"Q" is For "Quantrill"
When researching my subject for the letter “Q,” I was in a bit of a quandary (itself a ‘q’ word). There’s not a whole bunch of people who fit the bill. I could have chosen the late Libyan president, Muammar al-Qaddafi, I suppose, but most spellings of his name use a “G.”
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| Although it would have been great fun mocking his predilection of wearing drapes |
I didn’t want to confuse everyone or have people think I was cheating just because the Encyclopedia Brittanica used “Q.”
NOTE: The British are notorious for their wacky way
of spelling things. I mean, who actually
writes cheques?
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| "I suppose you colonials spell it with a...sniff...'k'?" |
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| "Well...yeah." |
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| "Right. Off you go." |
“Quisling” might have worked. But I wrote about him only last year. I didn’t want to inflict a rerun on you so soon. Heck, someone actually may have read that post and actually may have remembered it. Doubtful though that may be.
But, I finally found
someone who fit the “Q” requirement: “William
Quantrill.” Although, I would be
hard-pressed to find anything funny about him because his exploits are hardly
the stuff of chortles, chuckles, or guffaws.
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| Much less titters |
Hey, I'll go for the cheap laugh when I can get it.
William Quantrill
was a notorious Southern guerrilla fighter before and during the American Civil
War.
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| With a face that only a mother could love |
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| Not you, though. |
NOTE: For my non-American followers (I’m talking to you, Birgit), the Civil War may not be well-known. Suffice to say, this tragedy which drew its origins to whether states rights trumps (no pun intended) the federal government or not. Since one of those included the right to own human beings, I would say the South certainly didn't hold the moral high ground.
William Quantrill
was born on July 31, 1832 in Canal Dover, Ohio.
At least in his early years, he was against slavery. However, he soon lost his mind and believed slavery was perfectly fine. In fact, he
thought hanging abolitionist John Brown for leading a raid against the Federal
weapons depot at Harpers Ferry, Virginia, was “too good for him.”
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| "He said what!?" |
He became quite radicalized and formed a group of likeminded brutes which he called “Quantrill’s Raiders.” This group of murderous thugs specialized in savage tactics and included the likes of Jesse James and his older brother, Frank.
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| Yeah, that Jesse James |
They terrorized regions of Missouri and Kansas by dropping houses on people.
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| No. Wait. Wrong story. |
Well, anyway, it was bad.
In 1862, Quantrill
was designated a captain in the Confederate Army.
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| After receiving a Rebel Decoder Ring in the mail |
The most notorious chapter in the brutal history of “Quantrill’s Raiders” occurred on August 21, 1863 when 150 men and boys were murdered during the “Lawrence Massacre.”
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| No joke here. Massacre. Move along. |
The Civil War began to peter out in 1865 when Robert E. Lee surrendered the Army of Northern Virginia to Ulysses Grant on April 9th and Joseph E. Johnston surrendered much of the rest of rebel forces to William Sherman on April 26th.
However, Quantrill
refused to give up and wasn’t vanquished until he was ambushed by Union forces in
Wakefield, Kentucky, on May 10th. Attempting
to flee on a skittish horse, he was shot in the back and paralyzed from the
chest down.
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| "The captain wants you. I told him it wasn't a good idea." |
William Quantrill died of his wounds on June 6th.
At
first buried in an unmarked grave, his remains were disinterred; his final
burial spot was in 1992 at the Old Confederate Veteran’s Home Cemetery in Higginsville, Missouri.
Given the terror he inflicted on so many
people, I’m sure John Brown would have concluded that it was “too good for him.”
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| "You got that right." |















Ah, the Confederacy. Defeated, but perhaps trying to rise again as MAGA, despite being the self-declared enemy of the A for "America," yup, here we are. Be nice if people could believe in equality. Then again, my great-grandfather was the first of my ancestors to be legally declared a human. Equality is a stretch when first acknowledgement of the species has be declared. 🤦
ReplyDeleteSorry about the A to Z "N" post. It has been repaired. 🫰🏾
"Starting strong is good. Finishing strong is epic." — Robin Sharma
J (he/him 👨🏽 or 🧑🏽 they/them) @JLenniDorner ~ Speculative Fiction & Reference Author and Co-host of the April Blogging #AtoZChallenge international blog hop
Thanks for taking care of the commenting bug!
DeleteUgh good riddance! It used to be hard for me to believe that there are people who think the wrong side won, but then 2016 happened…
ReplyDeleteI've often thought on which side I would have been during the Civil War. I believe strongly in states rights and the Civil War began the bloat of the federal government. But, slavery? THAT would have been the deal-breaker. States don't have THAT right. Put me in Union Blue.
DeleteMy husband and I both like Civil War history and he reads a lot of that genre. I'll have to see if he's familiar with Quantrill. A side note-I post questions every Sunday for a Wednesday link up. You're welcome to join anytime or just copy and answer on your own blog without linking. It's a very random selection which is what makes it fun.
ReplyDeleteI plan on doing so! I love things like that.
DeleteWhile I had heard of Quantrill (I recall "Quantrill's Raiders" being mentioned in a John Wayne movie...lol), I didn't know as much as I would have liked.
Not a good guy.
DeleteThat Quantrill photo is familiar. I think most people make that face when they don't like the photographer or their mom for making them take a photo. I think I prefer not to read about him though. Perhaps we shouldn't talk about people who did terrible things and focus on the ones that did good things.
ReplyDeleteHave a lovely day.
You have a good point. Quantrill seems, so far, to have elicited a fair amount of (deserved) scorn (more than the others). So, in the future I shall (there are some stinkers to come, though, especially with "V" and "X," but those posts have already been written). This coming from someone who's written about Elagabalus, Kublai Khan, and THIS guy. In the future, I believe I'll do exactly as you said.
DeleteI would not have wanted to live during those Civil War years...at least not without a cell phone. You have to wonder how the war had turned out if they did have cell service back then.
ReplyDeleteLol
DeleteTitters 🤣🤣🤣 That made me laugh out loud.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad I wasn't born back then even if things are bad now, not as bad as then in most ways.
“Titters.” Always good for a titter. Or two.
DeleteHe has my birthday! Well, different year. I'm not quite that old.
ReplyDeleteIf you are, you hide it well.
Delete"No. Wait. Wrong story." hahaha Love that!
ReplyDeleteQuantril—seems like a jerk. His end seems fitting.
I enjoyed the post!
He was a murderous jerk.
DeleteA fascinating juxtapose of Quantrill and Brown. I wonder whose men would have won a battle between them?
ReplyDeleteI thought the same thing when I was reading about him.
Deletei understood the john brown reference... i think.
ReplyDeleteThis is Birgit…finally! I know some stuff bout the civil war..Harper’s Ferry, The Battle of Gettysburg and so many, many more. I have heard about him especially reading bout Jesse James and his brother, Frank. I love the Ken Burns civil War epic from PBS and I was stunned by the photography of Matthew Brady and did visit Gettysburg when I was just 17, …you know what I mean? Nyuck nyuck. Good for you for being on the Union Side. Funny, how many films portrayed the South in a Sympathetic light in the 1930s into the 1940s.
ReplyDelete