How We’ve Commemorated the Civil War
Take a look back at how Americans have remembered the civil war during significant anniversaries of the past
- By John Hanc
- Smithsonian.com, April 11, 2011, Subscribe
A little over ten years after the start of the Civil War, in July 1871, Gen. George Meade spoke to a reunion of Union Army veterans in Boston.
“Comrades of the Army of the Potomac,” he began, “The first thing I shall do, which we ought to do…is to return our thanks to the Great Being who, in His infinite mercy, has allowed us to be here, to enjoy the pleasures of this meeting, who has blessed us and spared us through all the dangers of the war.”
Reconciliation; unification; a re-examination of the whys and wherefores of the greatest conflict in American history: All of these would be themes of later Civil War reunions and observances, leading up to the current 150th commemoration. What those veterans celebrated in the first major anniversary of the war was the simple fact that they had made it through alive.
“There was a desire among soldiers on both sides to bring moral clarity and purpose to what they had just experienced,” says Peter Carmichael, director of the Civil War Institute at Gettysburg College. “We cannot forget that especially for Northern soldiers their celebration of Union meant something deep to them. They went to war to preserve the Union.”
By the time of the 25th anniversary of the war, the veterans of blue and gray were beginning the long process of reconciliation. In 1886, survivors of Confederate Maj. Gen. George E. Pickett’s division were welcomed to a reunion at Gettysburg with Union veterans of the battle from Philadelphia. “Then they were enemies,” wrote the New York Times. “Now they are come together as friends and as citizens of a common country, having no resentments and cherishing no animosities” (At least not in public: “privately,” Carmichael says, “many Confederate veterans were seething over military defeat. There was no question in their mind that the wrong side won the war.”)
Reunification was a dominant theme in the 50th anniversary observances of 1911-1915. George Carr Round, a Union veteran who after the war became a lawyer and settled in Manassas, Virginia, helped organize the Manassas National Jubilee of Peace, in July 1911, in observance of the 50th anniversary of the war’s first battle (also known as Bull Run).
According to historian Joan Zenzen, author of the 1998 book Battling for Manassas—about the preservation of the battlefield—a host of luminaries were on hand for the Peace Jubilee, including President William Howard Taft, who gave the keynote address to an estimated crowd of 10,000 people. As part of the Jubilee, 300 aged Confederates and 125 Federals “marched” up to each other, shook hands, and then joined in “laughter and smiles and backslapping.” For Round, the warm feelings of the Peace Jubilee proved that “hatred, resentments, misunderstandings and injustices” between North and South were “buried, forgotten and forever settled.”
Two years later, an even grander expression of that statement was demonstrated when 55,000 veterans joined hands at Gettysburg.
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Comments (4)
My Great-Grandfather Howard Sr. 1840-1922 fought for the confederacy and passed on much information to my grandfather who passed on to me. As a young lad of 10 years old I remember my step-fathers father who was a veteran of the union army telling me of the horrors of the civil war. My grandfather a veteran of WW1, my father WW2 myself Vietnam. My children, my grandchildren and my great grandchildren all were bless so far by no involvement in any wars. All of us that did had something in common. No one wins a war.
Posted by R.J. Knight on October 5,2011 | 11:09 PM
Many Americans researching their genealogies will find after 150 years that they are S.O.B.s - Sons (and Daughters) of Both Sides.
Posted by Michael Backauskas on August 5,2011 | 05:40 PM
The 125th anniversary of the end of the War between the States culminated with a stiring reenactment of the battle at Saylors Creek and the surrender at Appomatox Court House. The latter was incredably emotional to both reenactors and audience -- when the confederates marched in, stacked arms and accoutrements, then marched out to the field where they dismissed, the crowd was so hushed and the tension so high that you could have heard a pin drop in the grass! Although I'm predominantly a Union sympathizer, the performance of the Confederate reenactors at that event made me and all present sympathize deeply with the depression that that 1865 event brought to the southern troops who had given their all to the cause that they held so dear.
One can only wonder how different America would be today if we had not suffered the loss of 640,000 of the nation's most idealistic and patriotic young men 150 years ago.
Posted by John Montague on August 4,2011 | 03:09 PM
What happened with George Pickett after Gettysburg, What was his future, and when did he die and was buried?
Also, I read that Robert E. Lee had angina and heart disease during the Civil War. Please verify, if possible.
Posted by Mary Mills on May 5,2011 | 03:48 PM