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African Americans in the Revolutionary War

In the American Revolution, gaining freedom was the strongest motive for Black enslaved people who joined the Patriot or British armies. It is estimated that 20,000 African Americans joined the British cause, which promised freedom to enslaved people, as Black Loyalists. Around 9,000 African Americans became Black Patriots.[1]

Continental soldiers at Yorktown; on the left, an African-American soldier of the 1st Rhode Island Regiment.

As between 220,000 and 250,000 soldiers and militia served the American cause during the revolution in total, that would mean Black soldiers made up approximately four percent of the Patriots' numbers. Of the 9,000 Black soldiers, 5,000 were combat-dedicated troops.[2] Notably, the average length of time in service for an African American soldier during the war was four and a half years (due to many serving for the whole eight-year duration), which was eight times longer than the average period for white soldiers. Meaning that while they were only four percent of the manpower base, they comprised around a quarter of the Patriots' strength in terms of man-hours, though this includes supportive roles.[3]

In contrast, about 20,000 people escaped slavery, joined, and fought for the British army.[4] Much of this number was seen after Dunmore's Proclamation, and subsequently the Philipsburg Proclamation issued by Sir Henry Clinton.[5] Though between only 800–2,000 people who were enslaved reached Dunmore himself, the publication of both proclamations provided incentive for nearly 100,000 enslaved people across the American Colonies to escape, lured by the promise of freedom.[6]

Crispus Attucks was shot dead by British soldiers in the Boston Massacre in 1770 after he shouted, "Kill them! Kill them! Knock them over!" while the soldiers were being battered with shells, ice, and coal by a mob armed with clubs.[7] He is considered an iconic martyr of Patriots.[8]

African American Patriots edit

 
Engraving of Crispus Attucks being shot during the Boston Massacre. (John Bufford after William L. Champey, c. 1856)[9]

Prior to the revolution, many free African Americans supported the anti-British cause, most famously Crispus Attucks, believed to be the first person killed at the Boston Massacre. At the time of the American Revolution, some Black men had already enlisted as minutemen. Both free and enslaved Africans had served in private militias, especially in the North, defending their villages against attacks by Native Americans. In March 1775, the Continental Congress assigned units of the Massachusetts militia as Minutemen. They were under orders to become activated if the British troops in Boston took the offensive. Peter Salem, who had been freed by his owner to join the Framingham militia, was one of the Black men in the military. He served for nearly five years.[10] In the Revolutionary War, slave owners often let the people they enslaved to enlist in the war with promises of freedom, but many were put back into slavery after the conclusion of the war.[11]

In April 1775, at Lexington and Concord, Black men responded to the call and fought with Patriot forces. Prince Estabrook was wounded some time during the fighting on 19 April, probably at Lexington.[12] The Battle of Bunker Hill also had African-American soldiers fighting along with white Patriots, such as Peter Salem;[13] Salem Poor, Barzillai Lew, Blaney Grusha,[citation needed] Titus Coburn, Alexander Ames, Cato Howe, and Seymour Burr. Many African Americans, both enslaved and free, wanted to join with the Patriots. They believed that they would achieve freedom or expand their civil rights.[14] In addition to the role of soldier, Black men also served as guides, messengers, and spies.

On April 26, 1777, during Tyron's raid on Danbury Connecticut, a slave named Adams, in an act of reckless daring, was killed when firing upon the British.[15]

American states had to meet quotas of troops for the new Continental Army, and New England regiments recruited Black enslaved people by promising freedom to those who served in the Continental Army. During the course of the war, about one-fifth of the men in the northern army were Black.[16] At the Siege of Yorktown in 1781, Baron Closen, a German officer in the French Royal Deux-Ponts Regiment, estimated about one-quarter of the American army to be Black men.[17]

Another famous Black patriot was Jack Peterson of Westchester whose quick thinking helped repel British forces in Croton, New York.[18] Peterson's actions threw Benedict Arnold’s treasonous plans into disarray and led to the capture of Major Andre.

African American sailors edit

Because of manpower shortages at sea, both the Continental Navy and Royal Navy signed African Americans into their navies. Even southern colonies, which worried about putting guns into the hands of enslaved people for the army, had no qualms about using Black men to pilot vessels and to handle the ammunition on ships.[citation needed] In state navies, some African Americans served as captains: South Carolina had significant numbers of Black captains.[19] Some African Americans had been captured from the Royal Navy and used by the Patriots on their vessels.[citation needed]

Patriot resistance to using African Americans edit

Some revolutionary leaders began to be fearful of using Black men in the armed forces. They were afraid that enslaved people who were armed would cause slave rebellions. Slave owners became concerned that military service would eventually free their people.[citation needed]

In May 1775, the Massachusetts Committee of Safety enrolled enslaved people in the armies of the colony. The action was adopted by the Continental Congress when they took over the Patriot Army. But Horatio Gates in July 1775 issued an order to recruiters, ordering them not to enroll "any deserter from the Ministerial army, nor any stroller, negro or vagabond. . ." in the Continental Army.[20] Most Black men were integrated into existing military units, but some segregated units were formed.

African American Loyalists in British military service edit

In 1779, Sir Henry Clinton issued the Philipsburg Proclamation, which stipulated that all enslaved people, regardless of age or gender owned by Patriots would be accepted at British lines. This greatly increased the number of enslaved African Americans who fled to British lines, and many regiments were formed during this period. The largest regiment made up of escaped African Americas was the Black Company of Pioneers, a pioneer unit. This regiment was placed in a support role, with orders to "attend the scavangers, assist in cleaning the streets & removing all newsiances being thrown into the streets" when they were stationed in Philadelphia. A smaller unit of 24 escaped slaves fought under the command of Colonel Tye, raiding Patriot settlements in New Jersey.[21][22][23]

In Savannah, Augusta, and Charleston, when threatened by Patriot forces, the British filled gaps in their troops with African Americans. In October 1779, about 200 Black Loyalist soldiers assisted the British in successfully defending Savannah against a joint French and American Patriot attack.[24]

In total, historians estimate that approximately 20,000 African Americans joined the British during the Revolutionary War, while 5,000 African-Americans joined the Patriot cause.[4]

Somerset vs. Stewart edit

Despite Britain's utilization of African American slaves in the Revolutionary War, a monumental court decision would quickly put in motion efforts to end slavery in Britain itself,[25][26] though Britain did not ban the international slave trade in its Empire until 1807, the same year that then-President Thomas Jefferson and the U.S. Congress passed a law banning the international slave trade in the U.S. A slave trader named Charles Stewart purchased James Somerset, a slave who had been brought to America during the middle passage.[25][26] Somerset ran away from Stewart's home on October 1, 1771, but was caught on November 26, would face trial on December 9, and the case would finally be decided on June 22, 1772.[25][26] Somerset's defense exposed the fact that the laws of England do not affirm the right to possess slaves as property.[25][26] At the end of the case, Lord Mansfield, the overseeing judge, ordered Somerset be set free.[25][26] This decision immediately led to a massive rise in anti-slavery activism in Britain, and was a catalyst to the end of slave practices in Britain and among the British colonists.[25][26] This in-turn provoked some slaveholders among the colonists, and was a contributor to the increasing tensions between these colonists and the British.[25][26] The fear of losing the ability to own slaves was a minor motivator behind the revolt for the colonists since the Somerset decision threatened the slave practices in the colonies because they were bound by British law.[26][25] The Somerset decision is also a major precursor to Dunmore's proclamation.[25][26] Dunmore offered freedom to African American slaves in exchange for service in the British army during the revolution as the Somerset decision had begun to normalize the freedom of African slaves in Britain.[26][25]

Dunmore's Proclamation edit

Lord Dunmore, the royal governor of Virginia, was determined to maintain British rule in the colonies and promised to free those enslaved men of rebel owners who fought for him. On November 7, 1775, he issued Dunmore's Proclamation: "I do hereby further declare all indented servants, Negroes, or others, (appertaining to Rebels,) free, that are able and willing to bear arms, they joining His Majesty's Troops." By December 1775 the British army had 300 enslaved men wearing a military uniform. Sewn-on the breast of the uniform was the inscription "Liberty to Slaves". These enslaved men were designated as "Lord Dunmore's Ethiopian Regiment."

Patriot military response to Dunmore's Proclamation edit

Dunmore's proclamation angered the colonists, as they turned many African American slaves against them, serving as another contributor to the spark of the revolution.[25][26] The opposition to the proclamation is directly referenced in the United States Declaration of Independence.[25][26] The support of African American slaves would become an essential element to the Revolutionary Army and the British Army, and it would become a competition between both sides to enlist as many African American Slaves as possible.[25][26]

Dunmore's Black soldiers aroused fear among some Patriots. The Ethiopian unit was used most frequently in the South, where the African population was oppressed to the breaking point.[27] As a response to expressions of fear posed by armed Black men, in December 1775, Washington wrote a letter to Colonel Henry Lee III, stating that success in the war would come to whatever side could arm Black men the fastest; therefore, he suggested policy to execute any of the enslaved who would attempt to gain freedom by joining the British effort.[28] Washington issued orders to the recruiters to reenlist the free Black men who had already served in the army; he worried that some of these soldiers might cross over to the British side.

Congress in 1776 agreed with Washington and authorized re-enlistment of free Black men who had already served. Patriots in South Carolina and Georgia resisted enlisting enslaved men as armed soldiers. African Americans from northern units were generally assigned to fight in southern battles. In some Southern states, southern Black enslaved men substituted for their masters in Patriot service.[citation needed]

Black Regiment of Rhode Island edit

In 1778, Rhode Island was having trouble recruiting enough white men to meet the troop quotas set by the Continental Congress. The Rhode Island Assembly decided to adopt a suggestion by General Varnum and enlist enslaved men in 1st Rhode Island Regiment.[29] Varnum had raised the idea in a letter to George Washington, who forwarded the letter to the governor of Rhode Island. On February 14, 1778, the Rhode Island Assembly voted to allow the enlistment of "every able-bodied negro, mulatto, or Indian man slave" who chose to do so, and that "every slave so enlisting shall, upon his passing muster before Colonel Christopher Greene, be immediately discharged from the service of his master or mistress, and be absolutely free...."[30] The former owners of those slaves who'd enlisted, were to be compensated by the Assembly in an amount equal to the market value of the man who had been enslaved.

A total of 88 men who had been enslaved enlisted in the regiment over the next four months, joined by some free Black men. The regiment eventually totaled about 225 men; probably fewer than 140 were Black men.[31] The 1st Rhode Island Regiment became the only regiment of the Continental Army to have segregated companies of Black soldiers.

Under Colonel Greene, the regiment fought in the Battle of Rhode Island in August 1778. The regiment played a fairly minor but still-praised role in the battle. Its casualties were three killed, nine wounded, and eleven missing.[32]

Like most of the Continental Army, the regiment saw little action over the next few years, as the focus of the war had shifted to the south. In 1781, Greene and several of his Black soldiers were killed in a skirmish with Loyalists. Greene's body was mutilated by the Loyalists, apparently as punishment for having led Black soldiers against them. Forty of the Black men in his unit were also killed.[33] A Monument to the First Rhode Island Regiment memorializing the bravery of the Black soldiers that fought and died with Greene was erected in 1982 in Yorktown Heights, New York.

Fate of Black Loyalists edit

On July 21, 1781, as the final British ship left Savannah, more than 5,000 enslaved African Americans were transported with their Loyalist masters for Jamaica or St. Augustine. About 300 Black people in Savannah did not evacuate, fearing that they would be re-enslaved. They established a colony in the swamps of the Savannah River. By 1786, many were back in bondage.[citation needed]

So many African Americans fled to the British Army under Lord Cornwallis, that he wrote they caused "a most serious distress to us."[34] By liberating slaves of revolting colonists, Cornwallis hindered the southern economy.[35] These refugees contributed significantly to the British, however, as soldiers, laborers, and guides in the Southern Campaign. Cornwallis declined to return slaves who served his forces unless "they are willing to go with" the owners who claimed them.[34] Following the Siege of Yorktown, however, General Washington issued an order for all "Negroes or Molattoes" fighting for the British to be held until they could be returned to their former owners.[34]

The British evacuation of Charleston in December 1782 included many Loyalists and more than 5,000 Black men. More than half of these were enslaved by the Loyalists; they were taken by their masters for resettlement in the West Indies, where the Loyalists started or bought plantations. The British also settled freed African Americans in Jamaica and other West Indian islands, eventually granting them land. Another 500 enslaved people were taken alongside their Loyalist masters to East Florida, which remained under British control.[citation needed]

The British promised freedom to enslaved people who left their Patriot masters to side with the British. In New York City, which the British occupied, thousands of refugee enslaved people migrated there to gain freedom. The British created a registry of people who had escaped slavery, called the Book of Negroes. The registry included details of their enslavement, escape, and service to the British. If accepted, the former enslaved person received a certificate entitling transport out of New York. By the time the Book of Negroes was closed, it had the names of 1,336 men, 914 women, and 750 children, who were resettled in Nova Scotia. They were known in Canada as Black Loyalists. Sixty-five percent of those evacuated were from the South. About 200 formerly enslaved people were taken to London with British forces as free people.[36]

After the war, many freed Black people living in London and Nova Scotia struggled with discrimination, a slow pace of land grants and, in Canada, with the more severe climate. Supporters in England organized to establish a colony in West Africa for the resettlement of Poor Blacks of London, most of whom were formerly enslaved in America. Freetown was the first settlement established of what became the colony of Sierra Leone. Black Loyalists in Nova Scotia were also asked if they wanted to relocate. Many chose to go to Africa, and on January 15, 1792, 1,193 Black people left Halifax for West Africa and a new life. Later the African colony was supplemented by Afro-Caribbean maroons transported by the British from Jamaica, as well as Africans who were liberated by the British in their intervention in the Atlantic slave trade, after Britain prohibited it in 1807.

Fate of Black Patriots edit

The African American Patriots who served the Continental Army, found that the postwar military held few rewards for them. It was much reduced in size, and state legislatures such as Connecticut and Massachusetts in 1784 and 1785, respectively, banned all Blacks, free or enslaved, from military service. Southern states also banned all enslaved men from their militias. North Carolina was among the states that allowed free people of color to serve in their militias and bear arms until the 1830s. In 1792, the United States Congress formally excluded African Americans from military service, allowing only "free able-bodied white male citizens" to serve.[37]

At the time of the ratification of the Constitution in 1789, free Black men could vote in five of the thirteen states, including North Carolina. That demonstrated that they were considered citizens not only of their states but of the United States.[38]

Many enslaved men who fought in the war gained freedom, but others did not. Some owners reneged on their promises to free them after their service in the military.[citation needed] Only 500 African-Americans applied for a Revolutionary War pension. It is estimated that half of those who served migrated to northern states, and those who lived long enough to apply for a pension had no one to corroborate their service.[39]

Some African American descendants of Revolutionary war veterans have documented their lineage. Professor Henry Louis Gates and Judge Lawrence W. Pierce, as examples, have joined the Sons of the American Revolution based on documenting male lines of ancestors who served.

In the first two decades following the Revolution, most northern states abolished slavery, some by a gradual method others such as Vermont and Massachusetts did so during the Revolutionary period.[40] Northern states abolished slavery by law or in their new constitutions. By 1810, about 75 percent of all African Americans in the North were free. By 1840, virtually all African Americans in the North were either free or living in free state jurisdiction.[40]

Although southern state legislatures maintained the institution of slavery, in the Upper South, especially, numerous slaveholders were inspired by revolutionary ideals to free the people they had enslaved. In addition, in this period Methodist, Baptist and Quaker preachers also urged manumission. The proportion of free Black people in the Upper South increased markedly, from less than 1 percent of all Black people to more than 10 percent, even as the number of enslaved people was increasing overall.[41] More than half of the number of free Black people in the United States were concentrated in the Upper South.[41] In Delaware, nearly 75 percent of Black people were free by 1810.[42] This was also a result of a changing economy, as many planters had been converting from labor-intensive tobacco to mixed commodity crops, with less need for intensive labor.

After that period, few enslaved people were granted freedom. The invention of the cotton gin made cultivation of short-staple cotton profitable, and the Deep South was developed for this product. This drove up the demand for labor from people who were enslaved in that developing area, creating a demand for more than one million people to be enslaved to be transported to the Deep South in the domestic slave trade.[43]

In popular culture edit

The 2000 film, The Patriot, features an African American character named Occam (played by Jay Arlen Jones). He is an enslaved man who fights in the war in place of his master. After serving a year in the Continental Army, he becomes a free man and continues to serve with the militia until the end of the war.

The 2011 young adult novel, Forge, by Laurie Halse Anderson, follows a teenage African-American youth who escaped from slavery to join the war.[44]

Role of other combatants with African ancestry edit

While not American-based, a French regiment of colored troops (the Chasseurs-Volontaires de Saint-Domingue) under the command of Comte d'Estaing and the largest combatant contingent of color in the American Revolutionary War, fought on behalf of the Patriots in the Siege of Savannah.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Nash, "The African Americans' Revolution," at p 254
  2. ^ Michael Lee Lanning. "African Americans in the Revolutionary War." Page 177.
  3. ^ Michael Lee Lanning. "African Americans in the Revolutionary War." Page 178.
  4. ^ a b "The Ex-Slaves Who Fought with the British". 28 September 2021.
  5. ^ Carnahan, Burrus M. (2007). Act of Justice: Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation and the Law of War. University Press of Kentucky. p. 18. ISBN 0-8131-2463-8
  6. ^ Bristow, Peggy (1994). We're Rooted Here and They Can't Pull Us Up: Essays in African Canadian Women's History. University of Toronto Press. p. 19. ISBN 0-8020-6881-2.
  7. ^ "John Adams and the Boston Massacre Trials".
  8. ^ "Crispus Attucks". Biography. Retrieved 2018-06-20.
  9. ^ Thomas H. O'Connor, The Hub: Boston Past and Present (Boston: Northeastern University Press, 2001), p. 56 ISBN 1555535445.
  10. ^ Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors of the Revolutionary War. Vol. 13, pp. 743–744.
  11. ^ . History.
  12. ^ "SALEM, April 25". Essex Gazette. Essex, Massachusetts. 25 April 1775. Retrieved 19 April 2015.
  13. ^ Lisa, C. R. (January 2006). "Peter Salem, American hero!". Footsteps. 8: 36–37 – via ProQuest.
  14. ^ Foner, 43.
  15. ^ "An account of Tryon's raid on Danbury in April, 1777, also the battle of Ridgefield and the career of Gen. David Wooster ... With much original matter hitherto unpublished". Danbury, Conn., [The Danbury printing co.] 1927.
  16. ^ Liberty! The American Revolution (Documentary) Episode II:Blows Must Decide: 1774–1776. ©1997 Twin Cities Public Television, Inc. ISBN 1-4157-0217-9
  17. ^ "The Revolution's Black Soldiers" by Robert A. Selig, Ph.D., American Revolution website, 2013-2014
  18. ^ G.P. Wygant (October 19, 1936). "Peterson and Sherwood, Local Men Real Heroes of "Vulture" Episode". Peekskill Evening Star.
  19. ^ Foner, 70.
  20. ^ "Continental Army". United States History. Retrieved 7 August 2016.
  21. ^ Lanning, 145.
  22. ^ Nan Cole and Todd Braisted (February 2, 2001). "A History of the Black Pioneers". Loyalist Institute.
  23. ^ Jonathan D. Sutherland, African Americans at War, ABC-CLIO, 2003, pp. 420-421, accessed 4 May 2010
  24. ^ Lanning, 148.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Blumrosen, Alfred W. (2005). Slave nation : how slavery united the colonies & sparked the American Revolution. Ruth G. Blumrosen. New York: Barnes & Noble. ISBN 0-7607-7877-9. OCLC 64641541.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Quarles, Benjamin (1961). The Negro in the American Revolution. Institute of Early American History and Culture. Chapel Hill: Published for the Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Va., by University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1-4696-0054-3. OCLC 622408535.
  27. ^ White, Deborah; Bay, Mia; Martin, Waldo (2013). Freedon: on My Mind. Bostan: Bedford/St.Martin's. p. 129.
  28. ^ Malcolm, Joyce Lee (14 May 2014). Peter's War: A New England Slave Boy and the American Revolution. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300142761. Retrieved 25 October 2017 – via Google Books.
  29. ^ Nell, William C. (1855). "IV, Rhode Island". The Colored Patriots of the American Revolution. Robert F. Wallcut.
  30. ^ Foner, 205.
  31. ^ Foner, 75–76.
  32. ^ Lanning, 76–77.
  33. ^ Lanning, 79.
  34. ^ a b c Urwin, Gregory J. W. (19 October 2021). "The Yorktown Tragedy: Washington's Slave Roundup". Journal of the American Revolution. Retrieved 20 October 2021.
  35. ^ Urwin, Gregory J. W. (2008). "When Freedom Wore a Red Coat: How Cornwallis' 1781 Campaign Threatened the Revolution in Virginia". Army History (68): 15. JSTOR 26298725. Retrieved 20 October 2021.
  36. ^ Lanning, 161–162.
  37. ^ Lanning, 181.
  38. ^ Abraham Lincoln's Speech on the Dred Scott Decision, June 26, 1857 September 8, 2002, at the Wayback Machine
  39. ^ Davis, Robert Scott. "Black Soldiers of Liberty". Journal of the American Revolution. Retrieved 22 June 2023.
  40. ^ a b Peter Kolchin (1993), American Slavery, p. 81.
  41. ^ a b Peter Kolchin (1993), American Slavery, pp. 77–78, 81.
  42. ^ Kolchin (1993), American Slavery, p. 78.
  43. ^ Kolchin (1993), American Slavery, p. 87.
  44. ^ "Sign in - Google Accounts". Sites.google.com. Retrieved 25 October 2017.[dead link]

Bibliography edit

  • Barker-Benfield, Graham J. Phillis Wheatley Chooses Freedom: History, Poetry, and the Ideals of the American Revolution (NYU Press, 2018).
  • Blanck, Emily. "Seventeen eighty-three: the turning point in the law of slavery and freedom in Massachusetts." New England Quarterly (2002): 24–51. in JSTOR
  • Brown, Christopher L. "Empire without Slaves: British Concepts of Emancipation in the Age of the American Revolution." William and Mary Quarterly 56.2 (1999): 273-306 online.
  • Carretta, Vincent. Phillis Wheatley: Biography of a Genius in Bondage (U of Georgia Press, 2011)
  • Farley, M. Foster. "The South Carolina Negro in the American Revolution, 1775-1783." South Carolina Historical Magazine (1978): 75-86 online.
  • Fischer, David Hackett. African Founders: How Enslaved People Expanded American Ideals (Simon & Schuster, 2022), ch 5. before 1860.
  • Foner, Philip. Blacks in the American Revolution. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1976 ISBN 0837189462.
  • Frey, Sylvia R. Water from the Rock: Black Resistance in a Revolutionary Age (1992) excerpt and text search
  • Gallagher, Sean. "Black Refugees and the Legal Fiction of Military Manumission in the American Revolution." Slavery & Abolition 43.1 (2022): 140-159.
  • Gilbert, Alan. Black Patriots and Loyalists: Fighting for Emancipation in the War for Independence (University of Chicago Press, 2012)
  • Hartgrove, W. B. "The Negro Soldier in the American Revolution." Journal of Negro History 1.2 (1916): 110-131. online
  • Hodges, Graham Russell Gao, and Alan Edward Brown, eds. The Book of Negroes: African Americans in Exile After the American Revolution (Fordham University Press, 2021).
  • Jackson, Luther P. "Virginia Negro Soldiers and Seamen in the American Revolution." Journal of Negro History 27.3 (1942): 247-287 online.
  • Lanning, Michael. African Americans in the Revolutionary War. New York: Kensington Publishing, 2000 ISBN 0806527161.
  • Lanning, Michael Lee. "African Americans and the American Revolution." in The Routledge Handbook of the History of Race and the American Military (Routledge, 2016) pp. 45–54.
  • MacLeod, Duncan J. Slavery, Race and the American Revolution (1974)
  • Nash, Gary B. "The African Americans' Revolution," in Oxford Handbook of the American Revolution (2012) edited by Edward G. Gray and Jane Kamensky pp. 250–70. DOI: 10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199746705.013.0015
  • Nash, Bary B. The forgotten fifth: African Americans in the age of revolution (Harvard University Press, 2006).
  • Pargas, Damian Alan, ed. Fugitive Slaves and Spaces of Freedom in North America (U of Florida Press, 2018). Pp. 315.
  • Parkinson, Robert G. The Common Cause: Creating Race and Nation in the American Revolution (UNC Press Books, 2016).
  • Piecuch, Jim. Three Peoples, One King: Loyalists, Indians, and Slaves in the Revolutionary South, 1775-1782 (Univ of South Carolina Press, 2008)
  • Quarles, Benjamin.The Negro in the American Revolution. (U of North Carolina Press, 1961) online
  • Schama, Simon. Rough Crossings: Britain, the Slaves and the American Revolution (Random House, 2006).
  • Spooner, Matthew. "Freedom, Reenslavement, and Movement in the Revolutionary South", in Race and Nation in the Age of Emancipations, edited by Whitney Nell Stewart and John Garrison Marks (U of Georgia Press, 2018), pp. 13–34. online
  • Taylor, Alan. The Internal Enemy: Slavery and War in Virginia, 1772–1832 (W. W. Norton & Company, 2013). Pulitzer Prize-winner.
  • Tise, Larry E., and Jeffrey J. Crow. The Southern Experience in the American Revolution (UNC Press Books, 2017).
  • Van Buskirk, Judith L. Standing in Their Own Light: African American Patriots in the American Revolution (U of Oklahoma Press, 2017).
  • Waldstreicher, David. "Ancients, Moderns, and Africans: Phillis Wheatley and the Politics of Empire and Slavery in the American Revolution." Journal of the Early Republic 37.4 (2017): 701-733 online.
  • Whitfield, Harvey Amani. "Black Loyalists and Black Slaves in Maritime Canada." History Compass, vol. 5, issue 6 (November 2007), pp. 1980–1997.
  • Wright, Donald R. African Americans in the colonial era: From African origins through the American Revolution(4th ed. John Wiley & Sons, 2017).

Historiography and memory edit

  • Kozel, Sue. "Important NJ African American Resources from the Revolutionary War Era." New Jersey Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal 7.1 (2021): 368-372.
  • Stevens, Robert L. "African American Participation in America's Wars: An Artist's View." 'Social Studies Review 59 (2020): 54-66.

african, americans, revolutionary, american, revolution, gaining, freedom, strongest, motive, black, enslaved, people, joined, patriot, british, armies, estimated, that, african, americans, joined, british, cause, which, promised, freedom, enslaved, people, bl. In the American Revolution gaining freedom was the strongest motive for Black enslaved people who joined the Patriot or British armies It is estimated that 20 000 African Americans joined the British cause which promised freedom to enslaved people as Black Loyalists Around 9 000 African Americans became Black Patriots 1 Continental soldiers at Yorktown on the left an African American soldier of the 1st Rhode Island Regiment As between 220 000 and 250 000 soldiers and militia served the American cause during the revolution in total that would mean Black soldiers made up approximately four percent of the Patriots numbers Of the 9 000 Black soldiers 5 000 were combat dedicated troops 2 Notably the average length of time in service for an African American soldier during the war was four and a half years due to many serving for the whole eight year duration which was eight times longer than the average period for white soldiers Meaning that while they were only four percent of the manpower base they comprised around a quarter of the Patriots strength in terms of man hours though this includes supportive roles 3 In contrast about 20 000 people escaped slavery joined and fought for the British army 4 Much of this number was seen after Dunmore s Proclamation and subsequently the Philipsburg Proclamation issued by Sir Henry Clinton 5 Though between only 800 2 000 people who were enslaved reached Dunmore himself the publication of both proclamations provided incentive for nearly 100 000 enslaved people across the American Colonies to escape lured by the promise of freedom 6 Crispus Attucks was shot dead by British soldiers in the Boston Massacre in 1770 after he shouted Kill them Kill them Knock them over while the soldiers were being battered with shells ice and coal by a mob armed with clubs 7 He is considered an iconic martyr of Patriots 8 Contents 1 African American Patriots 2 African American sailors 3 Patriot resistance to using African Americans 4 African American Loyalists in British military service 5 Somerset vs Stewart 6 Dunmore s Proclamation 6 1 Patriot military response to Dunmore s Proclamation 7 Black Regiment of Rhode Island 8 Fate of Black Loyalists 9 Fate of Black Patriots 9 1 In popular culture 10 Role of other combatants with African ancestry 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 13 1 Historiography and memoryAfrican American Patriots editMain article Black Patriot nbsp Engraving of Crispus Attucks being shot during the Boston Massacre John Bufford after William L Champey c 1856 9 Prior to the revolution many free African Americans supported the anti British cause most famously Crispus Attucks believed to be the first person killed at the Boston Massacre At the time of the American Revolution some Black men had already enlisted as minutemen Both free and enslaved Africans had served in private militias especially in the North defending their villages against attacks by Native Americans In March 1775 the Continental Congress assigned units of the Massachusetts militia as Minutemen They were under orders to become activated if the British troops in Boston took the offensive Peter Salem who had been freed by his owner to join the Framingham militia was one of the Black men in the military He served for nearly five years 10 In the Revolutionary War slave owners often let the people they enslaved to enlist in the war with promises of freedom but many were put back into slavery after the conclusion of the war 11 In April 1775 at Lexington and Concord Black men responded to the call and fought with Patriot forces Prince Estabrook was wounded some time during the fighting on 19 April probably at Lexington 12 The Battle of Bunker Hill also had African American soldiers fighting along with white Patriots such as Peter Salem 13 Salem Poor Barzillai Lew Blaney Grusha citation needed Titus Coburn Alexander Ames Cato Howe and Seymour Burr Many African Americans both enslaved and free wanted to join with the Patriots They believed that they would achieve freedom or expand their civil rights 14 In addition to the role of soldier Black men also served as guides messengers and spies On April 26 1777 during Tyron s raid on Danbury Connecticut a slave named Adams in an act of reckless daring was killed when firing upon the British 15 American states had to meet quotas of troops for the new Continental Army and New England regiments recruited Black enslaved people by promising freedom to those who served in the Continental Army During the course of the war about one fifth of the men in the northern army were Black 16 At the Siege of Yorktown in 1781 Baron Closen a German officer in the French Royal Deux Ponts Regiment estimated about one quarter of the American army to be Black men 17 Another famous Black patriot was Jack Peterson of Westchester whose quick thinking helped repel British forces in Croton New York 18 Peterson s actions threw Benedict Arnold s treasonous plans into disarray and led to the capture of Major Andre African American sailors editBecause of manpower shortages at sea both the Continental Navy and Royal Navy signed African Americans into their navies Even southern colonies which worried about putting guns into the hands of enslaved people for the army had no qualms about using Black men to pilot vessels and to handle the ammunition on ships citation needed In state navies some African Americans served as captains South Carolina had significant numbers of Black captains 19 Some African Americans had been captured from the Royal Navy and used by the Patriots on their vessels citation needed Patriot resistance to using African Americans editSome revolutionary leaders began to be fearful of using Black men in the armed forces They were afraid that enslaved people who were armed would cause slave rebellions Slave owners became concerned that military service would eventually free their people citation needed In May 1775 the Massachusetts Committee of Safety enrolled enslaved people in the armies of the colony The action was adopted by the Continental Congress when they took over the Patriot Army But Horatio Gates in July 1775 issued an order to recruiters ordering them not to enroll any deserter from the Ministerial army nor any stroller negro or vagabond in the Continental Army 20 Most Black men were integrated into existing military units but some segregated units were formed African American Loyalists in British military service editMain article Black Loyalist In 1779 Sir Henry Clinton issued the Philipsburg Proclamation which stipulated that all enslaved people regardless of age or gender owned by Patriots would be accepted at British lines This greatly increased the number of enslaved African Americans who fled to British lines and many regiments were formed during this period The largest regiment made up of escaped African Americas was the Black Company of Pioneers a pioneer unit This regiment was placed in a support role with orders to attend the scavangers assist in cleaning the streets amp removing all newsiances being thrown into the streets when they were stationed in Philadelphia A smaller unit of 24 escaped slaves fought under the command of Colonel Tye raiding Patriot settlements in New Jersey 21 22 23 In Savannah Augusta and Charleston when threatened by Patriot forces the British filled gaps in their troops with African Americans In October 1779 about 200 Black Loyalist soldiers assisted the British in successfully defending Savannah against a joint French and American Patriot attack 24 In total historians estimate that approximately 20 000 African Americans joined the British during the Revolutionary War while 5 000 African Americans joined the Patriot cause 4 Somerset vs Stewart editMain article Somerset v Stewart Despite Britain s utilization of African American slaves in the Revolutionary War a monumental court decision would quickly put in motion efforts to end slavery in Britain itself 25 26 though Britain did not ban the international slave trade in its Empire until 1807 the same year that then President Thomas Jefferson and the U S Congress passed a law banning the international slave trade in the U S A slave trader named Charles Stewart purchased James Somerset a slave who had been brought to America during the middle passage 25 26 Somerset ran away from Stewart s home on October 1 1771 but was caught on November 26 would face trial on December 9 and the case would finally be decided on June 22 1772 25 26 Somerset s defense exposed the fact that the laws of England do not affirm the right to possess slaves as property 25 26 At the end of the case Lord Mansfield the overseeing judge ordered Somerset be set free 25 26 This decision immediately led to a massive rise in anti slavery activism in Britain and was a catalyst to the end of slave practices in Britain and among the British colonists 25 26 This in turn provoked some slaveholders among the colonists and was a contributor to the increasing tensions between these colonists and the British 25 26 The fear of losing the ability to own slaves was a minor motivator behind the revolt for the colonists since the Somerset decision threatened the slave practices in the colonies because they were bound by British law 26 25 The Somerset decision is also a major precursor to Dunmore s proclamation 25 26 Dunmore offered freedom to African American slaves in exchange for service in the British army during the revolution as the Somerset decision had begun to normalize the freedom of African slaves in Britain 26 25 Dunmore s Proclamation editLord Dunmore the royal governor of Virginia was determined to maintain British rule in the colonies and promised to free those enslaved men of rebel owners who fought for him On November 7 1775 he issued Dunmore s Proclamation I do hereby further declare all indented servants Negroes or others appertaining to Rebels free that are able and willing to bear arms they joining His Majesty s Troops By December 1775 the British army had 300 enslaved men wearing a military uniform Sewn on the breast of the uniform was the inscription Liberty to Slaves These enslaved men were designated as Lord Dunmore s Ethiopian Regiment Patriot military response to Dunmore s Proclamation edit Dunmore s proclamation angered the colonists as they turned many African American slaves against them serving as another contributor to the spark of the revolution 25 26 The opposition to the proclamation is directly referenced in the United States Declaration of Independence 25 26 The support of African American slaves would become an essential element to the Revolutionary Army and the British Army and it would become a competition between both sides to enlist as many African American Slaves as possible 25 26 Dunmore s Black soldiers aroused fear among some Patriots The Ethiopian unit was used most frequently in the South where the African population was oppressed to the breaking point 27 As a response to expressions of fear posed by armed Black men in December 1775 Washington wrote a letter to Colonel Henry Lee III stating that success in the war would come to whatever side could arm Black men the fastest therefore he suggested policy to execute any of the enslaved who would attempt to gain freedom by joining the British effort 28 Washington issued orders to the recruiters to reenlist the free Black men who had already served in the army he worried that some of these soldiers might cross over to the British side Congress in 1776 agreed with Washington and authorized re enlistment of free Black men who had already served Patriots in South Carolina and Georgia resisted enlisting enslaved men as armed soldiers African Americans from northern units were generally assigned to fight in southern battles In some Southern states southern Black enslaved men substituted for their masters in Patriot service citation needed Black Regiment of Rhode Island editIn 1778 Rhode Island was having trouble recruiting enough white men to meet the troop quotas set by the Continental Congress The Rhode Island Assembly decided to adopt a suggestion by General Varnum and enlist enslaved men in 1st Rhode Island Regiment 29 Varnum had raised the idea in a letter to George Washington who forwarded the letter to the governor of Rhode Island On February 14 1778 the Rhode Island Assembly voted to allow the enlistment of every able bodied negro mulatto or Indian man slave who chose to do so and that every slave so enlisting shall upon his passing muster before Colonel Christopher Greene be immediately discharged from the service of his master or mistress and be absolutely free 30 The former owners of those slaves who d enlisted were to be compensated by the Assembly in an amount equal to the market value of the man who had been enslaved A total of 88 men who had been enslaved enlisted in the regiment over the next four months joined by some free Black men The regiment eventually totaled about 225 men probably fewer than 140 were Black men 31 The 1st Rhode Island Regiment became the only regiment of the Continental Army to have segregated companies of Black soldiers Under Colonel Greene the regiment fought in the Battle of Rhode Island in August 1778 The regiment played a fairly minor but still praised role in the battle Its casualties were three killed nine wounded and eleven missing 32 Like most of the Continental Army the regiment saw little action over the next few years as the focus of the war had shifted to the south In 1781 Greene and several of his Black soldiers were killed in a skirmish with Loyalists Greene s body was mutilated by the Loyalists apparently as punishment for having led Black soldiers against them Forty of the Black men in his unit were also killed 33 A Monument to the First Rhode Island Regiment memorializing the bravery of the Black soldiers that fought and died with Greene was erected in 1982 in Yorktown Heights New York Fate of Black Loyalists editOn July 21 1781 as the final British ship left Savannah more than 5 000 enslaved African Americans were transported with their Loyalist masters for Jamaica or St Augustine About 300 Black people in Savannah did not evacuate fearing that they would be re enslaved They established a colony in the swamps of the Savannah River By 1786 many were back in bondage citation needed So many African Americans fled to the British Army under Lord Cornwallis that he wrote they caused a most serious distress to us 34 By liberating slaves of revolting colonists Cornwallis hindered the southern economy 35 These refugees contributed significantly to the British however as soldiers laborers and guides in the Southern Campaign Cornwallis declined to return slaves who served his forces unless they are willing to go with the owners who claimed them 34 Following the Siege of Yorktown however General Washington issued an order for all Negroes or Molattoes fighting for the British to be held until they could be returned to their former owners 34 The British evacuation of Charleston in December 1782 included many Loyalists and more than 5 000 Black men More than half of these were enslaved by the Loyalists they were taken by their masters for resettlement in the West Indies where the Loyalists started or bought plantations The British also settled freed African Americans in Jamaica and other West Indian islands eventually granting them land Another 500 enslaved people were taken alongside their Loyalist masters to East Florida which remained under British control citation needed The British promised freedom to enslaved people who left their Patriot masters to side with the British In New York City which the British occupied thousands of refugee enslaved people migrated there to gain freedom The British created a registry of people who had escaped slavery called the Book of Negroes The registry included details of their enslavement escape and service to the British If accepted the former enslaved person received a certificate entitling transport out of New York By the time the Book of Negroes was closed it had the names of 1 336 men 914 women and 750 children who were resettled in Nova Scotia They were known in Canada as Black Loyalists Sixty five percent of those evacuated were from the South About 200 formerly enslaved people were taken to London with British forces as free people 36 After the war many freed Black people living in London and Nova Scotia struggled with discrimination a slow pace of land grants and in Canada with the more severe climate Supporters in England organized to establish a colony in West Africa for the resettlement of Poor Blacks of London most of whom were formerly enslaved in America Freetown was the first settlement established of what became the colony of Sierra Leone Black Loyalists in Nova Scotia were also asked if they wanted to relocate Many chose to go to Africa and on January 15 1792 1 193 Black people left Halifax for West Africa and a new life Later the African colony was supplemented by Afro Caribbean maroons transported by the British from Jamaica as well as Africans who were liberated by the British in their intervention in the Atlantic slave trade after Britain prohibited it in 1807 Fate of Black Patriots editThe African American Patriots who served the Continental Army found that the postwar military held few rewards for them It was much reduced in size and state legislatures such as Connecticut and Massachusetts in 1784 and 1785 respectively banned all Blacks free or enslaved from military service Southern states also banned all enslaved men from their militias North Carolina was among the states that allowed free people of color to serve in their militias and bear arms until the 1830s In 1792 the United States Congress formally excluded African Americans from military service allowing only free able bodied white male citizens to serve 37 At the time of the ratification of the Constitution in 1789 free Black men could vote in five of the thirteen states including North Carolina That demonstrated that they were considered citizens not only of their states but of the United States 38 Many enslaved men who fought in the war gained freedom but others did not Some owners reneged on their promises to free them after their service in the military citation needed Only 500 African Americans applied for a Revolutionary War pension It is estimated that half of those who served migrated to northern states and those who lived long enough to apply for a pension had no one to corroborate their service 39 Some African American descendants of Revolutionary war veterans have documented their lineage Professor Henry Louis Gates and Judge Lawrence W Pierce as examples have joined the Sons of the American Revolution based on documenting male lines of ancestors who served In the first two decades following the Revolution most northern states abolished slavery some by a gradual method others such as Vermont and Massachusetts did so during the Revolutionary period 40 Northern states abolished slavery by law or in their new constitutions By 1810 about 75 percent of all African Americans in the North were free By 1840 virtually all African Americans in the North were either free or living in free state jurisdiction 40 Although southern state legislatures maintained the institution of slavery in the Upper South especially numerous slaveholders were inspired by revolutionary ideals to free the people they had enslaved In addition in this period Methodist Baptist and Quaker preachers also urged manumission The proportion of free Black people in the Upper South increased markedly from less than 1 percent of all Black people to more than 10 percent even as the number of enslaved people was increasing overall 41 More than half of the number of free Black people in the United States were concentrated in the Upper South 41 In Delaware nearly 75 percent of Black people were free by 1810 42 This was also a result of a changing economy as many planters had been converting from labor intensive tobacco to mixed commodity crops with less need for intensive labor After that period few enslaved people were granted freedom The invention of the cotton gin made cultivation of short staple cotton profitable and the Deep South was developed for this product This drove up the demand for labor from people who were enslaved in that developing area creating a demand for more than one million people to be enslaved to be transported to the Deep South in the domestic slave trade 43 In popular culture edit The 2000 film The Patriot features an African American character named Occam played by Jay Arlen Jones He is an enslaved man who fights in the war in place of his master After serving a year in the Continental Army he becomes a free man and continues to serve with the militia until the end of the war The 2011 young adult novel Forge by Laurie Halse Anderson follows a teenage African American youth who escaped from slavery to join the war 44 Role of other combatants with African ancestry editWhile not American based a French regiment of colored troops the Chasseurs Volontaires de Saint Domingue under the command of Comte d Estaing and the largest combatant contingent of color in the American Revolutionary War fought on behalf of the Patriots in the Siege of Savannah See also editNational Liberty Memorial proposed memorial to commemorate African Americans who fought in the Revolutionary War The Colored Patriots of the American Revolution 1855 book African Americans in the American Civil WarReferences edit Nash The African Americans Revolution at p 254 Michael Lee Lanning African Americans in the Revolutionary War Page 177 Michael Lee Lanning African Americans in the Revolutionary War Page 178 a b The Ex Slaves Who Fought with the British 28 September 2021 Carnahan Burrus M 2007 Act of Justice Lincoln s Emancipation Proclamation and the Law of War University Press of Kentucky p 18 ISBN 0 8131 2463 8 Bristow Peggy 1994 We re Rooted Here and They Can t Pull Us Up Essays in African Canadian Women s History University of Toronto Press p 19 ISBN 0 8020 6881 2 John Adams and the Boston Massacre Trials Crispus Attucks Biography Retrieved 2018 06 20 Thomas H O Connor The Hub Boston Past and Present Boston Northeastern University Press 2001 p 56 ISBN 1555535445 Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors of the Revolutionary War Vol 13 pp 743 744 Fighting Maybe for Freedom but probably not History SALEM April 25 Essex Gazette Essex Massachusetts 25 April 1775 Retrieved 19 April 2015 Lisa C R January 2006 Peter Salem American hero Footsteps 8 36 37 via ProQuest Foner 43 An account of Tryon s raid on Danbury in April 1777 also the battle of Ridgefield and the career of Gen David Wooster With much original matter hitherto unpublished Danbury Conn The Danbury printing co 1927 Liberty The American Revolution Documentary Episode II Blows Must Decide 1774 1776 c 1997 Twin Cities Public Television Inc ISBN 1 4157 0217 9 The Revolution s Black Soldiers by Robert A Selig Ph D American Revolution website 2013 2014 G P Wygant October 19 1936 Peterson and Sherwood Local Men Real Heroes of Vulture Episode Peekskill Evening Star Foner 70 Continental Army United States History Retrieved 7 August 2016 Lanning 145 Nan Cole and Todd Braisted February 2 2001 A History of the Black Pioneers Loyalist Institute Jonathan D Sutherland African Americans at War ABC CLIO 2003 pp 420 421 accessed 4 May 2010 Lanning 148 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Blumrosen Alfred W 2005 Slave nation how slavery united the colonies amp sparked the American Revolution Ruth G Blumrosen New York Barnes amp Noble ISBN 0 7607 7877 9 OCLC 64641541 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Quarles Benjamin 1961 The Negro in the American Revolution Institute of Early American History and Culture Chapel Hill Published for the Institute of Early American History and Culture Williamsburg Va by University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 4696 0054 3 OCLC 622408535 White Deborah Bay Mia Martin Waldo 2013 Freedon on My Mind Bostan Bedford St Martin s p 129 Malcolm Joyce Lee 14 May 2014 Peter s War A New England Slave Boy and the American Revolution Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300142761 Retrieved 25 October 2017 via Google Books Nell William C 1855 IV Rhode Island The Colored Patriots of the American Revolution Robert F Wallcut Foner 205 Foner 75 76 Lanning 76 77 Lanning 79 a b c Urwin Gregory J W 19 October 2021 The Yorktown Tragedy Washington s Slave Roundup Journal of the American Revolution Retrieved 20 October 2021 Urwin Gregory J W 2008 When Freedom Wore a Red Coat How Cornwallis 1781 Campaign Threatened the Revolution in Virginia Army History 68 15 JSTOR 26298725 Retrieved 20 October 2021 Lanning 161 162 Lanning 181 Abraham Lincoln s Speech on the Dred Scott Decision June 26 1857 Archived September 8 2002 at the Wayback Machine Davis Robert Scott Black Soldiers of Liberty Journal of the American Revolution Retrieved 22 June 2023 a b Peter Kolchin 1993 American Slavery p 81 a b Peter Kolchin 1993 American Slavery pp 77 78 81 Kolchin 1993 American Slavery p 78 Kolchin 1993 American Slavery p 87 Sign in Google Accounts Sites google com Retrieved 25 October 2017 dead link Bibliography editBarker Benfield Graham J Phillis Wheatley Chooses Freedom History Poetry and the Ideals of the American Revolution NYU Press 2018 Blanck Emily Seventeen eighty three the turning point in the law of slavery and freedom in Massachusetts New England Quarterly 2002 24 51 in JSTOR Brown Christopher L Empire without Slaves British Concepts of Emancipation in the Age of the American Revolution William and Mary Quarterly 56 2 1999 273 306 online Carretta Vincent Phillis Wheatley Biography of a Genius in Bondage U of Georgia Press 2011 Farley M Foster The South Carolina Negro in the American Revolution 1775 1783 South Carolina Historical Magazine 1978 75 86 online Fischer David Hackett African Founders How Enslaved People Expanded American Ideals Simon amp Schuster 2022 ch 5 before 1860 Foner Philip Blacks in the American Revolution Westport Conn Greenwood Press 1976 ISBN 0837189462 Frey Sylvia R Water from the Rock Black Resistance in a Revolutionary Age 1992 excerpt and text search Gallagher Sean Black Refugees and the Legal Fiction of Military Manumission in the American Revolution Slavery amp Abolition 43 1 2022 140 159 Gilbert Alan Black Patriots and Loyalists Fighting for Emancipation in the War for Independence University of Chicago Press 2012 Hartgrove W B The Negro Soldier in the American Revolution Journal of Negro History 1 2 1916 110 131 online Hodges Graham Russell Gao and Alan Edward Brown eds The Book of Negroes African Americans in Exile After the American Revolution Fordham University Press 2021 Jackson Luther P Virginia Negro Soldiers and Seamen in the American Revolution Journal of Negro History 27 3 1942 247 287 online Lanning Michael African Americans in the Revolutionary War New York Kensington Publishing 2000 ISBN 0806527161 Lanning Michael Lee African Americans and the American Revolution in The Routledge Handbook of the History of Race and the American Military Routledge 2016 pp 45 54 MacLeod Duncan J Slavery Race and the American Revolution 1974 Nash Gary B The African Americans Revolution in Oxford Handbook of the American Revolution 2012 edited by Edward G Gray and Jane Kamensky pp 250 70 DOI 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199746705 013 0015 Nash Bary B The forgotten fifth African Americans in the age of revolution Harvard University Press 2006 Pargas Damian Alan ed Fugitive Slaves and Spaces of Freedom in North America U of Florida Press 2018 Pp 315 Parkinson Robert G The Common Cause Creating Race and Nation in the American Revolution UNC Press Books 2016 Piecuch Jim Three Peoples One King Loyalists Indians and Slaves in the Revolutionary South 1775 1782 Univ of South Carolina Press 2008 Quarles Benjamin The Negro in the American Revolution U of North Carolina Press 1961 online Schama Simon Rough Crossings Britain the Slaves and the American Revolution Random House 2006 Spooner Matthew Freedom Reenslavement and Movement in the Revolutionary South in Race and Nation in the Age of Emancipations edited by Whitney Nell Stewart and John Garrison Marks U of Georgia Press 2018 pp 13 34 online Taylor Alan The Internal Enemy Slavery and War in Virginia 1772 1832 W W Norton amp Company 2013 Pulitzer Prize winner Tise Larry E and Jeffrey J Crow The Southern Experience in the American Revolution UNC Press Books 2017 Van Buskirk Judith L Standing in Their Own Light African American Patriots in the American Revolution U of Oklahoma Press 2017 Waldstreicher David Ancients Moderns and Africans Phillis Wheatley and the Politics of Empire and Slavery in the American Revolution Journal of the Early Republic 37 4 2017 701 733 online Whitfield Harvey Amani Black Loyalists and Black Slaves in Maritime Canada History Compass vol 5 issue 6 November 2007 pp 1980 1997 Wright Donald R African Americans in the colonial era From African origins through the American Revolution 4th ed John Wiley amp Sons 2017 Historiography and memory edit Kozel Sue Important NJ African American Resources from the Revolutionary War Era New Jersey Studies An Interdisciplinary Journal 7 1 2021 368 372 Stevens Robert L African American Participation in America s Wars An Artist s View Social Studies Review59 2020 54 66 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title African Americans in the Revolutionary War amp oldid 1204921422, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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