Peace
Generations of my family's life has been disrupted by politicians making war. Is it right for politicians to force people to fight in the military? Why does the world system still allow slave soldiers?
Frank Smola a great, great relative mine left Europe to avoid fighting in the Austro Hungarian Wars only to end up in the US Civil War - where people were forced to be soldiers. Harry Schlosberg was imprisoned in Siberia in part to avoid war in Russia. Ronald was forced to leave his homeland to avoid being forced to kill in Vietnam.
(Honza and Frances Smola's four sons immigrated to the United States from Bohemia to avoid serving in the Austrian army about 1854. The four boys settled in the midwest, Iowa and Illinois. Their descendants most of whom do not carry the Smola surname are the subjects of this book.)
Civil War
Although both North and South resorted to conscription during the Civil War, in
neither nation did the system work effectively. The Confederate congress on Apr.
16, 1862, passed an act requiring military service for three years from all
males aged eighteen to thirty-five not legally exempt, and it later extended the
obligation. The U.S. Congress followed on July 17, 1862, with an act authorizing
a militia draft within a state when it could not meet its quota with volunteers.
This state-administered system failed in practice and on Mar. 3, 1863, Congress
passed the first genuine national conscription law, setting up under the Union
army an elaborate machinery for enrolling and drafting men between twenty and
forty-five years of age.
Quotas were assigned in each state, the deficiencies in volunteers to be met by
conscription. But men drafted could provide substitutes or, until mid-1864,
avoid service by paying commutation money. Many eligibles pooled their money to
cover the cost of anyone drafted. Families used the substitute provision to
select which man should go into the army and which should stay home. There was
much evasion and overt resistance to the draft, especially in Catholic
areas. The great draft riot in New York City in July 1863 involved Irish
immigrants who had been signed up as citizens to swell the machine vote, not
realizing it made them liable for the draft. Of the 168,649 men procured for the
Union through the draft, 117,986 were substitutes, leaving only 50,663 who had
their personal services conscripted.
The problem of Confederate desertion was aggravated by the inequitable
inclinations of conscription officers and local judges. The three conscription
acts of the Confederacy exempted certain categories, most notably the planter
class, and enrolling officers and local judges often practiced favoritism,
sometimes accepting bribes. Attempts to effectively deal with the issue were
frustrated by conflict between state and local governments on the one hand and
the national government of the Confederacy.