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<blockquote data-quote="Jogeephus" data-source="post: 1262991" data-attributes="member: 4362"><p>Yes and to all using this sir name it is important to remember it should always be preceded with a mister and its heavy on the Mister. ;-) :lol2: </p><p></p><p>If your bunch is from the same clan as my bunch its worth noting we did not own slaves. We actually looked down on those - mostly loyalists - who did. We actually had a lot of empathy for them as we for many years had been no more than slaves ourselves. As a right of passage I climbed to the top of King's Mountain where it is tradition that we pizz on Ferguson's grave just as our kin had done after killing him on the mountain in 1780. During this battle the local militia gave the loyalist militia and the British soldiers the same treatment they gave us at the massacre at Waxhaw where they shot unarmed patriots who had surrendered. I've tried to educate my children of our family history and keep some of our traditions alive but this is one thing I've fallen short on. Rest assured though, all do know the importance of dog heads. </p><p></p><p>We did fight for the south. Slavery had nothing to do with it as we were against it but our dislike of intrusive governments far outweighed our dislike of slavery. I am told that after the war one relative knicknamed Mance, tried to go back to the farm and live in peace but the federal occupational army was corrupt and the puppet government they empowered would overtax and extort and rob people. They pushed him too far and he and some of his buddies started their own little war and killed some soldiers and ran off with their payroll. The feds wanted him bad and chased him all the way to Texas where he fell off his horse and hit his head on a rock and died. He was on my mother's side but this treatment must have been the norm because my father's home place was once owned by a carpet bagger who forged deeds and stole the land. After setting a cross on fire in the front yard one night the carpetbagger loaded his stuff up the next morning and abandoned the place. The property stayed in the family for years.</p><p></p><p>Its funny how today, I being from the south, am often labeled. This flag thing strikes me as funny too because to my friends and family this flag has nothing to do with slavery (its also the wrong flag) but I'm pretty sure it wasn't a confederate flag flying on a slave ship but that of England, Portugal or a ship owned by a yankee flying old glory, yet WE are so often blamed and labeled by the very entity that we have such little trust. Its comical when you think about it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jogeephus, post: 1262991, member: 4362"] Yes and to all using this sir name it is important to remember it should always be preceded with a mister and its heavy on the Mister. ;-) :lol2: If your bunch is from the same clan as my bunch its worth noting we did not own slaves. We actually looked down on those - mostly loyalists - who did. We actually had a lot of empathy for them as we for many years had been no more than slaves ourselves. As a right of passage I climbed to the top of King's Mountain where it is tradition that we pizz on Ferguson's grave just as our kin had done after killing him on the mountain in 1780. During this battle the local militia gave the loyalist militia and the British soldiers the same treatment they gave us at the massacre at Waxhaw where they shot unarmed patriots who had surrendered. I've tried to educate my children of our family history and keep some of our traditions alive but this is one thing I've fallen short on. Rest assured though, all do know the importance of dog heads. We did fight for the south. Slavery had nothing to do with it as we were against it but our dislike of intrusive governments far outweighed our dislike of slavery. I am told that after the war one relative knicknamed Mance, tried to go back to the farm and live in peace but the federal occupational army was corrupt and the puppet government they empowered would overtax and extort and rob people. They pushed him too far and he and some of his buddies started their own little war and killed some soldiers and ran off with their payroll. The feds wanted him bad and chased him all the way to Texas where he fell off his horse and hit his head on a rock and died. He was on my mother's side but this treatment must have been the norm because my father's home place was once owned by a carpet bagger who forged deeds and stole the land. After setting a cross on fire in the front yard one night the carpetbagger loaded his stuff up the next morning and abandoned the place. The property stayed in the family for years. Its funny how today, I being from the south, am often labeled. This flag thing strikes me as funny too because to my friends and family this flag has nothing to do with slavery (its also the wrong flag) but I'm pretty sure it wasn't a confederate flag flying on a slave ship but that of England, Portugal or a ship owned by a yankee flying old glory, yet WE are so often blamed and labeled by the very entity that we have such little trust. Its comical when you think about it. [/QUOTE]
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