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The Most Famous Thing Robert E. Lee Never Said: Duty, Forgery, and Cultural Amnesia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 September 2014

Abstract

This essay explains the surprising set of circumstances surrounding perhaps the best-known quotation commonly attributed to Robert E. Lee (“Duty is the sublimest word in the English language”) and explains several significant things about the famous quotation and its broader significance: (1) Lee never said any such thing. (2) The famous line appears in a forged letter. (3) It is quite likely that a Union soldier forged the letter when the US Army occupied Lee's Arlington, Virginia estate during the American Civil War. (4) The phony quotation also shows up in an amazing range of sources, from academic books and scholarly journals, to Forbes magazine, to legal briefs and judicial decisions, to speeches by major political figures. (5) Although at one point early in the twentieth century it was fairly widely known that the letter was a forgery, the bogus quotation persists in widespread usage as something like a southern (and, perhaps surprisingly, a national) equivalent of George Washington's apocryphal “I cannot tell a lie.” (6) The long, strange career of this bogus quotation has larger implications for professional and general conversations about Lee, the Civil War, and American cultural memory.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press and British Association for American Studies 2014 

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References

1 “FORGED LETTER WITH LEE'S NAME; Expert Investigation Shows the Document Sold in London Was Not Written by Confederate General,” New York Times, 11 Nov. 1917, p. 84.

2 Southall Freeman, Douglas, R. E. Lee: A Biography, Volume I (New York and London: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1934), 316Google Scholar n. 47.

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26 Ibid., 60.