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->''"You know, years ago John Calhoun said that West Point men would lead great armies. He never thought they'd be leading them against each other."''
--> -- '''Orry Main''', ''Series/NorthAndSouthUS''
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The [[UsefulNotes/TheAmericanCivilWar Civil War]] has been subject to a great deal of historical whitewashing, due to the popularizing of the pseudohistorical "Lost Cause of the Confederacy" mythology. The South is commonly romanticized as a land of {{Southern Belle}}s, wise old colonels, {{Good Old Boy}}s, and SouthernGentlemen. So whether it be by actual Southerners, Hollywood filmmakers who don't want to alienate a market, or writers running off PopularHistory, the Confederacy, and the army in particular, gets portrayed in an unexpectedly positive light considering that they're the bad guys in American history class.

The Noble Confederate Soldier won't care about slavery, and if he owns slaves he treats them well. They fight out of duty to their state, [[MyCountryRightOrWrong right or wrong]], and are noble, honest, and loyal. The officers will be [[SouthernGentleman Southern Gentlemen]] of the highest degree. The Confederacy might be presented as a tragic underdog. At the least, they will be a WorthyOpponent. Portrayals of ex-Confederate soldiers will show them as proud of their service, and will sympathize with their bitterness over losing the war.

There is of course historical basis for the trope of the sympathetic Confederate soldier. General [[UsefulNotes/RobertELee Robert E. Lee]] was famous for siding with his state of UsefulNotes/{{Virginia}} despite wanting the Union to remain whole and being offered command of the Union army, and frequently gets cast in the role of ReluctantWarrior and WorthyOpponent in fiction. However, in reality, Lee owned slaves, and during his campaigns, he allowed slaver raids by his forces to take Free Blacks and drag them south in chains ([[https://www.encyclopediavirginia.org/Lee_Robert_E_and_Slavery Feel free to read the Encyclopieda Virginia webpage about Lee]]). An examination of the surviving letters and diaries of Confederate soldiers reveals that many of them were indeed fighting for home and country, though they did believe that emancipation would lead to servile insurrection (a race war).

Though real examples obviously existed, this trope is generally employed to avoid having to confront the uncomfortable nature of the South in the Civil War era, instead glorifying the Confederate military and glossing over the unpleasant parts.

See also SouthernGentleman, MyCountryRightOrWrong, and WorthyOpponent.

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!!Examples:
[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder: Comic Books ]]
* The titular cowboy of ''ComicBook/JonahHex'' is a former Confederate soldier-turned Western gunslinger, and [[StillWearingTheOldColors still wears his grey uniform]]. Though he's an AntiHero, he has a strong code of honor and is a definite good guy.
* ''ComicBook/KidColt2009'': Sherman Wilks was a Confederate officer who believed in the Southern cause. He's spent the years since the war as a bounty hunter, compensating the families of the men who died under his command, and he absolutely will not [[IGaveMyWord break his word]] or compromise his personal [[HonorBeforeReason code of honor]]. [[spoiler:In the end, the conflict between the two things gets him killed in a duel with Colt]].
* Used to excellent effect in the graphic novel ''The Skin of the Hadrosaurs'', whose protagonist is a Confederate officer fleeing from a group of Union troops whose commanding officer is hellbent on killing him. He meets a paleontologist who is entirely neutral in the conflict and who joins up with him, and the two end up stumbling across a lost land of dinosaurs. The Union soldiers follow them however, and [[spoiler:their officer kills the paleontologist, prompting the enraged Confederate to fight him to the death to avenge the murdered scientist]].
* The Belgian comic series ''ComicBook/LesTuniquesBleues'' is a mostly comedic approach of the Civil War, yet runs on GreyAndGrayMorality, insisting as much as a family friendly story possibly can on the fact that WarIsHell for both camps. There '''are''' nasty greycoats villains but the army as a whole is not portrayed better nor worse than the bluecoats, with many cases of WorthyOpponent or even EnemyMine.

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Film ]]
* ''Film/ColdMountain'': Played with. Most of the prominent Confederate soldiers in the movie are highly sympathetic but are also deserters who hate the Confederacy (although self-preservation is a major part of that). However, a flashback shows most of those same people voluntarily enlisting to fight for the Confederacy (although some were peer-pressured into it) while brushing over the fact that they're fighting to preserve slavery. When Acton Swanger boasts about fighting for the South, his father tells him that the South is just a direction, which Action, his brother, and their friends ignore. The Home Guard, on the other hand, is portrayed entirely negatively, working to keep the worst aspects of the Confederacy alive without taking any risks in battle and hunting and killing soldiers who do abandon the war.
* ''Film/TheGreatLocomotiveChase'' : While the ruthlessness of the Confederate leadership is referencd, every Confederate soldier or civilian aiding the war effort to appear onscreen is portrayed as an extremely brave NiceGuy who conveniently never talks about the ugly truths of what really motivated the Confederacy.
* ''Film/JohnCarter'' gives the title character a sympathetic backstory where he served as a [[HorsebackHeroism cavalry]] [[TheGoodCaptain captain]] and became disillusioned with fighting for a cause after he [[spoiler:returned home to find [[DoomedHometown his farm burned and his wife and child murdered]]]]. Carter's character arc in the film is overcoming his reluctance to [[ConceptsAreCheap fight for a cause]] after losing faith, which, by implication, glorifies his cause as a Confederate.
* Sergeant Pencroft in the [[Film/MysteriousIsland movie adaptation]] of [[Creator/JulesVerne Jules Verne's]] ''Literature/TheMysteriousIsland''. He is initially a hostile character who tries to stop the Union P.O.W.s led by Captain Harding from escaping, but gets taken prisoner following their successful getaway. As the movie progresses, though, he [[FireForgedFriends becomes friends with Herbert]] and even helps rescue black soldier Neb from a GiantEnemyCrab, suggesting he doesn't care about slavery or race, and never once tries to betray or sabotage the group. It gets to the point that, his accent aside, a viewer could be forgiven for forgetting he was even an enemy soldier to begin with.
* ''Film/RioLobo'': The Confederate soldiers are portrayed as brave, audacious, fine with taking orders from a half-Mexican officer, and willing to make peace with their former enemies after the war.
* The protagonist of ''Film/TheOutlawJoseyWales'' is a Confederate Rebel who is hunted down by a brutal group of Northern soldiers who slaughtered his unit. Eventually, Josie adopts a peculiar FamilyOfChoice and tries to build a new life. Notably, it was written by ardent segregationist and Klansman Asa "Forrest" Carter, although Eastwood and the film crew were ignorant of his racist beliefs.
* ''Film/GoneWithTheWind'' is one of the most famous examples with Ashley and Rhett Bultler both being officers in the Confederate army. The cause of the Confederacy is to maintain an idealized vision of the slaveholding South that the destruction of is considered to be a great loss.
* ''Film/WildWildWest'': Downplayed. While General [=McGrath=] wants to bring back the Confederacy and everything that entails and took part in the New Liberty massacre of runaway slaves, he is still [[EvenEvilHasStandards appalled]] that Doctor Loveless would so callously sacrifice his men to demonstrate the deadliness of his new tank prototype. [[spoiler:Loveless shoots him and dumps his body in a river when he objects.]]
* ''Film/{{Gettysburg}}'' makes it clear that the cause of the war is slavery, but it plays up the bravery of the Confederate soldiers and their mixed feelings about fighting old West Point classmates. In the film, it's the Confederate ''politicians'' who care so much about slavery; the Confederate soldiers who discuss "the Cause" use the idea of "our rights" (or [[FunetikAksent rahts]]) while not elaborating on what rights they want to preserve.[[note]]The nebulous phrasing of "states' rights" became more prominent ''after'' the war, when the Lost Cause realized that maintaining their original position of "we want to keep treating humans as livestock" made them look like dicks.[[/note]] To get away with this illusion, the film does ''not'' include the aforementioned fact that Lee's army abducted and enslaved every Black person they could find on their invasion of Pennsylvania.
* ''Film/TheKillingBox'':
** Many minor or secondary Confederate characters are sleazy or thuggish, but the government's main representative, Colonel Strayn is a brave and affable man who (eventually) admits that slavery is wrong but still believes that the Confederacy is a glorious government that should be preserved. However, the epilogue notes that Strayn's new anti-slavery beliefs were very rare and unpopular amongst the Confederacy's officer corps.
** Corporal Dawson and his men are looters, but they happily surrender to and then fight alongside the Union soldiers to get away from the zombies and never show any prejudice toward Rebecca.
* ''Film/{{Shenandoah}}'': Downplayed. Many of the individual Confederate soldiers (especially Boy's friend Carter and Jennie's fiancé Sam) are highly sympathetic characters who just want to survive the war (the only explicitly racist character is Gabriel's owner, a civilian) and some of them are conscripts who don't have a choice about fighting. The only completely villainous Confederate soldiers in the movie are deserters. However, Charlie emphasizes to his sons in an early scene that fighting for the Confederacy boils down to fighting to preserve slavery, and none of the Confederates try to claim that they're fighting for states' rights.
* ''Film/FortApache'' and ''Film/GeronimoAnAmericanLegend'' both feature noble ''former'' Confederate soldiers who are always brave in combat and respectful of Native Americans while remaining extremely proud of their former Confederate service and never bringing up the ugly truths of slavery.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Literature ]]

* Robert E. Lee, of course, gets this treatment in Creator/HarryTurtledove's ''Literature/TheGunsOfTheSouth'' where he's a ReasonableAuthorityFigure [[AlternateHistory as CSA President]] and works to free the slaves soon after the war ends.
** Subverted in Turtledove's later Literature/Timeline191 series where the Confederacy survives only to become identical to the ''Nazis'' and It goes FromBadToWorse once they get nuclear weapons.
* ''Literature/JohnCarterOfMars'': John Carter is a former Confederate officer from Virginia, created in the 1910s when this trope was popular (see UsefulNotes/TheAmericanCivilWar page for background).
* The majority of heroes in William Johnstone's western novels are former Confederate soldiers who believe in racial equality but have no guilt about fighting for the South. To a man, they believe that the war was about states' rights instead of slavery and rarely hesitate to say so in an unsubtle and factually dubious AuthorFilibuster monologue.
* ''Literature/TheKillerAngels'' portrays the Union protagonists (particularly Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain and his Maine soldiers) as being genuinely abolitionist. The Confederate soldiers severely downplay the fact that they are fighting for slavery--the main characters on that side (Longstreet, Lee, and Armistead) ''don't'' like talking about "the Cause" while their comrades use the nebulous idea of "state's rights" whenever they're trying to defend it.[[note]]This was more of a postwar thing when the concept of slavery became more abhorrent in popular opinion.[[/note]] Although Longstreet does privately acknowledge that "the Cause" ''is'' slavery, the book keeps the Southern characters sympathetic by downplaying their own allegiance to it and cuts out the fact that Lee's army abducted and enslaved any Black person they found in Pennsylvania.
* Military science fiction ''Literature/{{Victoria}}'' offers a futuristic setting for these, since one of the Successor States is the very Southern-flavored and self-consciously Neo-Confederate [[ShapedLikeItself New Confederacy]]. Several examples are encountered; one that might be mentioned is Colonel Bill [=McMoster=], commanding the 3rd Texas Rangers, who becomes one of the protagonist's key allies as they take one the [[DirtyCommies Commune]]. As for the status of black people in the New Confederacy and the rest of the Successor States... Well, suffice to say that "[[DamnedByFaintPraise they get a better deal than they did in]] ''Literature/TheTurnerDiaries''" is about the most positive spin that can be put on it.
* ''Literature/GodsAndGenerals'' and the miniseries made out of it have long been stated to be Southern apologia with Stonewall Jackson treated with an almost messianic light.

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Live Action Television ]]

* The backstory of ''Series/{{Firefly}}'' is basically the Civil War InSpace!, with the Alliance as the Union and the Independents as the Confederacy (if the Civil War had really been about States' Rights, and not slavery). Malcom Reynolds (TheCaptain of the ship and ex-Sergeant of Zoe) and [[TheLancer Zoe]] both fought for the Independents and still believe they were on the right side. As the show is a SpaceWestern, they correspond to examples of ex-Confederates in [[TheWildWest Wild West]] stories, with any unpleasant aspects of the Confederacy conveniently left out of the parallel (with Afro-Cuban-American actor Creator/GinaTorres playing Zoe, for example). In terms of their cultures, however, it's the Alliance that has more in common with the antebellum South, and from what little we see, whatever problems the Independents had the Alliance are much worse.
* Subverted in ''Series/HellOnWheels''. In the first episode, the starting protagonist Bohannon while trying to obtain a job states that he not only fought in the Civil War, but owned slaves as well. He claimed he set them free, though, before the war. [[spoiler: He did not]]. Later Confederates depicted are both racist as well as brutal. The show has a general BlackAndGreyMorality.
* Discussed in ''Series/HowIMetYourMother''. Long story short, Marshall and Robin lie to Lily that her and Marshall's new apartment has the ghost of a Confederate general living in it to try to cover up the fact the floor is crooked. Lily is not pleased to hear this, pointing out being a Confederate ghost means he fought against the United States and is probably racist. Marshall then claims the ghost loves people of all races and was simply fighting for states' rights.
* ''Series/TheOuterLimits1995'' episode "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S6E17Gettysburg Gettysburg]]" is a deconstruction of this trope. The time traveler Nicholas Prentice sends two 20th-century men who are Civil War reenactors back to the actual Battle of Gettysburg to teach the one playing the Confederate some sort of lesson since he greatly [[StillFightingTheCivilWar admires the Confederacy]], hoping it will stop him from assassinating a future black US President for publicly burying the Confederate battle flag at the site in a symbolic denunciation. They discover that WarIsHell, most of the soldiers they're fighting alongside are demoralized conscripts, and they're led by an insane colonel who doesn't know he's dying from meningitis. The Neo-Confederate's ancestor ends up getting killed by the insane colonel after trying to prevent the disastrous Pickett's charge).
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Music ]]

* Music/JohnnyHorton's song "Johnny Reb" sings about the tenacity of the titular Confederate soldier.
* Music/SteveEarle gives voice to one of these in his song "[=Ben McCulloch=]". The man, a poor farmer, enlists in the Texas Infantry for the pay, food, and "a rifle we could keep". But [=McCulloch=]'s missteps lead to him seeing his brother killed in action, the infantry constantly retreating, and finally, he deserts the night before The Battle of Pea Ridge, where [=McCulloch=] dies.
-->''I killed a boy the other night who'd never even shaved\\
I don't even know what I'm fighting for, I ain't ever owned a slave.\\
So I snuck outta camp, and then I heard the news next night\\
The Yankees won the battle, and [=McCulloch=] lost his life.''

[[/folder]]
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