Posted on 02/18/2012 2:26:38 PM PST by BigReb555
May I share two short stories about a Black South Carolina Confederate soldier honored recently and a Black Confederate Veteran-Legislator from Mississippi from over a century past?
(Excerpt) Read more at huntingtonnews.net ...
May I share two short stories about a Black South Carolina Confederate soldier honored recently and a Black Confederate Veteran-Legislator from Mississippi from over a century past?
Black Confederates? Why havent we heard more about them? National Park Service Historian, Ed Bearrs, stated, quote I dont want to call it a conspiracy to ignore the role of Blacks both above and below the Mason-Dixon Line, but it was definitely a tendency that began around 1910. Unquote
The movie Glory enlightened us about Black Union Soldiers of the War Between the States and books like: Forgotten ConfederatesAn Anthology about Black Southerners by Barrow, Segars and Rosenburg opened our eyes about Black Confederates.
The War Between the States was tragic but also an important time in Americas past. Young people once knew who Gen. Robert E. Lee and Gen. Joshua Chamberlain were and sang songs of the war that included Dixie and Goober Peas. It is very unfortunate that Dixie, the song loved by Presidents Jefferson Davis and Abraham Lincoln, has been banned by many institutions.
A newspaper reported that during February 2012 the Colonel Joseph Norton Camp No. 45 Sons of Confederate Veterans honored Henry Craig a Black Confederate Soldier who was born in South Carolina in the 1840s. Henry was a Servant of the Craig family of Pickens and Oconee County. When war broke out in 1861 he joined the Craig Brothers in enlisting in Orrs First South Carolina Rifles.
On August 6, 1864, John Craig was wounded at Gravely Hill, Virginia and lost his arm. Henry brought his Master and childhood friend back to Pickens, South Carolina where he continued to serve the Craig family until his death in 1927.
South Carolina Senator Robert Ford of the 42nd District, a Black Southerner, is reported to have spoken at the service honoring Henry Craig of his desire to honor the heritage of all people.
In Mississippi on February 1, 1890, an appropriation for a monument to the Confederate dead was being considered. A delegate had just spoken against the bill, when John F. Harris, a Black Republican delegate from Washington County, rose to speak:
"Mr. Speaker! I have risen in my place to offer a few words on the bill.
I have come from a sick bed. Perhaps it was not prudent for me to come. But sir, I could not rest quietly in my room without contributing a few remarks of my own. I was sorry to hear the speech of the young gentlemen from Marshall County. I am sorry that any son of a soldier would go on record as opposed to the erection of a monument in honor of the brave dead. And, Sir, I am convinced that had he seen what I saw at Seven Pines, and in the Seven Day's fighting around Richmond, the battlefield covered with mangled forms of those who fought for this country and their country's honor, he would not have made the speech.
When the news came that the South had been invaded, those men went forth to fight for what they believed, and they made not requests for monuments. But they died, and their virtues should be remembered.
Sir, I went with them. I, too, wore the gray, the same color my master wore. We stayed for four long years, and if that war had gone on till now I would have been there yet. I want to honor those brave men who died for their convictions.
When my Mother died I was a boy. Who, Sir, then acted the part of Mother to the orphaned slave boy, but my old Missus! Were she living now, or could speak to me from those high realms where are gathered the sainted dead, she would tell me to vote for this bill. And, Sir, I shall vote for it. I want it known to all the world that my vote is given in favor of the bill to erect a monument in HONOR OF THE CONFEDERATE DEAD."
When the applause died down, the measure passed overwhelmingly, and every Black member voted "AYE." A fact sheet has been prepared by the Sons of Confederate Veterans Education Committee for distribution to professors, teachers, librarians, principals, ethnic leaders, members of the press, and others interested in promoting an understanding of Black contributions to United States history. See fact sheet at:
http://www.scv.org/documents/edpapers/blackhistory.pdf
The War Between the States Sesquicentennial, 150th Anniversary, runs 2011 through 2015. The Georgia Division Sons of Confederate Veterans joins the nation in remembering this historic time in our nations history. See more information at: http://www.150wbts.org/
We must remember the words of those who were there and saw what they saw—and not those who imagined what the war was like as seen though the prejudged eyes of the present age.
The funds raised in these FReepathons go to pay our current quarter expenses. But we're also going to try to replace some of our older servers and failing equipment this year so we're going to add a little extra to our FReepathon goals. John is estimating ten to fifteen thousand to do this and I'd like to get it all in place and working before the election cycle is fully heated up, so we'll try to bring in a little extra now, if we can, and the rest next quarter.
Jim Robinson
Blacks are 4th generation parasites, having learned that "whitey" will be robbed by Taxes to be handed to them, IF THEY JUST KEEP VOTING FOR DEMOCRATS!
I will give a damn about it when it is taught as a part of AMERICAN History Month. UNtil than Black, Asian, Hispanic and Gay History months are a bunch of BS.
I will give a damn about it when it is taught as a part of AMERICAN History Month. UNtil than Black, Asian, Hispanic and Gay History months are a bunch of BS.
Poor black america quite literally brain washed by various “facts” adjusted by obvious lies.. Not totally ignorant but UNeducated with hyperbolic propaganda...
And they reject real American History.. IF they know any at all.. For sure they have no idea idea of proper american civics..
Agree completely. Kids don't know which country we fought the Revolutionary War to separate from, but they can tell you all about the contributions of a jazz singer profiled in February. This garbage of balkanizing our history will be our downfall (ONE reason for it, anyway).
Then there's sports.
When you find someone who was around in the 1860’s let me know. I’d be interested in what they had to say.(s.)
The people of the 1860s are gone—but they left their records, letters and deeds behind. We must use them to get a picture of the past. I say its time for a monument to black Confederates to list what they did. There story has been forgotten.
Blacks fighting to maintain the system of slavery for their white over-seers. yeah, that makes sense. And then a monument to the KKK.
blacks were hoping that their service to the CSA might help their cause and lead to more freedoms. Their were lots of Black people in the south who were not slaves. (A few blacks even owned slaves) Still, I think that it was a case of the Devil you know or the Devil you don’t know (the Yankees). The fact that there were no slave revolts in the South in the Civil War—while the men were away fighting says volumes. the Civil War was a complex one with many causes—not just slavery.
If he was in the state legislature in 1890 his loyalty went unrewarded.
He would have been voting with the same people who would disenfranchise him in that very year's Constitutional Convention.
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