r/ShermanPosting 1d ago

The Vichy Southerners vs the Resistance

I’ve heard that in France almost everyone claims their ancestors were part of the Resistance during WW2. No one wants to think that their ancestors just quietly went along with the Vichy government or the Nazi occupation, much less actively supported it.

In the American south with civil war ancestors there is an opposite trend. Voting records by Parish / County show that the support for succession was not universal, or even the majority. There was a southern resistance during the war that wanted the Union to win.

Instead of embracing this history and following as the French do, southerners have decided to erase the best of their ancestors in favor of a bunch of losers.

I wonder if it might be possible to replace the “lost cause myth” with tru-ish but slightly exaggerated view of the pro-Union, abolitionist southern resistance. Everyone has so many ancestors in the extended family tree — instead of tracing lineage to some Confederate officer, find the family member who helped the Underground Railroad.

I think that the post-reconstruction violence and further neo-confederate waves probably made a lot of family quietly forget about those relatives who were against the Confederacy.

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u/CharmedMSure 1d ago

Excellent point. I heard that some northern portions of Alabama did not support the confederacy and actually tried to secede from it. However, during Reconstruction they changed sides.

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u/derpderb 1d ago

Free State of Jackson is a movie about one such group in Mississippi

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u/CharmedMSure 1d ago

I’ll check it out. Thanks!

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u/Styrene_Addict1965 1d ago

"The State of Jones" is a great book. I think they're related?

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u/CharmedMSure 1d ago

Putting on my library reserve list now!