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Freedoms Road

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Title: Freedoms Road


1
Freedoms Road
  • African Americans and the Civil War

2
The African American Perspective on the War What
was the war about?
  • Freedom
  • Manhood
  • Citizenship

3
Freedom
  • Frederick Douglass Any attempt now to separate
    the freedom of the slave from the victory of the
    governmentany attempt to secure peace to the
    whites while leaving the blacks in chains--will
    be labor lost . . . The war now being waged in
    this land is a war for and against slavery.

4
Freedom
  • From the outbreak of the war
  • African Americans in the North called for Lincoln
    to emancipate the slaves
  • Slaves in the South ran away to Union lines

5
Manhood
  • White paternalism (North and South) blacks were
    savage children
  • African American saw military service as an
    opportunity to change white opinions

6
Citizenship
  • African Americans linked citizenship to military
    service
  • If blacks performed well and faithfully, how
    could their claims to citizenship be denied?

7
Federal Policy toward African Americans
  • Stages
  • 1861 A white mans war
  • 1862 Emancipation
  • 1863-65 Blacks and the armed services

8
1861 A white mans war
  • Prewar law prohibited black enlistment in the
    Army (but not the Navy)
  • Lincolns concerns for the Border States
  • Position of Northern Democrats
  • Congressional resolutions on the war
  • No one anticipated a long war
  • Lincoln remained cautious

9
1861 A white mans war
  • Contraband policy, May 23, 1861
  • General Benjamin F. Butler
  • Fort Monroe, Va.
  • First Confiscation Act, Aug. 6, 1861
  • Slaves used on Confederate projects subject to
    capture
  • Became federal property not freed

10
1861 A white mans war
  • Lincoln rescinded Fremonts Aug. 30 unauthorized
    Mo. emancipation proclamation
  • But the Navy, desperate for men, began enlisting
    contrabands, Sept. 25

11
1861 A white mans war
  • And blacks did accompany the Union armed forces
    to war as hired civilians
  • cooks, teamsters, stevedores, camp servants
  • For such work they received less pay than whites

12
1862 Emancipation
  • March Congress outlawed slavery in the
    territories
  • May Lincoln rescinded unauthorized emancipation
    proclaimed by David Hunter, Dept. of the South
  • July Second Confiscation Act
  • Freed all contrabands and all slaves of masters
    participating in the rebellion
  • Doubting the laws constitutionality, Lincoln did
    not enforce it.

13
1862 Emancipation
  • Militia or Enlistment Act, July 17
  • Gave the President authority to enlist African
    Americans in the Army at his discretion
  • Lincoln took no action

14
1862 Emancipation
  • The Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, Sept.
    22
  • Slaves in areas still in rebellion as of Jan. 1,
    1863, to be freed
  • Slaves in Mo., Md., Del., Ky., and parts of
    Confederacy already conquered were exempted
  • Slaves in those areas would remain slaves

15
1862 Emancipation
  • November With consent of the War Department and
    Lincoln, three regiments of Louisiana Native
    Guards mustered into federal service
  • Regiments were composed of free blacks in New
    Orleans (Federals had captured the city in April)
  • They were the first African Americans to be
    enlisted in the U.S. Army
  • 1st Kansas Colored (Lane) was accepted next, then
    1st S.C. (Saxton)

16
Jan. 1, 1863 Emancipation Proclamation.
  • Justification a fit and necessary war measure
    for suppressing said rebellion
  • Suitable freedmen will be received into the
    armed service . . . to garrison forts, positions,
    stations, and other places, and to man vessels

17
1863-1865 Blacks and the armed services
18
1863-1865 Blacks and the armed services
  • African Americans in combat
  • 449 engagements
  • 39 battles, including
  • Battery Wagner, 1863
  • Port Hudson, 1863
  • Olustee, 1864
  • Nashville, 1864
  • 24 Medal of Honor winners

19
1861-1865 Blacks and the armed services
  • Conditions of service
  • Segregation
  • Black volunteer regiments
  • United States Colored Troops, May 22, 1863
  • Unequal pay (until 1864)
  • Prejudice of fellow Union soldiers
  • Fate of prisoners in Confederate hands

20
Missouri African Americans and the War
  • Background
  • Military service
  • Women and children

21
Background Missouri statistics from 1860 Census
22
Military service
  • Slavery was still legal in Missouri
  • But federal law freed any slave who enlisted
  • Govt. compensated slaveholders 300/slave
  • This was well below market value
  • Missouri slaveholders loyal to the Union
    complained that recruiters stole their slaves

23
Military service
  • Regiments organized in the state
  • 1st Mo. Colored Inf. (62nd USCT), Dec. 1863
  • 2nd Mo. Colored Inf. (65th USCT), Dec. 1863
  • 3rd Mo. Colored Inf. (67th USCT), Jan., 1864
  • 4th Mo. Colored Inf. (68th USCT), Jan. 1864
  • 18th USCT, Feb.-Sept. 1864
  • The last regiment organized at large, the others
    at Benton Barracks, near St. Louis
  • Total numbers 8,334 (an undercount?)

24
Military service
  • Blacks in Trans-Mississippi battles
  • Island Mound, Mo., Oct. 1862
  • Cabin Creek, I.T., July 1863
  • Honey Springs, I.T., July 1863
  • Poison Springs, Ark., April 1864
  • Jenkins Ferry, Ark., April 1864

25
Military service
  • 2nd Battalion, St. Louis City Guard
  • Formed by African Americans Sept. 26, 1864, to
    help defend the city against Prices Raid
  • Disbanded Oct. 31, 1864

26
Women and children
  • St. Louis Colored Ladies Union Aid Society
  • Black nurses on hospital ships

27
Women and children
  • Refugees
  • Camp followers

28
Legacy of the war
  • Mo. state convention abolished slavery, Jan. 1865
  • Blacks granted all civil rights except voting and
    office holding
  • Those were not established until 1870, with the
    15th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

29
Legacy of the war
  • Mo. whites resisted the freedmens gains
  • Sempronius Boyd, writing from Springfield, June
    1865
  • Hundreds of negroes . . . have settled here and
    are industrious, well behaved, and now constitute
    a large portion of our laboring class, and are
    indeed a blessing to us. Yet . . . they are
    persecuted wronged, whipped and even killed and
    nothing done to prevent it.

30
Legacy of the war
  • Boyd reported that a black church had been burned
    down in Springfield and that one poor negro who
    was gathering a load of wood only half a mile
    from the court house was shot.
  • The struggle against slavery had ended.
  • The struggle against racism was just beginning.

31
Legacy of the war
  • Lincoln Institute (Lincoln University)
  • Founded 1866, Jefferson City
  • Funds raised by white officers and black
    soldiers, 62nd and 65th USCT

32
Lincoln Institute founders
33
Lincoln Institute founders
34
Sources
  • Dudley Taylor Cornish, The Sable Arm Negro
    Troops in the Union Army (1956)
  • Pauli Murray, Proud Shoes The Story of an
    American Family (1956)
  • Joseph Glatthaar, Forged in Battle The Civil War
    Alliance of Black Soldiers and White Officers
    (1990)
  • Noah Trudeau, Like Men of War Black Troops in
    the Civil War (1998)
  • Wilbert L. Jenkins, Climbing Up to Glory A Short
    History of African Americans during the Civil War
    and Reconstruction (2002)
  • Ervin L. Jordan, Black Confederates and
    Afro-Yankees in Civil War Virginia (1995).
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