Lt. Col. William S. Pierson Hoffman’s Battalion was in a pickle. A group of new prisoners recently captured at the fall of Port Hudson had arrived at the prisoner-of-war processing center in New Sandusky, Ohio. The four officers, Col. I.G.W. Steedman (1st Alabama), Capt. R.M. Hewitt (Miles Legion), Capt. O.P. Amacker (9th Louisiana Batt. Cav.), and Lt. J.B. Wilson, (39th Mississippi), had brought along six servants, “four colored and two white, the latter small boys.” When the officers had surrendered, the six servants were permitted to accompany them. “Their journey had taken them from Port Hudson, to Governor’s Island in New York, and finally to the outskirts of Johnson’s Island. “Please give me such directions as you think proper,” Pierson asked Col. William Hoffman, Commissary General of Prisoners in Washington, D.C., regarding the matter.[1]
The question that
Pierson posed to his superior is an interesting one: just what was the policy
of the Federal government regarding captured Confederate camp servants (both
enslaved and free)? It is possible that the Federal government did not have a
policy, as the question appeared several times. Louisville, Kentucky’s provost-marshal,
Col. Henry Dent, asked the same question in December 1862: “Several slaves have
been brought to the prison with their masters who were captured, said slaves
having acted as cooks &c. I should like to know what shall be done with.”
Dent realized he could not turn them loose. They would be arrested, jailed, and
then sold for jail fees. Neither could he send them North, where “they are
liable for their value by civil proceedings. Our people protest against their
being let loose in our midst.”[2]
An interesting clue
is found in a letter from Col. Peter Porter, 8th New York Volunteer
Artillery, stationed at Fort McHenry, written to Colonel Hoffman on October 6,
1863. Hoffman had obviously written to Porter on the matter, for Porter quotes
Hoffman: “You state that Captured negroes are ranked as Camp followers, and
therefore [are] Prisoners of War.” William Duane’s A Military Dictionary (1810) defines camp followers as “Officers
servants, sutlers, &c. All followers of a camp are subject to the articles
of war equally with the soldiery.” (164) All of the servants of officers,
captured by the Federals, were considered prisoners of war. But what to do with
them? Colonel Porter continues: “It is respectfully suggested that they be
employed in the services of the Government as paid laborers and teamsters—thus
rendering service to the Government, and avoiding the return of such as were
slaves. It is further suggested that those among them who are freed men with
families and desire to go should be sent south with the first installment of
prisoners going thither—as exchanged prisoners or not as the Government thinks
best.”[3]
To some degree,
that appears to be what happened. Bvt, Brig. Gen. W.W. Morris, commanding Fort
McHenry, wrote to Lt. Col. Wm H. Cheeseborough about the disposition of black
prisoners. He had 64 “Negroes, Servants of Officers in the Rebel Armies” who
had arrived at the fort since the battle of Gettysburg. According to Morris, 16
“had enlisted in the Negro Regt now in process of Organization in
Balt[imore]—four… have been enlisted as Assist Cook in Co D 5th N.Y.
Artillery, now at this post—four… left clandestinely with the 21st
Reg-N.Y. I[nfantry]. National Guard, on its return to New York-, the balance,
forty, are still here and chiefly employed in police duty.” So it would seem
that soon after these black Confederate prisoners arrived in a prison camp,
they took the Oath of Allegiance and were released.[4]
However, there is some evidence that not all
of these black Confederate prisoners were enthusiastic about taking the Oath of
Allegiance. The Staunton Express,
reprinting a piece published on October 13, 1863, told its readers that “The
Petersburg Express is informed by Lieut. Daniels, who has just arrived at
Petersburg from Fort Norfolk, that some 35 or 40 Southern negroes, captured at
Gettysburg, are confined at Fort McHenry. He says that they profess an undying
attachment to the South. Several times Gen. Schneck had offered to release them
from the Fort, it they would take the oath of allegiance to the Federal
Government and join the Lincoln army. They had peremptorily refused in every
instance, and claim that they should be restored to their masters and homes in
the South. They say they would prefer death to liberty on the terms proposed by
Schneck.”
On the surface, it
would be easy to dismiss the Staunton
Express article as hyperbole. Yet there are accounts that support the idea
of black Confederate prisoners refusing to take the Oath and gain their
freedom. Lieutenant Robert Park, 12th Alabama Infantry, wrote in July
1864, while near Washington, D.C., that his “negro cook” Charlie was missing.
Park believed he had been enticed to leave or “forcibly detained by some negro
worshipper.” Yet Park discovered in December that Charlie was being held as a
prisoner of war at Fort McHenry, refusing to take the oath.[5]
There are
undoubtedly more black Confederate prisoners of war who refused to take the
Oath and remained prisoners of war until the very end. Historians are largely
silent on the issue. Since many of the prisoner of war register books have been
digitized and are now online (through familysearch), we can uncover more of
these stories.
[1] Official Records, Series 2, vol. 6,
397-398.
[2] Official Records, Series 2, vol. 5, 36.
[3] Peter
A. Porter to William Hoffman, October 6, 1863, Letters Received from the
Commissary General of Prisoners, Record Group 107, National Archives, quoted in
James M. Paradis, African Americans and
the Gettysburg Campaign, 60.
[4] W.W.
Morris to Wm H. Cheeseborough, July 30, 1863, Letters Received from the
Commissary General of Prisoners, Record Group 107, National Archives, quoted in
James M. Paradis, African Americans and
the Gettysburg Campaign, 59-60.
[5] Southern Historical Society Papers, vol.
1, No. 5, 179, 379.
Thank you, Mr. Hardy, for shedding some light on this otherwise ignored part of the history of the Confederate War. Too many academic historians perhaps ignore this because it does not conveniently fit the politically correct narrative they seek to advance.
ReplyDeleteMichael, I applaud your exhaustive research and diligence in providing a more accurate picture of a complex subject of the negro's role in the war of 1861-1865. I remember in a late war issue of whether to accept slaves in the CSA army, the newspapers of the Southern states exploded with emotional articles pro and con about the problems of integrating slaves into the army. There are hundreds of current articles that are recorded in the Library of Congress digital newspapers about this issue, which was hotly debated after massive losses from the campaigns in Virginia of 1864. General Cleburne of the Army of Tennessee advocated the integration of slaves into the army, however the concept was met with great resistance.
ReplyDeleteThe Confederate War Department, and Confederate Congress already had employed about 30,000 slaves and free negroes into Confederate support activities, often integrated into encampment, bivouac, and the march of Confederate troops. Union General Meade declared that at the battle of 'Reams Station' everyone came at the Union troops entrenched at Reams. This activity was surely the similar scenario of the dozen or so negroes who rode with the 9th Virginia, and members reported that the blacks joined in the cavalry charges from time to time. Sgt. Robert Saunders, of the Old Dominion Dragoons, would report that his servant was most concerned with Robert during the campaigns - however, after Robert was captured, his servant went over to the occupying Union forces, and by chance encounter on his release as a POW - Robert was given money and kind encouragement from his former servant, now a part of Union forces.
Thanks so much for the detailed reporting of history with the fidelity of discovery and accuracy in recording your findings.
Excellent article. Thank you for speaking the truth about these men and their service.
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