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gpthelastrebel
Thu Dec 15 2011, 07:35PM

Registered Member #1
Joined: Tue Jul 17 2007, 02:46PM
Posts: 4067
The Grandest Soldiers That Ever Marched


Their steadfast devotion to the cause of liberty is the greatest
achievement of the American soldiers fighting for the Southern
Confederacy. In the October, 1895 issue of the Confederate Veteran (page
313) the Hon A.G. Hawkins of Tennessee proclaimed: "We were outnumbered
by over 2-1/4 millions. To put it another way they had 4-2/3 men to our
one. Of the millions against us were 494,000 men were foreigners."

Bernhard Thuersam, Director
Cape Fear Historical Institute
www.cfhi.net


The Grandest Soldiers That Ever Marched:

"It is quite a mistaken idea that the Yankees were poor soldiers and
easily whipped. Any Confederate soldier who met them often in battle
will testify that they were hard and tenacious fighters, especially
those from the Great North West. The Confederates could claim very
little credit for holding at bay such a mighty host armed with the most
improved weapons and devices of warfare for four long, dreary years, and
defeating them so often and disastrously, with odds often greatly
against them, had the Northern army been merely a disorganized mob and
rabble.

Yes, the Northern army was a fine one, well equipped and well officered,
with all the resources at hand that could be desired for great and
aggressive warfare; but it had to meet an army of Southern troops
composed of the grandest soldiers that ever marched to martial music, or
fought in defense of country!

Just to think, that the Southern army of six hundred thousand men,
poorly armed and equipped, ridiculously clad and meagerly fed, without
tents, without medicine, without pay, checkmating, baffling, repulsing
and often humiliating and disastrously defeating the Northern army of
2,778,304 men armed with the most improved engines of warfare, well
paid, well fed, abundantly clothed; backed by all the resources of a
great nation, for four long, dreary years, staggers the credulity of man
to contemplate.

In a letter to General [Jubal] Early shortly after the close of the war,
General Robert E. Lee wrote: "It will be difficult to get the world to
understand the odds against which we fought." From the number drawing
pensions from the United States government today, fifty years since the
close of hostilities, there might have been a million more soldiers in
the Union Army than given in the figures named above."

(Sketch of the War Record of the Edisto Rifles, William V. Izlar, The
State Company, 1914, pp. 98-100)


(Used With Permission)
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