23 September comment
After listening to most of a General Lee biography, I’m not too
impressed with him as a person or a general. His greatest attribute was
his loyalty, which I can admire. I could turn my back on my country over
plenty of causes, but it would be hard to fight against family and
friends who I grew up with and share so many experiences. So I am not
judging Gen. Lee on leading the Confederates or turning down the Union.
Lee was at the top of his classes at his academy.
He later became an engineer officer in the Army and had a successful career leading to the Civil War. But as a general I don’t
think he excelled or even did well. The south was destined to lose. They
had no chance and no help from France, unlike their predecessors. Back
to him as a general, he was reckless with his men. A clear sign of a
terrible leader in my eyes, or at least a huge asshole.
As a person, I was pretty disappointed by Lee’s actions. He
questioned slavery and succession during his life, but his actions were
very supportive of both. Lee owned slaves inherited from his in-laws and
he was known to be very strict and I’d argue inhumane. Slaves caught
trying to escape were purposely sold far away from their families as a
punishment and deterrent for other slaves. (He was also very tough on
the Confederate soldiers that went AWO, eventually passing a death
penalty). As a slave owner, he was instructed to emancipate all the
slaves he inherited within 5 years, and he didn't release them until after
the 5 years. These actions make it very hard to accept that he
was against slavery after his treatment and use of slaves.
Today, Gen. Lee is a symbol for racism. I don’t think we need his
statues because he wasn’t a very good person or general. But like
Ashley said, it isn't good to forget. And maybe his statues will help
us remember instead of divide.
But if Gen. Lee’s statues are going to be removed I think we should
remove founding fathers too. Pres. Jefferson among others (I’d keep Pres.
Washington). Jefferson was a dick too. And he probably would have sided with the Confederates had he been alive for the conflict.
5 Oct addition:
For anyone who cares about Gen Lee. This quote sums up who he was
pretty well. It is from the first chapter of Clouds of Glory: The Life
and Legend of Robert E. Lee by Michael Korda. This biography is really good, unlike the previous one I read.
“Like
Henry Lee, Robert was tall, physically strong, a born horseman and
soldier, and so courageous that even his own soldiers often begged him
to get back out of range, in vain of course. He had his father’s gift
for the sudden flank attack that would throw the enemy off balance, and
also his father’s ability to inspire loyalty–and in Robert’s case,
virtual worship–in his men. On the other hand, perhaps because of Henry
Lee’s quarrels with Jefferson and Madison, Robert had an ingrained
distrust of politics and politicians, including those of the
Confederacy. But the most important trait that influenced Robert was a
negative one: his father had been voluble, imprudent, fond of gossip,
hot-tempered, and quick to attack anybody who offended or disagreed with
him. With Henry Lee, even minor differences of opinions escalated
quickly into public feuds. Robert was, or forced himself to be, exactly
the opposite. He kept the firmest possible rein on his temper, he
avoided personal confrontations of every kind, and he disliked
arguments. These characteristics, normally thought of as virtues, became
in fact Robert E. Lee’s Achilles’ heel, the one weak point in his
otherwise admirable personality, and a dangerous flaw for a commander,
perhaps even a flaw that would, in the end, prove fatal for the
Confederacy. Some of the most mistaken military decisions in the short
history of the Confederacy can be attributed to Lee’s reluctance to
confront a subordinate and have it out with him on the spot, face to
face.”
My previous opinions about Gen Lee were misguided. I feel good leaving it with this quote.
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