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March 2011

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Research and writing about Virginia genealogy and family history." <[log in to unmask]>
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Tue, 29 Mar 2011 12:18:59 -0500
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Thank you for posting this..Thank you ever so much as it rings so true. The
"bad" is always brought to the forefront, it seems..Never the "positive"
side.

Shirley Cox Schroeder

On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 10:41 AM, Charlie Weaver <[log in to unmask]>wrote:

> "Damn Yankee" is a person who visits the South and refuses to leave.
> Without the "damn" they are just nice people spending money.
>
> A couple of towns in the South are experiencing such an "invasion"
> where the invaders pretty much take over the town government
> and impose their  culture on the locals.
>
> Slavery has been discussed on this forum. A despicable, inhuman,
> system, which, still exists in many parts of the world.
> However, some additions to the big picture. Slavery had at least
> de facto support from many Northern industrialists, particularly in
> Connecticut and Massachusetts. They enjoyed the cheap raw
> materials, particularly cotton,  tobacco, and various
> food stuffs, coming from slave states. Northern shipping interests
> profited enormously from the slave trade. New Yorkers rioted
> rather than be drafted to "fight for Negroes", killing many blacks
> in the process. So, there was plenty of avarice to go around.
>
> The black woman CNA who helps me, a senior at a local college, is
> from Boston, MA. She was incredulous when I explained to her that
> many black slaves in this state were actually owned by other blacks.
> In her schools, she was taught only about the cruelty and inhumane
> treatment slaves endured. Unfortunately there was plenty of that.
> But, she was never taught about the "illegal" slave schools plantation
> owners provided  or the land given to them upon their
> manumission or before, as in my gg-grandfather's case.
> Such facts seem to be completely ignored by our educators. Perhaps
> it's not PC to mention them.
> Charlie Weaver, Winston-Salem, NC
>
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