Part One of a Two-Part Review of
[Publisher’s Note, by Gene Kizer, Jr. – Original post was March 17, 2021. Updated December 5, 2022:
I am honored to present Col. Jerry D. Morelock’s review, below, as Part One of a two-part review of Ty Seidule’s Robert E. Lee and Me. Next week will be Part Two, by me.
Seidule is on the naming commission which came about because of Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, who introduced in 2021 in the Senate Armed Services Committee, a resolution to change the names of the military bases in the South named for Confederates. We won two World Wars from those bases, which are around a century old. They were named for Confederates as part of the reconciliation of our country and most, such as Fort Bragg and Fort Benning, are legendary.
Warren’s legislation has morphed into the changing of over a thousand historically inspired names of streets, monuments, and patches making it an unbelievable waste of taxpayer money at a time when some of our servicemen and women are on foodstamps because they can’t make ends meet.
Now, Seidule and the naming commission have concluded that they need to demolish the 108 year old Confederate Memorial in Arlington National Cemetery, which symbolizes the reconciliation and reunification of North and South after the War Between the States.
The memorial, entitled “New South” and created by internationally renowned Jewish sculptor, Moses Ezekiel, who was a Confederate soldier and is buried at the base of his monument, was the idea of Union soldier and later president William McKinley.
McKinley said that every grave, Union and Confederate, was a testament to American valor.
Congress and two other presidents, William Howard Taft and Woodrow Wilson, as well as veterans North and South supported the Confederate Memorial but what difference does history and tradition make to a Woke political commission out to erase history. Their standard is “presentism,” the application of the goofy standards of today rather than peer-reviewed and debated scholarly history.
Scroll down for a link to an excellent video by Bode Lang entitled “The Civil War Was Not for Slavery,” which tears apart Seidule and the Prager University video he made.
Frankly, I have lost all respect for Prager University. They might present some aspects of American history well, but they are false and unhistorical to promote Seidule as a truthful expert on Southern history.
Lang makes Seidule look foolish by showing one clip after another of Seidule’s cherry-picked “history” then thoroughly refuting each with equal, and in most cases, better, sources.
Lang proves Seidule’s dishonesty, politicization and falsification of history.
Below, is Col. Morelock’s bio followed by his excellent assessment of Seidule’s Robert E. Lee and Me.]
JERRY D. MORELOCK, PhD, Colonel, U.S. Army, ret., is a 1969 West Point graduate who served 36 years in uniform. A decorated Vietnam War combat veteran, his assignments included Pentagon tours on the Department of the Army staff and in the Strategic Plans and Policy Directorate, Joint Chiefs of Staff. His final active duty assignment was head of the history department of the US Army Command & General Staff College. An award-winning author, he has published several books and hundreds of journal and magazine articles. His books include Generals of the Bulge: Leadership in the U.S. Army’s Greatest Battle (Stackpole, 2015) and (as a contributing author) Pershing’s Lieutenants: American Military Leadership in World War I edited by David Zabecki and Douglas Mastriano (Osprey, 2020).
After Army retirement, he was Executive Director of the Winston Churchill Memorial & Library at Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri (2000-2004) and is adjunct faculty professor of history and political science at Westminster. He was Editor in Chief of Armchair General magazine (2004-2015), and currently is Senior Editor/Senior Historian for three military history magazines.
by Jerry D. Morelock
Lest any potential buyer/reader of this book be swayed by the seemingly “impressive military credentials” of the author, please let me explain what those credentials really comprise and represent when the author acquired them by being a former ‘permanent professor’ and ‘department head’ in the academic department of the US Military Academy at West Point.
First of all, Ty Seidule did not earn his rank of ‘Brigadier General’ by being competitively selected by a Department of the Army promotion selection board from among his peers, but, per standard procedure for retiring USMA academic department heads, was merely given that general officer1 rank upon his retirement from military service (that is, as he exited military service, he was ‘awarded’ that rank — essentially like a long-serving corporate executive would get a ‘gold watch’ as he walked out the door).
Seidule never served on active duty as a ‘general officer’ commanding a tactical unit (apparently, based on his bio, he commanded a tank platoon – a Lieutenant’s command – and his highest unit command appears to be an armored battalion – a Lieutenant Colonel’s command); so some of the reviews on this book asking, “Was he a warrior general or was he not?” sadly miss the point because they are simply unaware of where Seidule’s ‘general’ rank came from, and not their fault — Seidule was never a general until he retired.
Second, Seidule’s author bio emphasizes that he served on active duty for “36 years” (coincidentally, the same as I did) but also notes that he spent “two decades” teaching history at West Point – so, immediately, that means Seidule had, at most, 16 years of ‘real’ military service in the ‘real’ Army — serving on the staff & faculty at West Point is hardly ‘real’ military service, as it is a completely artificial environment in every possible way (how do I know? my own 36 years of service included eight years at USMA, four as a cadet, graduating in 1969, and four more years later serving on the USMA staff & faculty).
Being a ‘permanent professor/department head’ at West Point means serving in the artificial, hermetically-sealed environment that exists at the Military Academy, completely separate and distinct from the day-to-day, rough and tumble ‘real’ Army.
The bottom line is that the title ‘Brig. Gen.’ given to a former USMA permanent professor/department head does NOT carry the same weight and prestige as an Army officer EARNING that rank on his own military merits — it was merely given to Seidule for ‘staying the course’ for 20 years as a West Point professor.
And his claimed ’36 years’ of military service is really only, at best, 16 years in the REAL ARMY when his 20 years in an academic department at USMA is factored into his overall service.
I only present this information to alert readers that there is a profound difference between ‘real’ US Army brigadier generals and those who, like Seidule, are simply awarded that rank upon retirement; plus when his claimed 36 years of military service has the 20 years serving at West Point removed, Seidule’s actual military service is about the same as that of an Army Major.
His book on Lee is nothing more than his revisionist ‘sucking up’ to his new civilian academic buddies, ingratiating himself into the camaraderie of his new ‘Woke’ buds and has nothing of any historical revelation to share in this so-called ‘book.’
It’s not a researched, thoughtful book based on new information or new evaluation of previous information. In fact, it ignores Lee’s significant post-Civil War efforts to bring the divided nation back together – which was Lee’s “finest hour” as, for only one example, historian Charles Bracelen Flood revealed in his book Lee: The Final Years.
Seidule’s book seems merely to be his own ‘Hey! I’m so, so WOKE now!’ confessional, but disingenuously using his ‘BG’ rank, his misleading ’36 years’ service, and touting his ‘so what?’ West Point service to try to trick potential readers/buyers into spending actual money on his worthless book based on his misleading ‘military credentials.’
Don’t waste your money.
Here is the caption beneath Abbeville’s video:
The Naming Commission has recommended the removal of the Arlington Confederate Monument. This would not only be a historical travesty and a barbaric leveling of art, it would lay waste to the very message the monument was intended to convey: fraternity, healing, and reconciliation. Tell your Representative you want to stop this heinous act of cultural destruction.
Next Week:
Part Two of a Two-Part Review of
Robert E. Lee and Me, A Southerner’s Reckoning with the Myth of the Lost Cause by Ty Seidule, Professor Emeritus of History at West Point
by Gene Kizer, Jr.
NOTES:
1 The term “general officer” means an officer of the Army, Air Force, or Marine Corps serving in or having the grade of general, lieutenant general, major general, or brigadier general. https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/10/101#b_4, Accessed 3-17-21.
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View Comments
Part 1 of this review is largely composed of personal attacks on the author. Hopefully, Part 2 consists of a critical review of the book using appropriate sources to back up Col. Morelock's claims. If not, the review carries no scholarly credibility.
Matt,
Thanks for writing! Hope you enjoyed Part Two.
Gene
So good to read military man with some backbone. I am thoroughly disgusted with the West Point and VMI who, just like the civilians, remove Jackson's monument, while they continue feminizing army and all in quiet obedience, one step at a time. How can men remain fighters under such boneless scam artists?
David,
I agree completely! Col. Morelock nailed it. It's too bad our military schools are under the influence of the same destructive political correctness as the rest of academia. This cowardly PC idiocy is not going to stop until we confront it, discredit it, and put it in its grave once and for all.
Gene
Love getting your emails and historical facts, I've even got my family reading your writings, keep up the good work Gene.
Thank you, Dwayne! Really appreciate it, and WILL DO! Gene