What southern whites further sought, and in a sense demanded, was respect. This the North provided after 1876 in paeans to the courage and dedication of soldiers on both sides. Resentment of northern power, the wars destruction, and Reconstruction continued to be strong in the South, and the work of white-supremacist politicians, army veterans, and southern women turned that resentment into a long-lasting ideology of the Lost Cause. Northerners, for their part, congratulated themselves on winning the war and freeing the slaves; they also took pleasure in feeling superior to the South for many generations, while industrialization, urbanization, immigration, and other social changes diverted much of their attention from wartime issues [184].
About This Quote
About Paul D. Escott, Uncommonly Savage: Civil War and Remembrance in Spain and the United States
Paul D. Escott, Uncommonly Savage: Civil War and Remembrance in Spain and the United States.
Themes
- War — Reflections on conflict, peace, and the human cost of war