Steve Simms
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My 4th Greatest American -- Thaddeous Stevens
||March 14, 2008|394 reads
 

To add a comment to "My 4th Greatest American -- Thaddeous Stevens"
MaKelly
March 14, 2008
SO STEVE YOU KNOW YOUR HISTORY
Steve Simms
March 14, 2008
I really enjoy history, MaKelly.  I think we are supposed to look at the wrongs of the past and make them better in our day.
Ed
March 14, 2008
I agree, Steve, we are doing better, but some of us have not learned from the past.  In another blog I commented on this morning, I mentioned that the church should should play a more prominent role in presenting man's equally.  But, alas, it took 140 years after the Civil War for Southern Baptists to officially apologize for their part in slavery and segregation.  Can we do better?  You bet.  For some, it will take a closer walk with Christ.
Steve Simms
March 14, 2008
Ed:  For there to be unity in the church some of us Christians will have to leave our home church and go be a minority in a church of another skin complexion.
preachergirl
March 14, 2008
Steve! What??? Are you an undercover history professor or something????:-)
Good Stuff! Keep em coming!

Have a terrific week-end Preachergirl
 
Steve Simms
March 14, 2008
preachergirl:  I just enjoy reading about courageous people who stood up to injustice in this world and made a real difference.
preachergirl
March 14, 2008

Oh yeah and I worglee that I can keep all of this imfo:-)
                   
                         Peace- preachergirl

Steve Simms
March 14, 2008

That's great preachergirl.  Let's also worglee that we will courageously stand up for righteousness and make a tremendous difference for God.

Jerry Webb
March 14, 2008
Great stuff Steve and I love history also.
Steve Simms
March 14, 2008
Thanks for reading my post, Jerry.  Glad you enjoyed it.
preachergirl
March 14, 2008

A-men
Bro . Steve
"If we Don't Stand for something, We will fall for nothing...

Preachergirl

Gene Boecker
March 14, 2008
Steve,  I read what you noted about his headstone and went looking for some information about where that might be.  I found this to be quite interesting:

Thaddeus Stevens died at midnight on August 11, 1868, in Washington, D.C. The public expression of grief in Washington was second only to that following the death of Abraham Lincoln in 1865. Stevens' coffin lay in state inside the Capitol Rotunda, flanked by a Black Union Honor Guard from Massachusetts.  Twenty thousand people, one-half of whom were free black men, attended his funeral in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. He chose to be buried in the Shreiner-Concord Cemetery because it was the only cemetery that would accept people without regard to race.

Steve Simms
March 15, 2008
That's great information, Gene.  Isn't it amazing that such a great man, whose funeral was second only to Lincoln's, has been all but forgotten in our day?