14 Facts About Confederate army

1.

Confederate army had been a United States senator from Mississippi and U S Secretary of War under President Franklin Pierce.

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2.

Confederate army Congress enacted several more amendments throughout the war to address losses suffered in battle as well as the United States' greater supply of manpower.

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3.

Confederate army stated that while the American rebel colonists of the 1770s saw an incongruity between owning slaves on the one hand, and proclaiming to be fighting for liberty on the other, the Confederacy's soldiers did not, as the Confederate ideology of white supremacy negated any contradiction between the two:.

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4.

McPherson states that Confederate army soldiers did not discuss the issue of slavery as often as United States soldiers did, because most Confederate army soldiers readily accepted as an obvious fact that they were fighting to perpetuate slavery and thus did not feel the need to debate over it:.

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5.

Indeed, while about one-third of all Confederate army soldiers belonged to slaveholding families, slightly more than two-thirds of the sample whose slaveholding status is known did so.

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6.

In some cases, Confederate men were motivated to join the army in response to the United States' actions regarding its opposition to slavery.

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7.

Confederate army concludes that most of the desertions came because the soldier felt he owed a higher duty to his own family than to the Confederacy.

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8.

Local pressures mounted as Union forces occupied more and more Confederate army territory, putting more and more families at risk of hardship.

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9.

Supply situation for most Confederate army armies was dismal, even when they were victorious on the battlefield.

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10.

Confederate army soldiers were faced with inadequate food rations, especially as the war progressed.

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11.

Choctaw Confederate army battalions were formed in Indian Territory and later in Mississippi in support of the southern cause.

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12.

However, Confederate army authorities feared retaliation, and consequently no black prisoner was ever put on trial and executed.

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13.

In most cases, though, Confederate army officers returned captured black soldiers to slavery or put them to hard labor on southern fortifications.

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14.

Ninety-one percent of Confederate army soldiers were native-born white men and only nine percent were foreign-born white men, Irishmen being the largest group with others including Germans, French, Mexicans, and British.

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