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Many Confederate Monuments are Actually Monuments to that Most American of Ideologies, Hucksterism
Posted for the benefit of people who live in the North and are not likely to know this.
Retweeted by Dave Weigel: https://twitter.com/daveweigel
many confederate monuments are actually monuments to that most american of ideologies, hucksterism
Link to tweet
Why those Confederate soldier statues look a lot like their Union counterparts
At left, a Monumental Bronze Co. sculpture of a Union soldier, erected in Westfield, N.J., in 1889. On the right, a sculpture of a Confederate soldier, by the same company, erected in Windsor, N.C., in 1898. (Sarah Beetham)
By Marc Fisher August 18
President Trumps supportive comments about Confederate monuments have focused new attention on long-ignored Civil War statues of a mustachioed infantryman standing at rest, wearing a greatcoat and holding a rifle barrel. ... The nameless figure, known to many as the Silent Sentinel, gazes over town squares and courthouse steps in dozens of Southern towns but not just there.
Many of the Souths Silent Sentinels turn out to be identical to the statues of Union soldiers that decorate hundreds of public spaces across the North. Identical, but for one detail: On the soldiers belt buckle, the U.S. is replaced by a C.S. for Confederate States.
It turns out that a campaign in the late 19th century to memorialize the Civil War by erecting monuments was not only an attempt to honor Southern soldiers or white supremacy. It was also a remarkably successful bit of marketing sleight of hand in which New England monument companies sold the same statues to towns and citizens groups on both sides of the Civil War divide.
It took some years before Southern customers caught on and sought to buy statues of soldiers who were more obviously Grays rather than Blues. Statue manufacturers eventually gave their Confederate models a slouch hat instead of the Union topper that looked more like a baseball cap, and a short shell jacket rather than the Norths greatcoat, and a bedroll to replace the Union mans knapsack.
....
Marc Fisher, a senior editor, writes about most anything. Hes been The Posts enterprise editor, local columnist and Berlin bureau chief, and hes covered politics, education, pop culture, and much else in three decades on the Metro, Style, National and Foreign desks. Follow @mffisher
At left, a Monumental Bronze Co. sculpture of a Union soldier, erected in Westfield, N.J., in 1889. On the right, a sculpture of a Confederate soldier, by the same company, erected in Windsor, N.C., in 1898. (Sarah Beetham)
By Marc Fisher August 18
President Trumps supportive comments about Confederate monuments have focused new attention on long-ignored Civil War statues of a mustachioed infantryman standing at rest, wearing a greatcoat and holding a rifle barrel. ... The nameless figure, known to many as the Silent Sentinel, gazes over town squares and courthouse steps in dozens of Southern towns but not just there.
Many of the Souths Silent Sentinels turn out to be identical to the statues of Union soldiers that decorate hundreds of public spaces across the North. Identical, but for one detail: On the soldiers belt buckle, the U.S. is replaced by a C.S. for Confederate States.
It turns out that a campaign in the late 19th century to memorialize the Civil War by erecting monuments was not only an attempt to honor Southern soldiers or white supremacy. It was also a remarkably successful bit of marketing sleight of hand in which New England monument companies sold the same statues to towns and citizens groups on both sides of the Civil War divide.
It took some years before Southern customers caught on and sought to buy statues of soldiers who were more obviously Grays rather than Blues. Statue manufacturers eventually gave their Confederate models a slouch hat instead of the Union topper that looked more like a baseball cap, and a short shell jacket rather than the Norths greatcoat, and a bedroll to replace the Union mans knapsack.
....
Marc Fisher, a senior editor, writes about most anything. Hes been The Posts enterprise editor, local columnist and Berlin bureau chief, and hes covered politics, education, pop culture, and much else in three decades on the Metro, Style, National and Foreign desks. Follow @mffisher
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Many Confederate Monuments are Actually Monuments to that Most American of Ideologies, Hucksterism (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Aug 2017
OP
lapfog_1
(29,205 posts)1. Brother against brother
in this case - identical twins!
Gothmog
(145,291 posts)2. These monuments are scams