Southern By the Grace of God

Stephen Dill Lee's Charge
to the
Daughters of the Confederacy

To you, Daughters of the Confederacy, will be given the loving service of remembering the Confederate dead and of ministering to the living who were dear to him and are in need of your help and tenderness. Worthy daughters, you shall be of the immortal women, your mothers, who gave to womanhood a new perfection of heroism and a more divine expression of sacrifice and devotion.

The UDC Recognizes
Veterans of All Wars

If you are a veteran of any branch of the armed forces, we want you to know that we appreciate your service to our country.

Your contribution to maintain our national defense and guarantee the "ring of freedom" will always be foremost with the UDC.

With sincere appreciation for all who serve their country, we applaud your dedication to duty, courage, honor and personal sacrifice.

The UDC sponsors Crosses of Military Service and War Service Medals for Veterans of all Wars. If you are interested in receiving one, or sponsoring a veteran in your family, camp or community, please contact your nearest UDC Chapter for assistance.

Memorial to Confederate Veterans

As we look upon the threshold of a new age, we glance back into a distant past. To us, the struggle that our Southern people faced was too terrible to remember with calmness, and the sting of injustice still stirs in our hearts. Our ancestors fought for their homes and loved ones; fought for their pride, honor and manhood; their principles and rights; they fought for all that man holds dearest in life.

Even though the War and all of its miseries are buried in the past, let us be ever ready to tell the story of our Southern people; so that the world will always remember that never before in history was there recorded such sufferings, borne with such noble heroism as that endured by Confederate Veterans.

May we endeavor to memorialize the memory of those Confederate Veterans by preserving a true and unbiased history of their struggles, so that generations yet unborn will be taught to love and revere the memories of the Southland; always remembering that our forefathers were the noblest of men who fought for a cause that demanded respect of the whole world.

Let us humbly acknowledge our debt to all Confederate Veterans who gave so much. This is not a duty but a privilege to hold dear, our blessed inheritance as we strive on...

Lest We Forget.

Poetry

Now That The War Is Through

by Donald Keith Patterson, Sr.

While Standing in line at Appomattox
I felt suddenly vulnerable and weak
And as reality settled upon me
Hot tears ran down my cheek,
A tired old Union solider
In his tattered coat of blue
Looked at me and said, "This War is over son,
So what is wrong with you?"

I could not believe such a question
Coming from this man,
So I looked at him right in the eyes
And I said, "You don't understand.
Has an army ever invaded your homeland
And destroyed your family and home?
Will you go home only to find
Everything is totally gone?"

"The fields you plowed in the spring
To raise your crops for fall,
How would you like to go home, Sir,
And find you lost it all?
So, unless you've lost everything
And your loss is truly real,
How could you hope to understand
The way that I now feel?"

"Go lay down your weapons
And surrender your flag and then,
Burn your houses and your fields
And rape and pillage your land,
Let someone kill your family and friends
Until no one is left but you.
Now, tell me, Sir, how does it feel
Now that the War is through?"

The Stainless Banner

by Ronnie Hatfield

Unfurl the Stainless Banner, southern breezes set it free,
as I salute, again, the Veterans, who followed General Lee.
To the men who fought at Gettysburg, The Crater, and Bloody Lane,
I bow my head in reverence, and recite again their names.

May they never be forgotten, their heroic deeds be told,
although their blood, on sacred fields is generations old.
This flag is my reminder, their honor to defend,
as once again, I watch it rise, and dance upon the wind.

And heritage, not hatred, is what she means to me,
when I unfurl the Stainless Banner, and southern breezes set it free!

The Flag My Grandpa Knew

by Ronnie Hatfield

I remember how, each morning, he'd rise before us all,
and I'd hear his muffled footsteps, as he padded down he hall.
The many years he'd labored, had left his body bent and gray,
but Grandpa had a reason, for getting up each day.

A well worn box sat on a shelf, beside his rocking chair,
I don't know where it came from, seems it always had been there.
Inside the box, a tattered cloth, of crimson, blue and white,
and he'd gaze at it each morning, with tears that dimmed his sight.

On special days, he raised it still, on the pole outside our door,
and he'd tell us kids, in reverent tones what that tattered cloth stood for.
"The red reminds me of the Wheat Field, where Pickett's men were slain,
when seven thousand good men fell, amidst the bloodied grain."

"The blue, I guess, brings back to mind, the loneliness and cold,
of a Shenandoah winter, a thousand miles from home."
"And the pure white stars, well they're generals, for Jackson, Stuart and Bee,
and that big one in the middle there, is for Robert Edward Lee!"

"Each bullet hole is a battle won, each tear is a comrade lost,
each stain is for a wounded friend, who paid the final cost."
Ol' Grandpa must have loved that flag, he stayed near it every day,
and so Grandpa took it with him, when he finally passed away.

And if there's a flagpole up in Heaven, there's no tear in Grandpa's eye,
cause I know he's back in uniform, and his beloved flag flies high!

The Officer’s Funeral

by Mrs. Norton

Hark! to the shrill trumpet calling,
It pierceth the soft spring air.
Tears from each comrade are falling
For the widow and orphan are there.
The bayonets earthward are turning.
And the drum’s muffled breath rolls around;
But he heeds not the voices of their mourning,
Nor awakes to the bugle’s sound.

Sleep solider, though many regret thee
Who stand by thy cold bier today.
Soon, soon shall the kindest forget thee,
And thy name from the earth pass away.
The man thou didst love as a brother
A friend in thy place will have gained,
Thy dog shall keep watch for another,
And thy steed by a stranger be reined.

But tho hearts that now mourn for thee sadly
Soon joyous as ever shall be,
Tho thy bright orphan boy may laugh gladly
As he sits on some kind comrade’s knee,
There’s one who shall still pay thee duty
Of tears for the true and the brave,
As when first in the bloom of her beauty
She wept o’er her dead soldier’s grave.

DO YOU JUST BELONG?

Are you an active member,
The kind that would be missed?
Or are you just contented
That your name is on the list?

Do you attend our meetings,
And mingle with the flock,
Or do you just stay home
And criticize the knock?

Do you take an active part
To help the work along
Or are you satisfied to be
The kind to "just belong?"

There's quite a program scheduled
That I'm sure you've heart about,
And we'll appreciate it if you, too,
Will show up and help us out.

So come to the meetings often
And help with hand and heart,
Don't just be a member
But take an active part.

Think this over, ladies,
You all know right from wrong,
Are you an active member
Or do you "just belong"?

author unknown

Links

Listen to a collection of Southern Music On-Line at the Texas Division SCV Jukebox!

Read this touching tribute to Confederate Flags, I Am Their Flag!

Read about General Robert E. Lee, He Lost A War, But Won Immortality by Louis Redmond!

Read a Confederate POW's letter to the New York Times!

Read About Texas Confederate Martyr David Dodd!

Read About Texas Confederate Martyr Calvin Crozier!

Read About Confederate Hero Colonel Isaac Irwin Avery and his last words to his father!

Read About The Most Sensational Walk in American History, a story of the patriotism of the post-war South!

Read About the Texas Confederate Battle Flags in the Collection at the Texas State Library and Archives in Austin!


UDC Websites

Thunderbird Chapter 2102, Phoenix, Arizona

Cape Fear Chapter 3, Wilmington, North Carolina

General William Ruffin Cox Chapter 2612, Raleigh, North Carolina


Site Directory

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