Posted on 08/27/2006 9:13:18 AM PDT by smug
UDC marks another black Confederate grave By Clayta Richards / Chronicle staffwriter
On Sunday afternoon at Old Union Cemetery in southern White County, over 180 people gathered to pay a debt owed nearly 80 years. The group included members of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, Sons of Confederate Veterans, family and friends, all there to memorialize the service of Pvt. Henry Henderson, a black Confederate soldier.
Henderson was born in 1849 in Davidson County, NC. He was 11 years old when he entered service with the Confederate States of America as a cook and servant to Colonel William F. Henderson, a medical doctor. Records show Henry was wounded during his service, but he continued to serve until the war's end in 1865. He was discharged in Salem, NC, age 16.
After the war, Henry married Miranda Shockley, of White County, TN. The couple raised five children.
"We're here to honor him," said his great-grandson, Oscar Fingers, of Evansville, IN. "I think he would be proud his family has come this far and to know all we have done." Several other family members made the trip with Fingers from Indiana for Sunday's ceremony.
Sons Dalton and Lee received Henderson's first and last Tennessee Colored Confederate pension check upon their father's death in September 1926. The check provided enough funds to bury their father, but not enough to buy a headstone for his grave.
The 60,000-90,000 black Confederate soldiers are often called "the forgotten Confederates," but through the concerted efforts of the Capt. Sally Tompkins Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy along with the Sons of the Confederate Veterans, several graves have been found in the Upper Cumberland and have been or will be marked.
Pvt. Henry Henderson's service was finally recognized and his grave officially marked on Sunday, all to the snap of salutes from the grandsons of fellow Confederates, volleys of gunfire and cannons shot toward the distant hillsides of his final resting place.
Official U.S. government grave markers are available to all Confederate veterans. For additional information, contact Barbara Parsons, 484-5501.
>>>Legally he could not free slaves in those states not in rebellion.<<<
Why should that matter to him? He was a usurper--a tyrant.
Your chronic neoconfederatitis is showing - again.
Get some help.
Utter nonsense.
Robert Lee stated that slavery was the best situation for blacks in the south. Jefferson Davis said that the Negro was fit for slavery and nothing else. Thomas Jackson predicted a war between North and South over slavery and made it clear he'd be on the slavery side. Not a single one of these men believed blacks to be their equal in any way. Not a single one can be quoted as saying that blacks deserved any rights whatsoever. Each and every one was a slave owner for most or all of their adult life. Each believed slavery should continue. Given all that then wouldn't even someone like you have to admit that if Lincoln was a racist then Robert Lee and Jefferson Davis and Thomas Jackson were as bad, if not worse than he was?
don't you get TIRED of being the BUTT of 90% of the jokes about PREJUDICED NITWITS & STUPID BIGOTS on the forum????
you'd be PITIFUL, if you weren't a BIGOT, 1st Class.
free dixie,sw
what you have posted, N-S, is a combination of NONSENSE, HALF-truths & outright DY PROPAGANDA.
NOBODY here but "DUH snake" & "Mr SPIN" are clueLESS enough to believe that SELF-serving, REVISIONIST, BILGE any more.
free dixie,sw
No, not particularly hard. I'm actually honest about these things. And the times were the times. Find me a political leader of anywhere near Lincoln's stature who was as advanced racially as we are today. Maybe a couple of the hardcore abolitionists like Sumner, who would never get anywhere near the presidency. It's interesting to consider that most of the damning Lincoln quotes on race come from the Douglas debates, where Douglas is taunting Lincoln about his position on race, trying to play the race card for the white audience. So who's the racist there? And as Frederick Douglass said in his 1876 speech,
I have said that President Lincoln was a white man, and shared the prejudices common to his countrymen towards the colored race. Looking back to his times and to the condition of his country, we are compelled to admit that this unfriendly feeling on his part may be safely set down as one element of his wonderful success in organizing the loyal American people for the tremendous conflict before them, and bringing them safely through that conflict. His great mission was to accomplish two things: first, to save his country from dismemberment and ruin; and, second, to free his country from the great crime of slavery. To do one or the other, or both, he must have the earnest sympathy and the powerful cooperation of his loyal fellow-countrymen. Without this primary and essential condition to success his efforts must have been vain and utterly fruitless. Had he put the abolition of slavery before the salvation of the Union, he would have inevitably driven from him a powerful class of the American people and rendered resistance to rebellion impossible. Viewed from the genuine abolition ground, Mr. Lincoln seemed tardy, cold, dull, and indifferent; but measuring him by the sentiment of his country, a sentiment he was bound as a statesman to consult, he was swift, zealous, radical, and determined.
You say he'd be a good candidate for the Klan, but you ignore the plain truth. Before Lincoln, slavery. After Lincoln, no slavery. Show me a Klansman who'd do that.
I doubt Watie will accept anything as an original source short of you showing up at his door with the actual signed document in hand, but here...
The blacks are immeasurably better off here than in Africa, morally, physically, and socially. The painful discipline they are undergoing is necessary for their further instruction as a race, and will prepare them, I hope, for better things. How long their servitude may be necessary is known and ordered by a merciful Providence. Robert E. Lee letter dated December 27, 1856
A January 11, 1865 letter written to senator Andrew Hunter of Virginia, in response to Mr. Hunter's request to know General Lee's opinion on black troops. Link
free dixie,sw
otoh, he was NOT a RACIST as "us grant", "lincoln", "butler" & so MANY others of the "oh, so wunnerful,wunnerful DY elites" WERE!
free dixie,sw
he was a TYRANT & destroyer of BOTH the CSA & the CONSTITUTION.
free dixie,sw
So...I understand that you've been on vacation.
The why did he state his preference that the south rely on the white population to staff the army, expressing his opinion that it was dangerous to do otherwise?
Sure he could. The Confiscation acts allowed him to seize private property used to support the southern rebellion and the Emacipation Proclamation was an offshoot of that.
not i. i DID go to Columbia, SC (Thursday - Saturday)to "do" a BBQ for Congressman Tom Tancredo.
the BBQ was a SUCCESS.
free dixie,sw
he was NOT BLIND & could SEE for himself the MANY "freemen of colour" in the CSA ranks.
N-S, unlike some here, you are NOT a dunce & you KNOW that the "no Black men in gray thesis" is BILGE & (in all too many cases) a KNOWING lie on the part of the REVISIONIST LEFT.
otoh, as a PROPAGANDIST for the unionists, you don't WISH to admit that 100,00+ FREE Black men (and NOT a few Black women!) fought for dixie LIBERTY from "the unionist leviathan", as it makes "lincoln & his merry band of thugs & common thieves" look BAD!
free dixie,sw
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