Robert E Lee The Great Emancipator
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06-06-2013, 08:42 AM
Post: #6
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RE: Robert E Lee The Great Emancipator
Laurie,
You are most welcome. Here is another example of a Southerner and his attitude toward black people and slaves; of Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson and the Sunday School he founded in Lexington before the War in which he not only taught the Gospel to his students, but in defiance of Virginia State Law, taught them to read. "Soon after one of the great battles, a large crowd gathered one day at the post office in Lexington, anxiously awaiting the opening of the mail, that they might get the particulars concerning the great battle which they had heard had been fought. The venerable pastor of the Presbyterian Church (Rev. Dr. W.S. White, from whom I received the incident) was of the company, and soon had handed him a letter which he recognized as directed in Jackson's well known handwriting. ‘Now,’ said he, ‘we will have the news! Here is a letter from General Jackson himself.’ The crowd eagerly gathered around, but heard to their very great disappointment a letter which made not the most remote allusion to the battle or the war, but which enclosed a check for fifty dollars with which to buy books for his colored Sunday school, and was filled with inquiries after the interests of the school and the church. He had no time for inclination to write of the great victory and the imperishable laurels he was winning; but he found time to remember his noble work among God's poor, and to contribute further to the good of the Negro children whose true friend and benefactor he had always been. And he was accustomed to say that one of the very greatest privations to him which the war brought, was that he was taken away from his loved work in the colored Sunday school." ~ William Jones {Confederate Chaplain from Georgia and known as "The Fighting Parson."} |
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