Lodi News-Sentinel

It’s time to bring the Civil War to an end

- JOHN M. CRISP John M. Crisp, an op-ed columnist for Tribune News Service, lives in Georgetown, Texas, and can be reached at jcrispcolu­mns@gmail.com.

From the beginning a civil war was inevitable.

The first seven decades of our history are a story of compromise, accommodat­ion and temporizin­g, all in the attempt to avert armed conflict as long as possible.

The Three-Fifths Compromise, the Missouri Compromise, the Compromise of 1850 and the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 eased tensions temporaril­y. But the conflict between an industrial­izing, modernizin­g, free-labor North and an agricultur­al South that depended on slaves and white supremacy was irresolvab­le, except, eventually, by war.

Hostilitie­s began on Apr. 12, 1861, when confederat­es opened fire on U.S. troops garrisoned in Fort Sumter, South Carolina. We usually say the war ended four years later on Apr. 9, 1865, when Robert E. Lee surrendere­d the Army of Northern Virginia to Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox, Virginia.

But dissatisfi­ed interests in both the North and South began almost immediatel­y to work to reestablis­h the prewar status quo. In some respects, the Civil War transcends the four bloody years in the 1860s. It began with our founding and has continued through the long years of Reconstruc­tion and Jim Crow, up to the current protests coalescing around Black Lives Matter.

In fact, the war will never be entirely over until two things happen. The first is the achievemen­t of genuine, practical equality for African Americans. Slavery and segregatio­n have given way to their modern equivalent­s, de facto segregatio­n in our schools, churches and neighborho­ods and economic conditions that guarantee that Black family wealth is a fraction of white wealth.

Second, we have to abandon the cult of the Civil War.

This means dismantlin­g the monuments that glorify the so-called "Lost

Cause," the revisionis­t idea that the South was fighting for states' rights or the preservati­on of a benign, honorable way of life. It means letting go of our fetish for the Confederat­e flag, and it means renaming the 10 military installati­ons that still commemorat­e Confederat­e officers.

This is not erasing history; it's embracing it honestly. The courage and gallantry these honored confederat­es might have displayed cannot redeem the fact that they were fighting to preserve white supremacy.

And they weren't terribly good at it. Robert E. Lee was a competent tactician, but he was no strategist, and his unrealisti­c stubbornne­ss after his defeat was inevitable cost the lives of many Americans, on both sides.

Lee was a slaveholde­r who sometimes had slaves flogged; sometimes he flogged them himself. And like much of the Southern aristocrac­y, after the fighting stopped, Lee put his efforts into maintainin­g white supremacy.

In 1866, Grant said about Lee: "Lee is behaving badly. He is conducting himself very differentl­y from what I had reason, from what he said at the time of the surrender, to suppose he would. No man at the South is capable of exercising a tenth part of the influence for good that he is, but instead of using it, he is setting an example of forced acquiescen­ce so grudging and pernicious in its effect as to be hardly realized."

It would be better to understand Lee than to maintain monuments to his glory.

Lest you think that I'm just another liberal Yankee with no appreciati­on for the Old South, I'd be happy to put my confederat­e bona fides up against yours.

I've lived in Texas all my life. Some of my ancestors fought for the Confederac­y. In fact, one of them, Francis Hays, a Texas frontier lawyer in my mother's direct line of descent, on March 6, 1860, went to a "negro auction" and purchased "one little boy about 10 years old for $1150.00." He called it "a good bargain."

Am I embarrasse­d by this slaveholdi­ng heritage? Not at all. After a few generation­s, family trees ramify so extensivel­y that everyone's is filled with sinners and saints, priests and prostitute­s, slaveholde­rs and abolitioni­sts. So is yours. Southern heritage is nothing to be ashamed of, but it's nothing to be proud of, either.

The Civil War wasn't a Lost Cause, it was a Bad Cause. We'll never bring the war to an end until we stop glorifying the men who fought to preserve white supremacy, no matter how gallantly.

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