For example, even though many of them served in the infantry and artillery, discriminatory practices had moved several of them to work in non-combat, supportive duties, such as cooks, laborers, and teamsters. African American soldiers were paid $10 per month, with a clothing deduction fee of $3, and white soldiers were paid $13 per month with no deduction fee regarding clothing. If African American soldiers were captured by the Confederate Army, they faced an even greater threat than white soldiers. According to an article "Civil War wasn't to end slavery Purposes: The South fought to defend ...." published by Baltimore Sun, the South didn’t use all their slaves to help them fight against the North because the North was more against slavery than the South was. The white defenders of their “heritage” argue that the Civil War was not about slavery, but it was about their states’ rights and “Southern independence.” Orlando Sentinel columnist Charley Reese has gone so far as to assert that the Confederacy was fighting for “liberty.”The Civil War was not meant to end slavery, but to defend
For example, even though many of them served in the infantry and artillery, discriminatory practices had moved several of them to work in non-combat, supportive duties, such as cooks, laborers, and teamsters. African American soldiers were paid $10 per month, with a clothing deduction fee of $3, and white soldiers were paid $13 per month with no deduction fee regarding clothing. If African American soldiers were captured by the Confederate Army, they faced an even greater threat than white soldiers. According to an article "Civil War wasn't to end slavery Purposes: The South fought to defend ...." published by Baltimore Sun, the South didn’t use all their slaves to help them fight against the North because the North was more against slavery than the South was. The white defenders of their “heritage” argue that the Civil War was not about slavery, but it was about their states’ rights and “Southern independence.” Orlando Sentinel columnist Charley Reese has gone so far as to assert that the Confederacy was fighting for “liberty.”The Civil War was not meant to end slavery, but to defend