Now It's Confederate Cemeteries

Confederate soldiers buried in Yankee soil?
Interesting read



https://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/national_cemeteries/development.html


Confederate soldiers could not be buried in national cemeteries, nor were they afforded any benefits from the United States Government for many decades after the end of the Civil War. When the reburial corps in the late 1860s found the remains of Confederate soldiers lying near those of Union soldiers, they removed the Union soldiers but left the Confederates’ bodies. Because identification of remains was difficult at best, some Confederate soldiers were reburied in national cemeteries, unintentionally as Union soldiers. Confederate prisoners of war were often interred in “Confederate sections” within the national cemeteries. Generally, within national cemeteries and at other cemeteries under the care of the Federal Government, Confederate graves were marked first with wooden headboards (as had been Union graves) and later with marble markers with just the name of the soldier engraved on the stone, so that they were indistinguishable from civilians buried in the national cemeteries. Private organizations, especially women’s organizations established in former Confederate states after the war, assumed responsibility for Confederate reburials. One of the more prominent groups was the Hollywood Memorial Association, which raised funds to move the bodies of Confederate soldiers from the battlefields of Gettysburg and Drewry’s Bluff to Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond, Virginia. The appearance of grave markers varied in these Confederate cemeteries depending on the preferences of the supervising organization.

The Federal Government first became involved in permanently marking Confederate graves in 1906. That year, Congress authorized the furnishing of headstones for Confederate soldiers who died in Federal prisons and military hospitals in the North, and were buried near their places of confinement. The act also established the Commission for Marking Graves of Confederate Dead, whose job it was to ensure that the graves of Confederate soldiers in the North received markers. The design for these grave markers was to be more or less identical to that approved in 1901 for marking Confederate graves at Arlington National Cemetery. The headstone was the same size and material as those for Union soldiers, except the top was pointed instead of rounded, and the U.S. shield was omitted. Individual graves were marked at places such as Rock Island Confederate Cemetery, Illinois, and Camp Chase Confederate Cemetery, Ohio, both sites of large prisoner of war camps. Confederate graves within national cemeteries in the North, such as Woodlawn National Cemetery, New York, were also remarked with the new headstones at this time. In places where the Commission was unable to mark individual graves, such as Point Lookout Confederate Cemetery, Maryland, and Finn’s Point National Cemetery, New Jersey, a single monument was erected that featured bronze plaques bearing the names of those who died at the associated prisoner of war camps. Finally, an Act of January 20, 1914, authorized the furnishing of headstones for the unmarked graves of both Union and Confederate soldiers, sailors, and marines in national, post, city, town, and village cemeteries. This provision allowed graves of Confederate soldiers buried in national cemeteries in the South, such as Fort Smith and Little Rock National Cemeteries in Arkansas, to be marked with the distinctive Confederate-style headstone.
 
Reading comprehension, eh?

Look Jethro, I'm not the slightest bit interested in anything you have to say about anything.

Why even make attempts at communication?

You do realize that you RESPONDED to his comment, when you could have just shut up and moved on!!

:dealwithit:
 
Confederate soldiers buried in Yankee soil?

So are British Soldiers who died during our War of Independence.

ca8bb376-fd69-4907-b91d-e651e0701933.jpg


Should this marker be torn down, the bodies dug up, and the remains rolled into a ditch?
 
Of course not. In the name of profit is always acceptable. And nobody did anything to graves in any cemetery. They removed markers.

and blackasshole wants to go further

he wants some1 to open the graves and dump the remains in the gutter

he is serious

:hand::hand::hand:

Thanks to Trump and his white supremacist horde.

I suggest they take what's left of the bodies and roll them into the gutter.
 
:hand::hand::hand:

Thanks to Trump and his white supremacist horde.

I suggest they take what's left of the bodies and roll them into the gutter.



After 3000 years of the white man being in bondage by North Africans, we had 200 years of Muslim north Africans bringing black slaves here and selling them. It was not a white man that enslaved them. It was a whiteman that kept them enslaved.


But..... It took a white man to free the slaves too, in less time than the Black man, to freed the white man in Egypt.....
 
UPDATE: The story linked below was originally published 2 years ago.

On Tuesday, with respect to tearing down Confederate monuments, President Trump bravely stood before the world and asked, "Where does it end?" The media responded by ridiculing the notion that such a thing could get out of hand.
now we have vigilante protesters starting to dig up the remains of Confederate Lt. General Nathan Bedford Forrest:


A group of protesters who want the body of an alleged Ku Klux Klan leader removed from their city have broken the soil over the grave.

The campaigners claim it has taken officials in Memphis, Tennessee, too long to exhume Nathan Bedford Forrest — who was a lieutenant general in the Confederate States Army. ...

Members of the protest group, who call themselves the Commission on Religion and Racism, removed only a small patch of grass from the park, but threatened to return with heavy machinery to tear down the wartime symbol.

A few things ...

1) Grave desecration is never-ever okay, no matter who it is. This act is especially noxious when the democratic gears are already turning to remove this particular monument — though there is no guarantee that will happen.

2) While there is evidence that Forrest was an early member of the Klan, there is also evidence that he was not a founder or leader (documents appear to prove he was not in the area that year).

3) A congressional investigation into the KKK at the time concluded that Forrest was actually responsible for the dissolution of the KKK: "The natural tendency of all such organizations is to violence and crime; hence it was that General Forrest and other men of influence in the state, by the exercise of their moral power, induced them to disband."

4) In his final public appearance, just a decade after the end of the Civil War, Forrest spoke eloquently about race relations, and some might say redeemed himself.....(more)
http://www.dailywire.com/news/19851/year-zero-vigilante-protesters-start-dig-remains-john-nolte
 
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