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In reply to the discussion: What is Southern Heritage? [View all]Uncle Joe
(62,372 posts)Whether the suffering was justified or not depends on your personal experience and reality, are you a newly freed slave, a rich slave owner, a poor, illiterate dirt farmer, or a small town person defending your community, family, friends, state and region from a perceived threat, an enlightened abolitionist fighting to free the slaves, a racist Northerner that still fought to preserve the Union, a conscripted Confederate with no choice to fight, a drafted Yankee that couldn't afford the bounty to have someone else fight for him?
The cause of slavery was not just.
The South in general still suffered from economic devastation up until and in some cases past FDR's New Deal including the TVA, much of the South didn't have electricity until the 1930s, Mississippi; the last time I checked was still the poorest state in the Union.
The South only won back white political power after Reconstruction because the North was getting tired of dealing with the ordeal and didn't want to fight another war.
No doubt, the black population suffered the worst from Jim Crow but the South in general, continued to suffer as well.
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