Paul Sorrells

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Barton would help locate more than twenty thousand of the Union’s dead and spark a systematic effort to reinter them in national cemeteries. A suggestion that the national cemetery in Marietta, Georgia, include the Confederate dead, however, horrified local women who protested any “promiscuous mingling” of the remains of the Confederates with “the remains of their enemies.” The South launched its own private efforts to reinter its abundant dead.
The Republic for Which It Stands: The United States during Reconstruction and the Gilded Age, 1865-1896 (Oxford History of the United States)
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