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The casualties from the massacre and the subsequent battle to take the AWB's offices in Richmond were high- at least one hundred in total, as Richmond's primary hospital had that much in capacity and was already filled before all the ambulances completed their work. The Confederate States lost its second Vice President, a famous general from its war for independence, and lost its second President's wife, all on the day of Robert E. Lee's inauguration. The Lee administration, as a result, was marked by a drastic change of security practices in the C.S. capital and regarding the President in particular. Bodyguards wielding AK-47s accompanied the President "everywhere but the bathtub" and Lee observed them to take their duties far more seriously than they had in the days before the Richmond Massacre.
 
The casualties from the massacre and the subsequent battle to take the AWB's offices in Richmond were high- at least one hundred in total, as Richmond's primary hospital had that much in capacity and was already filled before all the ambulances completed their work. The Confederate States lost its second Vice President, a famous general from its war for independence, and lost its second President's wife, all on the day of Robert E. Lee's inauguration. The Lee administration, as a result, was marked by a drastic change of security practices in the C.S. capital and regarding the President in particular. Bodyguards wielding AK-47s accompanied the President "everywhere but the bathtub" and Lee observed them to take their duties far more seriously than they had in the days before the Richmond Massacre.
   
The events of the Richmond Massacre were the beginning of the end for the men of America Will Break; the events that followed as C.S. forces laid siege to [[Rivington]] and captured the town ultimately destroyed the AWB. The Massacre also brought a flood of sympathetic [[telegram]]s and letters to the Confederate White House. One such telegram came from former U.S. President [[Abraham Lincoln (The Guns of the South)|Abraham Lincoln]], who wrote, "May God be with you and your country in your hour of sorrow. You are in my prayers."
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The events of the Richmond Massacre were the beginning of the end for the men of America Will Break; the events that followed as C.S. forces laid siege to [[Rivington]] and captured the town ultimately destroyed the AWB. The Massacre also brought a flood of sympathetic telegrams and letters to the Confederate White House. One such telegram came from former U.S. President [[Abraham Lincoln (The Guns of the South)|Abraham Lincoln]], who wrote, "May God be with you and your country in your hour of sorrow. You are in my prayers."
   
 
The Richmond Massacre boosted political support for Lee and his platform of gradual abolition. Lee showed every member of the Confederate States Congress the captured history books from an alternate 2014, under condition that the existence of these books from a now-nonexistent future be kept secret. Even the fiery pro-slavery [[Texas (The Guns of the South)|Texan]], Senator [[Louis Wigfall (The Guns of the South)|Louis Wigfall]], was stunned by the scorn and disgust which future generations heaped on slavery and its advocates. The Congressmen also vividly remembered the Richmond Massacre, and ultimately voted to pass Lee's [[Legislation Regulating the Labor of Certain Inhabitants of the Confederate States|bill]], beginning the gradual end of slavery in the Confederate States.
 
The Richmond Massacre boosted political support for Lee and his platform of gradual abolition. Lee showed every member of the Confederate States Congress the captured history books from an alternate 2014, under condition that the existence of these books from a now-nonexistent future be kept secret. Even the fiery pro-slavery [[Texas (The Guns of the South)|Texan]], Senator [[Louis Wigfall (The Guns of the South)|Louis Wigfall]], was stunned by the scorn and disgust which future generations heaped on slavery and its advocates. The Congressmen also vividly remembered the Richmond Massacre, and ultimately voted to pass Lee's [[Legislation Regulating the Labor of Certain Inhabitants of the Confederate States|bill]], beginning the gradual end of slavery in the Confederate States.
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