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Quotations on Black Confederates

Posted on 03/17/2004 8:23:46 AM PST by Global_Warming

http://www.credenda.org/issues/9-1verbatim.php

Volume 9, Issue 1: Verbatim

Quotations on Black Confederates

Various Saints

Numerous Afro-Virginians, free blacks and slaves, were genuine Southern loyalists, not as a consequence of white pressure but due to their preferences. They are the Civil War's forgotten people, yet their existence was more widespread than American history has recorded. Their bones rest in unhonored glory in Southern soil, shrouded by falsehoods, indifference and historians' censorship.

Ervin L. Jordan, Jr.

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 do to destroy the Federal government and build up that of the traitors and rebels.

Fredrick Douglass

To the majority of the Negroes, as to all the South, the invading armies of the Union seemed to be ruthlessly attacking independent States, invading the beloved homeland and trampling upon all that these men held dear.

Charles H. Wesley

There are numerous accounts of black participation in the battle of First Manassas in the summer of 1861. Black combatants shot, killed, and captured Union troops. Loyal slaves were said to have fought with outstanding bravery alongside their masters. These reports also provide testimony to the fidelity of black Rebels in combat. One black soldier was moving about the field when ordered to surender by a Union officer. The Rebel replied, "No sir, you are my prisoner," while drawing a pistol and shooting the officer dead. He then secured the officer's sidearm and after the battle boasted loudly of having quieted at least one of "the stinkin' Yankees who cam here `specting to whip us Southerners." Another black Confederate who stood behind a tree allowed two Union soldiers to pass before shooting one in the shoulders, clubbing him with a pistol, while demanding the other to surrender. Both prisoners were marched into Confederate lines. An Alabama officer's servant marched a Zouave into camp proclaiming, "Massa, here one of dese devils who been shooting at us, Suh."

Charles W. Harper

I have no doubt that if Congress would authorize their [the black Southerners'] reception into service, and empower the President to call upon individuals of States for such as they are willing to contribute, with the condition of emancipation to all enrolled, a sufficient number would be forthcoming to enable us to try the experiment [of determining whether the slaves would make good soldiers]. If it proved successful, most of the objections to the measure would disappear, and if individuals still remained unwilling to send their negroes to the army, the force of public opinion in the States would soon bring about such legislation as would remove all obstacles. I think the matter should be left, as far as possible, to the people and the States, which alone can legislate as the necessities of this particular service may require.

Gen. Robert E. Lee

One cavalry officer related how he was held under guard by a shotgun-wielding black who kept the weapon trained on the Yankee's head with unwavering concentration. "Here I had come South and was fighting to free this man," the disgusted major wrote in his diary. "If I had made one false move on my horse, he would have shot my head off."

Wayne R. Austman

For more than two years, Negroes had been extensively employed in belligerent operations by the Confederacy. They had been embodied and drilled as rebel soldiers and had paraded with white troops at a time when this would not have been tolerated in the armies of the Union.

Horace Greeley

Some Negroes, however, soon became disillusioned because of the hardships they experienced during the early months of their freedom. Nine hundred freedmen assembled at Mobile on August 13, 1865, and by a vote of seven hundred to two hundred declared that the realities of freedom "were far from being so flattering as their imagination had painted it; that the prejudices of color were not confined to the South, but stronger and more marked on the part of the strangers from the North."

Robert D. Reid

Former mayor John Dodson . . . presented them with a Confederate flag, assuring them that when they returned they would "reap a rich reward of praise, and merit, from a thankful people." Charles Tinsley, a bricklayer and a "corner workman," acted as spokesman for the Negroes. His remarks in acceptance of the flag were brief: "We are willing to aid Virginia's cause to the utmost of our ability. . . . There is not an unwilling heart among us, not a hand but will tell in the work before us; and we promise unhesitating obedience to all orders that may be given us."

Benjamin Quarles

Nor were runaways the only bondsmen who aided the Union war effort. Slaves who lacked opportunity to escape nonetheless found ways of contributing to Confederate defeat. At great peril to themselves, some slaves, concealed, fed, and directed runaways or escaped Federal prisoners of war on the journey to freedom. Others sabotaged farm and labor equipment or assumed an uncooperative attitude with owners and overseers, to slow down work and promote widespread insecurity among whites at home. In time such deeds paid great dividends, as Confederate troops deserted ranks to look after the welfare of loved ones at home.

Joseph T. Glattaar

Tennessee in June 1861 became the first in the South to legislate the use of free black soldiers. The governor was authorized to enroll those between the ages of fifteen and fifty, to be paid $18 a month and the same rations and clothing as white soldiers; the black men appeared in two black regiments in Memphis by September.

Ervin L. Jordan, Jr.

Perhaps the group that had the strongest vested interest in seeing the South victorious were the black slaveowners. In 1830 approximately 1,556 black slaveowners in the deep South owned 7,188 slaves. About 25% of all free blacks owned slaves. A few of these were men who purchased their family members to protect or free them, but most were people who saw slavery as the best way to economic wealth and independence for themselves. The American dream in the antebellum South was just as powerful for free blacks as whites and it included the use of slaves for self-improvement. They bought and sold slaves for profit and exploited their labor just like their white counterparts.

Richard Rollins

After their capture one group of white Virginia slave owners and Afro-Virginians were asked if they would take the oath of allegiance to the United States in exchange for their freedom. One free negro indignantly replied: "I can't take no such oaf as dat. I'm a secesh nigger." A slave from this same group, upon learning that his master had refused, proudly exclaimed, "I can't take no oath dat Massa won't take." A second slave agreed: "I ain't going out here on no dishonorable terms." On another occasion a captured Virginia planter took the oath, but slave remained faithful to the Confederacy and refused. This slave returned to Virginia by a flag of truce boat and expressed disgust at his owner's disloyalty: "Massa had no principles." Confederate prisoners of war paid tribute to the loyalty, ingenuity, and diligence of "kind-hearted" blacks who attended to their needs and considered them fellow Southerners.

Ervin L. Jordan, Jr.

Wednesday, September 10: At 4 o'clock this morning the Rebel army began to move from our town, Jackson's force taking the advance. The movement continued until 8 o'clock P.M., occupying 16 hours. The most liberal calculation could not give them more than 64,000 men. Over 3,000 Negroes must be included in the number. . . . They had arms, rifles, muskets, sabers, bowie-knives, dirks, etc. They were supplied, in many instances, with knapsacks, haversacks, canteens, etc., and they were manifestly an integral portion of the Southern Confederacy 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.

Capt. Isaac Heysinger

Forrest said of the black men who served with him, and this seems to be a direct quote: These boys stayed with me, drove my teams and better Confederates did not live. . . . Those [black Southerners] among us during the war behaved in such a manner that I shall always respect them for it. . . . I have always felt kind towards them and always treated them kindly.

Thomas Y. Cartwright

The public support and activities of Afro-Confederates, a minority within a minority, received considerable prominence. A Charlottesville newspaper reported an interview with Hames Ward, a slave who fled "Yankeedom" to warn his fellow slaves of abuse and racism in Union army camps and of blacks being forced to front lines during battles. He preferred being the slave of "the meanest masters in the South" than a free black man in the North: "If this is freedom, give me slavery forever."

Ervin L. Jordan, Jr.

Much is said about the slaves coming into Federal lines, and many complaints are made because they are not promptly given up. Are they not in the Confederate lines, and are they not used to build fortifications and do the work of rebels, and in many instances used to man rebel guns, and fight against the Union?

The Liberator, July 18, 1862

Well-to-do Creole Negroes . . . carried themselves with a military bearing; as they informed a commanding general on a later occasion, they came of a fighting race: "Our fathers were brought here as slaves bacause they were captured in war, and in hand to hand fights, too. Pardon me, General, but the only cowardly blood we have got in our veins is the white blood."

Benjamin Quarles


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: blackconfederates; dixie; quotes
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To: 4ConservativeJustices
So you're arguement is that it was OK because the Yankees did it? Squack alert!
41 posted on 03/22/2004 4:18:15 AM PST by Non-Sequitur (Jefferson Davis - the first 'selected, not elected' president.)
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To: GOPcapitalist
it was also the case that AT LEAST five northern states would not even allow blacks to legally set foot inside their borders prior to 1860

What did that have to do with blacks voting? I'd declare a squack alert except that I'm not sure what your current definition of 'tu quoque' is.

42 posted on 03/22/2004 4:28:33 AM PST by Non-Sequitur (Jefferson Davis - the first 'selected, not elected' president.)
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To: Non-Sequitur
So you're arguement is that it was OK because the Yankees did it? Squack alert!

Nonsense. Confederates were barred from serving in political office - unless the federal congress removed the disability. Barring any evidence that multitudes of former politicians were recipients of such acts, it couldn't have been ex-confederates drafting such legislation. Additionally, the governments were military, and elections/constitutions were approved by the President and Congress (devoid of southern representatives).

It wasn't a Southern thing.

43 posted on 03/22/2004 6:00:31 AM PST by 4CJ (||) OUR sins put Him on that cross - HIS love for us kept Him there. (||)
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To: 4ConservativeJustices
Nonsense. Confederates were barred from serving in political office - unless the federal congress removed the disability. Barring any evidence that multitudes of former politicians were recipients of such acts, it couldn't have been ex-confederates drafting such legislation. Additionally, the governments were military, and elections/constitutions were approved by the President and Congress (devoid of southern representatives).

Again, you are deliberately avoiding fact and misstating the circumstances. The Black Codes were in place in every southern state by the fall of 1865, long before the 14th Amendment was ratified or Reconstruction was imposed. Jim Crow laws were enacted almost as soon as reconstruction ended. Section 3 of that Amendment only prevented those who had held federal or state office prior to the rebellion and who had sworn to uphold the Constitution as a part of that office from holding office again without approval of Congress. Approval that was apparently freely granted. So your claim that 'it was them Yankees what done it' is ridiculous.

It wasn't a Southern thing.

It most certainly was. Before the rebellion...during the rebellion...and after the rebellion as well.

44 posted on 03/22/2004 7:30:07 AM PST by Non-Sequitur (Jefferson Davis - the first 'selected, not elected' president.)
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To: Non-Sequitur
Again, you are deliberately avoiding fact and misstating the circumstances. The Black Codes were in place in every southern state by the fall of 1865, long before the 14th Amendment was ratified or Reconstruction was imposed.

Just as the Northern states were rife with their own Black Codes, long before 1865.

Jim Crow laws were enacted almost as soon as reconstruction ended.

Which ended when, and what politicians were in office? In the intervening period while ex-confederates could serve, what multitude of Jim Crow laws were passed?

Section 3 of that Amendment only prevented those who had held federal or state office prior to the rebellion and who had sworn to uphold the Constitution as a part of that office from holding office again without approval of Congress.

The Constitution prohibited ex post facto laws, and also prohibited "Bills of Attainder" - no trials were held to convict anyone of the punishment imposed. The Supreme Court agreed in Cummings v. Missouri, 4 Wall. (71 US) 277 (1867) and in Ex Parte Garland, 4 Wall. (71 US) 333 (1867). If it was illegal/unconstitutional in 1867, it certainly was after that.

Approval that was apparently freely granted. So your claim that 'it was them Yankees what done it' is ridiculous.

Nonsense. Point to the legislation removing the prohibition from masses of Confederate legislators. Post the proof of your assertion.

It most certainly was. Before the rebellion...during the rebellion...and after the rebellion as well.

Before - both North & South had Black Laws. During ditto. After - the south was ruled by Union military, carpetbaggers and scalawags - ex-Confederates were disbarred from office.

It was now a Yankee thing.

45 posted on 03/22/2004 8:04:12 AM PST by 4CJ (||) OUR sins put Him on that cross - HIS love for us kept Him there. (||)
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To: 4ConservativeJustices
Just as the Northern states were rife with their own Black Codes, long before 1865.

Not denied, but if you were a Yankee then GOP would be calling a tu quoque alert on your ass. But since you're a reb then you fall under the alternate definition of the term. Regardless, Northern pre-war Black Codes were also matched in severity by pre-war southern Black Codes which prevented free blacks in virtually all southern states from living near, competing with, travelling among, or even associating with southern whites and were meant to keep blacks in what the overwhelming majority of southerners saw as their proper place, in bondage. Most southern states had laws on their books forbidding free black emigration into the state, or from freeing the existing slave population. So the Black Codes that you blame on them devil Yankees had a long and honorable tradition on southern society. It was, in all respects, a 'sothern thang'.

46 posted on 03/22/2004 8:57:13 AM PST by Non-Sequitur (Jefferson Davis - the first 'selected, not elected' president.)
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To: Non-Sequitur
Not denied, but if you were a Yankee then GOP would be calling a tu quoque alert on your ass.

Nope. That is where one attempts to excuse another by stating that the other did it as well, which excuses the actions of the first.

I do not deny the south's complicity, but pointed out the northern historical record is rife with "Black Laws" - it was not just a southern thing. It wasn't even an American thing - some African villages were comprised of up to 75% slaves.

...pre-war southern Black Codes which prevented free blacks in virtually all southern states from living near, competing with, travelling among, or even associating with southern whites and were meant to keep blacks in what the overwhelming majority of southerners saw as their proper place, in bondage.

Huh???? "free blacks" ... "their proper place, in bondage"??

Most southern states had laws on their books forbidding free black emigration into the state, or from freeing the existing slave population.

Yall didnt want them, nor did you want them in the territorries. Where were they to go?

47 posted on 03/22/2004 9:08:37 AM PST by 4CJ (||) OUR sins put Him on that cross - HIS love for us kept Him there. (||)
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To: 4ConservativeJustices
Yall didnt want them, nor did you want them in the territorries. Where were they to go?

A question which troubled southern states no end. The Mississippi legislature seriously debated an act requiring all free blacks in the state be forcibly deported to Africa. This was after they enacted a law similar to the one in Virginia which required that all slaves freed in Mississippi had to leave or else be sold back into slavery. So apparently they were not concerned where the free blacks went, so long as they went.

48 posted on 03/22/2004 9:40:48 AM PST by Non-Sequitur (Jefferson Davis - the first 'selected, not elected' president.)
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To: Non-Sequitur
What did that have to do with blacks voting?

A better question would be exactly what blacks voting had to do with my original comment about blacks being barred from even living in several northern states. Wlat introduced the issue of black voters (a claim which, BTW, he has not cited nor substantiated as of yet) as an apparent non-response to my prior statement about the horrendously discriminatory black codes employed by yankeeland for decades before the civil war. Thus it is incumbent upon him to either challenge or explain for my original argument. Simply noting his failure to do so and restating my original argument before him is subsequently my right in this debate as well.

49 posted on 03/22/2004 10:37:38 AM PST by GOPcapitalist
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To: Non-Sequitur
What a load of manure.

So in other words, you have no answer for the fact that blacks were legally barred from taking up residence in at least 5 yankee states prior to 1860?

50 posted on 03/22/2004 10:40:58 AM PST by GOPcapitalist
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To: Non-Sequitur
A question which troubled southern states no end.

Quoth the Non-Sequitur: "Squack! Tu Quoque! Tu Quoque!"

51 posted on 03/22/2004 10:42:10 AM PST by GOPcapitalist
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To: Non-Sequitur
Again, you decry Southern actions while posting no specifics. For your reading pleasure, from the Oregon Constitution
No free Negro, or mulatto, not residing in this state at the time of adoption of this constitution, shall ever come, reside, or be within this state, or hold any real estate, or make any contract, or maintain any suit therein; and the legislative assembly shall provide by penal laws for the removal by public officers of all such free negroes who shall bring them into the state, or employ or harbor them therein.

In June of 1844 Oregonian blacks were subject to lashes (20-39) every 6 months until they left.

In 1819 a Virginia man - Edward Coles - emmigrated to Illinois, freed his slaves and was elected governor in 1822. He was sued for failure to pay the $200 per head bond for each of the blacks. In 1848 Illinois altered its Constitution to, "prohibit free persons of color from immigrating to and settling in this state; and to effectually prevent the owners of slaves from bringing them into this state for the purpose of setting them free."

52 posted on 03/22/2004 11:56:08 AM PST by 4CJ (||) OUR sins put Him on that cross - HIS love for us kept Him there. (||)
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To: 4ConservativeJustices
Again, you decry Southern actions while posting no specifics.

On the contrary, I posted the specifics of the bill debated of the Mississippi legislature that would have deported all free blacks. But if you want more, then for your reading pleasure I submit the following:

"If any slave hereafter emancipated shall remain within this commonwealth more than twelve months after his or her right to freedom shall have accrued, he or she shall forfeit all such right, and may be apprehended and sold by the overseers of the poor of any county or corporation in which he or she shall be found, for the benefit of the poor of such county or corporation." 1806 Virginia Manumission Law [Shepherd, Statutes at Large, III, 252; passed January 25, 1806; in effect May 1, 1806.] The particulars of that law was later added to the Virginia Constitution. This was in addition to the Virginia Migration Law of 1786 which made it illegal for free blacks to move into the state. In 1836 Virginia passed the Literacy Law which made it a crime to teach a black to read, and in 1838 Virginia passed the Virginia School Law which prohibited any black who left the state to go to school from ever returning. So you want to explain again how it was all the Yankees?

An 1838 court case in Alabama, Trotter v Blocker (6 Porter 269), ruled that emancipation was a gift and that slaves lacked the legal capacity to accept the gift of freedom. Therefore, manumission was illegal.

In 1844 South Carolina passed an Amusement Law which prohibited blacks and whites from engaging in sports or games together. That came on top of the Looking Law of 1841 which prohibited blacks and whites from looking out the same window.

Mississippi had a number of laws on the books designed to rid the state of free blacks. It is a matter of fact that these laws were rarely enforced, and most of the blacks deported from the states were, in fact, slaves. Some of these slaves were problem cases but many were elderly slaves who had reached the end of their economic usefulness and were a financial burden on their owners. (Franklin L. Riley, “A Contribution to the History of the Colonization Movement in Mississippi,” Publications of the Mississippi Historical Society, vol. 9, pp. 345-348.)

53 posted on 03/22/2004 12:50:22 PM PST by Non-Sequitur (Jefferson Davis - the first 'selected, not elected' president.)
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To: Non-Sequitur
On the contrary, I posted the specifics of the bill debated of the Mississippi legislature that would have deported all free blacks.

You wrote: "The Mississippi legislature seriously debated an act requiring all free blacks in the state be forcibly deported to Africa."

I fail to see the specifics claimed. Not that it matters, the point is, that Africans, Egyptians, Russians, Europeans, Northerners, Southerers etc ALL had slaves at one time. Abraham Lincoln wanted to reward faithful blacks with a trip to Panama to dig a canal. Whatever law you can find in a southern state will probably have existed in some northern state. The South just wasn't hypocritical/sanctimonius about it - Yankees practiced slavery masked as indentured servitude in several states, no northern state wanted freed blacks, and they also wanted the territories reserved for whites only.

54 posted on 03/22/2004 1:22:22 PM PST by 4CJ (||) OUR sins put Him on that cross - HIS love for us kept Him there. (||)
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To: Non-Sequitur
In 1722 Pennsylvania enacted laws to penalize sexual relations between whites and blacks, another outlawed interracial marriages. In 1784 Connecticutt prevented blacks from serving in military, and in 1818 their right to vote. In 1792 Federal government limited military service to whites (whites were also the only people that could become citizens). Ohio restricted blacks in 1804, Delaware outlawed black emmigration into the state in 1811.
55 posted on 03/22/2004 1:35:07 PM PST by 4CJ (||) OUR sins put Him on that cross - HIS love for us kept Him there. (||)
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To: 4ConservativeJustices
In 1722 Pennsylvania enacted laws to penalize sexual relations between whites and blacks, another outlawed interracial marriages. In 1784 Connecticutt prevented blacks from serving in military, and in 1818 their right to vote. In 1792 Federal government limited military service to whites (whites were also the only people that could become citizens). Ohio restricted blacks in 1804, Delaware outlawed black emmigration into the state in 1811.

Are you suggesting that there was any southern state that allowed blacks to vote? Any one that allowed interracial marriages or blacks to enlist in the militia? Never mind all the southern states that made it illegal for blacks to move in there, were there any Northern laws that sold free blacks into slavery? Any of those out there? All you are showing is that at best the Northern states were no different than southern states, and at worst the southern states were significantly more oppressive.

So it was, after all, a southern thing.

56 posted on 03/23/2004 5:11:08 AM PST by Non-Sequitur (Jefferson Davis - the first 'selected, not elected' president.)
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To: 4ConservativeJustices
Whatever law you can find in a southern state will probably have existed in some northern state.

Hardly. Find this up North.

"If any slave hereafter emancipated shall remain within this commonwealth more than twelve months after his or her right to freedom shall have accrued, he or she shall forfeit all such right, and may be apprehended and sold by the overseers of the poor of any county or corporation in which he or she shall be found, for the benefit of the poor of such county or corporation.

The South just wasn't hypocritical/sanctimonius about it

No, they were very up front about keeping blacks in their place before, during, and after the war. That was the whole point to this discussion. It was a southern thang.

57 posted on 03/23/2004 5:14:06 AM PST by Non-Sequitur (Jefferson Davis - the first 'selected, not elected' president.)
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To: Non-Sequitur
"If any slave hereafter emancipated shall remain within this commonwealth more than twelve months after his or her right to freedom shall have accrued, he or she shall forfeit all such right, and may be apprehended and sold by the overseers of the poor of any county or corporation in which he or she shall be found, for the benefit of the poor of such county or corporation.

and ... were there any Northern laws that sold free blacks into slavery? Any of those out there?

Oregon, Illinois & Indiania had laws against migration of blacks into the state. Illinois & Oragon penalized blacks by heavy fines, and failure to pay resulted in their being sold into involuntary servitude (slavery) as punishment. "It shall not be lawful for any free negro or mulatto to migrate in this Territory."

"The Whiteside (ILL.) SENTINEL says the following official notice is posted in the post-office and other public places in the city of Carthage, Hancock County, Ill. It is a practical exemplification of the Illinois 'black-laws.' The notice reads as follows: --

"PUBLIC SALE -- Whereas, The following negroes and one mulatto man, on the fifth and sixth days of February, 1863, tried before the undersigned, a Justice of the Peace within and for Hancock County, Ill., on a charge of high misdemeanor, having come into this State and county,and remaining therein for ten days and more, with the intention of residing in this State, and were found guilty by a jury, and were each severally find in the sum of fifty dollars, and the judgment was rendered against said negroes and mulatto man for fifty dollars' fine each, and costs of suit, which fines and costs were annexed opposite to each name to wit: --

Age Fine Costs
John, a negro man, tall and slim, about 35 $50 $33.17
Sambo, a negro man, about 31  50  32.17
Austin, a negro man, heavy set, about  30  50  30.10
Andrew, a negro man, about --  50  30.35
Amos, a negro man, about  40  50  29.57
Nelson, a mulatto man, about  55  50  30.07

'And whereas, Said fines and costs have not been paid, notice is therefore given that the undersigned will, on Thursday, the nineteenth day of February, A.D. 1863, between the hours of one and five o'clock, p.m., of said day, at the west end of the Court House, in Carthage, Hancock County, Ill., sell each of said negro men, John, Austin, Sambo, Andrew, Amos, and said mulatto man, Nelson, at public auction, to the person or persons who will pay the said fines and costs appended against each respectively for the shortest time of service of said negroes and mulatto.

'The purchaser or purchasers will entitled to the control and services of said negroes and mulatto purchased for the period named in the sale and no longer, and will be required to furnish said negroes and mulatto with comfortable food, clothing, and lodging during said servitude. The fees for selling will be added on the completion of the sale.

C.M. Child, J.P.
Carthage, Feb. 9, 1863"

From The 37th Texas Cavalry (Terrell's), CSA

So to answer your question, "were there any Northern laws that sold free blacks into slavery?", the correct response is Yes.

58 posted on 03/23/2004 8:00:13 AM PST by 4CJ (||) OUR sins put Him on that cross - HIS love for us kept Him there. (||)
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To: Non-Sequitur
Hardly. Find this up North. "If any slave hereafter emancipated shall remain within this commonwealth more than twelve months

Illinois couldn't even wait 12 months, they opted for 10 days. See above.

59 posted on 03/23/2004 8:01:37 AM PST by 4CJ (||) OUR sins put Him on that cross - HIS love for us kept Him there. (||)
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To: 4ConservativeJustices
So who were they supposed to sell them to? Slavery was illegal in Illinois.
60 posted on 03/23/2004 9:08:52 AM PST by Non-Sequitur (Jefferson Davis - the first 'selected, not elected' president.)
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