There is a video on the YouTube channel of the Georgia Division of the Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV) that offers a classic teaching moment. The video, entitled “Sesquicentennial Celebration,” urges those about to honor the 150th anniversary of the “War for Southern Independence” to remember what the SCV claims the war was really about. From their perspective, brave southerners fought to defend “their homes and families” against “an aggressive northern invasion.” The narrator proceeds to touch upon almost all of the elements of the “Lost Cause” or Neo-Confederate argument –the “insurmountable odds” of the fight, the battle over home and hearth (not slavery), the heroic leadership of figures such as Robert E. Lee, and the tyrannical tendencies of Lincoln and the northern government. My thanks to Matt Karlsen who first notified me about Kevin Levin’s post on this video at his well-regarded Civil War Memory blog.






rian as he walks along a famous Civil War battlefield or location such as Antietam or the Appomattox Court House. Since they record each episode live at the battlefield as the historian walks the site, you can download these audio files to a portable music device and use them as your own personal guide at each historic site. The website also has downloadable maps of each historic location in pdf form to help you stay in sync with your guide. This site would be great for bolstering field trips or for teachers who enjoy using their imagination. Students can listen to the tour and follow the guide’s route on the map for a rather engaging experience.
The digital revolution is transforming both historical scholarship and the way we view our history. A great example of how new technology is transforming the past comes with the
