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This fleece-lined knit cap will help keep you warm this winter. Choose from coal black with white embroidery or sport gray with black embroidery.
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These beautiful Confederate lapel pins are MADE IN AMERICA. Available in Southern Cross (measures 7/8" x 7/8"), I Pledge Allegiance to these Flags (7/8" x 7/8"), 1st National, 2nd National, 3rd National, Bonnie Blue or Battle Flag. All flag wreath lapel pins measure 3/4"W x 5/8"H with clutch back. These are beautiful pins!
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These beautiful postcards are 4" x 6" and pretty enough to frame!
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This heathered gray t-shirt has the Great Seal on the front left and "Forrest Boyhood Home - He Rode From Here Into The Legend Of The Land" on the back. Sizes Large - 4X. All proceeds benefit the National Confederate Museum.
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These beautiful silver lapel pins depict General N.B. Forrest's monument that now resides here at SCV Headquarters. Excellent quality and MADE IN AMERICA!
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These lightweight canvas haversacks are embroidered with "CS" on the front flap. Measures 11" x 14.5" and comes with an adjustable strap.
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Choose from Battle Flag, Robert E. Lee or Stonewall Jackson. Comes with chain and battery.
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This delightful hardbound children's book was originally published in 1867, a scant two years after the end of the War for Southern Independence. This is the story of three young Southern girls trying to understand why Santa Claus didn't visit the little Southern children during the four Christmases of the War. With the help of their auntie, they ponder this question one afternoon and finally write a letter to General Robert E. Lee, knowing he would be able to answer their question. They decide to put his answer, along with their dreams and other stories, into a book and give it to Santa Claus, so he could sell it for the benefit of the little Confederate children who had lost everything by the War.
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From the authors of THE SOUTH WAS RIGHT! comes a new edition of what one historian calls one of the most important and original histories of the Southern people. PUNISHED WITH POVERTY tells the unvarnished story of the intentional policy of economic devastation and exploitation of the South which has affected all Southerners, both black and white, long after the close of the "Civil War" and "Reconstruction." In fact, the sad legacy of these punitive policies continues to this very day. The over-arching theme of Southern history is not Race, as is conventionally stated, but Poverty - poverty not due to the South's shortcomings but imposed on them by the system under which they live.












