The Annoyed Man wrote:.....but, but, but.....what about that racist Uncle Ted?


Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
The Annoyed Man wrote:.....but, but, but.....what about that racist Uncle Ted?
I have heard it posited that if the South had won the war, the result would be that the United States would certainly not be 1 entity, and probably would not have been 2 entities - North and South - even. These scholars/historians believe that the Unities States would in actuality have become many small, regional nation-states, much as has evolved in Europe. The result of that configuration would have been that no nation would then have existed that had the singular capability of opposing (and defeating) Germany and then Japan in World War II. The world as we currently know it would have a vastly different look about it.74novaman wrote:C-dub wrote:
If they had won, the CSA would probably have experienced the same sort of issues that led the colonies to give up on the Articles of Confederation and draft the Constitution. They would probably have attempted to design a much weaker federal system, but one probably would have been instituted at some point by sheer necessity.
There were some who wanted to claim the states of Coahuila, Chihuahua, Sonora, and Sinaloa, as well as the Baja peninsula, by force if necessary. Kind of like drawing a line from Brownsville across to Culiacan. Consider it a southern version of "54.40 or fight!" they felt that more territory should have come with Texas.C-dub wrote:This might be the biggest "what if" we have discussed here. I think you are probably correct that even if the south had won and remained separate they would have eventually merged back again. The theory of pushing further south into Mexico is an interesting one. There are just so many variables.
"If" a frog had wings....stroo wrote:If Lee had followed Longstreet's advice at Gettysburg and disengaged, moved south between the Union Army and DC and had picked better ground to fight on or at least had fought a defensive battle at Gettysburg rather than an offensive one, he might have won. If he had defeated the Union army, Lincoln may not have been re-elected. And if that happened, the Union would have settled with the South. So while the Union had everything going for it, it is entirely conceivable that without Lincoln as President, the South would have "won".
I don't think the results would have overall been good for our history for many of the reasons already given.
I hate it when I have to look these things up.Heartland Patriot wrote:TANSTAAFL
A lot of that work was too dangerous to risk the life of a slave that cost a lot of money. They wanted cheap labor with no financial loss to the company when some percentage died. Reading about the way the railroads treated Chinese labor reveals the truth about Yankee "egalitarian" motivation in the 1800s.Heartland Patriot wrote:all of those freed slaves now became simply more low-paid laborers...and the north needed more and more laborers for their industrial buildup, especially post-war...millions of immigrants came to America to work in northern factories, but also millions of former slaves and the children of former slaves moved north to work, as well.
Which is exactly why they wanted those folks freed...to widen that pool of bulk-type labor...easier to get folks to move a few hundred miles with the promise of a job than to get them to come over in ships, though they obviously did that, too. With very few machines at the time, compared with today, they needed a lot of people to accomplish those tasks. Even after steam engine machines came into use, they were big and bulky and a lot of the more precise work still got done by people. And lots of folks of all races and ethnicity lost their lives building this country up. I don't want anyone thinking I'm taking pot shots at anyone, just pointing out the realities of the need of bulk labor at that time in our history.gringo pistolero wrote:A lot of that work was too dangerous to risk the life of a slave that cost a lot of money. They wanted cheap labor with no financial loss to the company when some percentage died. Reading about the way the railroads treated Chinese labor reveals the truth about Yankee "egalitarian" motivation in the 1800s.Heartland Patriot wrote:all of those freed slaves now became simply more low-paid laborers...and the north needed more and more laborers for their industrial buildup, especially post-war...millions of immigrants came to America to work in northern factories, but also millions of former slaves and the children of former slaves moved north to work, as well.
According to the northern oppressors' version of history.C-dub wrote:. . . but the south fired the first shots.