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Military history of African Americans in the American Civil War

African Americans, including former slaves, served in the American Civil War. The 186,097 black men who joined the Union Army included 7,122 officers and 178,975 enlisted soldiers.[1] Approximately 20,000 black sailors served in the Union Navy and formed a large percentage of many ships' crews.[2] Later in the war, many regiments were recruited and organized as the United States Colored Troops, which reinforced the Northern forces substantially during the conflict's last two years. Both Northern Free Negro and Southern runaway slaves joined the fight. Throughout the course of the war, black soldiers served in forty major battles and hundreds of more minor skirmishes; sixteen African Americans received the Medal of Honor.[2]

Sgt. Samuel Smith (3rd United States Colored Cavalry Regiment) with wife and daughters, c. 1863–65

For the Confederacy, both free and enslaved black Americans were used for manual labor, but the issue of whether to arm them, and under what terms, became a major source of debate within the Confederate Congress, the President's Cabinet, and C.S. War Department staff. In general, newspapers, politicians, and army leaders alike were hostile to any efforts to arm blacks. The war's desperate circumstances meant that the Confederacy changed their policy in the last month of the war; in March 1865, a small program attempted to recruit, train, and arm blacks, but no significant numbers were ever raised or recruited, and those that were never saw combat.

Union edit

Our Presidents, Governors, Generals and Secretaries are calling, with almost frantic vehemence, for men.-"Men! men! send us men!" they scream, or the cause of the Union is gone...and yet these very officers, representing the people and the Government, steadily, and persistently refuse to receive the very class of men which have a deeper interest in the defeat and humiliation of the rebels than all others.

-Frederick Douglass[3]

 
Unidentified African-American Union veteran. From the Liljenquist Family Collection of Civil War Photographs, Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress

Proposals to raise African American regiments in the Union's war efforts were at first met with trepidation by officials within the Union command structure, President Abraham Lincoln included. Concerns over the response of the border states (of which one, Maryland, surrounded in part the capital of Washington D.C.), the response of white soldiers and officers, as well as the effectiveness of a fighting force composed of black men were raised.[4]: 165–167 [5] Despite official reluctance from above, the number of white volunteers dropped throughout the war, and black soldiers were needed, whether the population liked it or not.[6] However, African Americans had been volunteering since the first days of war on both sides, though many were turned down.[7]

On July 17, 1862, the U.S. Congress passed two statutes allowing for the enlistment of "colored" troops (African Americans)[8] but official enrollment occurred only after the effective date of the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863. However, state and local militia units had already begun enlisting black men, including the "Black Brigade of Cincinnati", raised in September 1862 to help provide manpower to thwart a feared Confederate raid on Cincinnati from Kentucky, as well as black infantry units raised in Kansas, Missouri, Louisiana, and South Carolina.[9] In March 1863, upon hearing that Andrew Johnson was open to recruiting blacks in Tennessee, Abraham Lincoln wrote him encouragement: "The colored population is the great available, and yet unavailed of, force for restoring the Union. The bare sight of 50,000 armed and drilled black soldiers upon the banks of the Mississippi would end the rebellion at once."[10]

In May 1863, Congress established the Bureau of Colored Troops in an effort to organize black people's efforts in the war.[11]

African Americans served as medical officers after 1863, beginning with Baltimore surgeon Alexander Augusta. Augusta was a senior surgeon, with white assistant surgeons under his command at Fort Stanton, MD.[12]

 
African-American laborers bury the dead at Fredericksburg, Virginia, 1862.

In actual numbers, African-American soldiers eventually constituted 10% of the entire Union Army (United States Army). Losses among African Americans were high: In the last year and a half and from all reported casualties, approximately 20% of all African Americans enrolled in the military lost their lives during the Civil War.[1]: 16  Notably, their mortality rate was significantly higher than that of white soldiers:

[We] find, according to the revised official data, that of the slightly over two millions troops in the United States Volunteers, over 316,000 died (from all causes), or 15.2%. Of the 67,000 Regular Army (white) troops, 8.6%, or not quite 6,000, died. Of the approximately 180,000 United States Colored Troops, however, over 36,000 died, or 20.5%. In other words, the mortality "rate" amongst the United States Colored Troops in the Civil War was 35% greater than that among other troops, notwithstanding the fact that the former were not enrolled until some eighteen months after the fighting began.

— Herbert Aptheker[1]: 16 

Non-combatant labor duty edit

Escaped slaves who sought refuge in Union Army camps were called contrabands. A number of officers in the field experimented, with varying degrees of success, in using contrabands for manual work in Union Army camps. Eventually they composed black regiments of soldiers. These officers included General David Hunter, General James H. Lane, and General Benjamin F. Butler of Massachusetts.[4]: 165–167  In early 1861, General Butler was the first known Union commander to use black contrabands, in a non-combatant role, to do the physical labor duties, after he refused to return escaped slaves, at Fort Monroe, Virginia, who came to him for asylum from their masters, who sought to capture and reenslave them. In September 1862, free African-American men were conscripted and impressed into forced labor for constructing defensive fortifications, by the police force of the city of Cincinnati, Ohio; however, they were soon released from their forced labor and a call for African-American volunteers was sent out. Some 700 of them volunteered, and they came to be known as the Black Brigade of Cincinnati. Because of the harsh working conditions and the extreme brutality of their Cincinnati police guards, the Union Army, under General Lew Wallace, stepped in to restore order and ensure that the black conscripts received the fair treatment due to soldiers, including the equal pay of privates.

Contrabands were later settled in a number of colonies, such as at the Grand Contraband Camp, Virginia, and in the Port Royal Experiment.

Blacks also participated in activities further behind the lines that helped keep an army functioning, such as at hospitals and the like. Jane E. Schultz wrote of the medical corps that

Approximately 10 percent of the Union's female relief workforce was of African descent: free blacks of diverse education and class background who earned wages or worked without pay in the larger cause of freedom, and runaway slaves who sought sanctuary in military camps and hospitals.[13]

Early battles in 1862 and 1863 edit

 
A lithograph of the storming of Fort Wagner.

In general, white soldiers and officers believed that black men lacked the ability to fight and fight well.[citation needed] In October 1862, African-American soldiers of the 1st Kansas Colored Infantry, in one of the first engagements involving black troops, silenced their critics by repulsing attacking Confederate guerrillas at the Skirmish at Island Mound, Missouri, in the Western Theatre. By August, 1863, fourteen more Negro State Regiments were in the field and ready for service. Union General Benjamin Butler wrote

Better soldiers never shouldered a musket. I observed a very remarkable trait about them. They learned to handle arms and to march more easily than intelligent white men. My drillmaster could teach a regiment of Negroes that much of the art of war sooner than he could have taught the same number of students from Harvard or Yale.[14]

At the Battle of Port Hudson, Louisiana, May 27, 1863, the African-American soldiers bravely advanced over open ground in the face of deadly artillery fire. Although the attack failed, the black soldiers proved their capability to withstand the heat of battle, with General Nathaniel P. Banks recording in his official report: "Whatever doubt may have existed heretofore as to the efficiency of organizations of this character, the history of this day's proves...in this class of troops effective supporters and defenders."[15] Noted for his bravery was Union Captain Andre Cailloux, who fell early in the battle.[16] This was the first battle involving a formal Federal African-American unit.[17]

On June 7, 1863, a garrison consisting mostly of black troops assigned to guard a supply depot during the Vicksburg Campaign found themselves under attack by a larger Confederate force. Recently recruited, minimally trained, and poorly armed, the black soldiers still managed to successfully repulse the attack in the ensuing Battle of Milliken's Bend with the help of federal gunboats from the Tennessee river, despite suffering nearly three times as many casualties as the rebels.[18] At one point in the battle, Confederate General Henry McCulloch noted

The line was formed under a heavy fire from the enemy, and the troops charged the breastworks, carrying it instantly, killing and wounding many of the enemy by their deadly fire, as well as the bayonet. This charge was resisted by the negro portion of the enemy's force with considerable obstinacy, while the white or true Yankee portion ran like whipped curs almost as soon as the charge was ordered.[19]

Fort Wagner, Fort Pillow, and beyond edit

[The Fifty-fourth Massachusetts] made Fort Wagner such a name to the colored race as Bunker Hill has been for ninety years to the white Yankees.

-The New York Tribune, September 8, 1865[20]

 
This recruitment poster was issued under a July 1863 presidential order with the promise of freedom, protection and pay.

The most widely-known battle fought by African Americans was the assault on Fort Wagner, off the Charleston coast, South Carolina, by the 54th Massachusetts Infantry on July 18, 1863. The 54th volunteered to lead the assault on the strongly fortified Confederate positions of the earthen/sand embankments (very resistant to artillery fire) on the coastal beach. The soldiers of the 54th scaled the fort's parapet, and were only driven back after brutal hand-to-hand combat. Despite the defeat, the unit was hailed for its valor, which spurred further African-American recruitment, giving the Union a numerical military advantage from a large segment of the population the Confederacy did not attempt to exploit until too late in the closing days of the War. Unfortunately for any African-American soldiers captured during these battles, imprisonment could be even worse than death. Black prisoners were not treated the same as white prisoners. They received no medical attention, harsh punishments, and would not be used in a prisoner exchange because the Confederate states only saw them as escaped slaves fighting against their masters.[21]

After the battle, Secretary of War Edwin Stanton praised the recent performances of black troops in a letter to Abraham Lincoln, stating "Many persons believed, or pretended to believe, and confidentially asserted, that freed slaves would not make good soldiers; they would lack courage, and could not be subjected to military discipline. Facts have shown how groundless were these apprehensions. The slave has proved his manhood, and his capacity as an infantry soldier, at Milliken's Bend, at the assault opon Port Hudson, and the storming of Fort Wagner."[19]

 
Company I of the 36th Colored Regiment, U.S. Colored Troops, (USCT) Infantry.

African-American soldiers participated in every major campaign of the war's last year, 1864–1865, except for Sherman's Atlanta Campaign in Georgia, and the following "March to the Sea" to Savannah, by Christmas 1864. The year 1864 was especially eventful for African-American troops. On April 12, 1864, at the Battle of Fort Pillow, in Tennessee, Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest led his 2,500 men against the Union-held fortification, occupied by 292 black and 285 white soldiers.

After driving in the Union pickets and giving the garrison an opportunity to surrender, Forrest's men swarmed into the Fort with little difficulty and drove the Federals down the river's bluff into a deadly crossfire. Casualties were high and only sixty-two of the U.S. Colored Troops survived the fight. Accounts from both Union and Confederate witnesses suggest a massacre.[22] Many believed that the massacre was ordered by Forrest. The battle cry for some black soldiers became "Remember Fort Pillow!"

Six weeks later, Black troops won a notable victory in their first battle of the Overland Campaign in Virginia at the Battle of Wilson's Wharf, successfully defending Fort Pocahontas. Before the battle, Confederate General Fitzhugh Lee sent a surrender demand to the garrison in the fort, warning them if they did not surrender, he would not be "answerable for the consequences." Interpreting this to be a reference to the massacre at Fort Pillow, Union commanding officer Edward A. Wild defiantly refused, responding with a message stating "Present my compliments to General Fitz Lee and tell him to go to hell.” In the ensuing battle, the garrison force repulsed the assault, inflicting 200 casualties with a loss of just 6 killed and 40 wounded.

The Battle of Chaffin's Farm, Virginia, became one of the most heroic engagements involving black troops. On September 29, 1864, the African-American division of the Eighteenth Corps, after being pinned down by Confederate artillery fire for about 30 minutes, charged the earthworks and rushed up the slopes of the heights. During the hour-long engagement the division suffered tremendous casualties. Of the twenty-five African Americans who were awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor during the Civil War, fourteen received the honor as a result of their actions at Chaffin's Farm.

Discrimination in pay and assignments edit

 
African-American Federal troops participating in the Inauguration Day parade at Lincoln's second Inauguration, March 1865.[23]

Although black soldiers proved themselves as reputable soldiers, discrimination in pay and other areas remained widespread. According to the Militia Act of 1862, soldiers of African descent were to receive $10.00 per month, with an optional deduction for clothing at $3.00. In contrast, white privates received $12.00 per month plus a clothing allowance of $3.50.[24] Many regiments struggled for equal pay, some refusing any money and pay until June 15, 1864, when the Federal Congress granted equal pay for all soldiers.[25][26]

Besides discrimination in pay, colored units were often disproportionately assigned laborer work, rather than combat assignments.[4]: 198  General Daniel Ullman, commander of the Corps d'Afrique, remarked "I fear that many high officials outside of Washington have no other intention than that these men shall be used as diggers and drudges."[27]

African-American contributions to Union war intelligence edit

Black people, both enslaved and free, were involved in assisting the Union in matters of intelligence, and their contributions were labeled Black Dispatches.[28] One of these spies was Mary Bowser. Harriet Tubman was also a spy, a nurse, and a cook whose efforts were key to Union victories and survival. Tubman is most widely recognized for her contributions to freeing slaves via the Underground Railroad. However, her contributions to the Union Army were equally important. She used her knowledge of the country's terrain to gain important intelligence for the Union Army. She became the first woman to lead U.S. soldiers into combat when, under the order of Colonel James Montgomery, she took a contingent of soldiers in South Carolina behind enemy lines, destroying plantations and freeing 750 slaves in the process.[29]

Black people routinely assisted Union armies advancing through Confederate territory as scouts, guides, and spies. Confederate General Robert Lee said "The chief source of information to the enemy is through our negroes."[30] In a letter to Confederate high command, Confederate general Patrick Cleburne complained "All along the lines slavery is comparatively valueless to us for labor, but of great and increasing worth to the enemy for information. It is an omnipresent spy system, pointing out our valuable men to the enemy, revealing our positions, purposes, and resources, and yet acting so safely and secretly that there is no means to guard against it. Even in the heart of our country, where our hold upon this secret espionage is firmest, it waits but the opening fire of the enemy's battle line to wake it, like a torpid serpent, into venomous activity."[31]

Union Navy (U.S. Navy) edit

Unlike the army, the U.S. Navy had never prohibited black men from serving, though regulations in place since 1840 had required them to be limited to not more than 5% of all enlisted sailors. Thus at the start of the war, the Union Navy differed from the Army in that it allowed black men to enlist and was racially integrated.[32] The Union Navy's official position at the beginning of the war was ambivalence toward the use of either Northern free black people or runaway slaves. The constant stream, however, of escaped slaves seeking refuge aboard Union ships forced the Navy to formulate a policy towards them.[33] Secretary of the Navy, Gideon Wells in a terse order, pointed out the following;

It is not the policy of this Government to invite or encourage this kind of desertion and yet, under the circumstances, no other course...could be adopted without violating every principle of humanity. To return them would be impolitic as well as cruel...you will do well to employ them.

— Gideon Wells, Secretary of the Navy July 22, 1861 [34]

In time, the Union Navy would see almost 16% of its ranks supplied by African Americans, performing in a wide range of enlisted roles.[35] In contrast to the Army, the Navy from the outset not only paid equal wages to white and black sailors, but offered considerably more for even entry-level enlisted positions.[36] Food rations and medical care were also improved over the Army, with the Navy benefiting from a regular stream of supplies from Union-held ports.[37]

Becoming a commissioned officer was out of reach for nearly all black sailors. With rare exceptions, the rank of petty officer was the highest available to black sailors, and in practice, only to free blacks (who often were the only ones with naval careers sufficiently long to earn the rank).[38] Robert Smalls, an escaped slave who freed himself, his crew, and their families by commandeering a Confederate transport ship, CSS Planter, in Charleston harbor, on May 13, 1862, and sailing it from Confederate-controlled waters of the harbor to the U.S. blockade that surrounded it, was given the rank of captain of the steamer "Planter" in December 1864.[39]

Confederacy edit

 
Marlboro Jones, an African-American servant to a white Confederate soldier. African Americans performed forced labor under Confederate military unit direction.[40]

Confederate Army edit

Blacks did not serve in the Confederate Army as combat troops, per law.[2][41][42] Blacks were not merely not recruited; service was actively forbidden by the Confederacy for the majority of its existence.[2] Enslaved blacks were sometimes used for camp labor, however. Other times, when a son or sons in a slaveholding family enlisted, he would take along a family slave to work as a personal servant. Such slaves would perform non-combat duties such as carrying and loading supplies, but they were not soldiers. Still, even these civilian usages were comparatively infrequent. In areas where the Union Army approached, a wave of slave escapes would inevitably follow; Southern blacks would inevitably offer themselves as scouts who knew the territory to the Federals. Confederate armies were rationally nervous about having too many blacks marching with them, as their patchy loyalty to the Confederacy meant that the risk of one turning runaway and informing the Federals as to the rebel army's size and position was substantial. Opposition to arming blacks was even stauncher. Many in the South feared slave revolts already, and arming blacks would make the threat of mistreated slaves overthrowing their masters even greater.[2]

The closest the Confederacy came to seriously attempting to equip colored soldiers in the army proper came in the last few weeks of the war. The Confederate Congress narrowly passed a bill allowing slaves to join the army. The bill did not offer or guarantee an end to their servitude as an incentive to enlist, and only allowed slaves to enlist with the consent of their masters. Even this weak bill, supported by Robert E. Lee, passed only narrowly, by a 9–8 vote in the Senate. President Jefferson Davis signed the law on March 13, 1865, but went beyond the terms in the bill by issuing an order on March 23 to offer freedom to slaves so recruited. The emancipation offered, however, was reliant upon a master's consent; "no slave will be accepted as a recruit unless with his own consent and with the approbation of his master by a written instrument conferring, as far as he may, the rights of a freedman."[43] According to historian William C. Davis, President Davis felt that blacks would not fight unless they were guaranteed their freedom after the war.[44] Gaining this consent from slaveholders, however, was an "unlikely prospect".[2]

THE BATTALION from Camps Winder and Jackson, under the command of Dr. Chambliss, including the company of colored troops under Captain Grimes, will parade on the square on Wednesday evening, at 4* o'clock. This is the first company of negro troops raised in Virginia. It was organized about a month since, by Dr. Chambliss, from the employees of the hospitals, and served on the lines during the recent Sheridan raid.

Richmond Sentinel, March 21, 1865

According to calculations of Virginia's state auditor, some 4,700 free black males and more than 25,000 male slaves between eighteen and forty five years of age were fit for service.[45] Two companies were raised from laborers of two local hospitals-Winder and Jackson-as well as a formal recruiting center created by General Ewell and staffed by Majors James Pegram and Thomas P. Turner.[46]: 125  In all, they managed to recruit about 200 men.[47] They paraded down the streets of Richmond, albeit without weapons. At least one such review had to be cancelled due not merely to lack of weaponry, but also lack of uniforms or equipment. These units did not see combat; Richmond fell without a battle to Union armies one week later in early April 1865. These two companies were the sole exception to the Confederacy's policy of spurning black soldiery, never saw combat, and came too late in the war to matter.[2] In his memoirs, Davis stated "There did not remain time enough to obtain any result from its provisions".[48]

 
Jefferson Shields in uniform with medals and hat. Shields attended many reunions and was voted in as a member of the Stonewall Brigade at a reunion in Staunton, Virginia. He was buried with a military grave marker that reads "Jefferson Shields, Pvt. Co. H 27th Va. Inf., Stonewall Brigade, Confederate States Army" at Evergeen Cemetery, Lexington, Virginia. From the Liljenquist Family Collection of Civil War Photographs, Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. Jefferson Shields was not enlisted in the Confederate Army.[49] The Sons of Confederate Veterans awarded him the honorary rank of private decades after his death. The Confederate Army did not allow slaves to enlist. His image, along with other "black Confederates", helped to reinforce the stereotype of the "happy slave" narrative according to historian Kevin M. Levin.[50]

According to a 2019 study by historian Kevin M. Levin, the origin of the myth of black Confederate soldiers primarily originates in the 1970s.[51] After 1977, some Confederate heritage groups began to claim that large numbers of black soldiers fought loyally for the Confederacy.[52][53] These accounts are not given credence by historians, as they rely on sources such as postwar individual journals rather than military records.[2][52] Historian Bruce Levine wrote:

The whole sorry episode [the mustering of colored troops in Richmond] provides a fitting coda for our examination of modern claims that thousands and thousands of black troops loyally fought in the Confederate armies. This strikingly unsuccessful last-ditch effort constituted the sole exception to the Confederacy's steadfast refusal to employ African American soldiers. As General Ewell's long term aide-de-camp, Major George Campbell Brown, later affirmed, the handful of black soldiers mustered in the southern capital in March of 1865 constituted 'the first and only black troops used on our side.'[54]

Non-military use edit

The impressment of slaves and conscription of freedmen into direct military labor initially came on the impetus of state legislatures, and by 1864, six states had regulated impressment (Florida, Virginia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and South Carolina, in order of authorization).[55][56][57] Slave labor was used in a wide variety of support roles, from infrastructure and mining, to teamster and medical roles such as hospital attendants and nurses.[46]: 62–63  Bruce Levine wrote that "Nearly 40% of the Confederacy's population were unfree... the work required to sustain the same society during war naturally fell disproportionately on black shoulders as well. By drawing so many white men into the army, indeed, the war multiplied the importance of the black work force."[46]: 62 

Naval historian Ivan Musicant wrote that blacks may have possibly served various petty positions in the Confederate Navy, such as coal heavers or officer's stewards, although records are lacking.[58]

After the war, the State of Tennessee granted Confederate pensions to nearly 300 African Americans for their service to the Confederacy.[59][60]

Proposals to arm slaves edit

The idea of arming slaves for use as soldiers was speculated on from the onset of the war, but not seriously considered by Davis or others in his administration. As the Union saw victories in the fall of 1862 and the spring of 1863, however, the need for more manpower was acknowledged by the Confederacy in the form of conscription of white men, and the national impressment of free and enslaved blacks into laborer positions. State militias composed of freedmen were offered, but the War Department spurned the offer.[46]: 19 

Will the slaves fight?−the experience of this war so far has been that half-trained Negroes have fought as bravely as half-trained Yankees.

-General Patrick Cleburne[61]

In January 1864, General Patrick Cleburne in the Army of Tennessee proposed using slaves as soldiers in the national army to buttress falling troop numbers. Cleburne recommended offering slaves their freedom if they fought and survived. He also recommended recognizing slave marriages and family, and forbidding their sale, hotly controversial proposals when slaveowners routinely separated families and refused to recognize familial bonds. Cleburne cited the blacks in the Union army as proof that they could fight. He also believed that such a policy would reduce mass defections of slaves to the Union: "The approach of the enemy would no longer find every household surrounded by spies ... There would be no recruits awaiting the enemy with open arms, no complete history of every neighborhood with ready guides, no fear of insurrection in the rear...[2]

Cleburne's proposal received a hostile reception. Recognizing slave families would entirely undermine the economic foundation of slavery, as a man's wife and children would no longer be salable commodities, so his proposal veered too close to abolition for the pro-slavery Confederacy.[2] The other officers in the Army of Tennessee disapproved of the proposal. A. P. Stewart said that emancipating slaves for military use was "at war with my social, moral, and political principles", while James Patton Anderson called the proposal "revolting to Southern sentiment, Southern pride, and Southern honor."[62][63][2] It was sent to Confederate President Jefferson Davis anyway, who refused to consider Cleburne's proposal and ordered the report kept private as discussion of it could only produce "discouragement, distraction, and dissension." Military adviser to Davis General Braxton Bragg considered the proposal outright treasonous to the Confederacy.[2]

The growing setbacks for the Confederacy in late 1864 caused a number of prominent officials to reconsider their earlier stance, however. President Lincoln's re-election in November 1864 seemed to seal the best political chance for victory the South had. President Davis, Secretary of State Judah P. Benjamin, and General Robert E. Lee now were willing to consider modified versions of Cleburne's original proposal. On November 7, 1864, in his annual address to Congress, Davis hinted at arming slaves.[64] Despite the suppression of Cleburne's idea, the question of enlisting slaves into the army had not faded away but had become a fixture of debate among columns of southern newspapers and southern society in the winter of 1864.[46]: 4 [65] Representative of the two sides in the debate were the Richmond Enquirer and the Charleston Courier:

... whenever the subjugation of Virginia or the employment of her slaves as soldiers are alternative propositions, then certainly we are for making them soldiers, and giving freedom to those negroes that escape the casualties of battle.

— Nathaniel Tyler in the Richmond Enquirer[66]

Slavery, God's institution of labor, and the primary political element of our Confederation of Government, state sovereignty... must stand or fall together. To talk of maintaining independence while we abolish slavery is simply to talk folly.

— Charleston Courier[67]

Opposition to the proposal was still widespread, even in the last months of the war. Howell Cobb of Georgia wrote in January 1865 that

the proposition to make soldiers of our slaves is the most pernicious idea that has been suggested since the war began... You cannot make soldiers of slaves, nor slaves of soldiers... The day you make soldiers of [Negroes] is the beginning of the end of the revolution. If slaves will make good soldiers our whole theory of slavery is wrong – but they won't make soldiers.[63][2]

Robert M. T. Hunter wrote "What did we go to war for, if not to protect our property?"[2] Confederate General Robert Toombs complained "But if you put our negroes and white men into the army together, you must and will put them on an equality; they must be under the same code, the same pay, allowances and clothing. There must be promotions for valor or there will be no morals among them. Therefore, it is a surrender of the entire slavery question."[68]

On January 11, 1865, General Robert E. Lee wrote the Confederate Congress urging them to arm and enlist black slaves in exchange for their freedom.[69] On March 13, the Confederate Congress passed legislation to raise and enlist companies of black soldiers by one vote. The law allowed slaves to enlist, but only with the consent of their slave masters. The legislation was then promulgated into military policy by Davis in General Order No. 14 on March 23, 1865.[43] The war ended less than six weeks later, and there is no record of any black unit being accepted into the Confederate army or seeing combat.[70]

Louisiana militia edit

Louisiana was somewhat unique among the Confederacy as the Southern state with the highest proportion of non-enslaved free blacks, a remnant of its time under French rule. Elsewhere in the South, such free blacks ran the risk of being accused of being a runaway slave, arrested and enslaved. One of the state militias was the 1st Louisiana Native Guard, a militia unit composed of free men of color, mixed-blood creoles who would be considered black elsewhere in the South by the one-drop rule. The unit was short lived, and never saw combat before forced to disband in April 1862 after the Louisiana State Legislature passed a law that reorganized the militia into only "...free white males capable of bearing arms."[71][72] The militia was later briefly reformed, then dissolved again. A Union army regiment 1st Louisiana Native Guard, including some former members of the former Confederate 1st Louisiana Native Guard, was later formed under the same name after General Butler took control of New Orleans.

Other militias with notable free black representation included the Baton Rouge Guards under Capt. Henry Favrot, the Pointe Coupee Light Infantry under Capt. Ferdinand Claiborne, and the Augustin Guards and Monet's Guards of Natchitoches under Dr. Jean Burdin. The only official duties ever given to the Natchitoches units were funeral honor guard details.[73] One account of an unidentified African American fighting for the Confederacy, from two Southern 1862 newspapers,[74] tells of "a huge negro" fighting under the command of Confederate Major General John C. Breckinridge against the 14th Maine Infantry Regiment in a battle near Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on August 5, 1862. The man was described as being "armed and equipped with knapsack, musket, and uniform", and helping to lead the attack.[75] The man's status of being a freedman or a slave is unknown.

Confederate Navy edit

There is evidence of a small number enslaved and free African Americans who were sailors/laborers (though not combatants necessarily) in the Confederate Navy. This includes a sailor named Edward Weeks who served on the CSS Alabama.[76] Typically tasks in the Confederate navy were those of menial labor. Historians have estimated that up to 5% of seamen on Confederate ships in Savannah were of African American descent. These numbers were always small, and were limited by officials in the Confederate government.[77]

United States Colored Troops as prisoners of war edit

 
Monument to U.S. Colored Troops at Vicksburg National Military Park

Prisoner exchanges between the Union and Confederacy were suspended when the Confederacy refused to return black soldiers captured in uniform. In October 1862, the Confederate Congress issued a resolution declaring that all Negroes, free and enslaved, should be delivered to their respective states "to be dealt with according to the present and future laws of such State or States".[78] In a letter to General Beauregard on this issue, Secretary Seddon pointed out that "Slaves in flagrant rebellion are subject to death by the laws of every slave-holding State" but that "to guard, however, against possible abuse...the order of execution should be reposed in the general commanding the special locality of the capture."[79]

However, Seddon, concerned about the "embarrassments attending this question",[80] urged that former slaves be sent back to their owners. As for freemen, they would be handed over to Confederates for confinement and put to hard labor.[81] Black troops were actually less likely to be taken prisoner than whites, as in many cases, such as the Battle of Fort Pillow, Confederate troops murdered them on the battlefield; if taken prisoner, black troops and their white officers faced far worse treatment than other prisoners.

In the last few months of the war, the Confederate government agreed to the exchange of all prisoners, white and black, and several thousand troops were exchanged until the surrender of the Confederacy ended all hostilities.[82]

See also edit

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Aptheker, Herbert (January 1947). "Negro Casualties in the Civil War". The Journal of Negro History. 32 (1): 12. doi:10.2307/2715291. hdl:2027/mdp.39015026808827. JSTOR 2715291. S2CID 149567737.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Bonekemper III, Edward (2015). The Myth of the Lost Cause. New York: Regnery Publishing. pp. 78–92. ISBN 978-1-62157-454-5.
  3. ^ "Douglass Monthly" V (August 1863) 852
  4. ^ a b c James McPherson, "The Negro's Civil War".
  5. ^ Edward G. Longacre, "Black Troops in the Army of the James", 1863–65 "Military Affairs", Vol. 45, No. 1 (February 1981), p.3
  6. ^ "Teaching With Documents: The Fight for Equal Rights: Black Soldiers in the Civil War". National Archives. The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved December 3, 2015.
  7. ^ Trudeau, Noah A., Like Men of War, Little, Brown and Company, p.8-9.
  8. ^ U.S. Statutes at Large XII, p. 589-92
  9. ^ "Black Civil War Soldiers - Facts, Death Toll & Enlistment". 22 November 2022.
  10. ^ Brabson, Fay Warrington (1972). Andrew Johnson: a life in pursuit of the right course, 1808–1875: the seventeenth President of the United States. Durham, N.C.: Seeman Printery. p. 96. LCCN 77151079. OCLC 590545. OL 4578789M.
  11. ^ a b "Black Soldiers in the Civil War". Archives.gov. 2011-10-19. Retrieved 2012-05-27.
  12. ^ Butts, Heather (2005). "Alexander Thomas Augusta Physician, Teacher and Human Rights Activist". J Natl Med Assoc. 97 (1): 106–9. PMC 2568562. PMID 15719881.
  13. ^ Jane E. Schultz, "Seldom Thanked, Never Praised, and Scarcely Recognized: Gender and Racism in Civil War Hospitals", Civil War History, Vol. xlviii No. 3 p. 221
  14. ^ "The Color of Bravery". American Battlefield Trust. 2013-07-29. Retrieved 2021-05-30.
  15. ^ Official Record of the War of the Rebellion Series I, Vol. XXVI, Pt. 1, p. 45
  16. ^ Rogers, Octavia V., "The House of Bondage", Oxford University Press, pg.131.
  17. ^ Trudeau, Noah A., Like Men of War, Little, Brown and Company, p.37.
  18. ^ "Milliken's Bend". American Battlefield Trust. Retrieved 2021-05-30.
  19. ^ a b "Battle of Milliken's Bend, June 7, 1863 - Vicksburg National Military Park (U.S. National Park Service)".
  20. ^ "New York Tribune,", September 8, 1865
  21. ^ Ward, Thhomas J. Jr. (August 27, 2013). "The Plight of the Black P.O.W." The New York Times. Retrieved December 3, 2015.
  22. ^ Trudeau, Noah A., Like Men of War, Little, Brown and Company, p.166-168.
  23. ^ "Uncovered Photos Offer View of Lincoln Ceremony". NPR.
  24. ^ Eric Foner. Give Me Liberty!: An American History. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2004, p. 497 ISBN 978-0-393-97873-5
  25. ^ U.S. Statutes at Large, XIII, 129-131
  26. ^ "Black Soldiers in the Civil War". Archives.gov. 2011-10-19. Retrieved 2012-05-27.
  27. ^ Official Record Ser. III Vol. III p. 1126
  28. ^ . cia.gov. Archived from the original on June 12, 2007. Retrieved 23 November 2010.
  29. ^ Chism, Kahlil (March 2005). "Harriet Tubman: Spy, Veteran, and Widow". OAH Magazine of History. 19 (1): 47–51. doi:10.1093/maghis/19.2.47.
  30. ^ "African Americans In The Civil War". HistoryNet. Retrieved 2021-05-30.
  31. ^ "Patrick Cleburne's Proposal to Arm Slaves". American Battlefield Trust. Retrieved 2021-05-30.
  32. ^ "African Americans in the U.S. Navy During the Civil War".
  33. ^ Steven J. Ramold. Slaves, Sailors, Citizens pp. 3–4
  34. ^ Official Record of the Confederate and Union Navies, Ser. I vol. VI, Washington, 1897, pp. 8–10. See http://cdl.library.cornell.edu/moa/browse.monographs/ofre.html
  35. ^ Ramold, Slaves, Sailors, Citizens, p. 55
  36. ^ Ramold, Slaves, Sailors, Citizens, pp. 82–84.
  37. ^ Ramold, Slaves, Sailors, Citizens, pp. 92–99.
  38. ^ Ramold, Slaves, Sailors, Citizens, pp. 76–77.
  39. ^ "Robert Smalls, from Escaped Slave to House of Representatives – African American History Blog – The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross". PBS. 13 January 2013.
  40. ^ Editors, Peter Wallenstein and Bertram Wyatt-Brown. Lucinda H. Mackethan. "Reading Marlboro Jones: A Georgia Slave in Civil War Virginia", Virginia's Civil War. Charlottesville, VA: University of Virginia Press, 2005.
  41. ^ Smith, Sam (10 February 2015). "Black Confederates". American Battlefield Trust. Civil War Trust.
  42. ^ Martinez, Jaime Amanda. "Black Confederates". Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Humanities Council.
  43. ^ a b Official Record, Series IV, Vol. III, p. 1161-1162.
  44. ^ Davis, William C., Jefferson Davis: The Man and His Hour, p. 599.
  45. ^ Statement of the Auditor of the Numbers of Slaves Fit for Service, March 25, 1865, William Smith Executive Papers, Virginia Governor's Office, RG 3, State Records Collection, LV.
  46. ^ a b c d e Bruce Levine. Confederate Emancipation: Southern Plans to Free and Arm Slaves during the Civil War.
  47. ^ James M. McPherson, ed., The Most Fearful Ordeal: Original Coverage of the Civil War by Writers and Reporters of the New York Times, p. 319.[1]
  48. ^ Jefferson Davis, The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government. p. 518
  49. ^ "Jefferson Shields profile in Richmond paper, Nov. 3, 1901". The Daily Times. 1901-11-03. p. 18. Retrieved 2022-03-01.
  50. ^ Levin, Kevin (2019). Searching for Black Confederates: The Civil War's Most Persistent Myth. UNC Press. pp. 89–90. ISBN 978-1-4696-6941-0.
  51. ^ Levin, Kevin M. (2019). Searching for Black Confederates: The Civil War's Most Persistent Myth. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1-4696-5326-6.
  52. ^ a b Levin, Kevin (August 8, 2015). "The Myth of the Black Confederate Soldier". The Daily Beast. Retrieved November 16, 2017.
  53. ^ Marshall, Josh (January 2, 2018). "In Search of the Black Confederate Unicorn". Talking Points Memo. TPM Media LLC. Retrieved January 7, 2018.
  54. ^ Levine, Bruce. "Black Confederates", North & South 10, no. 2. p. 40–45.
  55. ^ Bergeron, Arthur W., Jr. Louisianans in the Civil War, "Louisiana's Free Men of Color in Gray", University of Missouri Press, 2002, p. 109.
  56. ^ Bernard H. Nelson, "Confederate Slave Impressment Legislation, 1861–1865", The Journal of Negro History, Vol. 31, No. 4. (October, 1946), pp. 393–394.
  57. ^ Nelson, "Confederate Slave Impressment Legislation," p. 398.
  58. ^ Ivan Musicant, "Divided Waters: The Naval History of the Civil War". (1995) p. 74. "Free blacks could enlist with the approval of the local squadron commander, or the Navy Department, and slaves were permitted to serve with their master's consent. It was stipulated that no draft of seamen to a newly commissioned vessel could number more than 5 per cent blacks. Though figures are lacking, a fair number of blacks served as coal heavers, officers' stewards, or at the top end, as highly skilled tidewater pilots."
  59. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-03-07. Retrieved 2009-05-20.
  60. ^ "Tennessee Colored Pension Applications for CSA Service".
  61. ^ Official Record, Series I, Vol. LII, Part 2, pp. 586–592.
  62. ^ Official Record, Series I, Vol. LII, Pt. 2, p. 598.
  63. ^ a b Official Record, Series IV, Vol III, p. 1009.
  64. ^ Fellman, Michael; Gordon, Lesley Jill; Sutherland, Daniel E. (2008). This Terrible War: The Civil War and its Aftermath (2nd ed.). New York: Pearson Longman.
  65. ^ Thomas Robson Hay. "The South and the Arming of the Slaves", The Mississippi Valley Historical Review, Vol. 6, No. 1. (June, 1919), p. 34.
  66. ^ Richmond Enquirer, October 6, 1864
  67. ^ Charleston Courier, January 24, 1865
  68. ^ ""It Is a Surrender Of the Entire Slavery Question"". civil war memory. 2014-11-13. Retrieved 2021-05-30.
  69. ^ Official Record. Series IV, Vol. III, p. 1012-1013.
  70. ^ "Black Confederates: Truth and Legend". 10 February 2015.
  71. ^ Official copy of the militia law of Louisiana, adopted by the state legislature, Jan. 23, 1862
  72. ^ Hollandsworth, James G., The Louisiana Native Guards, LSU Press, 1996, p.10.
  73. ^ Bergeron, Arhur W., Jr. Louisianans in the Civil War, "Louisiana's Free Men of Color in Gray", University of Missouri Press, 2002, p. 107-109.
  74. ^ Daily Delta, August 7, 1862; Grenada (Miss.) Appeal, August 7, 1862
  75. ^ Bergeron, Arhur W., Jr. Louisianans in the Civil War, "Louisiana's Free Men of Color in Gray", University of Missouri Press, 2002, p. 108.
  76. ^ Dr. Wilbert L. Jenkins: Climbing Up to Glory: A Short History of African Americans During the Civil War and Reconstruction (SR Books, 2002), p. 72.
  77. ^ Barbara Tomblin, Life in Jefferson Davis' Navy (Naval Institute Press, 2019)
  78. ^ Statutes at Large of the Confederate State (Richmond 1863), 167–168.
  79. ^ Official Record, Series II, Vol. VIII, p. 954.
  80. ^ Official Record, Series II, Vol. VI, pp. 703–704.
  81. ^ "Treatment of Colored Union Troops by Confederates, 1861–1865", The Journal of Negro History, Vol. 20, No. 3. (July, 1935), pp. 278–279.
  82. ^ Battle Cry of Freedom, p. 457.
  83. ^ "Delany, Martin R. (1812–1885)". Encyclopedia Virginia. Retrieved 2012-05-27.

Bibliography

  • Kevin M. Levin, Searching for Black Confederates: The Civil War's Most Persistent Myth. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2019.
  • Jaime Amanda Martinez, Confederate Slave Impressment in the Upper South. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2013.
  • Bruce Levine, Confederate Emancipation: Southern Plans to Free and Arm Slaves During the Civil War. New York: Oxford University Press, 2006. review by David W. Blight.

Further reading

  • William A. Dobak, Freedom by the Sword: The U.S. Colored Troops, 1862-1867. New York: Skyhorse Publishing, 2013. ISBN 978-1-61608-839-2
  • James G. Mendez, A Great Sacrifice: Northern Black Soldiers, Their Families, and the Experience of Civil War. New York: Fordham University Press, 2019. ISBN 9780823282500
  • John David Smith, Lincoln and the U.S. Colored Troops. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2013. ISBN 978-0-8093-3290-8

military, history, african, americans, american, civil, african, americans, including, former, slaves, served, american, civil, black, joined, union, army, included, officers, enlisted, soldiers, approximately, black, sailors, served, union, navy, formed, larg. African Americans including former slaves served in the American Civil War The 186 097 black men who joined the Union Army included 7 122 officers and 178 975 enlisted soldiers 1 Approximately 20 000 black sailors served in the Union Navy and formed a large percentage of many ships crews 2 Later in the war many regiments were recruited and organized as the United States Colored Troops which reinforced the Northern forces substantially during the conflict s last two years Both Northern Free Negro and Southern runaway slaves joined the fight Throughout the course of the war black soldiers served in forty major battles and hundreds of more minor skirmishes sixteen African Americans received the Medal of Honor 2 Sgt Samuel Smith 3rd United States Colored Cavalry Regiment with wife and daughters c 1863 65For the Confederacy both free and enslaved black Americans were used for manual labor but the issue of whether to arm them and under what terms became a major source of debate within the Confederate Congress the President s Cabinet and C S War Department staff In general newspapers politicians and army leaders alike were hostile to any efforts to arm blacks The war s desperate circumstances meant that the Confederacy changed their policy in the last month of the war in March 1865 a small program attempted to recruit train and arm blacks but no significant numbers were ever raised or recruited and those that were never saw combat Contents 1 Union 1 1 Non combatant labor duty 1 2 Early battles in 1862 and 1863 1 3 Fort Wagner Fort Pillow and beyond 1 4 Discrimination in pay and assignments 1 5 African American contributions to Union war intelligence 1 6 Union Navy U S Navy 2 Confederacy 2 1 Confederate Army 2 2 Non military use 2 3 Proposals to arm slaves 2 4 Louisiana militia 2 5 Confederate Navy 3 United States Colored Troops as prisoners of war 4 See also 5 ReferencesUnion editOur Presidents Governors Generals and Secretaries are calling with almost frantic vehemence for men Men men send us men they scream or the cause of the Union is gone and yet these very officers representing the people and the Government steadily and persistently refuse to receive the very class of men which have a deeper interest in the defeat and humiliation of the rebels than all others Frederick Douglass 3 nbsp Unidentified African American Union veteran From the Liljenquist Family Collection of Civil War Photographs Prints and Photographs Division Library of CongressProposals to raise African American regiments in the Union s war efforts were at first met with trepidation by officials within the Union command structure President Abraham Lincoln included Concerns over the response of the border states of which one Maryland surrounded in part the capital of Washington D C the response of white soldiers and officers as well as the effectiveness of a fighting force composed of black men were raised 4 165 167 5 Despite official reluctance from above the number of white volunteers dropped throughout the war and black soldiers were needed whether the population liked it or not 6 However African Americans had been volunteering since the first days of war on both sides though many were turned down 7 On July 17 1862 the U S Congress passed two statutes allowing for the enlistment of colored troops African Americans 8 but official enrollment occurred only after the effective date of the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1 1863 However state and local militia units had already begun enlisting black men including the Black Brigade of Cincinnati raised in September 1862 to help provide manpower to thwart a feared Confederate raid on Cincinnati from Kentucky as well as black infantry units raised in Kansas Missouri Louisiana and South Carolina 9 In March 1863 upon hearing that Andrew Johnson was open to recruiting blacks in Tennessee Abraham Lincoln wrote him encouragement The colored population is the great available and yet unavailed of force for restoring the Union The bare sight of 50 000 armed and drilled black soldiers upon the banks of the Mississippi would end the rebellion at once 10 In May 1863 Congress established the Bureau of Colored Troops in an effort to organize black people s efforts in the war 11 African Americans served as medical officers after 1863 beginning with Baltimore surgeon Alexander Augusta Augusta was a senior surgeon with white assistant surgeons under his command at Fort Stanton MD 12 nbsp African American laborers bury the dead at Fredericksburg Virginia 1862 In actual numbers African American soldiers eventually constituted 10 of the entire Union Army United States Army Losses among African Americans were high In the last year and a half and from all reported casualties approximately 20 of all African Americans enrolled in the military lost their lives during the Civil War 1 16 Notably their mortality rate was significantly higher than that of white soldiers We find according to the revised official data that of the slightly over two millions troops in the United States Volunteers over 316 000 died from all causes or 15 2 Of the 67 000 Regular Army white troops 8 6 or not quite 6 000 died Of the approximately 180 000 United States Colored Troops however over 36 000 died or 20 5 In other words the mortality rate amongst the United States Colored Troops in the Civil War was 35 greater than that among other troops notwithstanding the fact that the former were not enrolled until some eighteen months after the fighting began Herbert Aptheker 1 16 Non combatant labor duty edit Escaped slaves who sought refuge in Union Army camps were called contrabands A number of officers in the field experimented with varying degrees of success in using contrabands for manual work in Union Army camps Eventually they composed black regiments of soldiers These officers included General David Hunter General James H Lane and General Benjamin F Butler of Massachusetts 4 165 167 In early 1861 General Butler was the first known Union commander to use black contrabands in a non combatant role to do the physical labor duties after he refused to return escaped slaves at Fort Monroe Virginia who came to him for asylum from their masters who sought to capture and reenslave them In September 1862 free African American men were conscripted and impressed into forced labor for constructing defensive fortifications by the police force of the city of Cincinnati Ohio however they were soon released from their forced labor and a call for African American volunteers was sent out Some 700 of them volunteered and they came to be known as the Black Brigade of Cincinnati Because of the harsh working conditions and the extreme brutality of their Cincinnati police guards the Union Army under General Lew Wallace stepped in to restore order and ensure that the black conscripts received the fair treatment due to soldiers including the equal pay of privates Contrabands were later settled in a number of colonies such as at the Grand Contraband Camp Virginia and in the Port Royal Experiment Blacks also participated in activities further behind the lines that helped keep an army functioning such as at hospitals and the like Jane E Schultz wrote of the medical corps thatApproximately 10 percent of the Union s female relief workforce was of African descent free blacks of diverse education and class background who earned wages or worked without pay in the larger cause of freedom and runaway slaves who sought sanctuary in military camps and hospitals 13 Early battles in 1862 and 1863 edit nbsp A lithograph of the storming of Fort Wagner In general white soldiers and officers believed that black men lacked the ability to fight and fight well citation needed In October 1862 African American soldiers of the 1st Kansas Colored Infantry in one of the first engagements involving black troops silenced their critics by repulsing attacking Confederate guerrillas at the Skirmish at Island Mound Missouri in the Western Theatre By August 1863 fourteen more Negro State Regiments were in the field and ready for service Union General Benjamin Butler wroteBetter soldiers never shouldered a musket I observed a very remarkable trait about them They learned to handle arms and to march more easily than intelligent white men My drillmaster could teach a regiment of Negroes that much of the art of war sooner than he could have taught the same number of students from Harvard or Yale 14 At the Battle of Port Hudson Louisiana May 27 1863 the African American soldiers bravely advanced over open ground in the face of deadly artillery fire Although the attack failed the black soldiers proved their capability to withstand the heat of battle with General Nathaniel P Banks recording in his official report Whatever doubt may have existed heretofore as to the efficiency of organizations of this character the history of this day s proves in this class of troops effective supporters and defenders 15 Noted for his bravery was Union Captain Andre Cailloux who fell early in the battle 16 This was the first battle involving a formal Federal African American unit 17 On June 7 1863 a garrison consisting mostly of black troops assigned to guard a supply depot during the Vicksburg Campaign found themselves under attack by a larger Confederate force Recently recruited minimally trained and poorly armed the black soldiers still managed to successfully repulse the attack in the ensuing Battle of Milliken s Bend with the help of federal gunboats from the Tennessee river despite suffering nearly three times as many casualties as the rebels 18 At one point in the battle Confederate General Henry McCulloch notedThe line was formed under a heavy fire from the enemy and the troops charged the breastworks carrying it instantly killing and wounding many of the enemy by their deadly fire as well as the bayonet This charge was resisted by the negro portion of the enemy s force with considerable obstinacy while the white or true Yankee portion ran like whipped curs almost as soon as the charge was ordered 19 Fort Wagner Fort Pillow and beyond edit The Fifty fourth Massachusetts made Fort Wagner such a name to the colored race as Bunker Hill has been for ninety years to the white Yankees The New York Tribune September 8 1865 20 nbsp This recruitment poster was issued under a July 1863 presidential order with the promise of freedom protection and pay The most widely known battle fought by African Americans was the assault on Fort Wagner off the Charleston coast South Carolina by the 54th Massachusetts Infantry on July 18 1863 The 54th volunteered to lead the assault on the strongly fortified Confederate positions of the earthen sand embankments very resistant to artillery fire on the coastal beach The soldiers of the 54th scaled the fort s parapet and were only driven back after brutal hand to hand combat Despite the defeat the unit was hailed for its valor which spurred further African American recruitment giving the Union a numerical military advantage from a large segment of the population the Confederacy did not attempt to exploit until too late in the closing days of the War Unfortunately for any African American soldiers captured during these battles imprisonment could be even worse than death Black prisoners were not treated the same as white prisoners They received no medical attention harsh punishments and would not be used in a prisoner exchange because the Confederate states only saw them as escaped slaves fighting against their masters 21 After the battle Secretary of War Edwin Stanton praised the recent performances of black troops in a letter to Abraham Lincoln stating Many persons believed or pretended to believe and confidentially asserted that freed slaves would not make good soldiers they would lack courage and could not be subjected to military discipline Facts have shown how groundless were these apprehensions The slave has proved his manhood and his capacity as an infantry soldier at Milliken s Bend at the assault opon Port Hudson and the storming of Fort Wagner 19 nbsp Company I of the 36th Colored Regiment U S Colored Troops USCT Infantry African American soldiers participated in every major campaign of the war s last year 1864 1865 except for Sherman s Atlanta Campaign in Georgia and the following March to the Sea to Savannah by Christmas 1864 The year 1864 was especially eventful for African American troops On April 12 1864 at the Battle of Fort Pillow in Tennessee Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest led his 2 500 men against the Union held fortification occupied by 292 black and 285 white soldiers After driving in the Union pickets and giving the garrison an opportunity to surrender Forrest s men swarmed into the Fort with little difficulty and drove the Federals down the river s bluff into a deadly crossfire Casualties were high and only sixty two of the U S Colored Troops survived the fight Accounts from both Union and Confederate witnesses suggest a massacre 22 Many believed that the massacre was ordered by Forrest The battle cry for some black soldiers became Remember Fort Pillow Six weeks later Black troops won a notable victory in their first battle of the Overland Campaign in Virginia at the Battle of Wilson s Wharf successfully defending Fort Pocahontas Before the battle Confederate General Fitzhugh Lee sent a surrender demand to the garrison in the fort warning them if they did not surrender he would not be answerable for the consequences Interpreting this to be a reference to the massacre at Fort Pillow Union commanding officer Edward A Wild defiantly refused responding with a message stating Present my compliments to General Fitz Lee and tell him to go to hell In the ensuing battle the garrison force repulsed the assault inflicting 200 casualties with a loss of just 6 killed and 40 wounded The Battle of Chaffin s Farm Virginia became one of the most heroic engagements involving black troops On September 29 1864 the African American division of the Eighteenth Corps after being pinned down by Confederate artillery fire for about 30 minutes charged the earthworks and rushed up the slopes of the heights During the hour long engagement the division suffered tremendous casualties Of the twenty five African Americans who were awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor during the Civil War fourteen received the honor as a result of their actions at Chaffin s Farm Discrimination in pay and assignments edit nbsp African American Federal troops participating in the Inauguration Day parade at Lincoln s second Inauguration March 1865 23 Although black soldiers proved themselves as reputable soldiers discrimination in pay and other areas remained widespread According to the Militia Act of 1862 soldiers of African descent were to receive 10 00 per month with an optional deduction for clothing at 3 00 In contrast white privates received 12 00 per month plus a clothing allowance of 3 50 24 Many regiments struggled for equal pay some refusing any money and pay until June 15 1864 when the Federal Congress granted equal pay for all soldiers 25 26 Besides discrimination in pay colored units were often disproportionately assigned laborer work rather than combat assignments 4 198 General Daniel Ullman commander of the Corps d Afrique remarked I fear that many high officials outside of Washington have no other intention than that these men shall be used as diggers and drudges 27 African American contributions to Union war intelligence edit Black people both enslaved and free were involved in assisting the Union in matters of intelligence and their contributions were labeled Black Dispatches 28 One of these spies was Mary Bowser Harriet Tubman was also a spy a nurse and a cook whose efforts were key to Union victories and survival Tubman is most widely recognized for her contributions to freeing slaves via the Underground Railroad However her contributions to the Union Army were equally important She used her knowledge of the country s terrain to gain important intelligence for the Union Army She became the first woman to lead U S soldiers into combat when under the order of Colonel James Montgomery she took a contingent of soldiers in South Carolina behind enemy lines destroying plantations and freeing 750 slaves in the process 29 Black people routinely assisted Union armies advancing through Confederate territory as scouts guides and spies Confederate General Robert Lee said The chief source of information to the enemy is through our negroes 30 In a letter to Confederate high command Confederate general Patrick Cleburne complained All along the lines slavery is comparatively valueless to us for labor but of great and increasing worth to the enemy for information It is an omnipresent spy system pointing out our valuable men to the enemy revealing our positions purposes and resources and yet acting so safely and secretly that there is no means to guard against it Even in the heart of our country where our hold upon this secret espionage is firmest it waits but the opening fire of the enemy s battle line to wake it like a torpid serpent into venomous activity 31 Union Navy U S Navy edit Unlike the army the U S Navy had never prohibited black men from serving though regulations in place since 1840 had required them to be limited to not more than 5 of all enlisted sailors Thus at the start of the war the Union Navy differed from the Army in that it allowed black men to enlist and was racially integrated 32 The Union Navy s official position at the beginning of the war was ambivalence toward the use of either Northern free black people or runaway slaves The constant stream however of escaped slaves seeking refuge aboard Union ships forced the Navy to formulate a policy towards them 33 Secretary of the Navy Gideon Wells in a terse order pointed out the following It is not the policy of this Government to invite or encourage this kind of desertion and yet under the circumstances no other course could be adopted without violating every principle of humanity To return them would be impolitic as well as cruel you will do well to employ them Gideon Wells Secretary of the Navy July 22 1861 34 In time the Union Navy would see almost 16 of its ranks supplied by African Americans performing in a wide range of enlisted roles 35 In contrast to the Army the Navy from the outset not only paid equal wages to white and black sailors but offered considerably more for even entry level enlisted positions 36 Food rations and medical care were also improved over the Army with the Navy benefiting from a regular stream of supplies from Union held ports 37 Becoming a commissioned officer was out of reach for nearly all black sailors With rare exceptions the rank of petty officer was the highest available to black sailors and in practice only to free blacks who often were the only ones with naval careers sufficiently long to earn the rank 38 Robert Smalls an escaped slave who freed himself his crew and their families by commandeering a Confederate transport ship CSS Planter in Charleston harbor on May 13 1862 and sailing it from Confederate controlled waters of the harbor to the U S blockade that surrounded it was given the rank of captain of the steamer Planter in December 1864 39 Confederacy edit nbsp Marlboro Jones an African American servant to a white Confederate soldier African Americans performed forced labor under Confederate military unit direction 40 Confederate Army edit Blacks did not serve in the Confederate Army as combat troops per law 2 41 42 Blacks were not merely not recruited service was actively forbidden by the Confederacy for the majority of its existence 2 Enslaved blacks were sometimes used for camp labor however Other times when a son or sons in a slaveholding family enlisted he would take along a family slave to work as a personal servant Such slaves would perform non combat duties such as carrying and loading supplies but they were not soldiers Still even these civilian usages were comparatively infrequent In areas where the Union Army approached a wave of slave escapes would inevitably follow Southern blacks would inevitably offer themselves as scouts who knew the territory to the Federals Confederate armies were rationally nervous about having too many blacks marching with them as their patchy loyalty to the Confederacy meant that the risk of one turning runaway and informing the Federals as to the rebel army s size and position was substantial Opposition to arming blacks was even stauncher Many in the South feared slave revolts already and arming blacks would make the threat of mistreated slaves overthrowing their masters even greater 2 The closest the Confederacy came to seriously attempting to equip colored soldiers in the army proper came in the last few weeks of the war The Confederate Congress narrowly passed a bill allowing slaves to join the army The bill did not offer or guarantee an end to their servitude as an incentive to enlist and only allowed slaves to enlist with the consent of their masters Even this weak bill supported by Robert E Lee passed only narrowly by a 9 8 vote in the Senate President Jefferson Davis signed the law on March 13 1865 but went beyond the terms in the bill by issuing an order on March 23 to offer freedom to slaves so recruited The emancipation offered however was reliant upon a master s consent no slave will be accepted as a recruit unless with his own consent and with the approbation of his master by a written instrument conferring as far as he may the rights of a freedman 43 According to historian William C Davis President Davis felt that blacks would not fight unless they were guaranteed their freedom after the war 44 Gaining this consent from slaveholders however was an unlikely prospect 2 THE BATTALION from Camps Winder and Jackson under the command of Dr Chambliss including the company of colored troops under Captain Grimes will parade on the square on Wednesday evening at 4 o clock This is the first company of negro troops raised in Virginia It was organized about a month since by Dr Chambliss from the employees of the hospitals and served on the lines during the recent Sheridan raid Richmond Sentinel March 21 1865 According to calculations of Virginia s state auditor some 4 700 free black males and more than 25 000 male slaves between eighteen and forty five years of age were fit for service 45 Two companies were raised from laborers of two local hospitals Winder and Jackson as well as a formal recruiting center created by General Ewell and staffed by Majors James Pegram and Thomas P Turner 46 125 In all they managed to recruit about 200 men 47 They paraded down the streets of Richmond albeit without weapons At least one such review had to be cancelled due not merely to lack of weaponry but also lack of uniforms or equipment These units did not see combat Richmond fell without a battle to Union armies one week later in early April 1865 These two companies were the sole exception to the Confederacy s policy of spurning black soldiery never saw combat and came too late in the war to matter 2 In his memoirs Davis stated There did not remain time enough to obtain any result from its provisions 48 nbsp Jefferson Shields in uniform with medals and hat Shields attended many reunions and was voted in as a member of the Stonewall Brigade at a reunion in Staunton Virginia He was buried with a military grave marker that reads Jefferson Shields Pvt Co H 27th Va Inf Stonewall Brigade Confederate States Army at Evergeen Cemetery Lexington Virginia From the Liljenquist Family Collection of Civil War Photographs Prints and Photographs Division Library of Congress Jefferson Shields was not enlisted in the Confederate Army 49 The Sons of Confederate Veterans awarded him the honorary rank of private decades after his death The Confederate Army did not allow slaves to enlist His image along with other black Confederates helped to reinforce the stereotype of the happy slave narrative according to historian Kevin M Levin 50 According to a 2019 study by historian Kevin M Levin the origin of the myth of black Confederate soldiers primarily originates in the 1970s 51 After 1977 some Confederate heritage groups began to claim that large numbers of black soldiers fought loyally for the Confederacy 52 53 These accounts are not given credence by historians as they rely on sources such as postwar individual journals rather than military records 2 52 Historian Bruce Levine wrote The whole sorry episode the mustering of colored troops in Richmond provides a fitting coda for our examination of modern claims that thousands and thousands of black troops loyally fought in the Confederate armies This strikingly unsuccessful last ditch effort constituted the sole exception to the Confederacy s steadfast refusal to employ African American soldiers As General Ewell s long term aide de camp Major George Campbell Brown later affirmed the handful of black soldiers mustered in the southern capital in March of 1865 constituted the first and only black troops used on our side 54 Non military use edit The impressment of slaves and conscription of freedmen into direct military labor initially came on the impetus of state legislatures and by 1864 six states had regulated impressment Florida Virginia Alabama Louisiana Mississippi and South Carolina in order of authorization 55 56 57 Slave labor was used in a wide variety of support roles from infrastructure and mining to teamster and medical roles such as hospital attendants and nurses 46 62 63 Bruce Levine wrote that Nearly 40 of the Confederacy s population were unfree the work required to sustain the same society during war naturally fell disproportionately on black shoulders as well By drawing so many white men into the army indeed the war multiplied the importance of the black work force 46 62 Naval historian Ivan Musicant wrote that blacks may have possibly served various petty positions in the Confederate Navy such as coal heavers or officer s stewards although records are lacking 58 After the war the State of Tennessee granted Confederate pensions to nearly 300 African Americans for their service to the Confederacy 59 60 Proposals to arm slaves edit The idea of arming slaves for use as soldiers was speculated on from the onset of the war but not seriously considered by Davis or others in his administration As the Union saw victories in the fall of 1862 and the spring of 1863 however the need for more manpower was acknowledged by the Confederacy in the form of conscription of white men and the national impressment of free and enslaved blacks into laborer positions State militias composed of freedmen were offered but the War Department spurned the offer 46 19 Will the slaves fight the experience of this war so far has been that half trained Negroes have fought as bravely as half trained Yankees General Patrick Cleburne 61 In January 1864 General Patrick Cleburne in the Army of Tennessee proposed using slaves as soldiers in the national army to buttress falling troop numbers Cleburne recommended offering slaves their freedom if they fought and survived He also recommended recognizing slave marriages and family and forbidding their sale hotly controversial proposals when slaveowners routinely separated families and refused to recognize familial bonds Cleburne cited the blacks in the Union army as proof that they could fight He also believed that such a policy would reduce mass defections of slaves to the Union The approach of the enemy would no longer find every household surrounded by spies There would be no recruits awaiting the enemy with open arms no complete history of every neighborhood with ready guides no fear of insurrection in the rear 2 Cleburne s proposal received a hostile reception Recognizing slave families would entirely undermine the economic foundation of slavery as a man s wife and children would no longer be salable commodities so his proposal veered too close to abolition for the pro slavery Confederacy 2 The other officers in the Army of Tennessee disapproved of the proposal A P Stewart said that emancipating slaves for military use was at war with my social moral and political principles while James Patton Anderson called the proposal revolting to Southern sentiment Southern pride and Southern honor 62 63 2 It was sent to Confederate President Jefferson Davis anyway who refused to consider Cleburne s proposal and ordered the report kept private as discussion of it could only produce discouragement distraction and dissension Military adviser to Davis General Braxton Bragg considered the proposal outright treasonous to the Confederacy 2 The growing setbacks for the Confederacy in late 1864 caused a number of prominent officials to reconsider their earlier stance however President Lincoln s re election in November 1864 seemed to seal the best political chance for victory the South had President Davis Secretary of State Judah P Benjamin and General Robert E Lee now were willing to consider modified versions of Cleburne s original proposal On November 7 1864 in his annual address to Congress Davis hinted at arming slaves 64 Despite the suppression of Cleburne s idea the question of enlisting slaves into the army had not faded away but had become a fixture of debate among columns of southern newspapers and southern society in the winter of 1864 46 4 65 Representative of the two sides in the debate were the Richmond Enquirer and the Charleston Courier whenever the subjugation of Virginia or the employment of her slaves as soldiers are alternative propositions then certainly we are for making them soldiers and giving freedom to those negroes that escape the casualties of battle Nathaniel Tyler in the Richmond Enquirer 66 Slavery God s institution of labor and the primary political element of our Confederation of Government state sovereignty must stand or fall together To talk of maintaining independence while we abolish slavery is simply to talk folly Charleston Courier 67 Opposition to the proposal was still widespread even in the last months of the war Howell Cobb of Georgia wrote in January 1865 that the proposition to make soldiers of our slaves is the most pernicious idea that has been suggested since the war began You cannot make soldiers of slaves nor slaves of soldiers The day you make soldiers of Negroes is the beginning of the end of the revolution If slaves will make good soldiers our whole theory of slavery is wrong but they won t make soldiers 63 2 Robert M T Hunter wrote What did we go to war for if not to protect our property 2 Confederate General Robert Toombs complained But if you put our negroes and white men into the army together you must and will put them on an equality they must be under the same code the same pay allowances and clothing There must be promotions for valor or there will be no morals among them Therefore it is a surrender of the entire slavery question 68 On January 11 1865 General Robert E Lee wrote the Confederate Congress urging them to arm and enlist black slaves in exchange for their freedom 69 On March 13 the Confederate Congress passed legislation to raise and enlist companies of black soldiers by one vote The law allowed slaves to enlist but only with the consent of their slave masters The legislation was then promulgated into military policy by Davis in General Order No 14 on March 23 1865 43 The war ended less than six weeks later and there is no record of any black unit being accepted into the Confederate army or seeing combat 70 Louisiana militia edit Main articles 1st Louisiana Native Guard CSA and 1st Louisiana Native Guard United States Louisiana was somewhat unique among the Confederacy as the Southern state with the highest proportion of non enslaved free blacks a remnant of its time under French rule Elsewhere in the South such free blacks ran the risk of being accused of being a runaway slave arrested and enslaved One of the state militias was the 1st Louisiana Native Guard a militia unit composed of free men of color mixed blood creoles who would be considered black elsewhere in the South by the one drop rule The unit was short lived and never saw combat before forced to disband in April 1862 after the Louisiana State Legislature passed a law that reorganized the militia into only free white males capable of bearing arms 71 72 The militia was later briefly reformed then dissolved again A Union army regiment 1st Louisiana Native Guard including some former members of the former Confederate 1st Louisiana Native Guard was later formed under the same name after General Butler took control of New Orleans Other militias with notable free black representation included the Baton Rouge Guards under Capt Henry Favrot the Pointe Coupee Light Infantry under Capt Ferdinand Claiborne and the Augustin Guards and Monet s Guards of Natchitoches under Dr Jean Burdin The only official duties ever given to the Natchitoches units were funeral honor guard details 73 One account of an unidentified African American fighting for the Confederacy from two Southern 1862 newspapers 74 tells of a huge negro fighting under the command of Confederate Major General John C Breckinridge against the 14th Maine Infantry Regiment in a battle near Baton Rouge Louisiana on August 5 1862 The man was described as being armed and equipped with knapsack musket and uniform and helping to lead the attack 75 The man s status of being a freedman or a slave is unknown Confederate Navy edit There is evidence of a small number enslaved and free African Americans who were sailors laborers though not combatants necessarily in the Confederate Navy This includes a sailor named Edward Weeks who served on the CSS Alabama 76 Typically tasks in the Confederate navy were those of menial labor Historians have estimated that up to 5 of seamen on Confederate ships in Savannah were of African American descent These numbers were always small and were limited by officials in the Confederate government 77 United States Colored Troops as prisoners of war edit nbsp Monument to U S Colored Troops at Vicksburg National Military ParkPrisoner exchanges between the Union and Confederacy were suspended when the Confederacy refused to return black soldiers captured in uniform In October 1862 the Confederate Congress issued a resolution declaring that all Negroes free and enslaved should be delivered to their respective states to be dealt with according to the present and future laws of such State or States 78 In a letter to General Beauregard on this issue Secretary Seddon pointed out that Slaves in flagrant rebellion are subject to death by the laws of every slave holding State but that to guard however against possible abuse the order of execution should be reposed in the general commanding the special locality of the capture 79 However Seddon concerned about the embarrassments attending this question 80 urged that former slaves be sent back to their owners As for freemen they would be handed over to Confederates for confinement and put to hard labor 81 Black troops were actually less likely to be taken prisoner than whites as in many cases such as the Battle of Fort Pillow Confederate troops murdered them on the battlefield if taken prisoner black troops and their white officers faced far worse treatment than other prisoners In the last few months of the war the Confederate government agreed to the exchange of all prisoners white and black and several thousand troops were exchanged until the surrender of the Confederacy ended all hostilities 82 See also edit nbsp History portal nbsp United States portalGerman Americans in the American Civil War Hispanics in the American Civil War Irish Americans in the American Civil War Italian Americans in the Civil War Native Americans in the American Civil War Cherokee Choctaw Foreign enlistment in the American Civil War William Carney the first African American to receive the Medal of Honor 11 Martin R Delany the first black commanding officer to serve in the Union Army 83 A History of the Negro Troops in the War of the Rebellion 1861 1865 1888 history by George Washington WilliamsReferences editNotes a b c Aptheker Herbert January 1947 Negro Casualties in the Civil War The Journal of Negro History 32 1 12 doi 10 2307 2715291 hdl 2027 mdp 39015026808827 JSTOR 2715291 S2CID 149567737 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Bonekemper III Edward 2015 The Myth of the Lost Cause New York Regnery Publishing pp 78 92 ISBN 978 1 62157 454 5 Douglass Monthly V August 1863 852 a b c James McPherson The Negro s Civil War Edward G Longacre Black Troops in the Army of the James 1863 65 Military Affairs Vol 45 No 1 February 1981 p 3 Teaching With Documents The Fight for Equal Rights Black Soldiers in the Civil War National Archives The U S National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved December 3 2015 Trudeau Noah A Like Men of War Little Brown and Company p 8 9 U S Statutes at Large XII p 589 92 Black Civil War Soldiers Facts Death Toll amp Enlistment 22 November 2022 Brabson Fay Warrington 1972 Andrew Johnson a life in pursuit of the right course 1808 1875 the seventeenth President of the United States Durham N C Seeman Printery p 96 LCCN 77151079 OCLC 590545 OL 4578789M a b Black Soldiers in the Civil War Archives gov 2011 10 19 Retrieved 2012 05 27 Butts Heather 2005 Alexander Thomas Augusta Physician Teacher and Human Rights Activist J Natl Med Assoc 97 1 106 9 PMC 2568562 PMID 15719881 Jane E Schultz Seldom Thanked Never Praised and Scarcely Recognized Gender and Racism in Civil War Hospitals Civil War History Vol xlviii No 3 p 221 The Color of Bravery American Battlefield Trust 2013 07 29 Retrieved 2021 05 30 Official Record of the War of the Rebellion Series I Vol XXVI Pt 1 p 45 Rogers Octavia V The House of Bondage Oxford University Press pg 131 Trudeau Noah A Like Men of War Little Brown and Company p 37 Milliken s Bend American Battlefield Trust Retrieved 2021 05 30 a b Battle of Milliken s Bend June 7 1863 Vicksburg National Military Park U S National Park Service New York Tribune September 8 1865 Ward Thhomas J Jr August 27 2013 The Plight of the Black P O W The New York Times Retrieved December 3 2015 Trudeau Noah A Like Men of War Little Brown and Company p 166 168 Uncovered Photos Offer View of Lincoln Ceremony NPR Eric Foner Give Me Liberty An American History New York W W Norton amp Company 2004 p 497 ISBN 978 0 393 97873 5 U S Statutes at Large XIII 129 131 Black Soldiers in the Civil War Archives gov 2011 10 19 Retrieved 2012 05 27 Official Record Ser III Vol III p 1126 Black Dispatches Black American Contributions to Union Intelligence During the Civil War cia gov Archived from the original on June 12 2007 Retrieved 23 November 2010 Chism Kahlil March 2005 Harriet Tubman Spy Veteran and Widow OAH Magazine of History 19 1 47 51 doi 10 1093 maghis 19 2 47 African Americans In The Civil War HistoryNet Retrieved 2021 05 30 Patrick Cleburne s Proposal to Arm Slaves American Battlefield Trust Retrieved 2021 05 30 African Americans in the U S Navy During the Civil War Steven J Ramold Slaves Sailors Citizens pp 3 4 Official Record of the Confederate and Union Navies Ser I vol VI Washington 1897 pp 8 10 See http cdl library cornell edu moa browse monographs ofre html Ramold Slaves Sailors Citizens p 55 Ramold Slaves Sailors Citizens pp 82 84 Ramold Slaves Sailors Citizens pp 92 99 Ramold Slaves Sailors Citizens pp 76 77 Robert Smalls from Escaped Slave to House of Representatives African American History Blog The African Americans Many Rivers to Cross PBS 13 January 2013 Editors Peter Wallenstein and Bertram Wyatt Brown Lucinda H Mackethan Reading Marlboro Jones A Georgia Slave in Civil War Virginia Virginia s Civil War Charlottesville VA University of Virginia Press 2005 Smith Sam 10 February 2015 Black Confederates American Battlefield Trust Civil War Trust Martinez Jaime Amanda Black Confederates Encyclopedia Virginia Virginia Humanities Council a b Official Record Series IV Vol III p 1161 1162 Davis William C Jefferson Davis The Man and His Hour p 599 Statement of the Auditor of the Numbers of Slaves Fit for Service March 25 1865 William Smith Executive Papers Virginia Governor s Office RG 3 State Records Collection LV a b c d e Bruce Levine Confederate Emancipation Southern Plans to Free and Arm Slaves during the Civil War James M McPherson ed The Most Fearful Ordeal Original Coverage of the Civil War by Writers and Reporters of the New York Times p 319 1 Jefferson Davis The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government p 518 Jefferson Shields profile in Richmond paper Nov 3 1901 The Daily Times 1901 11 03 p 18 Retrieved 2022 03 01 Levin Kevin 2019 Searching for Black Confederates The Civil War s Most Persistent Myth UNC Press pp 89 90 ISBN 978 1 4696 6941 0 Levin Kevin M 2019 Searching for Black Confederates The Civil War s Most Persistent Myth University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 4696 5326 6 a b Levin Kevin August 8 2015 The Myth of the Black Confederate Soldier The Daily Beast Retrieved November 16 2017 Marshall Josh January 2 2018 In Search of the Black Confederate Unicorn Talking Points Memo TPM Media LLC Retrieved January 7 2018 Levine Bruce Black Confederates North amp South 10 no 2 p 40 45 Bergeron Arthur W Jr Louisianans in the Civil War Louisiana s Free Men of Color in Gray University of Missouri Press 2002 p 109 Bernard H Nelson Confederate Slave Impressment Legislation 1861 1865 The Journal of Negro History Vol 31 No 4 October 1946 pp 393 394 Nelson Confederate Slave Impressment Legislation p 398 Ivan Musicant Divided Waters The Naval History of the Civil War 1995 p 74 Free blacks could enlist with the approval of the local squadron commander or the Navy Department and slaves were permitted to serve with their master s consent It was stipulated that no draft of seamen to a newly commissioned vessel could number more than 5 per cent blacks Though figures are lacking a fair number of blacks served as coal heavers officers stewards or at the top end as highly skilled tidewater pilots Tennessee State Library amp Archives Tennessee Secretary of State Archived from the original on 2012 03 07 Retrieved 2009 05 20 Tennessee Colored Pension Applications for CSA Service Official Record Series I Vol LII Part 2 pp 586 592 Official Record Series I Vol LII Pt 2 p 598 a b Official Record Series IV Vol III p 1009 Fellman Michael Gordon Lesley Jill Sutherland Daniel E 2008 This Terrible War The Civil War and its Aftermath 2nd ed New York Pearson Longman Thomas Robson Hay The South and the Arming of the Slaves The Mississippi Valley Historical Review Vol 6 No 1 June 1919 p 34 Richmond Enquirer October 6 1864 Charleston Courier January 24 1865 It Is a Surrender Of the Entire Slavery Question civil war memory 2014 11 13 Retrieved 2021 05 30 Official Record Series IV Vol III p 1012 1013 Black Confederates Truth and Legend 10 February 2015 Official copy of the militia law of Louisiana adopted by the state legislature Jan 23 1862 Hollandsworth James G The Louisiana Native Guards LSU Press 1996 p 10 Bergeron Arhur W Jr Louisianans in the Civil War Louisiana s Free Men of Color in Gray University of Missouri Press 2002 p 107 109 Daily Delta August 7 1862 Grenada Miss Appeal August 7 1862 Bergeron Arhur W Jr Louisianans in the Civil War Louisiana s Free Men of Color in Gray University of Missouri Press 2002 p 108 Dr Wilbert L Jenkins Climbing Up to Glory A Short History of African Americans During the Civil War and Reconstruction SR Books 2002 p 72 Barbara Tomblin Life in Jefferson Davis Navy Naval Institute Press 2019 Statutes at Large of the Confederate State Richmond 1863 167 168 Official Record Series II Vol VIII p 954 Official Record Series II Vol VI pp 703 704 Treatment of Colored Union Troops by Confederates 1861 1865 The Journal of Negro History Vol 20 No 3 July 1935 pp 278 279 Battle Cry of Freedom p 457 Delany Martin R 1812 1885 Encyclopedia Virginia Retrieved 2012 05 27 Bibliography Kevin M Levin Searching for Black Confederates The Civil War s Most Persistent Myth Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press 2019 Jaime Amanda Martinez Confederate Slave Impressment in the Upper South Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press 2013 Bruce Levine Confederate Emancipation Southern Plans to Free and Arm Slaves During the Civil War New York Oxford University Press 2006 review by David W Blight Further reading William A Dobak Freedom by the Sword The U S Colored Troops 1862 1867 New York Skyhorse Publishing 2013 ISBN 978 1 61608 839 2 James G Mendez A Great Sacrifice Northern Black Soldiers Their Families and the Experience of Civil War New York Fordham University Press 2019 ISBN 9780823282500 John David Smith Lincoln and the U S Colored Troops Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 2013 ISBN 978 0 8093 3290 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Military history of African Americans in the American Civil War amp oldid 1206860752, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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