Ulysses S. Grant and Robert Lee are upright, resolute, passionate and skilled people. Li empowerment ideology is different from the Grant nobility belief, so this is their similarity. Bruce Catton wrote two people in the article "Grant and Lee: Comparative Study". Carton is a Pulitzer Prize-winning writer and a civil war historian In this article we conducted a simple role analysis of these two individuals. The fact that Grant accepts his creed as a frontier is worth more than Li's aristocratic belief.
Ulysses S. Grant Abstract: Ulysses S. Grant was born on Point Pleasant, Ohio on 27th April 1822, born of a leather tanning agent Jesse Grant and his wife Hannah Simpson Grant. His birth name was Hiram Ulysses Grant, but when he went to West Point he mistakenly changed it to Ulysses S. Grant. Simpson is the maiden name of his mother and she used some of her relationships to make promises at Westpoint. He forgotten the mistake and allowed him to become a US Grant. For friends, he is called "Sam". He graduated from West Point Military Academy at the age of 39 in 1843. He served as a corps of the Corps during the Mexican War and gained reputation for food and materials in the most harsh terrain. As an action person, he will go to the forefront of the fight and not obey instructions. In the battle between Molino del Rey and Chapultepec, he was criticized for his courage and courage
Ulysses S. Grant was not as famous as Robert E. Lee at the beginning of the Civil War, but proved equally worthy during the war. Grant is a graduate of West Point and he has a good record in the Mexican war. However, when a civil war broke out, Grant was a civilian. He works at a brothers' leather shop in Illinois. He regarded himself a loser "locked in the mud" losing spirit at the age of 40. When he tried to reenter the army in 1861, he had to apply for a job. Finally he became a colonel
After surrendering to the Ulysses S. Grant Union in April 1865, Robert Lee and Grant staff shook hands and stopped as if they looked at the dark features of Colonel Eli S. Parker. Lee stretched the handkerchief and made it a member of the Seneca tribe and said, "I'm very happy to see real Americans coming here." . By bridging the political meaning of Parker's ideal remarks over the long term, we will overcome the crack of the earthquake and realize true multi-ethnic, multi-religious democracy now. The importance of the fact that we exist as a country during the course of the trial is a significant improvement from the perspective of history and fears the ultimate effect in ruthlessness. This fear plagues every difficult controversy we have from immigration to gun control.