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re: Missouri is a partially Southern state

Posted on 6/7/13 at 8:07 am to
Posted by DisplacedKentuckian
Member since Jan 2013
428 posts
Posted on 6/7/13 at 8:07 am to
quote:

Having a Confederate heritage isn't the same though. 90+ percent of East Tennessee was pro Union, counties in N. Ga and N. Alabama were also strongly pro-Union. Plenty of Northerners supported the Confederacy and at the individual county level families were split on the issue both in the North and South. The simplistic notion of a pro-Union North and the pro-Confederate South was a fairy tale both regions told themselves post-war. Now the majority of people in the North and South believe it but it's always been a myth.


That was well said!

Most of the Mountain South was pro-Union, that doesn't make them non-southerners. They just had less of a dog in the fight. They still share the same ideals, religion, and culture with the rest of the region.

Even my wife does this! >>> Many people when they think of the south they only consider the picturesque Alabama/Mississippi Plantation with loads of Spanish Moss. Most don't realize that the south has a lot of unique sub cultures scattered all around but share a common background.
Posted by TPAWZ
Member since Dec 2011
200 posts
Posted on 6/7/13 at 8:31 am to
Missouri has no identity. People that live in the state have a Southern or Northern identity. The whole argument is a waste of time. My ancestors originated in South Carolina moved west to Tennessee and finally settled in Southeast Missouri and grew cotton and soybeans on the land between the Mississippi and the St Francis Rivers. Call me a Yankee and I will tell you to go FU$K Yourself.
Posted by Prof
Member since Jun 2013
42752 posts
Posted on 6/7/13 at 1:36 pm to
quote:

That was well said!

Most of the Mountain South was pro-Union, that doesn't make them non-southerners. They just had less of a dog in the fight. They still share the same ideals, religion, and culture with the rest of the region.

Even my wife does this! >>> Many people when they think of the south they only consider the picturesque Alabama/Mississippi Plantation with loads of Spanish Moss. Most don't realize that the south has a lot of unique sub cultures scattered all around but share a common background.


I think you're exactly right about that and it's mainly due to antebellum period being so important and the subsequent books and movies that have been produced on that have all focused on plantations and slavery for good reason (that's a story that needs to be told but there are so many other Southern stories to tell that also need to be told).

The Mountain South has left an outsized mark on American and World Culture when it comes to music, 'spirits' (whiskey/bourbon/moonshine) and other things but we've had fewer writers deal with our culture or even our antebellum period which is fascinating. However, even when people think of things that are quintessentially 'Mountain South' -- our uniqueness and actual history is erased and substituted with the plantation South.

I really do wish all the unique subcultures of the South would get more attention. We are truly a fascinating region and in any given state there is sooo much diversity of culture and yet so much similarity.
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