Often, the shipment of commercial goods took priority over sending troops from one location to another.
Similarly, each Southern state had substantial numbers of militia which were never made available to the national government, and this was a serious crimp on already-scant Confederate manpower.
Remise wrote:Both of the above sound bully!
B. C. Milligan
Feralkoala wrote:He means 3, I believe he was using it in the sense of Theodore Roosevelt![]()
bountyhunter wrote:In other words one of the key arguments was "States Rights" which you could argue was developed as a result of arguments about slavery. In any case this states rights theory really limited what the Confederate government could "acquire" from the states especially manpower and resources.
WallysWorld wrote:In James McPherson's "Battle Cry of Freedom", he mentions that at the end of the war, one Confederate state (Alabama, I think) was found to have about 35,000 brand new uniforms in storage while the Confederate armies were marching in shreds. The state refused to release the new uniforms to the federal government and instead was keeping them for their own militia.
Director wrote:The US Military RR organization mostly rebuilt and ran railroads in occupied Southern territory. To my knowledge, the South built no major line and the USMRR mostly repaired and maintained previously-existing lines. Army campaigns were conducted around the existing pre-War RR lines. So restricting the players to the pre-War lines and not allowing them to build new railroads fits in with the historical record.
Director wrote: So restricting the players to the pre-War lines and not allowing them to build new railroads fits in with the historical record.
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