The African-American Odyssey
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Transcript The African-American Odyssey
Chapter 11
Liberation:
African Americans
and the Civil War
I. Lincoln’s Aims
Preserve the Union
– Everything else secondary
– Especially concerned about the border
states
– Call for 75,000 volunteers
– Black volunteers rejected
II. Black Men Volunteer and Are
Rejected
Fate of Union tied to issue of slavery
Fate of slavery tied to the outcome of
war
Black people understood before
northerners
• Anglo-African newspaper
• New York, Philadelphia, Boston
• Black men offered their services
III. Union Policies toward
Confederate Slaves
No coherent policy to deal with
Union military commanders
– More concern for slave owner’s interests
“Contraband”
General Benjamin Butler
– Fortress Monroe, May 1861
– Refused to return three runaway slaves
– “Contraband”
•
•
•
•
Enemy property
First Confiscation Act, August 1861
John C. Fremont
General David Hunter
Lincoln’s Initial Position
Reluctant
to move against slavery,
1861
– Border state loyalty
– Supported compensated emancipationcolonization
– Wanted to end slavery in border states,
April 1862
– Warned border states to accept
compensation or risk getting nothing, July
1862
Lincoln Moves toward
Emancipation
Victory and Union tied to slavery issue
– “Strike at the heart of the rebellion”
– Tells his cabinet, summer 1862
– William Seward warns Lincoln to wait
– Montgomery Blair feared fall elections
Lincoln Delays Emancipation
Waited for a victory on the battlefield
– Northern defeats, spring and summer 1862
– The Peninsula Campaign
– Seven Pines
– Seven Days’
– Second Battle of Bull Run
Antietam
– Justification for announcing emancipation
Black People Reject Colonization
Would not retreat from colonization
– Liberia
– Haiti
– Black people not interested
IV. Preliminary Emancipation
White southerners ridiculed it
Many white northerners had little
enthusiasm
– Antiblack riots
– Northern Democrats almost all opposed
• Denounced Lincoln and Republicans
Most black people gratified
V. Emancipation Proclamation
Limited to areas still in rebellion
Did not include border states
Changes war goals
– Preserve the Union
– Make people free
Effects of Proclamation
on the South
Ended chance of foreign recognition
Encouraged
– Slaves to flee
– Slaves to resist
VI. Black Men
Fight for the Union
Emancipation Proclamation
– Authorized black men to enlist
– Union defeats and the need for manpower
– Thomas Wentworth Higginson
– Robert Gould Shaw
Black Men
Fight for the Union (cont.)
Discrimination and hostility
– Segregated units
• White officers
– Often held racist beliefs
– Lower pay scale
• White privates $13/month
• Black privates $10/month
Black Men
Fight for the Union (cont.)
Combat
– Suffered disproportionately more casualties
– Battery Wagner
• William H. Carney
– Olustee
– The Crater
VII. Confederate Reaction to
Black Soldiers
Enraged
– Refused to recognize black men as
soldiers
• Treat as rebellious slaves
• General Order Number 11
– Fort Pillow Massacre
• Union response
• Union commanders angry
VIII. Black Men
in the Union Navy
Tradition of serving in the U.S. Navy,
1790s
– Integrated
– Early 19th century many black sailors
• Attempts to ban them from the navy
IX. Liberators, Spies, and Guides
Black men and women
– Robert Smalls
– Harriet Tubman
– Mary Elizabeth Bowser
– John Henry Woodson
X. Violent Opposition to Black
People
New York City Draft Riot, July 1863
– Draft
– Irish men angry
• Black men had replaced Irish stevedores, June 1863
• Rich white northerners could purchase an exemption
• Riot lasted four days
– Colored Orphan Asylum
– Churches
– Republican and abolitionists houses destroyed
Violent Opposition to Black
People (cont.)
Union troops and slaves
– Often treated slaves horribly
• Rapes and assaults were not uncommon
– Others found compassion for enslaved
people
• “I have no heart in this war if the slaves cannot
be made free,” a Union soldier wrote.
XI. Refugees
Thousands of black people escaped
bondage
– Some followed Union armies
– Others struck out on their own
• Faced re-enslavement or execution if caught
XII. Black People and
the Confederacy
Confederacy based on defense of
slavery
Benefited from the labors of bonds
people
– Toiled in fields
– Worked in factories
– Permitted more white men to serve in
military
Black People and
the Confederacy (cont.)
Impressment of black people
– Military demands for manpower
• Slave owners contributed slave labor
– Built fortifications
• Government first asked then compelled
– Registration and enrollment of free black people military
labor
“Twenty nigger law”
– Exempted men who owned twenty slaves from
draft
Black People and
the Confederacy (cont.)
Confederates enslave free black people
– Davis counter proclamation
• “All free negroes . . . shall be placed on the
slave status and be deemed to be chattels. . .
forever.”
• Ordered Confederate armies to capture free
black people in the North and enslave them.
– Robert E. Lee, Pennsylvania 1863
Black Confederates
– Free black people volunteered
services
• Show loyalty and gain white acceptance
• Re-enslavement concerns
• Southern leaders generally ignored
offers unless for menial labor
Black Confederates (cont.)
Small number of black men fight for
CSA
– Some black civilians profit if South wins
• John Wilson Buckner
• William Ellison
Black Enlistments
General Patrick Cleburne recommends,
early 1864
– President Davis cease and desist order
– Most southerners considered arming slaves
appalling
– Defied southern assumptions
• “If slaves will make good soldiers our whole theory of
slavery is wrong.”--Howell Cobb
March 1865 Confederate Congress voted to enlist
300,000
• Receive same pay as white soldiers
• Slaves freed only with consent of owners and state
agreed
XIII. Conclusion
185,000 black soldiers and sailors served in
the Union military
– Most had been former slaves
– Almost 40,000 died in combat or of disease
during the war
Abraham Lincoln and the shift in public
attitudes
–
–
–
–
White man’s war
Colonization
Enlistment
Appreciation