[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Mail]  [Sign-in]  [Setup]  [Help]  [Register] 

There hasn’T been ... a single updaTe To This siTe --- since I joined.

"This Is Not What Authoritarianism Looks Like"

America Erupts… ICE Raids Takeover The Streets

AC/DC- Riff Raff + Go Down [VH1 Uncut, July 5, 1996]

Why is Peter Schiff calling Bitcoin a ‘giant cult’ and how does this impact market sentiment?

Esso Your Butt Buddy Horseshit jacks off to that shit

"The Addled Activist Mind"

"Don’t Stop with Harvard"

"Does the Biden Cover-Up Have Two Layers?"

"Pete Rose, 'Shoeless' Joe Reinstated by MLB, Eligible for HOF"

"'Major Breakthrough': Here Are the Details on the China Trade Deal"

Freepers Still Love war

Parody ... Jump / Trump --- van Halen jump

"The Democrat Meltdown Continues"

"Yes, We Need Deportations Without Due Process"

"Trump's Tariff Play Smart, Strategic, Working"

"Leftists Make Desperate Attempt to Discredit Photo of Abrego Garcia's MS-13 Tattoos. Here Are Receipts"

"Trump Administration Freezes $2 Billion After Harvard Refuses to Meet Demands"on After Harvard Refuses to Meet Demands

"Doctors Committing Insurance Fraud to Conceal Trans Procedures, Texas Children’s Whistleblower Testifies"

"Left Using '8647' Symbol for Violence Against Trump, Musk"

KawasakiÂ’s new rideable robohorse is straight out of a sci-fi novel

"Trade should work for America, not rule it"

"The Stakes Couldn’t Be Higher in Wisconsin’s Supreme Court Race – What’s at Risk for the GOP"

"How Trump caught big-government fans in their own trap"

‘Are You Prepared for Violence?’

Greek Orthodox Archbishop gives President Trump a Cross, tells him "Make America Invincible"

"Trump signs executive order eliminating the Department of Education!!!"

"If AOC Is the Democratic Future, the Party Is Even Worse Off Than We Think"

"Ending EPA Overreach"

Closest Look Ever at How Pyramids Were Built

Moment the SpaceX crew Meets Stranded ISS Crew

The Exodus Pharaoh EXPLAINED!

Did the Israelites Really Cross the Red Sea? Stunning Evidence of the Location of Red Sea Crossing!

Are we experiencing a Triumph of Orthodoxy?

Judge Napolitano with Konstantin Malofeev (Moscow, Russia)

"Trump Administration Cancels Most USAID Programs, Folds Others into State Department"

Introducing Manus: The General AI Agent

"Chinese Spies in Our Military? Straight to Jail"

Any suggestion that the USA and NATO are "Helping" or have ever helped Ukraine needs to be shot down instantly

"Real problem with the Palestinians: Nobody wants them"

ACDC & The Rolling Stones - Rock Me Baby

Magnus Carlsen gives a London System lesson!

"The Democrats Are Suffering Through a Drought of Generational Talent"

7 Tactics Of The Enemy To Weaken Your Faith

Strange And Biblical Events Are Happening

Every year ... BusiesT casino gambling day -- in Las Vegas

Trump’s DOGE Plan Is Legally Untouchable—Elon Musk Holds the Scalpel

Palestinians: What do you think of the Trump plan for Gaza?

What Happens Inside Gaza’s Secret Tunnels? | Unpacked

Hamas Torture Bodycam Footage: "These Monsters Filmed it All" | IDF Warfighter Doron Keidar, Ep. 225


Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

United States News
See other United States News Articles

Title: The Myth of Black Confederates
Source: las.illinois.edu
URL Source: http://www.las.illinois.edu/news/2013/confederates/
Published: Sep 1, 2013
Author: Doug Peterson
Post Date: 2015-06-23 16:10:38 by Pericles
Keywords: None
Views: 11716
Comments: 55

The Myth of Black Confederates

LAS professor rejects myth that blacks fought for rebels in large numbers.

Patrick R. Cleburne, a prominent general in the Confederate Army of Tennessee, could see what was happening in the South in late 1863. Southern troops were outnumbered, soldiers were demoralized, and the institution of slavery was collapsing. So on January 2, 1864, Cleburne rode through a sleet-driven night in northern Georgia to present an audacious proposal to nearly a dozen Confederate generals.

He proposed that the Confederate States of America offer freedom to military age male slaves who were willing to fight for the South.

“Most of the generals denounced him,” says Bruce Levine, University of Illinois history professor and author of Confederate Emancipation and The Fall of the House of Dixie.

Cleburne’s proposal was overwhelmingly rejected, for secessionist states were not about to undermine the system of slavery that they were fighting to defend. But despite this clear disdain for the idea of arming African Americans, Levine says that over the past 30 years there has arisen a myth that black soldiers did fight for the Confederacy in massive numbers—tens of thousands and even hundreds of thousands, according to some accounts propagated online.

According to Levine, “The claims among modern romanticizers of the Confederacy are intended to bolster more fundamental claims—that African Americans identified with the Confederacy, that slaves were content with being slaves, and that the war had nothing to do with slavery.”

The problem is that the accounts of massive involvement of blacks in the Southern army are false, he says.

Levine says the Confederate army had a strict policy that if you were not certifiably white, you could not be a soldier in its ranks. However, in the early years of the Civil War, many slave owners did bring their servants into the Confederate army to carry equipment for them, and clean and take care of their clothes and horses. In addition, the Confederacy forced many slaves and free blacks in the South to labor for the war effort, building rail breastworks, driving wagons, burying the dead, and serving as nurses.

“On occasion, a slave might have even picked up a gun and taken a shot at the Yankees, proving how loyal and dependable he was,” Levine says. But this level of involvement is a far cry from tens of thousands of armed black soldiers marching in defense of the Confederacy.

What’s more, Confederates discovered that if they placed black laborers too close to Union lines, they ran the risk of African Americans fleeing to the other side; therefore, many slave owners stopped bringing along their black servants during the second half of the war.

Levine notes that there were two militias in the South made up of free African American soldiers—one in Mobile, Ala., and the other in New Orleans. But these were state militias, not part of the regular army, and they did not see serious action on behalf of the South. And numerous members of the “Native Guards” of New Orleans immediately switched allegiance to the Union when the Yankees occupied the city.

The Myth of the Black Confederates is a relatively new phenomenon, arising after the Civil Rights movement in the 1960s, Levine says. The notion of African Americans fighting in large numbers for the South was never suggested in the immediate aftermath of the war because white veterans would have been still alive to shoot down the idea. “White Confederate soldiers would have taken it as an insult to have served in the same army with the same status as a black soldier,” he says.

As evidence that black men fought heroically for the South, neo-Confederates today will sometimes dig up photos of black servants dressed in military uniforms. But according to Levine, “Some servants were dressed in military uniforms because that was the kind of clothing available in the army.” It didn’t mean they were real members of those army units, he says.

Levine says that when the Confederacy was on its last legs, in March of 1865, the Confederate congress did pass an eleventh-hour law by a razor-thin margin, allowing for the enlistment of black soldiers. But even that law freed no one.

“The Southern government invited masters to volunteer their slaves for the army, but first they would have to emancipate them because Jefferson Davis and Robert E. Lee knew that still-enslaved black men would certainly not fight for the South,” he says. “The overwhelming majority of masters declined that invitation.”

In the final weeks of the war, the South tried to recruit black soldiers in a handful of states, he says, “but nothing happened anywhere, except Richmond and Petersburg, where they apparently raised about 60 black soldiers in the Confederate army, who then saw virtually no action.”

In contrast, once black soldiers were accepted into the Union army in 1863, roughly 190,000 to 200,000 fought for the North. Even more telling, he adds, an estimated 80 percent of those soldiers were slaves and free blacks recruited by the Union army in slave states.

Editor’s note: We have included a new image and caption at the top of the story and an updated caption for the second image—February 2014

By Doug Peterson

September 2013

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 28.

#19. To: Pericles (#0)

Levine says the Confederate army had a strict policy that if you were not certifiably white, you could not be a soldier in its ranks.

The Union army had a strict policy that a woman could not be a soldier in the ranks. That did not stop anything.

Re the Confederate navy, when the CSS Hunley was raised several years ago, the DNA of one of the crew members was confirmed to be African-American.

For that matter, until recent years, the U.S. armed forces had a strict policy that homosexuals could not be service members in the ranks. Policy, meet reality.

Let's try Richard Rollins, Black Confederates at Gettysburg, in Black Southerners in Gray, Rollins Ed., at pp. 129-30.

Scholars writing on black life during the war also have usually ignored black Confederates. [Bell] Wiley again serves as a useful spokesman. "There seems to be no evidence thatthe Negro soldiers authorized bythe Confederate government ever went into battle," he wrote in 1938, and added that if any other black Confederates ever saw battle "the per cent of Negro blood was sufficiently low for them to pass as whites."5 Both of those statements are incorrect.

In fact some black Confederates did "see the elephant" with the support of the Confederate government. Even more to the point, thousands of black Southerners found their way into battle beneath the "starry cross" of their own volition, in spite of being officially prohibited by the Confederate government.6 Despite being enslaved, or severely discriminated against when free, there were many whose motivations were strong enough to propel them to overcome major obstacles and fight for the South. Some clearly must have had the support of the white Southerners who served with them in locally-raised companies and regiments. And, judging by the letters preserved in the Official Records, many more would have joined them had they the opportunity.7 They became an integral, important part of Southern armies. An English observer estimated there were 30,000 black servants in the Army of Northern Virginia in 1862.8 Dr. Lewis Steiner, a member of the Sanitary Commission who happened to be in Frederick, Maryland, in the days just before Sharpsburg, noted their presence in the Army of Northern Virginia in 1862. The description he recorded in his diary probably could have been written in June of 1863. According to Steiner, about 5% of the combat troops were black.

Next Rollins quoted Steiner, which I provide here directly from Steoner's report.

From Report of Lewis H. Steiner, inspector of the Sanitary Commission: containing a diary kept during the rebel occupation of Frederick, Md., and an account of the operations of the U.S. Sanitary Commission during the campaign in Maryland, September, 1862.

The full report is available for reading or download.
https://archive.org/details/reportlewissteiner00steirich

Wednesday, September 10.~At four o'clock this morning the rebel army began to move from our town, Jackson's force taking the advance. The movement continued until eight o'clock P.M., occupying sixteen hours. The most liberal calculations could not give them more than 64,000 men. Over 3,000 negroes must be included in this number. These were clad in all kinds of uniforms, not only in cast-off or captured United States uniforms, but in coats with Southern buttons, State buttons, etc. These were shabby, but not shabbier or seedier than those worn by white men in the rebel ranks. Most of the negroes had arms, rifles, muskets, sabres, bowie knives, dirks, etc. They were supplied, in many instances, with knapaacks, haversacks, canteens, etc., and were manifestly an integral portion of the Southern Confedcracy Army. They were seen riding on horses and mules, driving wagons, riding on caissons, in ambulances, with the staff of Generals, and promiscuously mixed up with all the rebel horde. The fact was patent, and rather interesting when considered in connection with the horror rebels express at the suggestion of black soldiers being employed for the National defence.

Hand Grips, The Story of the Great Gettysburg Reunion, July, 1913, at 66-67.

By Comrade Walter H. Blake, Compiled by Frank E. Channon, Vineland, N. J., G. H. Smith, Publisher, Published December 1913.

It was a pretty spectacle, and typified the whole spirit of the great Reunion.

There were colored men on both sides of the lines. The Commission had made arrangements only for negroes from the Union side, forgetful of the fact that there were many faithful slaves who fought against their own interests in their intense loyalty to their Southern masters.

Some of the colored boys from the Southland drifted into camp on the second day, but found no tents provided for them. They were given straw beds in the big tent, and there, later, some of the big-hearted Tennessee delegation discovered them. It didn't take those warm-hearted Southerners long to shift their colored brethren. They took them away into their own tent and saw that their wants were attended to, a special tent being reserved for them.

Mention of the colored comrades recalls a very pretty little incident that occurred on a New Jersey camp street one day. It was an incident that made some of the Northern boys sit up and take notice.

A giant of an old negro, Samuel Thomp­son, from Mount Holly, was resting under some shade trees, when along came a crowd of old Confederates.

66

- - -

"Howdy do, Boss!" saluted the old col­ored man.

Of the score of Johnny Rebs every one returned the salute of the old negro. Then one gaunt boy in gray went up and ex­tended his hand frankly.

"We-all are glad to see you," he prom­ised, "an* we-all want to shake hands with you, nigger, an' to say as we have some niggers at home just as big as you."

"'Deed you has, Boss,' deed you has," laughed the old darkey, and EVERY ONE of the Southerners stepped up and followed the example of their comrade, shaking hands with their dark-skinned brother, and slapping him with a kindly slap. No color line here.

- - - - -

The Myth of the Black Confederates is a relatively new phenomenon, arising after the Civil Rights movement in the 1960s, Levine says.

This hardly considers the Confederate pensions awarded to black applicants after the Civil War.

It would be nice to have see someone try to source this fiction to a black author.

From Blacks in Blue and Gray, Afro-American Service in the Civil War, by H.C. Blackerby, First Edition, 1979, pp. 101-102:

THE LOUISIANA BLACK NATIVE GUARDS

When the Civil war began, the sight of parading black soldiers was not new to the people of New Orleans. Organizations of Louisiana black militia had been present for most military ceremonies, and had participated in the earlier wars with the French and with the Spanish. The Battalion of Free Men of Color defended New Orleans from the beginning of the colony. While the name suggested the blacks were free, slaves were also enlisted to fight the Natchez and the Chickasaw Indians. Many slaves were freed as a reward for their service as soldiers. During the American war with Great Britain in 1776, the Spanish organized black militia companies that fought the British. Ironically, the same black militiamen were employed during peacetime to capture runaway slaves.

In 1812 a black battalion was augmented by a second force inducted into federal service and fought with Andrew Jackson in the Battle of New Orleans. General Jackson praised the fighting by the black soldiers and the men were awarded state and Federal pensions, together with bounty-land-grant certificates. The descendants of the black soldiers who [*102] were in the earlier wars owned thousands of slaves in 1861 at outbreak of the Civil war.

While the Native Guards numbered only a few of the Louisiana blacks who volunteered to be soldiers of the Confederacy, this organization named "The First Native Guards, Louisiana Militia, Confederate State America."

The names that follow are those who served the Confederacy. I have attempted to identify all the blacks who changed from gray uniform to wearing the Union blue. We know that many of the blacks who were first uniformed in gray later wore blue. Officers who changed color uniforms included Alcide Lewis, H. Louis Rey, Eugene Rapp, Charles Sentmanat, Andre Cailloux, and Alfred Borgeau. Some officers of lower rank also changed uniforms. No doubt some officers who had worn the gray served in the ranks as enlisted personnel of the black Union regiments. Almost all the names that follow are from Microcopy No.3; Compiled Records of Confederate Soldiers who served in organizations from the State of Louisiana, Roll No. 94, First Native Guards, Militia A-G, from the National Archives and Records Service, General Services Administration, Washington, D.C.:

The follows on pages 102-113, a two-column roll of the officers and men of the First Native Guards.

http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1382601/1/398925.pdf

318 pp.

Wearing The Gray Suit: Black Enlistment and the Confederate Military

Frank Edward Deserino
University College London
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment to the
Degree of Doctor of Philosophy
at the University of London

Department of History
University College London
July, 2001

At 215:

In August of 1861, a Federal officer observed a group he called the "Richmond Howitzer Battery" near Newport News, Virginia that was manned by blacks.95 A correspondent from the New York Times riding with Ulysses S. Grant reported in 1863 on a black artillery crew in Tennessee. "The guns of the rebel battery were manned almost wholly by Negroes," he noted, with "a single white man, or perhaps two, directing operations."96 An Indiana private wrote in a letter to his hometown newspaper about an exchange of fire with a group of black Southerners in the fall of 1861:

A body of seven hundred Negro infantry opened fire on our men, wounding two lieutenants and two privates. The wounded men testify positively that they were shot by Negroes, and that not less than seven hundred were present, aimed with muskets. This is, indeed, a new feature in the war. We have heard of a regiment of Negroes at [First] Manassas and another at Memphis, and still another at New Orleans, but did not believe it till it came so near home and attacked our men. One of the lieutenants was shot in the back of the neck and is not expected to live.97

95 Austerman, "Virginia's Black Confederates," p. 50.

96 Obatala, "The Unlikely Story of Negroes," p. 99.

97 Quoted in Blackerby, Blacks in Blue and Gray, p. 5

Blackerby cited a Union soldier's letter to the Indianapolis Star (December 23, 1861; reprinted in the New York Tribune in 1862.

From Ervin L. Jordan, Jr., Black Confederates and Afro-Yankees in Civil War Virginia, (1995), 4th Ed., 1999, at 219:

Certain free Afro-Virginian men, like other Southern males, seemed eager to prove their bravery and patriotism against the Yankee hordes. There were reports of local Confederate commanders in Virginia who armed and equipped free blacks and slaves in anticipation of attacks due to manpower shortages and despite well-grounded fears they would turn their weapons against Confederates when Union forces arrived. Another example of the Confederacy's painful drift toward a limited biracial society was in pay equity for African-Americans in its armies. Black musicians employed in Confederate regiments received the same pay as white musicians as of 15 April 1862; one of them, Jacob Jones, enlisted on 14 May 1861 at Salem, Roanoke County, as a drummer for the 9th Virginia Infantry. A Baltimore newspaper announced the arrival of black regiments at Richmond during February 1861 and described the conscription of slaves for service.

nolu chan  posted on  2015-06-24   0:42:53 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#20. To: nolu chan (#19)

This does not contradict the article which stated there were a couple of cases of black militia and in the case of the New Orleans one they went over to Union side.

Pericles  posted on  2015-06-24   0:46:39 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#23. To: Pericles (#20)

This does not contradict the article which stated there were a couple of cases of black militia and in the case of the New Orleans one they went over to Union side.

[Article] LAS professor rejects myth that blacks fought for rebels in large numbers.

How many will satisfy you. Name a number.

I take a Union report of 3,000 at one battle to be significant.

Here is from a noted Southern propagandist /sarc

http://cdm16694.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/fullbrowser/collection/p15109coll7/id/120/rv/compoundobject/cpd/136

The link displays a page image and text.

Frederick Douglass, Douglass' Monthly, IV, Sept. 1861, pp 516 (page 4 of issue)

It is now pretty well established, that there are at the present moment many colored men in the Confederate army doing duty not only as cooks, servants and laborers, but as real soldiers, having muskets on their shoulders, and bullets in their pockets, ready to shoot down loyal troops, and do all that soldiers may to destroy the Federal Government and build up that of the traitors and rebels. There were such soldiers at Manassas, and they are probably there still.

nolu chan  posted on  2015-06-24   1:31:12 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#28. To: nolu chan (#23)

http://militaryhistorynow.com/2012/06/20/black-in-grey-did-african-americans-fight-for-the-confederacy/

In a 2011 article in The Harvard Gazette, Corydon Ireland interviews John Stauffer, a historian with the noted university who estimates that a fraction of 1 percent of the Confederate army might have been black.

Stauffer described the case of a slave named John Parker who was forced by his owner to man a field gun that was firing canister shot into the Federal line. Parker remarked years later that he feared for his life that day and prayed for a Union victory, all the while helping to load the gun and fire it on his liberators.

“His case can be seen to be representative,” Stauffer told The Gazette. “Masters put guns to the heads of slaves to make them shoot Yankees.”

Pericles  posted on  2015-06-24   3:14:59 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 28.

        There are no replies to Comment # 28.


End Trace Mode for Comment # 28.

TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Mail]  [Sign-in]  [Setup]  [Help]  [Register] 

Please report web page problems, questions and comments to webmaster@libertysflame.com