
Frederick Douglass, C. 1869 |
On March 2,
1863, eminent abolitionist and former slave Frederick Douglass
sent out this powerful message in his newspaper, Douglass
Monthly. Titled "Men of Color, to Arms!" it urged black men
to support the nation's war and the crusade to end generations of
slavery. Approximately 180,000 African American soldiers took up
the call to fight for the Union, comprising more than 10% of all
Federal forces. Knowing that a Northern loss could mean possible
reenslavement, freemen and former slaves showed dedication to
their country and a commitment to the freedom of their people
forever.

Sgt. Major Lewis H. Douglass, one of two sons of
Frederick Douglass, served in the 54th Massachusetts
Volunteer Infantry. |
Gallant Service |
Enlistments |
Recruitment Efforts |
Acts of Bravery
Inadequate facilities, mistreatment |
1863 and 1864 campaigns |
Petersburg
War draws to a conclusion
Gallant Service

Black Civil War sailor aboard the USS New
Hampshire, one of 9,000 blacks who served as
seamen for the Union Navy. |
Black regiments, commanded by white officers and designated U.S.
Colored Troops (U.S.C.T.) were quickly raised by the War Department
following the announcement of the Emancipation Proclamation in early
1863. Often used as assault troops, the U.S.C.T. saw action in more than
400 engagements, 39 of which were major battles including Port Hudson,
Louisiana; Fort Wagner, South Carolina; the Siege of Petersburg, Virginia;
and Nashville, Tennessee. More than 9,000 black seamen in the U.S. Navy
added to the Union's strength as did thousands of others who served in
military support positions. Disease and combat wounds claimed almost
38,000 casualties in the Colored Troops, a large portion of the total
number of men enrolled. The U.S. government awarded the Congressional
Medal of Honor, first issued during the Civil War to recognize gallant
service, to 24 African Americans.

Drummer Boy Jackson, former slave and then
drummer for the Union Army in the 79th U.S. Colored
Troops in Louisiana. |

Enlistments
The Federal program to admit black soldiers during the Civil War was not
without precedent or resistance. American blacks had taken part in the
country's defense since the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812. By the
mid-nineteenth century, their earlier efforts were all but forgotten. The
government's call for 75,000 volunteers in April 1861 compelled many
Northern blacks to offer their services to a War Department opposed to
arming blacks for fear it would induce the loyal slave-holding border
states to join the Confederacy. However, by the fall of 1862, events
had changed in favor of accepting black soldiers. Declining Union
enlistments, heavy battle losses and the realization that the war
would take more time and resources than expected, confronted President
Abraham Lincoln and the Union Army. Continued pressure by abolitionists
and awareness of the potential of black labor as the Confederacy had
already discovered, also contributed to lifting the Army's prohibition of
"Negroes or Mulattoes," in existence since 1820.
The formal Emancipation Proclamation, issued on January, 1863, freed all
slaves in rebellious states with the exception of those in areas already
under Union control. The Proclamation also declared that freed slaves
would be officially received into the armed forces. Lincoln's decision
gave a higher meaning to a war initially focused on preservation of
the Union - abolition. "A double purpose induced me and most others
to enlist, to assist in abolishing slavery and to save the country from
ruin," wrote Medal of Honor winner Sgt. Major Christian Fleetwood of
the 4th U.S.C.T. Frederick Douglass and other leaders saw black military
service as an opportunity to win a Union victory and to gain equality
and rights as citizens. As Douglass stated: "Once let the black man
get upon his person the brass letters 'U.S.,' let him get an eagle on
his button, and a musket on his shoulder and bullets in his pocket,
and there is no power on earth which can deny that he has earned the
right to citizenship in the United States."

Sgt. Major Christian A. Fleetwood, 4th U.S. Colored Troops,
Medal of Honor Recipient; post-war civic leader in
Washington. |
Recruitment Efforts
In 1862, several black regiments were recruited by white officers in the
South and West without Presidential or Congressional authorization. The
combat actions of the 1st South Carolina, a regiment of ex-slaves raised
by Generals David Hunter and Rufus Saxton, received notice in the Northern
press. The regiment's commander, Massachusetts abolitionist and man
of letters Col. Thomas Wentworth Higginson, wrote encouraging reports
about this regiment: "Nobody knows anything about these men who has
not seen them in battle...No officer in this regiment now doubts that
the successful prosecution of the war lies in the unlimited employment
of black troops."
Like Higginson, a number of Northern white officers, many from leading
anti-slavery families and circles, were genuinely sympathetic to the
cause of black troops, among them Robert Gould Shaw, Edward N. Hallowell,
Norwood P. Hallowell and James C. Beecher. Kansas raised the next early
regiment, the 1st Kansas Volunteers, under the direction of Senator
James Lane. Their performance in a Missouri raid further helped dispel
the notion that blacks were unable or unwilling to fight.
In Union-held New Orleans, military governor Gen. Benjamin Butler's 1st,
2nd and 3rd Louisiana Native Guards, the Corps D'Afrique, were formed
from existing free black militia units and supervised by Gen. Daniel
Ullmann. Major Francis E. Dumas and Paris-educated Captain Andre
Cailloux, who proudly described himself as the blackest man in New
Orleans, exemplified the affluent freeman who commanded these units. Many
were to resign, however, because of tension in the ranks and the Army's
official policy of excluding blacks from leadership positions and officer
promotions.

Sojourner Truth |
Southern territory under Union control provided the largest number of
black soldiers during the war, further weakening the South's economic
base. Many were fugitive slaves or "contrabands," a military term
for seized enemy property like cotton, machinery or other goods. The
refugees sought freedom, safety and employment behind the Federal lines
where many served as soldiers, laborers, servants, teamsters, scouts,
spies, teachers and nurses. Former slave Susie King Taylor chronicled her
experiences as a laundress, teacher and nurse for her husband's regiment,
the 1st South Carolina. Charlotte Forten, a well-educated teacher from
the North, recorded her wartime participation in the Federal experiment
to educate and prepare slaves for emancipation along the coast of South
Carolina. Noted pre-war black activists Harriet Tubman and Sojourner
Truth served as spies and nurses, Tubman in the South and Truth in the
North.
Acts of Bravery
Many blacks were to perform acts of bravery in the name of the Union and
human liberty. Robert Smalls seized freedom for himself and his family
when he heroically captured a Confederate ship and delivered it to the
Union Navy which was blockading Charleston Harbor in May 1862. "I
thought that the Planter would be of some use to Uncle Abe," claimed
the 23-year-old slave who went to work for the Navy and later became a
U.S. Congressman from South Carolina. The U.S. Navy had a long history of
accepting men of all colors and backgrounds due to its continual manpower
shortages. As early as September, 1861 the Union Navy began enlisting
blacks into naval service as stewards, servants and later as seamen on
integrated ships. The Navy awarded the Medal of Honor to eight sailors
for outstanding service, two of whom were John Lawson for action at Mobile
Bay, Alabama and Joachim Pease who served aboard the USS Kearsarge.
Numerous advances in the employment of black troops took place in 1863,
a year in which Gen. Ulysses S. Grant wrote Lincoln, "By arming the
Negro we have added a powerful ally." Colored troops were originally
restricted to labor and fatigue duties, but the successful skirmishes of
1862 had proved their ability to fight in combat situations. A Bureau
of Colored Troops was established in Washington to supervise national
recruitment and training of the U.S.C.T., and to oversee selection
and schooling of white officers who were in command of the black
regiments. Widespread recruitment occurred in the North assisted by
leaders such as Frederick Douglass, who acted as a government recruiting
agent, and in occupied Southern areas such as South Carolina where
abolitionist and first black field officer Major Martin R. Delany
recruited for the 104th and 105th U.S.C.T.

Bombproof quarters of Maj. Strong at Dutch Gap,
VA, July, 1864 |
Inadequate facilities, mistreatment
Camp William Penn near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Camp Casey near
Alexandria, Virginia and Camp Birney in Baltimore Maryland, were
some of the many U.S.C.T. draft and training centers set up for eager
new recruits. Once enlisted, black soldiers received basic, sometimes
inadequate preparation for field service. Inferior firearms and equipment
poor camp conditions and hospital facilities, and a shortage of doctors
were not uncommon. Only eight black surgeons served in the Union Army,
one of whom was Lt. Col. Alexander T. Augusta, a physician trained
in Canada. After the war, Dr. Augusta settled in Washington, D.C. and
served on the Howard University Medical School faculty. Black chaplains,
14 in all, provided spiritual guidance and educational instruction to
black soldiers.
Random public assaults on men of color in uniform, violence towards
blacks in Northern cities, and mistreatment by white comrades and
the enemy afflicted the black troops. The fact that black soldiers
were paid less was a particularly offensive issue; black enlisted men
and officers received only $7 per month whereas white privates earned
$13. Due to the intervention and protests of Frederick Douglass, the
Governor of Massachusetts and commanding officers such as Col. Higginson
and Col. Robert Gould Shaw, the unequal pay issue was amended by
mid-1864. In spite of the injustices, the Colored Troops demonstrated
their determination and bravery in a number of engagements in the final
two years of the war.

Lt. Col. Alexander T. Augusta, medical doctor and the highest ranking
black soldier in the Civil War; Howard Medical School faculty. |
1863 and 1864 campaigns

The Storming of Fort Wagner by the 54th
Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, Morris Island,
Charleston, S.C., July 18, 1863. |
The earliest major offenses in which black troops participated were
in Louisiana, at Port Hudson and Milliken's Bend, in May and June of
1863. By far, however, the most famous was the assault on Fort Wagner
at Charleston, South Carolina by the 54th Massachusetts Infantry. John
A. Andrew, Massachusetts' influential abolitionist governor, directed
the organization of this distinctive unit, the first black regiment
of the North. Col. Robert Gould Shaw and Lt. Edward N. Hallowell, two
young Northern men with anti-slavery and humanitarian backgrounds, were
chosen to lead the proud men of the 54th. Shaw had studied at Harvard
and in Europe, and served at Antietam before accepting command of the
black unit.
In May 1863, with great confidence and high expectations, Col. Shaw's
regiment departed Boston for the South in a jubilant parade attended by
many dignitaries and well wishers. A few days later, Shaw reflected,
"...if the raising of colored troops proves such a benefit to
the country and to the blacks...I shall thank god a thousand times
that I was led to take my share in it." Once in South Carolina,
Shaw pressed for his anxious men to take part in the operations against
Charleston's fortifications. Their chance came on the evening of July 18,
1863 when some 600 tired and hungry, but ready men of the 54th led the
charge against Fort Wagner on Morris Island. Outnumbered by a larger
Confederate force inside the fort, the Massachusetts regiment suffered
many losses including the 25-year old colonel who was buried by the
opposition in a common grave with his men. His final words had been
"Onward 54th!" Confederate officer Lt. Iredell Jones admired the courage
of the 54th in the unsuccessful assault, "The Negroes fought gallantly
and were headed by as brave a coronel as ever lived."
Sgt. William H. Carney of Co. C characterized the valor for which the
unit became so well known. Suffering multiple wounds, Carney managed
to keep the flag flying during two advances, earning both the Medal
of Honor and the Gilmore medal for gallant and meritorious conduct at
Charleston. Lewis Douglass, 22-year-old son of the noted abolitionist,
served as a Sgt. Major in the 54th and survived Fort Wagner. He wrote
his future wife two days after the attack,"Remember if I die, I die
in a good cause. I wish we had a hundred thousand colored troops we
would put an end to this war." The spirit of the 54th Massachusetts,
which went on to fight in other engagements including Alist, Florida,
is remembered in their regimental song:
So rally boys, rally, let us never mind the past; We had a hard
road to travel, but our day is coming fast; For God is for the right,
and we have no need to fear, The Union must be saved by the colored
volunteer.
The war's single most brutal incident involving black troops took place
at Fort Pillow, Tennessee in April, 1864. Publicized Congressional
inquiries determined that many Colored Troops in the Union fort were
massacred after having surrendered to Confederate attackers. Some black
units responded with the avenging battle cry, "Remember Fort Pillow"
in subsequent retaliations. The atrocities committed at Fort Pillow and
several other sites reflected an action of Confederate Congress in May,
1863, which declared that black men bearing arms and white officers
"inciting servile insurrection" would be turned over to state
authorities - which meant punishment by death. The complicated prisoner
of war situation lingered, but the Lincoln administration did approve
strong measures to deter inhumane practices which denied basic rights to
black troops and their white officers if captured. The Union government
also notified Confederate officials that equally harsh treatment of rebel
captives would occur if threats of murdering or enslaving black soldiers
did not cease. Black troops and white officers were well aware of their
common fate which sometimes served to affirm their mutual goals.

Shaw Memorial, dedicated to the 54th
Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, by Augustus
Saint-Gaudens, Boston, 1897. |
Petersburg
U.S. Colored troops were used extensively in several 1864 campaigns.
Of particular note in the West was the Battle of Nashville, fought on
December 15-16, in which eight black regiments played a key role in
the Federal defeat of the Confederate Army of Tennessee by the Army
of the Cumberland. The greatest number of U.S.C.T., however, served
in the Virginia theatre as part of Gen. Grant's operations against
Petersburg and Richmond in the last two years of the war. Black units
were especially active in the fighting around Petersburg during the
summer of 1864. Referring to several combat missions which occurred
near this city, Secretary of War Edwin Stanton asserted, "The hardest
fighting was done by the black troops. The forts they stormed were the
worst of all."
The Colored Troops figured prominently in the ill-fated Battle of the
Crater fought on July 30, 1964 as part of the Petersburg Campaign. In
utter confusion, black and white Federal units poured into a crater which
resulted from a planned mine explosion set off by Union soldiers under the
small Confederate fort. Northern soldiers were cut down in the chaos with
blacks experiencing the heaviest single-day casualties of the war.
Two months after the tragic Petersburg episode, black soldiers
displayed their worth at the Battle of New Market Heights (Chaffin's
Farm) near Richmond on September 29, 1864. Fourteen men, including
Christian Fleetwood, who later became an active community leader in
Washington, D.C. were presented the Medal of Honor for valor at New
Market Heights. Several were awarded to men who took charge of their
units after all white commanders had fallen. Soldiers of distinction
were also given the Army of the James or "Butler" medal, designated by
champion of the black troops, Gen. Benjamin Butler and the only medal
created solely for the U.S.C.T.

Picket guards near Petersburg, VA 1864 |
War draws to a conclusion
Many black troops engaged at Petersburg, notably the 28th and 29th
U.S.C.T., were transported to Alexandria, Virginia for medical treatment.
Alexandria served as a major military center for the Union in close
proximity to the Federal capital. Hospitals and barracks for black
soldiers, such as Slough and L'Ouverture, had been set up to accommodate
the sick and wounded. More than 200 African-American U.S. troops from the
Civil War were buried in Alexandria's National Cemetery, many of whom died
in the city's hospitals after succumbing to disease or wounds received at
Petersburg. Black units were also attached to the camps and fortifications
that comprised the Defenses of Washington. The 28th and 29th U.S.C.T.,
raised in Indiana and Illinois, had trained briefly at Camp Casey, near
Fort Albany not far from Alexandria, before being dispatched to the
Virginia front. Several black regiments were recruited and trained in
the Washington, D.C. area - the 1st U.S.C.T in D.C., the 2nd U.S.C.T.
sin Arlington, the 23rd U.S.C.T. at Camp Casey and several Maryland
regiments raised in Baltimore. At the close of war, several veteran
black units returned to Washington to serve guard duty in the city's
defense system, notably the 107th U.S.C.T. at Fort Corcoran and Christian
Fleetwood's Regiment, the 4th U.S.C.T, at Forts Slocum and Lincoln.
The final participation by blacks in the Union war effort amounted to 120
infantry regiments, 12 heavy regiments, 10 light artillery batteries,
and seven cavalry units. Several regiments, not placed under direct
Federal authority, retained their state designations in Massachusetts,
Connecticut and Louisiana. Black troops were present at the surrender
at Appomattox and the entrance to Richmond. They also participated in
the pursuit of Lincoln's assassin and in some of the funeral activities
for the slain president.
Once the nation was at peace, a number of black regiments stayed in
service until 1867, especially in the South where they assisted the
Army of Occupation and Reconstruction efforts. Many black soldiers and
veterans cooperated with the Freedmen's Bureau, created in 1865 to help
with education, employment and the overall transition of newly-freed
slaves into society.
The contributions of black soldiers to the Union during the Civil War
was not unrecognized. Gratitude for their services was acknowledged by
President Lincoln himself:
"And then there will be some black men who can remember that with
silent tongue and clenched teeth and steady eye and well-poised bayonet
they have helped mankind on to this great consummation."

Band of the 107th U.S.C.T., Arlington, VA (Fort Corcoran?) November,
1865. |
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