Saturday, January 22, 2011

Ft. Wagner: black and white "saints" of the Civil War


******

TO LAY A WREATH

In honor of the black and white "saints"
of the Civil War whose sacrifices made possible
a future "saint" -- Kimberly Bailey,

Afro-American soldier,
educator, and nurse


May she reach her "Promised Land;"
their dream survives

BUT in the path to freedom
there is no "free lunch"


******



******

Sometime in the next year I will embark upon a kayak expedition to lay a wreath in honor of Robert Gould Shaw and the 54th Massachusetts at the remains of Fort Wagner off Charlestown Harbor.

Where their sacrifice in front of rebel guns opened the way for racial equality in the U.S.


This is the battle made mildly famous by the 1989 film:
Glory.

By helping to prove blacks could fight, Fort Wagner opened the way for President Lincoln's decision to massively enlist African Americans into the Union Army.

For more on the role of colored soldiers in the Civil War see the massacre at Petersburg by this writer.



Ft Wagner: price paid


******

The mass grave at Fort Wagner no longer exists; the site has eroded way back at the beginning of the last century.

The remains of Colonel Shaw and his men have long since been washed out to sea by Atlantic hurricanes.

All that is left is a few skulls which sometimes wash up on the beach.




Ft. Wagner is at lower left


This is the battle made mildly famous by the 1989 film: Glory.

By helping to prove blacks could fight, Fort Wagner opened the way for President Lincoln's decision to massively enlist African Americans into the Union Army.

For more on the role of colored soldiers in the Civil War see the massacre at Petersburg by this writer.


The morning after

********

At dusk July 18, 1863 was launched an attack spearheaded by the 54th Massachusetts Infantry, a black regiment.

(For the broader strategy of the 1863 Union assault on Charleston Harbor see Gate of Hell by Stephen B. Wise. The assault on Battery Wagner was a key part of the Union's effort to gain revenge for the Confederate capture of Fort Sumter in April 1861.)

The unit’s leader, Colonel Robert Gould Shaw, was killed.

A 25 year old white officer, a child of Boston aristocracy, immortalized in Blue-eyed Child of Fortune: The Civil War Letters of Colonel Robert Gould Shaw.

Spoiled, sheltered, with a wandering sense of entitlement, he seemed to thrive when the Civil War finally came.

He became a man with a mission.

Years later philosopher William James, a Shaw acquaintance, recalled a special kind of courage:

-- the lonely courage it took to drop a commission leading a socially correct white regiment and throw himself into this "new Negro soldier venture where loneliness was certain, ridicule inevitable, failure possible; and Shaw was only 25."

All the more remarkable because Shaw had some of the common prejudices of his day -- and only gradually came to see the fighting potential of his men.

He became their strongest advocate -- that they should be treated fairly, well armed, and adequately paid.

As his respect for his men grew, he ceased to use terms he once used: "niggers," and "darkeys."

After years of wandering uncertainty shifting from job to job young Robert was at last a man with a mission.

A man of many flaws was to be reborn a hero

His destiny was to die young -- to do his small but dramatic part to help a downtrodden race rise up free.

What greater "Glory" could a man seek? In his weakness he picked up the burden of a martyr who bows to death for a broader purpose.

These then were the last letters home by a youthful "saint" who died with "his" black free men in the assault on Fort Wagner:

July 18, Morris Island

"We are in General Strong's Brigade, and have left Montgomery. I hope for good. We came up here last night and were out again in heavy rain. Fort Wagner is being very heavily bombarded. We are not far from it."

And here is the last:

Morris Island
July 18, 1863
Dear Father

I enclose this letter for (wife) Annie, which I didn't intend to send to you because it is impossible to tell whether I can write again by mail...We hear nothing but praise for the Fifty-fourth on all hands....

Love to mother and the girls.

Rob






The night before the battle
("Let them know we went down standing up")



The 54th Massachusetts attacks:
eyewitness accounts


Shaw took his black men to the front, past thirteen often cheering white support regiments.


At six hundred yards from the fort, Shaw ordered his men to form two lines of battle, fix bayonets, and lie down in the sand.

The men shook hands, exchanged letters, and reminded each other who to send letters to in case they were killed or captured.

Shaw briefed his men and challenged them to "take the fort or die."


********


Members of a brigade scaled the parapet but after brutal hand-to-hand combat were driven out with heavy casualties.

Shaw reached the top of the fort's wall, took a bullet near the heart, and fell dead inside.

Half the regiment had penetrated the fort before withdrawal.

Of the 600 men of the 54th who charged the fort, 272 were killed, wounded or captured. Additional losses from the white regiments which followed brought union losses to 1,515.

Confederate gravediggers buried 800 Union soldiers in the sand in front of the fort the morning after the battle.

Confederates suffered 174 casualties.

The Federals resorted to siege operations to reduce the power of the fort.

This was the fourth time in the war that black troops played a crucial combat role.

The battle for Fort Wagner helped prove to skeptics that black troops could fight effectively. President Lincoln stepped up efforts to recruit them (Wikipedia).


Here is the story of flag bearer Sgt. William H. Carney who, although severely wounded, kept the flag off the ground.

He battlefield exploit was the first in a sequence of Civil War actions to earn an African American the Congressional Medal of Honor (1900).






********

After the battle, the Southern soldiers made a trench, dropped Shaw's body inside. then threw the bodies of some 20 of his black soldiers on top of him -- before shoveling them all over with sand.

Insult though this was, Shaw's abolitionist family thanked the Southern soldiers for burying Shaw with his men.

The dream of these "saints" -- both black and white -- survived.





Morris Island today
"Once let the black man get upon his person
the brass letter, U.S., let him get an eagle
on his button, and a musket on his shoulder
and bullets in his pocket, there is no power
on earth that can deny that
he has earned the right
to citizenship."


-Frederick Douglass

********

Kimberly, you follow in a grand tradition.

Courage is to stand up as a professional, self reliant, seeking handouts from no one.

Fighting with courage to make one's way.

The road can be dark and hazy.

For it is, as always, a world without free lunches.

Look forward but also backwards to the "saints of the past."

********



The issues of emancipation and military service were intertwined from the onset of the Civil War.

News from Fort Sumter set off a rush by free black men to enlist in U.S. military units.


They were turned away, however, because a Federal law dating from 1792 barred Negroes from bearing arms for the U.S. army (although they had served in the American Revolution and in the War of 1812).

In Boston disappointed would-be volunteers met and passed a resolution requesting that the Government modify its laws to permit their enlistment.

The Lincoln administration wrestled with the idea of authorizing the recruitment of black troops, concerned that such a move would prompt the border states to secede.

When Gen. John C. Frémont in Missouri and Gen. David Hunter in South Carolina issued proclamations that emancipated slaves in their military regions and permitted them to enlist, their superiors sternly revoked their orders.

By mid-1862, however, the escalating number of former slaves (contrabands), the declining number of white volunteers, and the increasingly pressing personnel needs of the Union Army pushed the Government into reconsidering the ban.

As a result, on July 17, 1862, Congress passed the Second Confiscation and Militia Act, freeing slaves who had masters in the Confederate Army.


Two days later, slavery was abolished in the territories of the United States, and on July 22 President Lincoln presented the preliminary draft of the Emancipation Proclamation to his Cabinet.

After the Union Army turned back Lee's first invasion of the North at Antietam, MD, and the Emancipation Proclamation was subsequently announced, black recruitment was pursued in earnest.

Volunteers from South Carolina, Tennessee, and Massachusetts filled the first authorized black regiments.


Recruitment was slow until black leaders such as Frederick Douglass encouraged black men to become soldiers to ensure eventual full citizenship.

(Two of Douglass's own sons contributed to the war effort.)


Volunteers began to respond, and in May 1863 the Government established the Bureau of Colored Troops to manage the burgeoning numbers of black soldiers.

By the end of the Civil War, roughly 179,000 black men (10 percent of the Union Army) served as soldiers in the U.S. Army and another 19,000 served in the Navy.

Nearly 40,000 black soldiers died over the course of the war—30,000 of infection or disease.


Black soldiers served in artillery and infantry and performed all noncombat support functions that sustain an army, as well. Black carpenters, chaplains, cooks, guards, laborers, nurses, scouts, spies, steamboat pilots, surgeons, and teamsters also contributed to the war cause.

There were nearly 80 black commissioned officers.

Black women, who could not formally join the Army, nonetheless served as nurses, spies, and scouts, the most famous being Harriet Tubman, who scouted for the 2d South Carolina Volunteers.

Kimberly, you "travel in the footsteps of those who came before."