Confederate battle flag: Separating the myths from facts
(CNN)The
racist massacre in a South Carolina church has tipped the balance in a
decades-old tug of war over the meaning of the Confederate battle flag.
Its champions have argued it's a symbol of Southern culture, the historic flag of the South.
Critics say it's a racist symbol that represents a war to uphold slavery and, later, a battle to oppose civil rights advances.
We take a look at the flags of the Confederacy to sort out the facts.
It's not the original Confederate flag
The
Confederate states went through three official flags during the
four-year Civil War, but none of them was the battle flag that's at the
center of the current controversy.
The first was the "Stars and Bars," approved in 1861.
Like
its Union sibling, it had a dark blue field in the upper left corner --
or the canton -- and only three stripes, two red and one white. It had
seven stars to represent the breakaway states: South Carolina,
Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and Texas. And the
white stars formed a circle, much like the original Betsy Ross American
flag.
It's not even the second, or the third
The
original Confederate flag's similarity to the Union flag quickly
confused soldiers, who often couldn't tell the difference between the
two on smoke-filled battlefields.
Confederate Gen. P.G.T. Beauregard wanted something that looked distinctly different.
So
politician William Porcher Miles came up with the design we know today
-- the battle flag: a blue St. Andrew's Cross with white stars on a red
field.
The Confederacy took the battle
flag design and put it on the canton of its next flag, a white one.
They called it the "Stainless Banner."
There was a problem.
When the wind didn't blow, only the white was clearly visible, making it look like a white flag of surrender.
So,
in the third incarnation of the Confederate flag, a red vertical stripe
was added on the far end. This flag was called the "Blood-Stained
Banner."
Shortly after that the South surrendered.
It's the battle flag of Robert E. Lee's army unit
While
it wasn't the Confederate states' official flag, the battle flag was
flown by several Confederate Army units. The most notable among them was
Gen. Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia.
And even Lee distanced himself from divisive symbols of a Civil War that his side lost.
"I
think it wiser moreover not to keep open the sores of war," he wrote in
a letter, declining an invitation by the Gettysburg Battlefield
Memorial Association.
There were no flags flown at his funeral, Confederate or otherwise.
Slavery was a big part of why the South wanted to secede
In
their declarations of secession from the Union, some Southern states
expressly mentioned slavery as a reason for their departure.
"...
an increasing hostility on the part of the non-slaveholding States to
the institution of slavery, has led to a disregard of their obligations
..." South Carolina wrote in its declaration.
The state of Mississippi aligned itself with slavery right off the top of its declaration:
"Our position is thoroughly identified with the institution of slavery -- the greatest material interest of the world."
Georgia named slavery in the second sentence of its declaration. The sad list goes on.
"To
put it more simply, South Carolina and the rest of the South only
seceded to preserve the violent domination and enslavement of black
people, and the Confederate flag only exists because of that secession,"
said CNN political commentator Sally Kohn.
"To call the flag 'heritage' is to gloss over the ugly reality of history."
The rebel flag's resurgence came long after the Civil War
After
the Civil War ended, the battle flag turned up here and there only
occasionally -- at events to commemorate fallen soldiers.
So,
when did the flag explode into prominence? It was during the struggle
for civil rights for black Americans, in the middle of the 20th century.
The
first burst may have been in 1948. South Carolina politician Strom
Thurmond ran for president under the newly founded States Rights
Democratic Party, also known as the Dixiecrats. The party's purpose was
clear: "We stand for the segregation of the races," said Article 4 of
its platform.
At campaign stops, fans greeted Thurmond with American flags, state flags -- and Confederate battle flags.
But desegregation progressed.
As
it passed milestones like the Supreme Court ruling on Brown vs. Board
of Education, which gave black American children access to all schools,
the Confederate battle flag popped up more and more.
It can be removed from the South Carolina Capitol without a supermajority
In
1961, to honor the 100th anniversary of the beginning of the Civil War,
South Carolina lawmakers raised the Confederate battle flag over the
State House.
In 2000, it was moved to a flagpole next to a soldiers' monument, and its position there was protected by the 2000 Heritage Act.
The act said that any changes to the act will require a "two-thirds vote of each house of the General Assembly."
But
there's another thing the state Legislature can do. It can vote to
repeal the law altogether -- and it only needs a simple majority for
that.
"The Heritage Act requires a
two-thirds vote to change any of these Confederate and Civil War statues
and monuments around the state," U.S. Rep. James Clyburn of South
Carolina told CNN.
"The Heritage Act
must be rescinded, and the only thing required to rescind that is a
simple majority vote. And once that Act is rescinded, two-thirds would
not be needed to change the locations of the flag or any other Civil War
or Confederate memorial."
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