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Confederate Veteran Magazine Nov-Dec 13admin2019-08-23T14:23:50-06:00

2021

  • CV Magazine Jan-Feb
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  • CV Magazine May-Jun Coming Soon
  • CV Magazine Jul-Aug Coming Soon
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  • CV Magazine Nov-Dec Coming Soon

2020

  • CV Magazine Jan-Feb
  • CV Magazine Mar-Apr
  • CV Magazine May-Jun
  • CV Magazine Jul-Aug
  • CV Magazine Sep-Oct
  • CV Magazine Nov-Dec

2019

  • CV Magazine Jan-Feb
  • CV Magazine Mar-Apr
  • CV Magazine May-Jun
  • CV Magazine Jul-Aug
  • CV Magazine Sep-Oct
  • CV Magazine Nov-Dec

2018

  • CV Magazine Jan-Feb
  • CV Magazine Mar-Apr
  • CV Magazine May-Jun
  • CV Magazine Jul-Aug
  • CV Magazine Sep-Oct
  • CV Magazine Nov-Dec

2017

  • CV Magazine Jan-Feb
  • CV Magazine Mar-Apr
  • CV Magazine May-June
  • CV Magazine July-Aug
  • CV Magazine Sep-Oct
  • CV Magazine Nov-Dec

2016

  • CV Magazine Jan-Feb
  • CV Magazine Mar-Apr
  • CV Magazine May-Jun
  • CV Magazine Jul-Aug
  • CV Magazine Sep-Oct
  • CV Magazine Nov-Dec

2015

  • CV Magazine Jan-Feb
  • CV Magazine Mar-Apr
  • CV Magazine May-Jun
  • CV Magazine Jul-Aug
  • CV Magazine Sep-Oct
  • CV Magazine Nov-Dec

2014

  • CV Magazine Jan-Feb
  • CV Magazine Mar-Apr
  • CV Magazine May-Jun
  • CV Magazine Jul-Aug
  • CV Magazine Sep-Oct
  • CV Magazine Nov-Dec

2013

  • CV Magazine Jan-Feb
  • CV Magazine Mar-Apr
  • CV Magazine May-Jun
  • CV Magazine Jul-Aug
  • CV Magazine Sep-Oct
  • CV Magazine Nov-Dec

2012

  • CV Magazine Jan-Feb
  • CV Magazine Mar-Apr
  • CV Magazine May-Jun
  • CV Magazine Jul-Aug
  • CV Magazine Sep-Oct
  • CV Magazine Nov-Dec

2011

  • CV Magazine Jan-Feb
  • CV Magazine Mar-Apr
  • CV Magazine May-Jun
  • CV Magazine Jul-Aug
  • CV Magazine Sep-Oct
  • CV Magazine Nov-Dec

2010

  • CV Magazine Jan-Feb
  • CV Magazine Mar-Apr
  • CV Magazine May-Jun
  • CV Magazine Jul-Aug
  • CV Magazine Sep-Oct
  • CV Magazine Nov-Dec

2009

Coming Soon

2008

Coming Soon

2007

Coming Soon

2006

Coming Soon

2005

Coming Soon

2004

Coming Soon

2003

Coming Soon

2002

Coming Soon

2001

Coming Soon

2000

Coming Soon

1999

Coming Soon

1998

Coming Soon

1997

Coming Soon

1893

  • 1893 Confederate Veteran, Vol 1

1894

  • 1894 Confederate Veteran, Vol 2

1895

  • 1895 Confederate Veteran, Vol 3

1896

  • 1896 Confederate Veteran, Vol 4

1897

  • 1897 Confederate Veteran, Vol 5

1898

  • 1898 Confederate Veteran, Vol 6

1899

  • 1899 Confederate Veteran, Vol 7

1900

  • 1900 Confederate Veteran, Vol 8

1901

  • 1901 Confederate Veteran, Vol 9

1902

  • 1902 Confederate Veteran, Vol 10

1903

  • 1903 Confederate Veteran, Vol 11

1904

  • 1904 Confederate Veteran, Vol 12

1905

  • 1905 Confederate Veteran, Vol 13

1906

  • 1906 Confederate Veteran, Vol 14

1907

  • 1907 Confederate Veteran, Vol 15

1908

  • 1908 Confederate Veteran, Vol 16

1909

  • 1909 Confederate Veteran, Vol 17

1910

  • 1910 Confederate Veteran, Vol 18

1911

  • 1911 Confederate Veteran, Vol 19

1912

  • 1912 Confederate Veteran, Vol 20

1913

  • 1913 Confederate Veteran, Vol 21

1914

  • 1914 Confederate Veteran, Vol 22

1915

  • 1915 Confederate Veteran, Vol 23

1916

  • 1916 Confederate Veteran, Vol 24

1917

  • 1917 Confederate Veteran, Vol 25

1918

  • 1918 Confederate Veteran, Vol 26

1919

  • 1919 Confederate Veteran, Vol 27

1920

  • 1920 Confederate Veteran, Vol 28

1921

  • 1921 Confederate Veteran, Vol 29

1922

  • 1922 Confederate Veteran, Vol 30

1923

  • 1923 Confederate Veteran, Vol 31

1924

We do not currently have a digital copy of the 1924 Edition of the Confederate Veteran. If you have one to add please contact the Webmaster at the bottom of the page.

1925

  • 1925 Confederate Veteran, Vol 33

1926

  • 1926 Confederate Veteran, Vol 34

1927

  • 1927 Confederate Veteran, Vol 35

1928

  • 1928 Confederate Veteran, Vol 36

1929

  • 1929 Confederate Veteran, Vol 37

1930

We do not currently have a digital copy of the 1930 Edition of the Confederate Veteran. If you have one to add please contact the Webmaster at the bottom of the page.

1931

  • 1931 Confederate Veteran, Vol 39

1932

  • 1932 Confederate Veteran, Vol 40
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Forms

  • 30 Day Transfer Rule
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  • Adjutant Training
  • Affiliation Policy
  • Awards Manual
  • Award Form: David O. Dodd Award
  • Award Form: Division Commanders Award Nomination
  • Award Form: Gen. Jo Shelby Award
  • Award Form: Gen. William McCain Distinguished Camp Award Form
  • Award Form: Graves Award Nomination form
  • Award Form: Heritage Defense Medal Nomination
  • Award Form: Individual Award Nomination
  • Award Form: Rev. J. William Jones Christian Lead. Award Nom. Form
  • Bonnie Blue Society Application
  • Brooks Medical Fund Application
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  • Cadet Membership Application
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  • The Confederate Museum Founder Donation Form
  • Corporate Sponsor Program Application
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  • Debutante Planning Guide
  • Division Annual Report Form
  • Dixie Handout
  • Friends of Elm Springs Application
  • Friends of the Museum Application
  • Friends of the SCV Membership Application
  • Funding Proposal Guidelines (.pdf)
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  • Graves Submission Form
  • Heritage Defense Fund Donation Form
  • Heritage Defense Manual 2016
  • Hunley Award JROTC Application
  • Instructions for Supplemental Ancestor Certificates
  • Last Roll Form (Member Death)
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  • SCV Constitution
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  • SCV Lineage Chart
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  • Stand Watie Scholarship Application
  • Understanding the Disciplinary Process
  • Walkways of Remembrance Form
  • War Service Medal Application
Sons of Confederate Veterans

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160th Anniversary of the War for Southern Independence

The month of April of each year is designated as Confederate History and Heritage Month throughout the South and shall be set aside to honor, remember, and revere the history of those who served in in the military forces and all those millions of its citizens of various races and ethnic groups and religions who contributed in sundry and myriad ways to the cause which the Confederate soldier fought for and held so dear. From its founding on February 4, 1861, in Montgomery, Alabama, until the Confederate ship CSS Shenandoah sailed into Liverpool Harbor and surrendered to British authorities on November 6, 1865, a four-year struggle was fought to secure the independence of the Confederate States of America. This April 12, 2021, marks the 160th Anniversary of the War for Southern Independence with the firing on Fort Sumter in Charleston, South Carolina. As Commander-in-Chief of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, I encourage you to observe this noble time in our history, when men and women of the South stood courageously for liberty even in the face of insurmountable odds. Not a Civil War fought to take over the United States as it is called in history books today, this was a war in which Southerners fought to defend their homes and families against an aggressive invasion by federal troops. The South peacefully seceded, just like our founding fathers did in 1776 with England, and all we wanted was to be left alone to govern ourselves. But the North and Abraham Lincoln would not allow the South to peacefully leave because of the taxes and tariffs the South paid. So, the South fought for her liberty, and fought valiantly. It was a war to which we remain connected by the unbreakable bond of our heritage to our Confederate Veteran forefathers, let us never forget them. Over the next four years, various 160 th Anniversary reenactments, memorial services, and a host of living history presentations in schools, parks, and cemeteries will be held all across the Confederation. I also encourage officials and departments of state, county, and municipal governments, boards of education, elementary and secondary schools, colleges and universities, businesses, and all citizens to participate in programs, displays, and activities that commemorate and honor our shared history and cultural inheritance during this time of observance over the next four years. This is a tremendous opportunity for teachers, students, and families to get out and learn more about our Southern culture and its rich heritage. So much is portrayed by Hollywood and the “Cancel Culture” movement today presenting the South as evil; when, in reality, the South was the most peaceful, rural, and Christian part of America before the war and Reconstruction destroyed the pastoral way of life here. We see various municipalities across the Confederation give in and remove our memorials, change school names, and streets because of “wokeness”. Therefore, I ask every Camp, Brigade, and Division, starting this month of April to take advantage of this opportunity to celebrate the positive things about our Southern heritage and culture, as well as to learn from the political dangers that once led to a deep division in America over the role of the federal government in people’s individual lives.”Starting at 4:30 AM on April 12, let us remember when General P.G.T. Beauregard was forced to give the order to open fire on Fort Sumter to prevent a “Yankee” invasion after he received a report that the federal garrison would be resupplied and reinforced by orders of Abraham Lincoln on that day, a blatant act of aggression upon the sovereignty of the southern people. Let us remember those actions of the federal government that led to a four-year struggle for the South to defend hearth and home from Northern aggression and the loss of live on both sides that numbered over 750,000 men and how it affected those after that conflict that resonates still today throughout the South.Therefore, I ask all of our Compatriots, both sons and daughters of the South, to proudly display our flag on April 12th thru the 13th in remembrance of those two days of bombardment at Fort Sumter and the struggle that led our ancestors to fight to preserve their culture and heritage for future generations. I also ask that you participate in observances this month and over the next four years that would remember, respect, and revere the sacrifices as well as educating the general population about the truth that our ancestors fought and died for during those four years of conflict.Thank you for all you do to perpetuate the memory of our Confederate ancestors and the true cause they fought for during that time.

Deo Vindice,
Larry McCluney, Jr.
Commander-in-Chief
Sons of Confederate Veterans

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