| View single post by BDW1964 | |||||||||||||
| Posted: Mon Nov 9th, 2009 07:57 pm |
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BDW1964 Member
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This is a pretty decent museum , located on the Ft. Worth Loop, on the west side of the city. The building is new, with great facilities. The exhibits are well maintained and it has about an equal number of Confederate and Union exhibits. There is a large collection of Victorian era clothing for women and girls. http://www.texascivilwarmuseum.com/ The one thing that concerned me was the well produced documentary they show in the theater. The movie itself is about a half an hour long and is pretty well done. However, it is highly partisan, which is not a good thing from a historical perspective. It appears to follow the essentials of the "Lost Cause" mythology, propagated by the United Daughter's of the Confederacy in the last part of the 19th and first part of the 20th century. I'll give a few examples:
However, the teaching of history should be conveyed in a manner that is as unbiased as possible. The Union did not begin the fight to end slavery, that evolved as both a military tactic and later as means to prevent it becoming an issue in the future. While some Northerners of the time were for equality of all people, the majority were as committed to white supremacy as those in the South. Likewise, it is historically counter-factual for modern people to claim that secession and the war had nothing to do with slavery. Slavery was a Constitutionally recognized institution in the ante-bellum era, and was left each state on how to regulate or outlaw it. Slavery was the sticky mass that underlined all of the other issues, from State's Rights, to Tariffs to Enforcement of the Fugitive Slave Law. Likewise, there were not two simple sides to the war, there were Unionist Southerners, Pro-Confederate Northerners, as well as the traditionally recognized partisans. Last edited on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 08:30 pm by BDW1964 |
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