil War Museum in his native Richmond 47 84 Statue of Stonewall Jackson 1910 West Virginia State Capitol Charleston West Virginia 49 A replica is at the Virginia Military Institute Southern also called The Lookout 1910 Confederate Cemetery Johnson s Island Ohio Commissioned by the United Daughters of the Confederacy Ezekiel asked only to be reimbursed the cost of the casting 47 94 Tyler Confederate Memorial Gateway 1913 City Cemetery Hickman Kentucky Commissioned by the United Daughters of the Confederacy 47 120 Statue of John Warwick Daniel c 1913 Lynchburg Virginia Confederate Memorial 1914 Arlington National Cemetery Arlington Virginia which Ezekiel called New South 50 According to Moehlman no monument exemplifies the Lost Cause narrative better than Ezekiel s Confederate Memorial in Arlington where the woman representing the South appears to be protecting the black figures below Ezekiel included faithful slaves because he wanted to undermine what he called the lies told about the South and slavery in Uncle Tom s Cabin and wished to rewrite history correctly his word to depict black slaves support for the Confederate cause 51 According to his descendant Judith Ezekiel who has headed a group of his descendants calling for its removal This statue was a very very deliberate part of revisionist history of racist America 46 According to historian Gabriel Reich the statue functions as propaganda for the Lost Cause It couldn t be worse 46 Kali Holloway director of the Make It Right Project devoted to the removal of Confederate monuments has said that What stands out most is the lasting impact of Ezekiel s tributes to the Confederacy his homage to Stonewall Jackson in West Virginia his loyal slave monument in Arlington his personification of Virginia mourning for her soldiers who died fighting for a treasonous nation created in defense of black chattel slavery Confederate monuments including Ezekiel s highly visible sculptures were part of a campaign to terrorize black Americans to romanticize slavery to promote an ahistorical lie about the honor of the Confederate cause to cast in granite what Jim Crow codified in law The consequences of all those things remain with us 52 Works of Thomas Dixon Jr No writer did more to establish the Lost Cause than Thomas Dixon Jr 1864 1946 a Southern lecturer novelist playwright filmmaker and Baptist minister citation needed Dixon a North Carolinian has been described as a professional racist who made his living writing books and plays attacking the presence of African Americans in the United States A firm believer not only in white supremacy but also in the degeneration of blacks after slavery ended Dixon thought the ideal solution to America s racial problems was to deport all blacks to Africa 53 510 Dixon predicted a race war if current trends continued unchecked that he believed white people would surely win having 3 000 years of civilization in their favor 54 He also considered efforts to educate and civilize African Americans futile even dangerous and said that an African American was all right as a slave or laborer but as an educated man he is a monstrosity 55 In the short term Dixon saw white racial prejudice as self preservation 56 and he worked to propagate a pro Southern view of the recent Reconstruction period and spread it nationwide He decried portrayals of Southerners as cruel and villainous in popular works such as Uncle Tom s Cabin 1852 seeking to counteract these portrayals with his own work 53 510 He was a noted lecturer often getting many more invitations to speak than he was capable of accepting 57 Moreover he regularly drew very large crowds larger than any other Protestant preacher in the United States at the time and newspapers frequently reported on his sermons and addresses 58 389 59 18 He resigned his minister s job so as to devote himself to lecturing full time and supported his family that way He had an immense following and his name had become a household word 59 30 In a typical review of the time his talk was decidedly entertaining and instructive There were great beds of solid thought and timely instruction at the bottom 60 Between 1899 and 1903 he was heard by more than 5 000 000 people his play The Clansman was seen by over 4 000 000 61 He was commonly referred to as the best lecturer in the country 62 50 51 He enjoyed a handsome income from lectures and royalties on his novels 57 especially from his share of The Birth of a Nation He bought a steam yacht and named it Dixie 57 After seeing a theatrical version of Uncle Tom s Cabin he became obsessed with writing a trilogy of novels about the Reconstruction period 62 64 The trilogy comprised The Leopard s Spots A Romance of the White Man s Burden 1865 1900 1902 The Clansman A Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan 1905 and The Traitor A Story of the Fall of the Invisible Empire 1907 Each of his trilogy novels had developed that black and white battle through rape lynching scenarios that are always represented as prefiguring total racewar should elite white men fail to resolve the nation s Negro Problem 63 Dixon also wrote a novel about Abraham Lincoln The Southerner 1913 the story of what Davis called the real Lincoln 62 80 another The Man in Grey 1921 on Robert E Lee and one on Jefferson Davis The Victim 1914 Dixon s method is hard hitting sensational and uncompromising it becomes easy to understand the reasons for the great popularity of these swiftly moving stories dealing with problems very close to people who had experienced the Civil War and Reconstruction and thousands of persons who had experienced Reconstruction were still alive when the trilogy of novels was published Dixon s literary skill in evoking old memories and deep seated prejudices made the novelist a respected spokesman a champion for people who held bitter resentments 62 75 Dixon s most popular novels were The Leopard s Spots and The Clansman Their influential spin off The Birth of a Nation movie 1915 was the first film shown in the White House and repeated the next day to the entire Supreme Court 38 Senators and the Secretary of the Navy 64 171 172 65 66 67 68 From the 20th century to the present The former flag of Mississippi incorporates the Confederate battle flag design It was adopted in 1894 after the state s so called redemption and relinquished in 2020 during the George Floyd protests Flag of Georgia 1956 2001 Main articles Modern display of the Confederate flag and Removal of Confederate monuments and memorials See also Confederate Memorial Hall and List of Confederate monuments and memorials The basic assumptions of the Lost Cause have proved durable for many in the modern South The Lost Cause tenets frequently emerge during controversies surrounding public display of the Confederate flag and various state flags The historian John Coski noted that the Sons of Confederate Veterans SCV the most visible active and effective defender of the flag carried forward into the twenty first century virtually unchanged the Lost Cause historical interpretations and ideological vision formulated at the turn of the twentieth 69 Coski wrote concerning the flag wars of the late twentieth century From the early 1950s SCV officials defended the integrity of the battle flag against trivialization and against those who insisted that its display was unpatriotic or racist SCV spokesmen reiterated the consistent argument that the South fought a legitimate war for independence not a war to defend slavery and that the ascendant Yankee view of history falsely vilified the South and led people to misinterpret the battle flag 70 The Confederate States used several flags during its existence from 1861 to 1865 Since the end of the American Civil War the personal and official use of Confederate flags and flags derived from them has continued under considerable controversy The second state flag of Mississippi adopted in 1894 after the state s so called Redemption and relinquished in 2020 during the George Floyd protests included the Confederate battle flag The city flag of Trenton Georgia which incorporates the Confederate battle flag was adopted in 2001 as a protest against the Georgia General Assembly voting to significantly reduce the size of the Confederate battle flag on their state flag 71 The city flag of Trenton greatly resembles the former state flag of Georgia 72 73 On March 23 2015 a Confederate flag related case reached the Supreme Court of the United States Walker v Texas Division Sons of Confederate Veterans centered on whether or not the state of Texas could deny a request by the SCV for vanity license plates that incorporated a Confederate battle flag The Court heard the case on March 23 2015 74 On June 18 2015 the Supreme Court in a 5 4 vote held that Texas was entitled to reject the SCV proposal 74 In October 2015 outrage erupted online following the discovery of a Texan school s geography textbook which described slaves as immigrants and workers 75 76 The publisher McGraw Hill announced that it would change the wording Religious dimensionCharles Wilson argues that many white Southerners most of whom were conservative and pious evangelical Protestants sought reasons for the Confederacy s defeat in religion They felt that the Confederacy s defeat in the war was God s punishment for their sins and motivated by this belief they increasingly turned to religion as their source of solace The postwar era saw the birth of a regional civil religion which was heavily laden with symbolism and ritual clergymen were this new religion s primary celebrants Wilson says that the ministers constructed Lost Cause ritualistic forms that celebrated their regional mythological and theological beliefs They used the Lost Cause to warn Southerners of their decline from past virtue to promote moral reform to encourage conversion to Christianity and to educate the young in Southern traditions in the fullness of time they related to American values 77 On both a cultural and religious level white southerners tried to defend what their defeat in 1865 made impossible for them to defend on a political level The Lost Cause the South s defeat in a holy war left southerners to face guilt doubt and the triumph of evil and they faced them by forming what C Vann Woodward called a uniquely Southern sense of the tragedy of history 78 Poole stated that in fighting to defeat the Republican Reconstruction government in South Carolina in 1876 white conservative Democrats portrayed the Lost Cause scenario through Hampton Days celebrations and shouted Hampton or Hell They staged the contest between Reconstruction opponent and Democratic candidate Wade Hampton and incumbent Governor Daniel H Chamberlain as a religious struggle between good and evil and called for redemption 79 Indeed throughout the South the Democrats who overthrew Reconstruction were frequently called Redeemers echoing Christian theology 80 Gender roles The United Daughters of the Confederacy helped promulgate the Lost Cause s ideology through the construction of numerous memorials such as this one in Tennessee Further information United Daughters of the Confederacy Among writers on the Lost Cause gender roles were a contested domain Men typically honored the role of women during the war by noting their total loyalty to the cause Women however developed a much different approach to the cause by emphasizing female activism initiative and leadership They explained that when all of the men left the women took command found substitute foods rediscovered their old traditional skills with the spinning wheel when factory cloth became unavailable and ran all of the farm or plantation operations They faced apparent danger without having men in their traditional role as protectors 81 The popularization of the Lost Cause interpretation and the erection of monuments was primarily the work of Southern women centered on the United Daughters of the Confederacy UDC 82 198 UDC leaders were determined to assert women s cultural authority over virtually every representation of the region s past They did this by lobbying for the creation of state archives and the construction of state museums the preservation of national historic sites and the construction of historic highways compiling genealogies interviewing former soldiers writing history textbooks and erecting monuments which now moved triumphantly from cemeteries into town centers More than half a century before women s history and public history emerged as fields of inquiry and action the UDC along with other women s associations strove to etch women s accomplishments into the historical record and take history to the people from the nursery and the fireside to the schoolhouse and the public square Jacquelyn Dowd Hall 83 The duty of memorializing the Confederate dead was a major activity for Southerners who were devoted to the Lost Cause and chapters of the UDC played a central role in performing it 84 The UDC was especially influential across the South in the early 20th century where its main role was to preserve and uphold the memory of Confederate veterans especially the husbands sons fathers and brothers who died in the war Its long term impact was to promote the Lost Cause image of the antebellum plantation South as an idealized society which was crushed by the forces of Yankee modernization which also undermined traditional gender roles 85 In Missouri a border state the UDC was active in setting up its own system of memorials 86 The Southern states set up their own pension systems for veterans and their dependents especially for widows because none of them was eligible for federal pensions The southern pensions were designed to honor the Lost Cause and reduce the severe poverty which was prevalent in the region Male applicants for pensions had to demonstrate their continued loyalty to the Lost Cause Female applicants for pensions were rejected if their moral reputations were in question 87 In Natchez Mississippi the local newspapers and veterans had a role in the maintenance of the Lost Cause However elite white women were central in establishing memorials such as the Civil War Monument which was dedicated on Memorial Day 1890 The Lost Cause enabled women noncombatants to lay a claim to the central event in their redefinition of Southern history 88 The UDC was quite prominent but not at all unique in its appeal to upscale white Southern women The number of women s clubs devoted to filiopietism and history was staggering stated historian W Fitzhugh Brundage He noted two typical club women in Texas and Mississippi who between them belonged to the United Daughters of the Confederacy the Daughters of the American Revolution the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities the Daughters of the Pilgrims the Daughters of the War of 1812 the Daughters of Colonial Governors and the Daughters of the Founders and Patriots of America the Order of the First Families of Virginia and the Colonial Dames of America as well as a few other historically oriented societies Comparable men on the other hand were much less interested in belonging to historical organizations instead they devoted themselves to secret fraternal societies and emphasized athletic political and financial exploits in order to prove their manhood Brundage notes that after women s suffrage came in 1920 the historical role of the women s organizations eroded 89 In their heyday in the first two decades of the 20th century Brundage concluded These women architects of whites historical memory by both explaining and mystifying the historical roots of white supremacy and elite power in the South performed a conspicuous civic function at a time of heightened concern about the perpetuation of social and political hierarchies Although denied the franchise organized white women nevertheless played a dominant role in crafting the historical memory that would inform and undergird southern politics and public life 90 Tenets The negroes servile instincts rendered them contented with their lot and their patient toil blessed the land of their abode with unmeasured riches Their strong local and personal attachment secured faithful service never was there happier dependence of labor and capital on each other The tempter came like the serpent of Eden and decoyed them with the magic word of freedom He put arms in their hands and trained their humble but emotional natures to deeds of violence and bloodshed and sent them out to devastate their benefactors Confederate President Jefferson Davis The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government 1881 91 92 The Lost Cause ideology includes fallacies about the relationships between slaves and their masters Tenets of the Lost Cause movement include 93 94 Just as states had chosen to join the federal union they could also choose to withdraw Defense of states rights rather than the preservation of chattel slavery was the primary cause that led eleven Southern states to secede from the Union thus precipitating the War Secession was a justifiable and constitutional response to Northern cultural and economic aggression against the superior chivalric Southern way of life which included slavery The South was fighting for its independence Many still want it The North was not attacking the South out of a pure though misguided motive to end slavery Its motives were economic and venal Slavery was not only a benign institution but a positive good It was not based on economic greed and slaves were generally happy and loyal to their kind masters see Heyward Shepherd Slavery was good for blacks and whites alike a symbiosis of races which were inherently unequal by nature The lives of enslaved blacks were much better than they would be in Africa or as free blacks in the North where there were numerous anti black riots Blacks were perceived as foreigners immigrants taking jobs away from whites by working for less and also as dangerously sexual It was not characterized by racism rape harsh working conditions brutality whipping forced separation of families and humiliation 95 Allgood identifies a Southern aristocratic chivalric ideal typically called the Southern Cavalier ideal in the Lost Cause It especially appeared in studies of Confederate partisans who fought behind Union lines such as Nathan Bedford Forrest Turner Ashby John Singleton Mosby and John Hunt Morgan Writers stressed how they embodied courage in the face of heavy odds as well as horsemanship manhood and martial spirit 96 Confederate generals such as Robert E Lee Albert Sidney Johnston and Stonewall Jackson represented the virtues of Southern nobility and fought bravely and humanely On the other hand most Northern generals were characterized by brutality and bloodlust subjecting the Southern civilian population to depredations like Sherman s March to the Sea and Philip Sheridan s burning of the Shenandoah Valley in the Valley Campaigns of 1864 Union General Ulysses S Grant is often portrayed as an alcoholic 97 Losses on the battlefield were inevitable given the North s superiority in resources and manpower Battlefield losses were also sometimes the result of betrayal and incompetence on the part of certain subordinates of General Lee such as General James Longstreet who was reviled for doubting Lee at Gettysburg The Lost Cause focuses mainly on Lee and the Eastern Theater of operations in northern Virginia Maryland and Pennsylvania It usually takes Gettysburg as the turning point of the war ignoring the Union victories in Tennessee and Mississippi and that nothing could stop the Union army s humiliating advance through Georgia South Carolina and North Carolina ending with the Army of Northern Virginia s surrender at Appomattox General Sherman destroyed property out of meanness Burning Columbia South Carolina which had been a hotbed of secession served no military purpose It was intended only to humiliate and impoverish Giving the vote to the newly freed slaves could only lead to political and social chaos They were incapable of voting intelligently and were easily bribed or misled Reconstruction was a disaster only benefitting greedy Northern interlopers scalawags It took great effort by chivalrous Southern gentlemen to reestablish law and order through white dominance The order and customs of Southern society were in accordance with Christian virtue and God s will given the inherent moral weakness of mankind SymbolsConfederate generals The most powerful images and symbols of the Lost Cause were Robert E Lee Albert Sidney Johnston and Pickett s Charge David Ulbrich wrote Already revered during the war Robert E Lee acquired a divine mystique within Southern culture after it Remembered as a leader whose soldiers would loyally follow him into every fight no matter how desperate Lee emerged from the conflict to become an icon of the Lost Cause and the ideal of the antebellum Southern gentleman an honorable and pious man who selflessly served Virginia and the Confederacy Lee s tactical brilliance at Second Bull Run and Chancellorsville took on legendary status and despite his accepting full responsibility for the defeat at Gettysburg Lee remained largely infallible for Southerners and was spared criticism even from historians until recent times 32 In terms of Lee s subordinates the key villain in Jubal Early s view was General Longstreet Although Lee took all responsibility for the defeats particularly the one at Gettysburg Early s writings place the Confederate defeat at Gettysburg squarely on Longstreet s shoulders by accusing him of failing to attack at dawn on July 2 1863 as instructed by Lee In fact however Lee issued no such order and never expressed dissatisfaction with the second day actions of his Old War Horse Because Gettysburg was perceived as the high tide of the Confederacy the loss there was seen to have led to the failure of the entire war to achieve independence for the South the blame for which was hung on Longstreet s disinclination to attack These charges stuck because Longstreet was already disparaged by many high profile Southerners due to his reputation as a scalawag caused by postwar endorsement of and cooperation with his close friend and in law President Grant Furthermore Longstreet advised Southerners to co operate with Reconstruction to control the black vote and he also joined the Republican Party and accepted a federal position 98 Grant in rejecting the Lost Cause arguments said in an 1878 interview that he rejected the notion that the South had simply been overwhelmed by numbers Grant wrote This is the way public opinion was made during the war and this is the way history is made now We never overwhelmed the South What we won from the South we won by hard fighting Grant further noted that when comparing resources the 4 000 000 of negroes who kept the farms protected the families supported the armies and were really a reserve force were not treated as a southern asset 99 War of Northern Aggression See also Names of the American Civil War One essential element of the Lost Cause movement was that the act of secession had been legitimate Otherwise all of the Confederacy s leading figures would have been traitors to the United States To legitimize the Confederacy s rebellion Lost Cause proponents challenged the legitimacy of the federal government and the actions of Abraham Lincoln as president This phenomenon was exemplified in a treatise by Mary Scrugham in which she presented frivolous arguments against the legality of Lincoln s presidency 100 These arguments include his receiving a minority of the popular vote in the 1860 election and the false assertion that he made his position on slavery ambiguous The accusations though thoroughly refuted gave rise to the belief that the North initiated the Civil War making a designation of The War of Northern Aggression possible as one of the names of the American Civil War citation needed Thomas Dixon Jr s novels The Leopard s Spots Main article The Leopard s Spots On the title page Dixon cited Jeremiah 13 23 Can the Ethiopian change his color or the Leopard his spots He argued that just as the leopard cannot change his spots the Negro cannot change his nature The novel aimed to reinforce the superiority of the Anglo Saxon race and advocate either for white dominance of black people or for the separation of the two races 62 68 According to historian and Dixon biographer Richard Allen Cook the Negro according to Dixon is a brute not a citizen a child of a degenerate race brought from Africa 62 68 Dixon expounded the views in The Times of Philadelphia while he discussed the novel in 1902 The negro is a human donkey You can train him but you can t make of him a horse 101 Dixon described the towering figure of the freed negro as growing more and more ominous until its menace overshadows the poverty the hunger the sorrows and the devastation of the South throwing the blight of its shadow over future generations a veritable black death for the land and its people 101 Using characters from Uncle Tom s Cabin he shows the happy slave who is now free and manipulated by carpetbaggers unproductive and disrespectful and he believed that freedmen constantly pursued sexual relations with white women 62 68 In Dixon s work the heroic Ku Klux Klan protects American women It is emphatically a man s book said Dixon to The Times 101 The novel which blazes with oratorial fireworks 101 attracted attention as soon as it came from the press and more than 100 000 copies were quickly sold 57 Sales eventually passed the million mark numerous foreign translations of the work appeared and Dixon s fame was international 62 70 The Clansman Frontispiece to the first edition ofDixon s The Clansman by Arthur I Keller The Fiery Cross of old Scotland s hills Illustration from the first edition of The Clansman by Arthur I Keller Main article The Clansman A Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan In The Clansman the best known of the three novels Dixon similarly claimed I have sought to preserve in this romance both the letter and the spirit of this remarkable period The Clansman develops the true story of the Ku Klux Klan Conspiracy which overturned the Reconstruction regime 102 Lincoln is pictured as a kind sympathetic man who is trying bravely to sustain his policies despite the pressures upon him to have a more vindictive attitude toward the Southern states 62 71 Reconstruction was an attempt by Augustus Stoneman a thinly veiled reference to US Representative Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania the greatest and vilest man who ever trod the halls of the American Congress 62 71 to ensure that the Republican Party would stay in power by securing the Southern black vote Stoneman s hatred for US President Andrew Johnson stems from Johnson s refusal to disenfranchise Southern whites Stoneman s anger towards former slaveholders is intensified after the assassination of Abraham Lincoln and Stoneman vows revenge on the South His programs strip away the land owned by whites and give it to former slaves as with the traditional idea of forty acres and a mule Men claiming to represent the government confiscate the material wealth of the South and destroy plantation owning families Finally the former slaves are taught that they are superior to their former owners and should rise against them These alleged injustices were the impetus for the creation of the Ku Klux Klan Mr Dixon s purpose here is to show that the original formers of the Ku Klux Klan were modern knights errant taking the only means at hand to right wrongs 103 Dixon s father belonged to the Klan and his maternal uncle and boyhood idol 64 21 Col Leroy McAfee to whom The Clansman is dedicated was a regional leader or in the words of the dedication Grand Titan of the invisible Empire of the Ku Klux Klan The depiction of the Klan s burning of crosses as shown in the illustrations of the first edition is an innovation of Dixon It had not previously been used by the Klan but was later taken up by them In Dixon s passionate prose the book also treats at considerable length the poverty shame and degradation suffered by the Southerners at the hands of the Negroes and unscrupulous Northeners 62 72 Martial law is declared US troops are sent in as they were during Reconstruction The victory of the South was complete when the Klan defeats the federal troups throughout the state 62 72 To publicize his views further Dixon rewrote The Clansman as a play Like the novel it was a great commercial success there were multiple touring companies presenting the play simultaneously in different cities Sometimes it was banned Birth of a Nation is actually based on the play which was unpublished until 2007 clarification needed rather than directly on the novel The Birth of a Nation Another prominent and influential popularizer of the Lost Cause perspective was D W Griffith s highly successful The Birth of a Nation 1915 which was based on Dixon s novel Noting that Dixon and Griffith collaborated on Birth of a Nation Blight wrote Dixon s vicious version of the idea that blacks had caused the Civil War by their very presence and that Northern radicalism during Reconstruction failed to understand that freedom had ushered blacks as a race into barbarism neatly framed the story of the rise of heroic vigilantism in the South Reluctantly Klansmen white men had to take the law into their own hands in order to save Southern white womanhood from the sexual brutality of black men Dixon s vision captured the attitude of thousands and forged in story form a collective memory of how the war may have been lost but Reconstruction was won by the South and a reconciled nation Riding as masked cavalry the Klan stopped corrupt government prevented the anarchy of Negro rule and most of all saved white supremacy 104 In both The Clansman and the film the Klan is portrayed as continuing the noble traditions of the antebellum South and the heroic Confederate soldier by defending Southern culture in general and Southern womanhood in particular against rape and depredations at the hands of the freedmen and Yankee carpetbaggers during Reconstruction Dixon s narrative was so readily adopted that the film has been credited with the revival of the Klan in the 1910s and 1920s The second Klan which Dixon denounced reached a peak membership of 2 5 million members 105 The film s legacy is widereaching in the history of American racism and even the now iconic cross burnings of the KKK were based on Dixon s novel and the film made of it The first KKK did not burn crosses which was originally a Scottish tradition Crann Tara designed to gather clans for war 106 Later literature and films The romanticization of the Lost Cause is captured in film such as The Birth of a Nation Gone With the Wind Song of the South and Tennessee Johnson the latter of which the San Francisco Chronicle called the height of Southern mythmaking Gods and Generals reportedly lionizes Jackson and Lee 19 CNN reported that these films recast the antebellum South as a moonlight and magnolia paradise of happy slaves affectionate slave owners and villainous Yankees 107 Post 1920s literature In his novels about the Sartoris family William Faulkner referenced those who supported the Lost Cause ideal but suggested that the ideal itself was misguided and out of date 108 The Confederate Veteran a monthly magazine published in Nashville Tennessee from 1893 to 1932 made its publisher Sumner Archibald Cunningham a leader of the Lost Cause movement 109 Gone with the Wind The Lost Cause view reached tens of millions of Americans in the best selling 1936 novel Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell and the Oscar winning 1939 film based on it Helen Taylor wrote Gone with the Wind has almost certainly done its ideological work It has sealed in popular imaginations a fascinated nostalgia for the glamorous southern plantation house and ordered hierarchical society in which slaves are family and there is a mystical bond between the landowner and the rich soil those slaves work for him It has spoken eloquently albeit from an elitist perspective of the grand themes war love death conflicts of race class gender and generation that have crossed continents and cultures 110 David W Blight wrote From this combination of Lost Cause voices a reunited America arose pure guiltless and assured that the deep conflicts in its past had been imposed upon it by otherworldly forces The side that lost was especially assured that its cause was true and good One of the ideas the reconciliationist Lost Cause instilled deeply into the national culture is that even when Americans lose they win Such was the message the indomitable spirit that Margaret Mitchell infused into her character Scarlett O Hara in Gone With the Wind 111 Southerners were portrayed as noble heroic figures living in a doomed romantic society that rejected the realistic advice offered by the Rhett Butler character and never understood the risk that they were taking in going to war Song of the South The 1946 Disney film Song of the South is the first to have combined live actors with animated shorts 112 In the framing story the actor James Baskett played Uncle Remus a former slave who apparently is full of joy and wisdom despite having lived part of his life in slavery There is a common misconception that the story takes place in the antebellum period and that the African American characters are slaves 113 114 One critic said Like other similar films of the period also dealing with the antebellum South the slaves in the film are all good natured subservient annoyingly cheerful content and always willing to help a white person in need with some valuable life lesson along the way In fact they re never called slaves but they come off more like neighborly workers lending a helping hand for some kind benevolent plantation owners 112 19 107 Disney has never released it on DVD 112 and the film has been withheld from Disney 115 It was released on VHS in the United Kingdom several times most recently in 2000 115 Gods and Generals The 2003 Civil War film Gods and Generals based on Jeff Shaara s 1996 novel is widely viewed as championing the Lost Cause ideology with a presentation favorable to the Confederacy 116 117 118 and lionizing Generals Jackson and Lee 19 Writing in the Journal of American History the historian Steven E Woodworth derided the movie as a modern day telling of Lost Cause mythology 116 Woodworth called the movie the most pro Confederate film since Birth of a Nation a veritable celluloid celebration of slavery and treason He summed up his reasons for disliking the movie Gods and Generals brings to the big screen the major themes of Lost Cause mythology that professional historians have been working for half a century to combat In the world of Gods and Generals slavery has nothing to do with the Confederate cause Instead the Confederates are nobly fighting for rather than against freedom as viewers are reminded again and again by one white southern character after another 116 Woodworth criticized the portrayal of slaves as being generally happy with their condition He also criticized the relative lack of attention given to the motivations of Union soldiers fighting in the war He excoriates the film for allegedly implying in agreement with Lost Cause mythology that the South was more sincerely Christian Woodworth concluded that the film through judicial omission presents a distorted view of the Civil War 116 The historian William B Feis similarly criticized the director s decision to champion the more simplistic and sanitized interpretations found in post war Lost Cause mythology 117 The film critic Roger Ebert described the movie as a Civil War movie that Trent Lott might enjoy and said of its Lost Cause themes If World War II were handled this way there d be hell to pay 119 The consensus of film critics of the movie was that it had a pro Confederate slant 118 Later useProfessor Gallagher contended that Douglas Southall Freeman s definitive four volume biography of Lee published in 1934 cemented in American letters an interpretation of Lee very close to Early s utterly heroic figure 120 In that work Lee s subordinates were primarily to blame for errors that lost battles While Longstreet was the most common target of such attacks others came under fire as well Richard Ewell Jubal Early J E B Stuart A P Hill George Pickett and many others were frequently attacked and blamed by Southerners in an attempt to deflect criticism from Lee Hudson Strode wrote a widely read scholarly three volume biography of Confederate President Jefferson Davis published in the 1950s and 1960s A leading scholarly journal that reviewed it stressed Strode s political biases His Jefferson Davis s enemies are devils and his friends like Davis himself have been canonized Strode not only attempts to sanctify Davis but also the Confederate point of view and this study should be relished by those vigorously sympathetic with the Lost Cause 121 One Dallas newspaper editorial in 2018 referred to the Texas Civil War Museum as a lovely bit of Lost Cause propaganda 122 While not limited to the American South specifically the Stop the Steal movement in the wake of the 2020 US presidential election has been interpreted as a reemergence of the Lost Cause idea and a manifestation of white backlash 123 124 125 126 Contemporary historiansContemporary historians overwhelmingly agree that secession was motivated by slavery There were numerous causes for secession but preservation and expansion of slavery was easily the most important of them The confusion may come from blending the causes of secession with the causes of the war which were separate but related issues According to the historian Kenneth M Stampp each side supported states rights or stronger federal power only when it was convenient for it to do so 127 Stampp cited Confederate Vice President Alexander Stephens as an example of a Southern leader who when the war began said that slavery was the cornerstone of the Confederacy but after the defeat of the Confederacy said in A Constitutional View of the Late War Between the States that the war had been not about slavery but about states rights Stephens became one of the most ardent defenders of the Lost Cause myth 128 Similarly the historian William C Davis explained the Confederate Constitution s protection of slavery at the national level To the old Union they had said that the Federal power had no authority to interfere with slavery issues in a state To their new nation they would declare that the state had no power to interfere with a federal protection of slavery Of all the many testimonials to the fact that slavery and not states rights really lay at the heart of their movement this was the most eloquent of all 129 Davis further noted Causes and effects of the war have been manipulated and mythologized to suit political and social agendas past and present 130 The historian David Blight said that its use of white supremacy as both means and ends has been a key characteristic of the Lost Cause 18 The historian Allan Nolan wrote T he Lost Cause legacy to history is a caricature of the truth The caricature wholly misrepresents and distorts the facts of the matter Surely it is time to start again in our understanding of this decisive element of our past and to do so from the premises of history unadulterated by the distortions falsehoods and romantic sentimentality of the Myth of the Lost Cause 131 The historian William C Davis labeled many of the myths that surround the war frivolous and these myths include attempts to rename the war by Confederate partisans He also stated that names such as War of Northern Aggression and War Between the States the latter being an expression coined by Alexander Stephens were just attempts to deny the fact that the American Civil War was an actual civil war 132 The historian A Cash Koeniger argues that Gary Gallagher has mischaracterized films that depict the Lost Cause He wrote that Gallagher concedes that Lost Cause themes with the important exception of minimizing the importance of slavery are based on historical truths p 46 Confederate soldiers were often outnumbered ragged and hungry southern civilians did endure much material deprivation and a disproportionate amount of bereavement U S forces did wreck sic havoc on southern infrastructure and private property and the like yet whenever these points appear in films Gallagher considers them motifs celebratory of the Confederacy p 81 133 See also American Civil War portal Myths portal Society portal United States portalPlaces and events List of Confederate monuments and memorials Blandford Church Confederate Memorial Day Confederate Memorial Hall Confederate Memorial Hall MuseumNostalgia and pseudo historical ideologies Communist nostalgia Eastern Europe and Russia Stab in the back myth German pseudo historical explanation for losing WWI Sociological Francoism Spain Myth of the clean Wehrmacht post WWII GermanyOther Kappa Alpha Order Naming the American Civil War Solid South Southern Democrats White nationalismReferences Great Day for the South St Louis Globe Democrat Jackson Mississippi June 4 1891 Archived from the original on January 25 2021 Retrieved August 8 2020 via Newspapers com Duggan Paul November 28 2018 The Confederacy Was Built on Slavery How Can So Many Southern Whites Think Otherwise The Washington Post Archived from the original on 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371X McPherson James M 1988 Battle Cry of Freedom The Civil War Era Frank and Virginia Williams Collection of Lincolniana New York pp vii viii ISBN 0 19 503863 0 OCLC 15550774 McPherson James M 2007 This Mighty Scourge Perspectives on the Civil War Frank and Virginia Williams Collection of Lincolniana Oxford Oxford University Press pp 3 9 ISBN 978 0 19 531366 6 OCLC 74915689 a b c David W Blight 2001 Race and Reunion The Civil War in American Memory Harvard University Press p 259 ISBN 978 0 674 00332 3 Archived from the original on June 10 2016 Retrieved December 11 2015 a b c d LaSalle Mick July 24 2015 Romanticizing Confederate cause has no place onscreen San Francisco Chronicle Archived from the original on July 8 2020 Retrieved July 8 2020 Coates Ta Nehisi June 23 2015 What This Cruel War Was Over The meaning of the Confederate flag is best discerned in the words of those who bore it The Atlantic Archived from the original on May 13 2019 Retrieved June 13 2017 William J Cooper Jr Thomas E Terrill 2009 The American South A History p 480 ISBN 978 0 7425 6098 7 Archived from the original on February 20 2017 Retrieved October 12 2016 Facts The Civil War U S National Park Service Nps gov Archived from the original on April 4 2019 Retrieved September 1 2017 Blight David W 2001 Race and reunion the Civil War in American memory Frank and Virginia Williams Collection of Lincolniana Mississippi State University Libraries Cambridge Mass ISBN 978 0 674 00332 3 OCLC 44313386 Osterweis Rollin G 1973 The Myth of the Lost Cause 1865 1900 p ix Foster Gaines Fall 2013 Civil War Sesquicentennial The Lost Cause Civil War Book Review Archived from the original on July 15 2015 Ulbrich p 1221 Pollard Edward A 1866 The Lost Cause A New Southern History of the War of the Confederates p 49 Foster Gaines M 1987 Ghosts of the Confederacy Defeat the Lost Cause and the Emergence of the New South 1865 1913 Oxford UP p 232 ISBN 978 0 19 977210 0 Gallagher p 12 Gallagher and Nolan p 43 Thomas 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New South 1865 1913 Oxford UP p 63 ISBN 978 0 19 987870 3 Gallagher Gary W Nolan Alan T eds 2000 The Myth of the Lost Cause and Civil War History p 28 ISBN 978 0 253 33822 8 Archived from the original on May 12 2016 Retrieved December 11 2015 Caroline E Janney The Lost Cause Encyclopedia Virginia Virginia Foundation for the Humanities 2009 accessed 26 July 2015 Archived July 17 2015 at the Wayback Machine David W Blight 2001 Race and Reunion The Civil War in American Memory Harvard University Press p 266 ISBN 978 0 674 00332 3 Archived from the original on June 10 2016 Retrieved December 11 2015 William Tynes Cowa 2013 The Slave in the Swamp Disrupting the Plantation Narrative Routledge p 155 ISBN 978 1 135 47052 4 Archived from the original on May 5 2016 Retrieved December 11 2015 Gary W Gallagher 2008 Causes Won Lost and Forgotten How Hollywood and Popular Art Shape What We Know about the Civil War U of North Carolina Press p 10 ISBN 978 0 8078 8625 0 Bruce Catton Reflections on the Civil War 1981 quoted in Caroline E Janney The Lost Cause In Encyclopedia Virginia 2015 online Archived July 17 2015 at the Wayback Machine Reiko Hillyer Relics of Reconciliation The Confederate Museum and Civil War Memory in the New South Public Historian Nov 2011 Vol 33 Issue 4 pp 35 62 Hall Jacquelyn Dowd 1998 You Must Remember This Autobiography as Social Critique The Journal of American History 85 2 439 465 doi 10 2307 2567747 JSTOR 2567747 page 449 a b c d Moehlman Lara September 21 2018 The Not So Lost Cause of Moses Ezekiel Moment Archived from the original on January 21 2019 Retrieved February 27 2019 a b c d e Cohen Stan Gibson Keith 2007 Moses Ezekiel Civil War soldier renowned sculptor Missoula Montana Pictorial Histories Publishing Company ISBN 978 1 57510 131 6 Ezekiel Moses Jacob 1975 Gutmann Joseph Chyet Stanley F eds Memoirs from the Baths of Diocletian Wayne State University Press ISBN 978 0 8143 1525 5 Stonewall Jackson Archived from the original on February 26 2019 Retrieved February 27 2019 Confederate Soldiers Memorial Archived November 26 2005 at the Wayback Machine from Arlington National Cemetery Herbert Hilary A 1915 History of the Arlington Confederate Monument Richmond Virginia United Daughters of the Confederacy p 66 Holloway Kali October 19 2018 The Not So Lost Cause of Moses Ezekiel Independent Media Institute Archived from the original on March 1 2019 Retrieved February 28 2019 a b Benbow Mark E October 2010 Birth of a Quotation Woodrow Wilson and Like Writing History with Lightning Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 9 4 509 533 doi 10 1017 S1537781400004242 JSTOR 20799409 S2CID 162913069 Sees Awful Race War South Bend Tribune February 23 1903 p 1 permanent dead link Untitled Chariton Courier Keytesville Missouri February 27 1903 p 4 Archived from the original on April 13 2019 Retrieved April 5 2019 Race Hatred Mitchell Capital Mitchell South Dakota June 12 1903 Archived from the original on April 4 2019 Retrieved April 5 2019 a b c d Thomas Dixon Jr s The Leopard s Spots Topeka Daily Capital Topeka Kansas February 14 1903 p 6 Archived from the original on June 7 2019 Retrieved April 5 2019 Bloomfield Maxwell 1964 Dixon s The Leopard s Spots A Study in Popular Racism American Quarterly 16 3 387 401 doi 10 2307 2710931 JSTOR 2710931 Archived from the original on April 29 2019 Retrieved April 5 2019 a b Gillespie Michele Hall Randal L 2009 Introduction Thomas Dixon Jr and the birth of modern America Louisiana State University Press ISBN 978 0 8071 3532 7 Tells Em Lincoln Journal Star Lincoln Nebraska October 31 1900 p 1 Archived from the original on April 15 2019 Retrieved April 5 2019 Advertisement for the Clansman Bisbee Daily Review Bisbee Arizona December 2 1908 p 4 Archived from the original on April 19 2019 Retrieved April 5 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l Cook Raymond Allen 1974 Thomas Dixon New York Twayne OCLC 1036955650 Weisenburger Steven 2004 Introduction toSins of the Father University Press of Kentucky p xxiv ISBN 0 8131 9117 3 Archived from the original on April 3 2019 Retrieved April 5 2019 a b Cook Raymond A 1968 Fire from the Flint The Amazing Careers of Thomas Dixon Winston Salem N C J F Blair OCLC 729785733 The Birth of a Nation Shown Washington Evening Star February 20 1915 p 12 Archived from the original on April 17 2019 Retrieved May 6 2019 Chief Justice and Senators at Movie Washington Herald February 20 1915 p 4 Archived from the original on April 17 2019 Retrieved May 6 2019 Movies at Press Club Washington Post February 20 1915 p 5 Archived from the original on April 19 2019 Retrieved May 6 2019 Franklin John Hope Autumn 1979 The Birth of a Nation Propaganda as History The Massachusetts Review 20 3 417 434 JSTOR 25088973 Coski pp 192 93 Coski p 193 Coski p 62 also wrote Just as the battle flag became during the war the most important emblem of Confederate nationalism so did it become during the memorial period the late 19th Century through the 1920s the symbolic embodiment of the Lost Cause Confederate banner still flying high in Trenton Ga timesfreepress com June 26 2015 Archived from the original on July 1 2020 Retrieved July 1 2020 Trenton s Flag Loophole Dixie Outfitters Archived from the original on July 2 2020 Retrieved July 1 2020 Trenton Georgia Your City For Family Living trentonga gov Archived from the original on July 1 2020 a b Walker v Texas Division Sons of Confederate Veterans Inc SCOTUSblog Archived from the original on June 23 2015 Retrieved June 20 2015 Isensee Laura October 23 2015 Why Calling Slaves Workers Is More Than An Editing Error NPR Archived from the original on January 4 2019 Retrieved January 3 2019 Fernandez Manny Hauser Christine October 5 2015 Texas Mother Teaches Textbook Company a Lesson on Accuracy The New York Times Archived from the original on February 21 2021 Retrieved January 3 2019 Charles Reagan Wilson 1983 Baptized in Blood The Religion of the Lost Cause 1865 1920 University of Georgia Press p 11 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2019 via Project MUSE Hall Jacquelyn Dowd You must remember this Autobiography as social critique p 450 Cynthia Mills and Pamela Hemenway Simpson eds Monuments to the Lost Cause Women Art and the Landscapes of Southern Memory U of Tennessee Press 2003 Karen L Cox Dixie s Daughters The United Daughters of the Confederacy and preservation of Southern Culture University Press of Florida 2003 pp 1 7 Megan B Boccardi Remembering in black and white Missouri women s memorial work 1860 1910 PhD Dissertation University of Missouri Columbia 2011 online Archived July 15 2015 at the Wayback Machine Elna C Green Protecting confederate soldiers and mothers Pensions gender and the welfare state in the US south a case study from Florida Journal of Social History 2006 39 4 pp 1079 1104 online Archived July 15 2015 at the Wayback Machine Melody Kubassek Ask Us Not to Forget The Lost Cause in Natchez Mississippi Southern Studies 1992 Vol 3 Issue 3 pp 155 70 W Fitzhugh Brundage White Women and the Politics of Historical Memory in the New South 1880 1920 in Jane Dailey Glenda Elizabeth Gilmore amp Bryant Simon eds Jumpin Jim Crow Southern Politics from Civil War to Civil Rights Princeton UP 2000 pp 115 39 esp 119 123 131 Brundage White Women and the Politics of Historical Memory in the New South pp 115 16 Archived April 8 2017 at the Wayback Machine Radway Janice A ed 2009 American Studies An Anthology John Wiley amp Sons p 529 ISBN 978 1 4051 1351 9 Archived from the original on April 8 2017 Retrieved October 12 2016 Jefferson Davis August 2020 The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government Volume 2 p 163 ISBN 978 3 75239 051 3 Archived from the original on June 2 2021 Retrieved May 31 2021 Janney Caroline E The Lost Cause article Encyclopedia Virginia 2009 https encyclopediavirginia org entries lost cause the Gaines M Foster Ghosts of the Confederacy Defeat the Lost Cause and the Emergence of the New South 1865 1913 1988 pp 4 8 Gallagher and Nolan p 16 Nolan writes Given the central role of African Americans in the sectional conflict it is surely not surprising that Southern rationalizations have extended to characterizations of the persons of these people In the legend there exist two prominent images of the black slaves One is of the faithful slave the other is what William Garrett Piston calls the happy darky stereotype Colt B Allgood Confederate Partisans and the Southern Cavalier Ideal 1840 1920 Southern Historian 2011 Vol 32 pp 28 42 Hayes Historical Journal The Problem of Ulysses S Grant Rutherford B Hayes Presidential Library amp Museums Archived from the original on September 11 2017 Retrieved September 11 2017 Piston 1987 passim David W Blight 2001 Race and Reunion The Civil War in American Memory Harvard University Press p 93 266 ISBN 978 0 674 00332 3 Archived from the original on June 10 2016 Retrieved December 11 2015 Scrugham Mary and William H William Henry Townsend Force or Consent As the Basis of American Government Lexington Lexington Ky Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy 1920 a b c d The Negro Problem Race Questions Vigorously Discussed by Thomas Dixon Jr in The Leopard s Spots The Times Philadelphia April 12 1902 p 14 Archived from the original on April 15 2019 Retrieved April 5 2019 Dixon Jr Thomas 1905 The Clansman New York Doubleday Page amp Co p To the reader About authors New York Times April 16 1904 p 18 Archived from the original on April 17 2019 Retrieved April 5 2019 David W Blight 2001 Race and Reunion The Civil War in American Memory Harvard University Press p 111 ISBN 978 0 674 00332 3 Archived from the original on June 10 2016 Retrieved December 11 2015 Rothman Joshua December 4 2016 When Bigotry Paraded Through the Streets The Atlantic Archived from the original on January 10 2019 Retrieved January 3 2019 Were Scots responsible for the Ku Klux Klan BBC Guides Archived from the original on October 23 2017 Retrieved January 3 2019 a b Blake John December 28 2016 How Trump s victory turns into another Lost Cause CNN Archived from the original on July 6 2020 Retrieved July 8 2020 David W Blight 2001 Race and Reunion The Civil War in American Memory Harvard University Press pp 292 448 49 ISBN 978 0 674 00332 3 Archived from the original on June 10 2016 Retrieved December 11 2015 quoting Robert Penn Warren on Faulkner Blight writes If respect for the human is the central fact of Faulkner s work what makes that fact significant is that he realizes and dramatizes the difficulty of respecting the human Everything is against it the savage egotism the blank appetite stupidity and arrogance even virtues sometimes the misreading of our history and tradition our education our twisted loyalties That is the great drama however the constant story Simpson John A December 25 2009 Sumner A Cunningham The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture Tennessee Historical Society amp University of Tennessee Press Archived from the original on March 15 2016 Retrieved December 14 2015 Helen Taylor 2002 Gone with the Wind and its Influence In Perry Carolyn Weaks Baxter Mary eds The History of Southern Women s Literature LSU Press pp 258 67 ISBN 978 0 8071 2753 7 Archived from the original on May 6 2016 Retrieved December 11 2015 David W Blight 2001 Race and Reunion The Civil War in American Memory Harvard University Press pp 283 84 ISBN 978 0 674 00332 3 Archived from the original on June 10 2016 Retrieved December 11 2015 a b c Sergio February 4 2016 Regarding Song of the South The Film That Disney Doesn t Want You to See IndieWire com Retrieved January 22 2019 Cohen Karl F 1997 Forbidden animation censored cartoons and blacklisted animators in America Jefferson N C McFarland amp Co ISBN 0 7864 0395 0 OCLC 37246766 Archived from the original on July 17 2021 Retrieved August 26 2020 Korkis Jim 2012 Who s afraid of the Song of the South and other forbidden Disney stories Theme Park Press p 68 ISBN 978 0 9843415 5 9 a b Spencer Samuel November 12 2019 Song of the South Why 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Memorial Associations and the lost cause U of North Carolina P ISBN 978 0 8078 3176 2 Retrieved January 24 2012 Janney Caroline E 2009 The Lost Cause Encyclopedia Virginia Virginia Foundation for the Humanities Loewen James W and Sebesta Edward H eds 2010 The Confederate and Neo Confederate Reader The Great Truth about the Lost Cause Jackson University Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1 60473 218 4 Osterweis Rollin G 1973 The Myth of the Lost Cause 1865 1900 Hamden Connecticut Archon Books ISBN 9780208013187 Reardon Carol Pickett s Charge in History and Memory University of North Carolina Press 1997 ISBN 0 8078 2379 1 Piston William Garrett 1987 Lee s Tarnished Lieutenant James Longstreet and His Place in Southern History Athens Georgia University of Georgia Press ISBN 0 8203 1229 0 Simpson John A 2003 Edith D Pope and Her Nashville Friends Guardians of the Lost Cause in the Confederate Veteran Knoxville Tennessee University of Tennessee Press ISBN 978 1 57233 211 9 OCLC 750779185 Stampp Kenneth 1991 The Causes of the Civil War 3rd rev ed New York Touchstone Books ISBN 9780671751555 Ulbrich David Lost Cause 2000 in Heidler David S and Heidler Jeanne T eds Encyclopedia of the American Civil War A Political Social and Military History New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 04758 X Wilson Charles Reagan 1980 Baptized in Blood The Religion of the Lost Cause 1865 1920 Athens Georgia University of Georgia Press ISBN 0 8203 0681 9 Wilson Charles Reagan 1997 The Lost Cause Myth in the New South Era in Gerster Patrick and Cords Nicholas editors Myth America A Historical Anthology Volume II St James New York Brandywine Press ISBN 1 881089 97 5Further readingPrimary Early Jubal Anderson 1866 A memoir of the last year of the War of Independence in the Confederate States of America Toronto Printed by Lovell amp Gibson Early Jubal Anderson 1872 The campaigns of Gen Robert E Lee Baltimore J Murphy Early Jubal Anderson 1915 The heritage of the South Lynchburg Va Press of Brown Morrison co Grady Benjamin Franklin 1899 The case of the South against the North or Historical evidence justifying the southern states of the American Union in their long controversy with northern states Raleigh N C Edwards amp Broughton Secondary and tertiary Bonekemper III Edward H 2015 The Myth of the Lost Cause Why the South Fought the Civil War and Why the North Won Regnery History ISBN 978 1 62157 454 5 Breed Allen G August 10 2018 The lost cause the women s group fighting for Confederate monuments The Guardian Connelly Thomas L 1977 The Marble Man Robert E Lee and His Image in American Society Baton Rouge Louisiana Louisiana State University Press ISBN 0 8071 0474 4 Connelly Thomas L and Bellows Barbara L 1982 God and General Longstreet The Lost Cause and the Southern Mind Baton Rouge Louisiana Louisiana State University Press ISBN 0 8071 2014 6 Coulter E Merton 1947 The South During Reconstruction 1865 1877 A History of the South Baton Rouge Louisiana Louisiana State University Press ISBN 978 0 8071 0008 0 Duggan Paul November 28 2018 Sins of the Fathers Washington Post Magazine Fahs Elizabeth and Waugh Joan eds 2004 The Memory of the Civil War in American Culture Chapel Hill North Carolina University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 5572 0 Gates Jr Henry Louis November 8 2019 The Lost Cause That Built Jim Crow The New York Times Maxwell Angie and Shields Todd 2019 The Long Southern Strategy How Chasing White Voters in the South Changed American Politics New York Oxford University Press pp 326 329 ISBN 978 0197579039 Palmer Brian and Wessler Seth Freed December 2018 The Costs of the Confederacy Smithsonian Magazine Rubin Karen Aviva 2007 The Aftermath of Sorrow White Women s Search for Their Lost Cause 1861 1917 PhD Tallahassee Florida Florida State University Seidule Ty 2020 Robert E Lee and Me A Southerner s Reckoning with the Myth of the Lost Cause New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 1 2502 3926 6 Tutor Philip January 17 2016 Memory or History Insight Throughout the South memorials with difficult histories pose vexing problems Anniston Star Tutor Philip December 7 2018 How the South pays literally for the Lost Cause Anniston Star Wallace Sanders Kimberly June 15 2009 Southern Memory Southern Monuments and the Subversive Black Mammy Southern Spaces doi 10 18737 M7PK6W Waters Dustin December 13 2017 How South Carolina history was hijacked to sell the Lost Cause The State of the Confederacy Charleston City Paper Archived from the original on April 16 2020 Retrieved January 26 2019 Williams David S May 15 2005 Lost Cause Religion New Georgia Encyclopedia Retrieved September 9 2021 External linksWhose Heritage Public Symbols of the Confederacy map by SPLC showing places dedicated to the memorial of Confederates Interview with historian Adam Domby about The False Cause Fraud Fabrication and White Supremacy in Confederate Memory on Half Hour of Heterodoxy Origins of the Lost Cause an academic panel at Reconstruction and the Legacy of the War the 2016 summer conference hosted by the Civil War Institute C SPAN Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lost Cause of the Confederacy amp oldid 1146511473, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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