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It reflected a view held by some ex-Confederates who were reluctant to accept Reconstruction with the United States and an expression of the bitterness and anger they felt after the Confederacy had lost the American Civil War to the U.S. [5] However, it is speculated that the song did not reflect Randolph's personal views and was intended ...
Portrait of a Confederate Army infantryman (1861–1865) Johnny Reb is the national personification of the common soldier of the Confederacy.During the American Civil War and afterwards, Johnny Reb and his Union counterpart Billy Yank were used in speech and literature to symbolize the common soldiers who fought in the Civil War in the 1860s. [1]
Chris Anderson – engineer Hoyt Axton – vocals, performer; Margaret Bailey – vocals; Dale Ballinger – vocals; Kris Ballinger – vocals; Russ Barenberg – guitar, mandolin ...
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A Souldier must consider that sometimes God[']s people have the worst in battel as well as God[']s enemies. [15] This condensed Souldiers Pocket Bible was usually buttoned on the inside waistcoat, placed near the heart, and under the soldier's outer coat. [6] The placement did not hinder the movements of the soldier. [10]
At the end of the Civil War, a Confederate Army Sergeant walks down a road aided by a wooden crutch.He carries with him a dirty bed roll and a homemade guitar.The limping Sergeant comes across a ruined antebellum mansion which belongs to Lavinia Godwin, a Southern belle whose husband was killed in the war and whose bitterness toward the Union Army still survives.
William Saunders Crowdy (August 11, 1847 – August 4, 1908) was an American soldier, preacher, entrepreneur and pastor. He was also one of the earliest known Black Hebrew Israelites in the United States, he established the Church of God and Saints of Christ in 1896 after he claimed to have had visions telling him "That blacks were descendants of the twelve lost tribes of Israel".
The song was used in attempts to foster a unique Southern national culture to distinguish the Confederate States from the United States. [3] The hymn was later included in The Soldier's Companion, the hymnal distributed to all Confederate soldiers. [4] Some considered "God Save The South" the de facto national anthem of