The Unbroken Oath
The Southern Heroes Who Chose the Union
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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JIM STOVALL
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
The Heroes History Forgot: Southern Officers Who Kept Their Oath to the Constitution
When Virginia seceded in April 1861, Colonel Robert E. Lee faced an agonizing choice: accept command of the Union army or follow his state into rebellion. He chose Virginia and broke his oath to the Constitution. On the same day, another Virginian made a different choice.
Winfield Scott, the 74-year-old commanding general of the Army, remained loyal to the oath he had taken 50 years earlier. "I have served my country under the flag of the Union for more than fifty years," Scott said, "and so long as God permits me to live, I will defend that flag with my sword."
Scott was not alone. George H. Thomas, a Virginian from a slave-owning family, kept his oath and was disowned by his relatives—they turned his portrait to the wall and never spoke to him again. David Farragut of Tennessee abandoned his Norfolk home and later led the Union fleet to victory at Mobile Bay. John Gibbon, raised in North Carolina, commanded Union troops at Gettysburg while three of his brothers fought for the Confederacy. Hundreds of other Southern officers made the same choice: duty over family, Constitution over state, oath over convenience.
The Unbroken Oath: The Southern Heroes Who Chose the Union tells the forgotten stories of these men—officers who kept their word when it cost them everything.
What History Forgot
For more than a century, the Lost Cause mythology has dominated our understanding of the Civil War. It taught generations that the war was about states' rights, that Confederate leaders were noble defenders of their homeland, and that all true Southerners supported secession. This mythology required one crucial erasure: Southern Unionists had to be forgotten, because their very existence contradicted the entire narrative.
If George Thomas—a Virginian who saved the Union army at Chickamauga and destroyed a Confederate army at Nashville—remained loyal to his oath, then secession was not the inevitable choice of honor. If 100,000 white Southerners fought in Union blue, then the South was never unified. If officers from the most prominent Southern families chose the Constitution over their states, then loyalty to the Union was not incompatible with being Southern.
So these men were erased. Their service went unrecognized in their home states. Their names disappeared from textbooks. Statues rose to celebrate Confederate "heroes," but not these men.
Inside This Book
The Unbroken Oath reclaims these remarkable stories:
- George H. Thomas, "The Rock of Chickamauga," whose family turned his portrait to the wall and refused to claim his body when he died
- David Farragut, who "damned the torpedoes" at Mobile Bay after choosing his country over his Tennessee roots
- Winfield Scott, the legendary general who remained loyal when hundreds of younger officers resigned
- John Gibbon, who commanded troops at Gettysburg while his own brothers fought against him in Confederate ranks
These men came from Virginia, Tennessee, North Carolina, and other Confederate states. They attended West Point. They owned slaves or came from slave-owning families. By every measure of background and culture, they should have joined the Confederacy. Instead, they kept their oaths—and helped save the United States.
Part of the Civil War You Never Knew Series
This book joins Battlelines: Gettysburg and Unconditional Failure: How Confederate Commanders Lost Fort Donelson in exploring lesser-known aspects of America's defining conflict. Each volume in the series challenges conventional narratives and recovers forgotten stories that change our understanding of the war.
A comprehensive reader's guide s is available at the author's website, JPROF.com.