Confederate Coffee Company: Bold brews for patriotic Southerners. Preserving heritage, supporting community, and fueling tradition—one cup at a time. ☕️
Help recreate the bronze Lee statue that Charlottesville melted down & get a mini Lee statue gift!
https://t.co/jQkzF1L6Mk
@Acg1325@Across_Dixie@MattWalshBlog
Help recreate the bronze Lee statue that Charlottesville melted down & get a mini Lee statue gift!
https://t.co/jQkzF1L6Mk
@MattWalshBlog@MattWalshShow
🙌Here is the clay model for the Robert E. Lee monument we are raising in Virginia. It’s time to rebuild what was lost.
That doesn’t just mean monuments, that means our culture as well.
@MattWalshBlog@MattWalshShow#Neverforget#confederate#bettersouth#southern #confederateflag #sonsofconfederateveterans #scv #civilwarmemory #oursouth #southerner #Dixie
#confederatehistorymonth #confederateheritagemonth
@Across_Dixie@MattWalshBlog@MattWalshShow Help recreate the bronze Lee statue that Charlottesville melted down & get a mini Lee statue gift!
https://t.co/jQkzF1L6Mk
#Onthisday (3/9/1948), Congress approved for American regiments to carry battle streamers from the "Civil War." Senator Tydings of MD suggested this in 1943 so Southerners could fight with the colors of their ancestors. Truman signed it into law. He desegrated the military too!
On January 21, 1863, Southern grit and ingenuity were on full display at Sabine Pass. Confederate forces struck a decisive blow against the Union blockade, recapturing the pass in an engagement often remembered as the Capture of the USS Morning Light. Using improvised but effective “cottonclad” steamers (the Josiah H. Bell and Uncle Ben) Southern sailors drove off two Union warships, the USS Morning Light and the USS Velocity, capturing both vessels along with more than 100 prisoners.
This hard-fought victory is sometimes mislabeled but historians are clear. The First Battle of Sabine Pass took place earlier, on September 24–25, 1862, when Union forces bombarded and briefly occupied the area. The most famous stand came later with the Second Battle of Sabine Pass on September 8, 1863, when a small but determined Confederate garrison at Fort Griffin turned back a massive Union invasion force against overwhelming odds.
It’s a reminder that along the Texas coast (as with a strong cup of coffee) resourcefulness, resolve and Southern spirit made all the difference. #ConfederateHistory #ConfederateCoffeeCompany #SecedeFromBadCoffee #SabinePass