Ron McCandless answered:
This is not a one time phenomena, we lost the war and therefore there
was no government to bask in the glory of the heroes and award medals and
citations to the valiant men who fought and died for what they believed
in the purpose of the Southern culture of that day. Mankind
has one great flaw, its tendency to use violence to settle disputes when
it is not necessary and though no one "wins" a war, one side is the obvious
loser and their soldiers go home to no glory and have to put their lives
and their country together from the ashes and ruin.
On the bright side of the issue, war is one of the refining elements
of the species, I do NOT glorify war but only make an observation
that during times of great stress individuals and families step forward
to a greater effort of support and caring for their fellows. Even
the Japanese admitted this when the reluctant Admiral that led the fleet
to Pearl Harbor mused upon his retreat "I fear we may only have awakened
a sleeping giant." His meaning is simple, a people were not united in spirit
and culture and this was the catalyst that would vault the American nation
to a united front. In a citation closer to home, in Texas there were many
families with no men left at home (as there were in many places) the men
in the community, even though elderly, would gather and farm the land of
those families that had no one and would help each other with food and
medicine to a greater extent than they did before the crisis.
The best observation of war's effects on its participants is found
during World War I when the "Red Baron" was shot down, American flyers
dropped a wreath over his field with a note to inform his comrades of their
loss.This was not done to gloat, it was done to honor a respected opponent.
Also there was the Christmas Truce that was spontaneous and both sides
came out and observed a few hours peace and remembered the birth of their
savior.
After the effects of the loss were fully absorbed into the culture of
the South, when military accolades were being handed out and "Johnny came
marching home" to his celebrations in the North, there was the terrible
injustice of the Reconstruction Period. There is not a Northerner
alive today that would want that to happen to a member of their own nation
and I am convinced that not many then were in favor of the wholesale criminal
actions imposed upon the families and people of the South. This is
not an element of blame, no one here today caused any of these things and
no one here suffered the injustice. The nature of discussion here
is to analyze the effects on our ancestors and herein I will allow that
the men who fought the battles were in high esteem of each other for many
years following. I will allow that there are the few who were probably
mentally unstable due to whatever reason but the overwhelming majority
of the letters and artifacts that I have examined show a respect much akin
to the feeling that is developed between two people who survived the same
natural disaster together. The difference is that these two fought against
each other but have the humanity to know it was over and they both survived
it.
As a last example I will give you a story that so illustrates this
that I have made a project out of it to honor the individuals involved.
In 1906 a man got off a train in Ottawa, Illinois and stepped in front
of another train. The only identification was a certificate of sorts
from the mayor of LaGrange, Texas in Fayette County. He offered that
this man was "John Haney, a veteran of the 4th Texas Cav. CSA. Please
give him every consideration in his travels from La Grange to his destination."
The Seth C. Earl GAR Post 156 of Ottawa took Mr. Haney's remains under
their protection and gave him a funeral with full military honors, burying
him in the GAR plot in the Ottawa Avenue Cemetery alongside and among the
Union veterans. His grave is marked with the standard curved top
of the Union headstones, however instead of the shield that is normally
on the face of the Union headstones, his is marked with the lone star of
Texas within a circle above his name, 4th Texas Cal (sic) and C S Army.
Each year at Memorial Day (The Federal one.) his grave is marked with the
US flag as are the other graves of his Union compatriots in death, plus
a Confederate Battle flag, by the Ottawa American Legion and VFW Posts.
I marvel in the fact that these very men who fought such a costly war
in terms of blood and lost humanity, years later give a former enemy such
honor and respect. This one soldier, John Haney received the honors
on behalf of all the others. Wasted blood and tears rest in the same
ground and it is even more ironic and fitting that we do not know who John
Haney really was. His family was never found and he became a member
of the family of the restored Union. Restored not of the rage, smoke
and violence of battle but of the humanity of his now comrades as they
together stand guard over shared territory, a small hallowed plot of ground
separated from home and family but in the company of valiant men and good
friends.
Ron McCandless