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Posts Tagged ‘union’

I took a trip down through corn and big sky to the Illinois state capitol, Springfield.

Springfield was originally named Calhoun after Secretory of War, John C. Calhoun from South Carolina.  About 10 years later, when Calhoun became the 7th Vice President under John Quincy Adams, and then again under Andrew Jackson, and maybe around the time that Calhoun became a staunch advocate of secession, the fact that he called slavery a “positive good” instead of a “necessary evil,” and that he spoke outright in favor of nullification, a state’s ability to void any federal law they found not to their liking, the citizens of Calhoun found their town’s namesake to be not to their liking, and renamed their town Springfield.

That was about the time this guy got here, where he would stay for almost two decades.

It was here he practiced law after having taught it to himself.  It was here he put his feet up on November 6th, 1860, his kids spilling ink on his law office walls, that he learned that he was elected President of the United States.

Lincoln freed the slaves, set a new direction for the country approaching its centennial, and kept these United States united, all while being under constant attack from his wealth of enemies, watching his sons die, as well as nearly 600,000 Americans, about 4% of the population at the time, yet he had the drive and vision to see a higher cause.

I’m totally in the bag for good ol’ Abe… But more on that later.

But check this out…

(Not my picture...)

I didn't take this one...

A face divided…

Cover up the right side of his face (his right) and you see happy Lincoln.  That man knew how to laugh, how to tell stories.

Now cover up the left side of his face (his left) and see sad Lincoln.  That men felt each one of those 600,000 deaths…

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Not too long ago, I took a flight from Frankfurt to Chicago just before Christmas.  Apparently, the U.S. still has left over military bases around Frankfurt, quite a few in fact, just to keep an eye on those dreadful Germans.  I got a chance to talk to a couple of America’s finest on the plane over.  They told me about the lack of prospects leaving High School, the boredom of their current post, their brother in Iraq.  Some of it seemed a tad cliché.  I felt like I knew the story.  I come from an upper middle class neighborhood in a big city and then went off to the most expensive private university in the country.  None of my friends enlisted.  I don’t get a chance to converse with our troops often.  I don’t know anyone who has been to Iraq.  And talking to these kids, most younger than me, which is not the easiest thing to be, they just seemed stagnant.  They told me about drinking binges, broken computers, movies downloaded.  They showed me a picture of their girlfriends wearing uggs and college hoodies.  I think our troops are the best and greatest, true heros.  I just…  They seem to lack a cause right now.  There is nothing driving them.  Some of the greatest poetry and literature has come out of wars, and those words can teach us.  But without a sense of purpose, without a task in which to take pride, these soldiers had only a military ID to show.  Other than that, they described to me boredom.  World War I Poet Soldier Wilfred Owen said, “All a poet can do today is warn. That is why the truest poets must be truthful.”  Perhaps it is the truth our soldiers lack, and it doesn’t come from them, it comes from up top.  

Below is a letter written by Union soldier Sullivan Ballou on July the 14th, 1861.  Give it a listen as it is just audio.  I have never heard a better rendering of love-of-country and love-of-woman put so succinctly.  He has truths to tell, a truth to his country, and a truth to his woman.  He proclaims them both.

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