Posted on 10/20/2010 8:19:20 AM PDT by Palter
Can you elaborate on that?
I hung around some Sons of conferate veteran types good group. they even say the black soldiers were paid the same as whites, well it was confederate money so...I dont know if got you much. And supposedly the union didnt pay their black soldier or it was less than white soldiers.
Black Rebs in this role were in danger, and were also a force multiplier. Riding shotgun on a ammo wagon train with Union cavalry running around isn't the safest thing in the world to do.
hell they could use a little deductive reasoning, altho that picture is not in color, union was blue and csa was gray, those uniforms looked a little light in color to be union blue dont they lol
u y’all gonna confuse th’m wit the truth
I have spoken to many Sons of the Confederate Veterans Camps. They are good groups.
They were a force multiplier in that they freed up whites for the combat roles. And you're assuming they were armed. The standard practice for both armies was to detail infantry or cavalry units to guard their supply trains.
Which are you contending:
a) No Blacks served in the CSA
b) Some may have served, but in lesser roles or by force.
c) Yes, a few misguided blacks did serve, but nowhere close to the number reported.
Here you go... :)
http://www.jewishworldreview.com/cols/williams012600.asp
http://www.jewishworldreview.com/cols/williams061301.asp
But, as per your own source, this unit was not involved in combat. It was not even allowed to escort POWs. When the Confederate Army needed more white officers, it poached them from the 1st Louisiana Native Guard and that unit was forced to disband. This sequence of events does not support the claim that “thousands of African Americans fought for the South during the Civil War.” If we are to draw any lesson from the 1st Louisiana Native Guard, it might be that, “thousands of American Americans purchased their own weapons and uniforms and offered their services to the South; they were refused, and later disbanded, so most of them put down their arms and the rest joined the Union.”
You stated: The overwhelming majority (of CSA Blacks) served unofficially in supporting roles as teamsters, cooks, servants, laborers, and the like
So then soldiers in WWII or any other war who served in similar functions are to be considered on a lower rung of honor then those who fought in combat?
Thanks!!!!!
Here's another source: Link
Which are you contending:
a) No Blacks served in the CSA b) Some may have served, but in lesser roles or by force. c) Yes, a few misguided blacks did serve, but nowhere close to the number reported.
He doesn't answer direct questions. It's the Yankee statist way.
I did a google images search: "Black Confederate Soldiers", dozens of pictures came up, I could have picked any one of them, I picked that one because it said "Louisiana", so shoot me.
Your point is a distraction from the fact that some blacks served in the CSA.
Oh sure, spoil the fun....
I’d say ‘c’ is the closest to my position, though ‘misguided’ is your choice of words and not mine. I’m sure that some were there willingly while many were not. Some had a choice, but most probably did not. What is undeniable is that none served legally as combat soldiers until March of 1865.
A textbook claimed that some blacks served in the Confederate Army. This upset some people who found the idea to be politicaly incorrect.
Did some blacks serve in the CSA? Yes they did.
Did they do so in the "tens of thousands"? No. But I haven't seen anyone make that claim here.
Did they serve in the front lines and win many battles for the South? Not that I know of, but I haven't seen anyone make that claim either.
There were free blacks in the South, and some of them enlisted. This is known to be true. Whether they drove mules, served as cooks, or guarded wagon trains really doesn't matter. All soldiers deserve recognition.
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