fleche_revolution_of_1861
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fleche_revolution_of_1861 [2025/01/30 05:32] – lstjohn | fleche_revolution_of_1861 [2025/01/31 18:04] (current) – 199.111.65.11 | ||
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The revolution of 1848 had a strong impact on American politics. For abolitionists, | The revolution of 1848 had a strong impact on American politics. For abolitionists, | ||
- | It is interesting how so many veterans of the revolutions of 1848 in Europe took up sides in the Civil War so quickly and with such determination. On either side, they held strong feelings for liberty and independence. This is just another way that those revolutions of 1848 impacted the Civil War, with those who fought it on the fields. (Lexi) | ||
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There were many similarities made between the events taking place in the U.S. during 1861 and the European revolutions during the 1840s. Many immigrants recognized these similarities, | There were many similarities made between the events taking place in the U.S. during 1861 and the European revolutions during the 1840s. Many immigrants recognized these similarities, | ||
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+ | Many Europeans were in the United States during the outbreak of war because they were forced to leave their homes after failing during the revolutions of 1848.Some of them were compelled to side with the confederates because, as they saw it, the south was fighting a tyrannical central government that was seeking to take away state sovereignty (to have slaves). They saw the 1861 secession as a revolution against these oppressive forces. These were mostly Irish sentiments in the south.- Sophia | ||
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+ | It is interesting how so many veterans of the revolutions of 1848 in Europe took up sides in the Civil War so quickly and with such determination. On either side, they held strong feelings for liberty and independence. This is just another way that those revolutions of 1848 impacted the Civil War, with those who fought it on the fields. (Lexi) | ||
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+ | While there were so many immigrants who did end up joining either the Union or the Confederacy, | ||
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+ | When reading this chapter, what struck me was how involved immigrants were on both sides of the war, and how different their ideologies were. In particular, how different groups could either sympathize with the South as a nation seeking independence, | ||
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+ | German-Americans interpreted the sectional struggle in the United States as simply an outgrowth of European revolutionary conflicts. This was a wide view held by many European-Americans on both sides of the American Civil War. Those who had faces democratic revolutions in the Old World found the conflict in the New World to be strikingly similar. (Ezra C.) | ||
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+ | The Germans and Irish in St. Louis, MO had differing opinions on the South' | ||
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+ | Fleche makes note of how Thomas F. Meagher, an Irish immigrant and founder of the Union’s Irish Brigade, sympathized with the south because of the equality that Irishmen benefited amongst other white men; However, he ultimately supported the Union because he believed that the Union could best resist Britain. | ||
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+ | Fleche talks about how different immigrant populations would’ve seen the revolutions of 1848 in the conflict in the U.S. As we discussed in class, the revolutions of ‘48 don’t map onto the conflict in the U.S. perfectly, so there is some room for immigrant groups to interpret it how they see fit. Fleche argues that Ireland sees themselves in the Confederacy, |
fleche_revolution_of_1861.1738215169.txt.gz · Last modified: 2025/01/30 05:32 by lstjohn