Al in Canada
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Yes, but I was referring to the "public" description, like you see on the plaque at the base of the statue the was inevitably in every town square.Rad Davis":fq5dr4fb said:Many people in the South refer to it as "The War of Northern Aggression". :lol:Al in Canada":fq5dr4fb said:. In Ohio the unfortunate conflict of the 1860's is commemorated as "The War of the Great Rebellion", and in the South it is "The War of Secession".
Rad
Being more neutral in Kentucky it was usually described as "The Civil War", and they commemorated both Union and Rebel heroes,
It was a shock to read that "Great Rebellion" description up North the first time, almost as strange as the first time some one in Canada referred to me as a "Yankee". Usually when I heard that sobriquet it was preceded with the adjective "damned" and it had never been applied to me, more generally applied to some one from the northeast who was going to tell us how life should be lived. Used a lot when IBM opened a plant in Lexington and sent a lot of people from New York down to Kentucky to get it up and running. With all their whining about moving to the wilds of Kentucky, it was surprising how few of them used their guaranteed option to move back to Schenecaty, New York when their three years was up. By then most of them had learned to talk civilized of course. :bounce:
Al (in Canada)