What is another word for Jefferson Davis?

Pronunciation: [d͡ʒˈɛfəsən dˈe͡ɪvɪs] (IPA)

Jefferson Davis was an important figure in American history, serving as the President of the Confederate States during the Civil War. There are various synonyms that can be used to refer to him, including confederate leader, rebel president, and secessionist politician. Other terms that are associated with Davis include southern statesman, champion of state rights, and pro-slavery advocate. While some view him as a hero for his role in defending the South, others condemn him for his support of slavery and for promoting a cause that led to so much death and destruction. Ultimately, how one refers to Jefferson Davis depends on one's perspective and beliefs.

Synonyms for Jefferson davis:

What are the hypernyms for Jefferson davis?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with Jefferson davis

  • The platform we had in Dallas, the 1984 Republican platform, all the ideas we supported there - from tax policy, to foreign policy; from individual rights, to neighborhood security - are things that Jefferson Davis and his people believed in.
    Trent Lott
  • Robert E Lee didn't make it the first time and Jefferson Davis took the vacancy. Pershing didn't make it for two years, MacArthur couldn't get in the first year and Eisenhower took an extra year of high school to get in. Patton took three years to get in and five to get out.
    Manley E. Rogers
  • Jefferson Davis is categorical in pronouncing four million Americans, and all their descendants for all future time, to be "the degenerate sons of Ham", fit only to be slaves. This implies that Negroes were descended from the Canaanites. But the Canaanites were not black! Neither were the great majority of the many millions of slaves in the ancient world. We mention these facts as conclusively refuting Davis' thesis, even if there is someone not under legal constraint who is inclined to accept the lunatic notion that anyone today can be justly enslaved because of the episode described in the ninth chapter of Genesis.
    Harry V. Jaffa
  • The paradox of calling the same human beings persons and property brings the cause of the Civil War into the sharpest focus. A person by definition is a being possessed of a rational will. A chattel by equal definition is a piece of movable property without a rational will. Because a horse or a dog lacks a rational will, its owner is responsible for any damage or injury it may cause. But slaves were held as responsible for their own actions, as were their masters, under the criminal codes of the slave states. The slave owners, in seeking to have the slaves counted as five-fifths, were asserting that they were full human beings. At the same time, by claiming the right to their labor as chattels, they were asserting them to be sub-human. How the slaves could be both was something that Jefferson Davis and his friends never explained.
    Harry V. Jaffa
  • On the question of the gentlemanliness of the debate, I'm reminded that in the Congress, just before the Civil War, the Senator from New Hampshire, I think, made an anti-slavery speech, and a Senator from Mississippi, not Jefferson Davis, invited him to come down to Mississippi to make that speech, promising to see that he was hanged from the highest tree in the forest. The Senator from New Hampshire invited the Senator from Mississippi to come to New Hampshire where he would be given a respectful hearing in every township in that State.
    Harry V. Jaffa

Related words: william jefferson davis, j.d., jefferson, jeff, jefferson davis statue, jefferson davis hospital, jefferson davis quotes

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