"Nelson Winbush rotates a miniature flag holder he keeps on his mantel, imagining how the banners would appear in a Civil War battle.
The Stars and Bars, he explains, looked too much like the Union flag to prevent friendly fire. The Confederacy responded by fashioning the distinctive Southern Cross -- better known as the rebel flag.
Winbush, 78, is a retired assistant principal with a master's degree, a thoughtful man whose world view developed from listening to his grandfather's stories about serving the South in the "War Between the States."
His grandfather's casket was draped with a Confederate flag. His mother pounded out her Confederate heritage on a typewriter. He wears a rebel flag pinned to the collar of his polo shirt.
Winbush is also black.
"You've never seen nothing like me, have you?..."
http://www.sptimes.com/2007/10/07/St..._his_Con.shtml
~~~
The article was recently featured on Kevin Levin's "Civil War Memory"...
...apparently he didn't bother to read it very closely-
Levin:
"...There is a fascinating story in all of this; unfortunately, Winbush doesn't have a sophisticated enough background to understand it..."
Winbush is a retired teacher & assistant principal with a master's degree.
"...The story of his grandfather is a story shaped by white Americans, which evolved as a means to satisfy both political and racial agendas...."
The story was passed down from generation to generation within his own family.