1 00:00:07,453 --> 00:00:12,954 Between 1860 and 1861, 11 southern states withdrew from the United States 2 00:00:12,954 --> 00:00:16,121 and formed the Confederate States of America. 3 00:00:16,120 --> 00:00:19,704 They left, or seceded, in response to the growing movement 4 00:00:19,704 --> 00:00:22,288 for the nationwide abolition of slavery. 5 00:00:22,288 --> 00:00:23,663 Mississippi said, 6 00:00:23,663 --> 00:00:27,496 “our position is thoroughly identified with the institution of slavery.” 7 00:00:27,495 --> 00:00:31,745 South Carolina cited “hostility on the part of the non-slaveholding states 8 00:00:31,745 --> 00:00:33,661 to the institution of slavery.” 9 00:00:33,661 --> 00:00:39,079 In March 1861, the Vice President of the Confederacy, Alexander Stevens, 10 00:00:39,079 --> 00:00:42,079 proclaimed that the cornerstone of the new Confederate government 11 00:00:42,079 --> 00:00:44,411 was white supremacy, or as he put it, 12 00:00:44,411 --> 00:00:47,536 “slavery” and “subordination” to white people 13 00:00:47,536 --> 00:00:50,786 was the “natural and normal condition” of Black people in America 14 00:00:50,786 --> 00:00:55,036 and the “immediate cause of the late rupture and present revolution.” 15 00:00:55,036 --> 00:00:57,829 Three weeks after the now-infamous Cornerstone Speech, 16 00:00:57,829 --> 00:00:59,871 the American Civil War began. 17 00:00:59,871 --> 00:01:04,662 The conflict lasted four years, had a death toll of about 750,000, 18 00:01:04,662 --> 00:01:07,037 and ended with the Confederacy’s defeat. 19 00:01:07,953 --> 00:01:11,495 By 1866, barely a year after the war ended, 20 00:01:11,495 --> 00:01:15,745 southern sources began claiming the conflict wasn’t actually about slavery. 21 00:01:15,745 --> 00:01:17,870 Meanwhile, Frederick Douglass, 22 00:01:17,870 --> 00:01:21,578 a prominent abolitionist and formerly enslaved person, cautioned, 23 00:01:21,578 --> 00:01:25,037 “the spirit of secession is stronger today than ever.” 24 00:01:25,745 --> 00:01:27,662 From the words of Confederate leaders, 25 00:01:27,662 --> 00:01:31,287 the reason for the war could not have been clearer— it was slavery. 26 00:01:31,287 --> 00:01:34,078 So how did this revisionist history come about? 27 00:01:34,078 --> 00:01:39,078 The answer lies in the Lost Cause— a cultural myth about the Confederacy. 28 00:01:39,078 --> 00:01:42,912 The term was coined by Edward Pollard, a pro-Confederate journalist. 29 00:01:42,912 --> 00:01:46,495 In 1866, he published “The Lost Cause: 30 00:01:46,495 --> 00:01:49,453 A New Southern History of the War of the Confederates.” 31 00:01:49,453 --> 00:01:52,537 Pollard pointed out that the U.S. Constitution gave states 32 00:01:52,537 --> 00:01:56,037 the right to govern themselves independently in all areas 33 00:01:56,037 --> 00:01:59,495 except those explicitly designated to the national government. 34 00:01:59,495 --> 00:02:02,912 According to him, the Confederacy wasn’t defending slavery, 35 00:02:02,912 --> 00:02:07,120 it was defending each state’s right to choose whether or not to allow slavery. 36 00:02:07,120 --> 00:02:10,412 This explanation effectively turned white southerners’ documented defense 37 00:02:10,413 --> 00:02:15,746 of slavery and white supremacy into a patriotic defense of the Constitution. 38 00:02:15,746 --> 00:02:17,871 The Civil War had devastated the country, 39 00:02:17,871 --> 00:02:20,038 leaving those who had supported the Confederacy 40 00:02:20,038 --> 00:02:22,538 grasping to justify their actions. 41 00:02:22,538 --> 00:02:25,829 Many pro-Confederate writers, political leaders, and others 42 00:02:25,829 --> 00:02:29,413 were quick to adopt and spread the narrative of the Lost Cause. 43 00:02:29,913 --> 00:02:33,329 One organization, the United Daughters of the Confederacy, 44 00:02:33,329 --> 00:02:36,454 played a key role in transmitting the ideas of the Lost Cause 45 00:02:36,454 --> 00:02:38,413 to future generations. 46 00:02:38,413 --> 00:02:41,538 Founded in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1894, 47 00:02:41,538 --> 00:02:46,329 the UDC united thousands of middle and upper class white southern women. 48 00:02:46,329 --> 00:02:51,121 The UDC raised thousands of dollars to build monuments to Confederate soldiers. 49 00:02:51,121 --> 00:02:53,829 These were often unveiled with large public ceremonies, 50 00:02:53,829 --> 00:02:57,704 and given prominent placements, especially on courthouse lawns. 51 00:02:57,704 --> 00:03:01,038 The Daughters also placed Confederate portraits in public schools. 52 00:03:01,038 --> 00:03:03,913 They monitored textbooks to minimize the horrors of slavery, 53 00:03:03,913 --> 00:03:06,038 and its significance in the Civil War, 54 00:03:06,038 --> 00:03:10,954 passing revisionist history and racist ideology down through generations. 55 00:03:11,788 --> 00:03:15,746 By 1918, the UDC claimed over 100,000 members. 56 00:03:15,746 --> 00:03:20,204 As their numbers grew, they increased their influence outside the South. 57 00:03:20,204 --> 00:03:23,121 Presidents William Howard Taft and Woodrow Wilson 58 00:03:23,121 --> 00:03:26,496 both met with UDC members and enabled them to memorialize 59 00:03:26,496 --> 00:03:29,579 the Confederacy in Arlington National Cemetery. 60 00:03:29,579 --> 00:03:32,371 The UDC still exists and defends Confederate symbols 61 00:03:32,371 --> 00:03:35,746 as part of a noble heritage of sacrifice by their ancestors. 62 00:03:36,246 --> 00:03:37,913 Despite the wealth of primary sources 63 00:03:37,913 --> 00:03:40,829 showing that slavery was the root cause of the Civil War, 64 00:03:40,829 --> 00:03:43,329 the myth about states’ rights persists today. 65 00:03:43,913 --> 00:03:45,663 In the aftermath of the war, 66 00:03:45,663 --> 00:03:48,871 Frederick Douglass and his abolitionist contemporaries 67 00:03:48,871 --> 00:03:52,246 feared this erasure of slavery from the history of the Civil War 68 00:03:52,246 --> 00:03:54,038 could contribute to the government’s failure 69 00:03:54,038 --> 00:03:56,329 to protect the rights of Black Americans— 70 00:03:56,329 --> 00:03:58,788 a fear that has repeatedly been proven valid. 71 00:03:59,204 --> 00:04:03,454 In an 1871 address at Arlington Cemetery, Douglass said: 72 00:04:03,996 --> 00:04:06,579 “We are sometimes asked in the name of patriotism 73 00:04:06,579 --> 00:04:09,163 to forget the merits of this fearful struggle, 74 00:04:09,163 --> 00:04:13,496 and to remember with equal admiration those who struck at the nation’s life, 75 00:04:13,496 --> 00:04:15,496 and those who struck to save it— 76 00:04:15,496 --> 00:04:19,788 those who fought for slavery and those who fought for liberty and justice. [...] 77 00:04:19,788 --> 00:04:24,121 if this war is to be forgotten, I ask in the name of all things sacred, 78 00:04:24,120 --> 00:04:25,662 what shall men remember?”