Op-ed: false reporting on USCT service

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Why Leading Scholars Make False Reports on USCT Service

by Hari Jones - African American Civil War Memorial
Saturday, June 19, 2010

One of the attractions of our museum is that we direct young scholars to primary sources. Teachers have changed the way they teach the Civil War as a result of the information they have received from our museum. The Delany Group Reading List has been of great benefit to educators and scholars across the country. Though false information and images promoted by the movie Glory have proven market value, it is my opinion that the market will demand more accurate information in the near future. It is easy to demonstrate from primary sources that the work of leading academics have promoted information aligned with the movie in lieu of facts found in primary sources. The works of such scholars have proven market value. Some in the museum business believe that the truth must be compromised in order to attract visitors. But most are simply afraid to disagree with esteem scholars.

Many of the false statements concerning the service of United States Colored Troops (USCT) are results of poor scholarship by leading scholars. Even in a 2008 John Hope Franklin edited work published by Howard University Press (Legacy: Treasures in Black History), we find obviously false statements. For example, the fatalities of the 54th Massachusetts at Fort Wagner on July 18, 1863 are reported to have been 281, which is eleven more than the regiment lost to disease and combat in two and half years of service. The regiment's actual fatalities at Fort Wagner were 54. Since most academics support this false report, it is difficult in the current atmosphere to tell the truth. Thus, the truth is currently being suppressed. In order to make the grade, many young scholars are being compelled to ignore the truth and to iterate falsehoods.

Among these often iterated falsehoods are that 1) there were no African American officers in the United States Colored Troops, 2) the 54th Massachusetts was the first African American regiment in the Civil War, 3) African Americans were denied equal pay (some qualify this by stating that they were denied equal pay for most of the war), 4) President Lincoln did not intend to assign African Americans to combat duty, and 5) Sergeant William Carney was the first African American to receive the Medal of Honor. All of these statements are false. Some require more complex explanations, but the truth can be discovered if one consults the primary sources.

1) There were over one hundred African American officers commissioned in the United States Colored Troops during the Civil War. Their records can be found at the National Archives, and their names are on the Wall of Honor at the African American Civil War Memorial. In the first regiment of African descent mustered into the Union Army in 1862, all of the commissioned officers except for the regimental staff officers were men of African descent.

2) Though the first regiment of African descent organized under the Union umbrella during the Civil War was the 1st South Carolina Infantry, it was not officially mustered into federal service because General David Hunter had acted illegally when he organized the regiment in the spring of 1862. Thus, the regiment was disbanded that spring after a Congressional Inquiry. After Congress granted President Lincoln the authority to arm men of African descent, General Rufus Saxton was ordered by the War Department to reorganize the regiment on August 25, 1862. It was mustered into the Union Army in January 1863. The 1st Louisiana Native Guards organized in New Orleans under General Benjamin Butler became the first African descent regiment mustered into the Union Army in September 1862. The 54th Massachusetts became the ninth regiment of African descent mustered into the Union Army in May 1863.

3) In section 6 of the Militia Act of 1862, which gave President Lincoln the authority to arm men of African descent, Congress mandated that African descent men enlisted under that act be paid only $10.00 regular pay with $3.00 to be taken away for their uniforms. Privates of European descent received $13.50 at that time. When the Bureau of United States Colored Troops was established on May 22, 1863, this section of the Militia Act was interpreted to apply to all men of African descent regardless of rank or whether he was free or enslaved before enlistment. For one year African American enlisted men were denied equal pay, African American commissioned officers received equal pay. On June 15, 1864, President Lincoln signed legislation into law that awarded men of African descent equal pay and arrears. The soldiers who were free men prior of April 1861 were entitled to all of their back pay. Those who were enslaved prior to April 1861 received back pay starting on January 1, 1864. As result of this act of Congress, men of African descent were denied equal pay for only one year, and most received all of their back pay. Therefore, they were not denied equal pay for most of the war, and most who served were not denied equal pay at all. According to the Congressional records, the fact is that their heroism on the battlefield earned them equal pay.

4) Scholars who state that Lincoln did not intend to arm men of African descent or assign them to combat duties often use paragraph six of the Emancipation Proclamation in which the President states that men of African descent will be assigned to "garrison forts" as their evidence. Edna Medford at Howard University has been known to advance this argument. It is important to note that to be assigned to garrison a fort in a combat zone is in fact combat duty. Since President Lincoln did not order his generals to remove African descent soldiers from combat zones, it is ridiculous to conclude that he did not intend to assign them to combat duty. When we combine this fact with the fact that all USCT regiments were combat arms regiments, the statement becomes even more ridiculous.

5) Sergeant William Carney received the Medal of Honor on May 23, 1900. He was the fifty-first African American to receive the Medal of Honor. The first African American to receive the nation's highest military honor was a sailor by the name of Robert Blake, who received the Medal of Honor in April 1864. Because Carney's noteworthy act of courage happened before Blake's, scholars intent on suppressing the truth have argued that Carney was the first to receive the Medal of Honor even though Blake received his medal over thirty-six years before Carney. This justification of false information leads me to suspect that the poor scholarship of many historians is intentional.

In the next five years as primary sources become more accessible to young scholars and curious readers, the poor scholarship of leading scholars will be exposed. Whenever a Civil War scholar states that the movie Glory is accurate or "almost perfectly aligned with the historical evidence," we can be certain that the scholar making the statement is either ignorant of the historical evidence or chooses to suppress the evidence in order to align his scholarship with what is most marketable. It is our intent to align our scholarship with the truth. We trust that the market will indeed value good scholarship in the near future.

http://afroamcivilwar.blogspot.com/2010/06/why-leading-scholars-make-false-reports.html
 
Whenever a Civil War scholar states that the movie Glory is accurate or "almost perfectly aligned with the historical evidence," we can be certain that the scholar making the statement is either ignorant of the historical evidence or chooses to suppress the evidence in order to align his scholarship with what is most marketable.

And that he/she can't read a map. It's one of my favorite CW movies, but I still have never been able to get past the fact that the sea's on the wrong side in the climactic battle sequence. :furious:
 
Did the 54th Massachusetts qualify technically as USCT? Weren't USCT units raised by the U.S. rather than the states?

Good eye. USCT were Federal troops (regulars); the 54th (and the 55th) were federalized Massachusetts state troops.

(Though I believe several state-organized formations were later reorganized as USCT units.)
 
...
Among these often iterated falsehoods are that 1) there were no African American officers in the United States Colored Troops
...
1) There were over one hundred African American officers commissioned in the United States Colored Troops during the Civil War. Their records can be found at the National Archives, and their names are on the Wall of Honor at the African American Civil War Memorial. In the first regiment of African descent mustered into the Union Army in 1862, all of the commissioned officers except for the regimental staff officers were men of African descent.
...

As far as I remember correct the Louisiana Native Guard regiments were no part of the USCT. Later, after many of the black original officers had left the regiments, they were decommissioned and part of the personell was transfered to USCT regiments - where there were white officers. So this, if viewed without other sources, would formally say: No black officers in the union army? Wrong. No black officers in the USCT (which mirrors point 1): True.
 
Hari Jones is straw-manning this, citing only a single book as spreading "false statements" about the USCT. I'm not going to defend inaccuracies, but to write 1,200 words in rebuttal to what I see as relatively innocuous errors is a bit much. The book he cites, after all, is a short, popular history of the African American experience going back centuries, of which the USCT is only a small element. There are only two short essays in the book about the ACW at all, comprising in aggregate 14 pages only. The essay which presumably contains the errors, "Soldiers and Sailors of the Union" by Joseph P. Reidy, is only four pages long, including images. It's hardly a major historical work.

Finally, Jones himself makes one of the "false statements" he's so torqued about -- the late John Hope Franklin was not an editor of this volume, but only wrote the preface.
 
None of the USCT Black officers led troops in the field. Most were chaplains. Only four USCT regiments were allowed to keep their state regimental identities. The link below lists some in the field but I have my doubts.

5th Massachusetts (Colored) Volunteer Cavalry Regiment
54th Massachusetts (Colored) Volunteer Infantry Regiment
55th Massachusetts (Colored) Volunteer Infantry Regiment
29th Connecticut (Colored) Volunteer Infantry Regiment

http://home.usmo.com/~momollus/USCT.HTM
 
The following opinions do not necessarily reflect those of the poster.

Why Leading Scholars Make False Reports on USCT Service

by Hari Jones - African American Civil War Memorial
Saturday, June 19, 2010

One of the attractions of our museum is that we direct young scholars to primary sources. Teachers have changed the way they teach the Civil War as a result of the information they have received from our museum....
Many of the false statements concerning the service of United States Colored Troops (USCT) are results of poor scholarship by leading scholars....
Among these often iterated falsehoods are that 1) 2) 3) 4) 5)....
http://afroamcivilwar.blogspot.com/2010/06/why-leading-scholars-make-false-reports.html
Most of this is nit-picky stuff.

The biggest False Report about the USCT is that they were all volunteers. Plenty of evidence they were not.

*

I note that the article is from the "African American Civil War Memorial" site. Maybe it should be called the "USCT Civil War Memorial" since it focuses on only one side of the conflict.

*

From the USCT History page-

"In July of 1862, Congress passed the Militia Act of 1862. It had become an "indispensable military necessity" to call on America's African descent population to help save the Union. A few weeks after President Lincoln signed the legislation on July 17, 1862, free men of color joined volunteer regiments in Illinois and New York. Such men would go on to fight in some of the most noted campaigns and battles of the war to include, Antietam, Vicksburg, Gettysburg, and Sherman's Atlanta Campaign."
http://afroamcivilwar.org/about-us-f/usct-history.html

Antietam? Vicksburg? Gettysburg? (I have heard of one small company of black civilians that fought at Gettysburg. Civilians - not USCT.) Sherman's army in the Atlanta Campaign?

I don't recall any USCT units in those battles/campaigns.
 
Most of this is nit-picky stuff.

The biggest False Report about the USCT is that they were all volunteers. Plenty of evidence they were not.

*

I note that the article is from the "African American Civil War Memorial" site. Maybe it should be called the "USCT Civil War Memorial" since it focuses on only one side of the conflict.

*

From the USCT History page-

"In July of 1862, Congress passed the Militia Act of 1862. It had become an "indispensable military necessity" to call on America's African descent population to help save the Union. A few weeks after President Lincoln signed the legislation on July 17, 1862, free men of color joined volunteer regiments in Illinois and New York. Such men would go on to fight in some of the most noted campaigns and battles of the war to include, Antietam, Vicksburg, Gettysburg, and Sherman's Atlanta Campaign."
http://afroamcivilwar.org/about-us-f/usct-history.html

Antietam? Vicksburg? Gettysburg? (I have heard of one small company of black civilians that fought at Gettysburg. Civilians - not USCT.) Sherman's army in the Atlanta Campaign?

I don't recall any USCT units in those battles/campaigns.

At Gettysburg? Who were they?

R
 
Sherman was accompanied by colored pioneer units of varying sizes.
But they weren't USCT and they didn't fight.

"USCT History
....Such men would go on to fight in some of the most noted campaigns and battles of the war to include, Antietam, Vicksburg, Gettysburg, and Sherman's Atlanta Campaign...."
 
For example?

"....it is the intention of the Secretary of War that all able-bodied negroes that can be reached shall be taken to fill up the colored regiments.

At the same time it is desirable that we should make a wide distinction between the Southern citizens who have been loyal and those who have not; also a distinction between those who have not been loyal, but now express a voluntary willingness to return to their allegiance and employ their negroes in accordance with existing orders, and those who hold out in their acknowledgment of a Southern Confederacy. I would lay down, then, as a rule, that negroes who have belonged to persons of known loyalty only be recruited as free white persons are; that is, when they come and offer themselves. Of the second class they may be visited by recruiting officers and the option given them to enlist, and the able-bodied negroes of the third class of citizens may be taken possession [of] with or without their own consent.

All negroes who have not been employed in accordance with published orders may be taken to put in the ranks...."

-Major-General U. S. Grant, Department of the Tennessee, August 28, 1863.

Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies ("OR"), Series 3, Volume 3, p.735

***


"...it is found by experience that the the recruiting officers do not even attempt to make any discrimination between the slaves of loyal and those of disloyal men, but go through the country picking up all they can induce to go with them, and in some cases forcing them away..."

-Major-General J.M. Schofield, Department of the Missouri, September 26, 1863

OR, Series 3, Volume 3, p.849

***


"Officers in Command of colored troops are in constant habit of pressing all able-bodied slaves into the military service of the United States."

-Major-General Lovell H. Rousseau, Nashville, TN, January 30, 1864

OR, Series 1, Volume 32, part 2, p.269

***


"A major of colored troops is here with his party capturing negroes, with or without their consent."

-Major-General John A. Logan, Huntsville, AL, February 26, 1864

OR, Series 1, Volume 32, part 2, p.477

***


"In view of the necessities of the military service, the want of recruits to complete the unfilled regiments in this department, the great numbers of unemployed colored men and deserters hiding about to avoid labor or service, and in consideration of the large bounties now paid to volunteers by the Government, General Orders, No. 17, dated headquarters Department of the South, Hilton head, S. C., March 6, 1863, is hereby amended to read as follows:

I. All able-bodied colored men between the ages of eighteen and fifty, within the military lines of the Department of the South, who have had an opportunity to enlist voluntarily and refused to do so, shall be drafted into the military service of the United States....

V. District provost-marshals are hereby directed to cause the arrest of all idle persons, and all persons within the military lines of their respective districts, either white or black, who have not proper and visible means of support, and to turn them over immediately to the general superintendent of volunteer recruiting service or his agents for conscription...."

-Major-General J. G. Foster, Department of the South, August 16, 1864.

OR, Series 3, Volume 4, p.621

***


"...the major-general commanding (General Foster) ordered an indiscriminate conscription of every able-bodied colored man in the department. As the special representative of the Government in its relation to them, I had given them earnest and repeated assurances that no force would be used in recruiting the black regiments. I say nothing of this order, in reference to my special duties and jurisdiction and the authority of the major-general commanding to issue it; but as an apparent violation of faith pledged to the freedmen, it could not but shake their confidence in our just intentions, and make them the more unwilling to serve the Government.

The order spread universal confusion and terror. The negroes fled to the woods and swamps, visiting their cabins only by stealth and in darkness. They were hunted to their hiding places by armed parties of their own people, and, if found, compelled to enlist. This conscription order is still in force. Men have been seized and forced to enlist who had large families of young children dependent upon them for support and fine crops of cotton and corn nearly ready for harvest, without an opportunity of making provision for the one or securing the other.

Three boys, one only fourteen years of age, were seized in a field where they were at work and sent to a regiment serving in a distant part of the department without the knowledge or consent of their parents.

A man on his way to enlist as a volunteer was stopped by a recruiting party. He told them where he was going and was passing on when he was again ordered to halt. He did not stop and was shot dead, and was left where he fell. It is supposed the soldiers desired to bring him in and get the bounty offered for bringing in recruits.

Another man who had a wife and family was shot as he was entering a boat to fish, on the pretense that he was a deserter. He fell in the water and was left. His wound, though very severe, was not mortal. An employe in the Quartermaster's Department was taken, and without being allowed to communicate with the quartermaster or settle his accounts or provide for his family, was taken to Hilton Head and enrolled, although he had a certificate of exemption from the military service from a medical officer.

I protested against the order of the major-general commanding (General Foster) and sent him reports of these proceedings, but had no power to prevent them. The order has never to my knowledge been revoked..."

-Brigadier-General R. Saxton, Beaufort, South Carolina, December 30, 1864

OR, Series 3, Volume 4, p.1028

***


"...the Southern colored regiments with which the [54th] Massachusetts troops were brigaded were hardly a fair specimen of their kind, having been raised chiefly by drafting, and, for this and other causes, being afflicted with perpetual discontent and desertion."

-Colonel Thomas W. Higginson, 33rd USCT (1st SC)

Army Life in a Black Regiment, p.303
 
For example?

"Major General Davis Hunter, Department of the South, Hilton Head, South Carolina, on May 8, 1862, advised Brigadier General Isaac I. Stevens, commanding post at Beaufort, Port Royal Island, "I am authorized by the war Department to form Negroes into 'squads, companies, or otherwise,' as I may deem most beneficial to the public service. I have concluded to enlist two regiments." Obediently, Stevens, Second Brigade, Northern District, Department of the South, on May 11 ordered in a circular, "in accordance with ... of Major General Hunter…the several agents or overseers of plantations will send to Beaufort tomorrow morning every able-bodied Negro between the ages of eighteen and forty five, capable of bearing arms."

"Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase on May 21 sent to Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton various papers about the state of affairs on Port Royal Island, including the following correspondence."

"Edward L. Pierce, special agent, Treasury Department, Port Royal, on May 12 wrote to Chase: "This has been a sad day on these islands--- The scenes of today… have been distressing… Some 500 men hurried… from Ladies and Saint Helena to Beaufort, … and the to Hilton Head… The Negroes are sad… The Superintendents… aided the military in the disagreeable affair, disavowing the act. Sometimes whole plantations, learning what was gong on, ran off to the woods for refuge. Others, with no means of escape, submitted passively to the inevitable decree… This mode of [enlistment by] seizures and transportation… spreading dismay and fright, is repugnant."

" The next day, at Pope's Plantation, Saint Helena Island, Pierce wrote to Hunter about scenes transpiring yesterday in the execution of your order… The colored people became suspicious of the presence of the companies of soldiers detailed for the service, who were marching through the island during the night… They were taken from the fields without being allowed to go to their houses even to get a jacket…there were sadness in all. As those plantations were called from the fields, the soldiers, under orders, while on the steps of my headquarters, loaded their guns, so the Negroes might see what would take place in case they attempted to get away…On some plantations the wailing and screaming were loud and the women threw themselves in despair on the ground. On some plantations the people took to the woods and were hunted up by the soldiers… I doubt if the recruiting service in this country has ever attended with such scenes before.'

: At this time G.M.Wells, Superintendent of Plantations, Mrs. Jenkins,' Saint Helena Island, wrote Pierce, "This conscription, together with the manner of its execution, has created a suspicion that the government has not the interest in the Negroes that it has professed, and many of them sighed yesterday for the old 'fetters' as being better than the new liberty."

"On may 13, L.D. Phillips at Dr. Pope's plantation, also wrote to Pierce: the whole village, old men, women, and boys, in tears, [were] following at our heels. The wives and mothers of the conscripts, giving way to their feeling, break into the loudest lamentations and rush the men, clinging to them with the agony of separation… Some of them, setting up such shrieking as only this people could, throw themselves on the ground and abandon themselves to the wildest expressions of grief… The old foreman {at Indian Hill]… said it reminded him of what his master said we would do… I have heard several contrasts the present state of things with their former condition to our disadvantage. This rude separation of husband and wife, children and parents, must needs remind them of what we have always stigmatized as the worst feature of slavery… never in my judgment, did major-general fall into a sadder blunder and rarely has humanity been outraged by an act of more unfeeling barbarity."

"Five and a half months later on October 29, Brigadier General Rufus Saxton in Beaufort informed Secretary of War Stanton, "When the colored regiment was first organized by General Hunter no provision was made for its payment, and thee men were discharged after several months service, receiving nothing for it. In the meantime their families suffered… This failure to pay them for their service has weakened their confidence in our promises for the future and makes then slow to enlist."

Thomas Bland Keys, The Uncivil War: Union Army and Navy Excesses in the Official Records, pp. 21-22.
 
"USCT History
....Such men would go on to fight in some of the most noted campaigns and battles of the war to include, Antietam,...."
That's some rather p-ss poor history. The only USCT units in existence at the time were the 1st Kansas and 1st South Carolina. Neither yet officially organized and nowhere near Antietam, MD. Where's the Internet History Police (Civil War Memory boys) when you need them?
 
In the next five years as primary sources become more accessible to young scholars and curious readers, the poor scholarship of leading scholars will be exposed. Whenever a Civil War scholar states that the movie

Glory

is accurate or "almost perfectly aligned with the historical evidence," we can be certain that the scholar making the statement is either ignorant of the historical evidence or chooses to suppress the evidence in order to align his scholarship with what is most marketable. It is our intent to align our scholarship with the truth. We trust that the market will indeed value good scholarship in the near future.



I'm interested in this thread as I have done some research in the USCT units and read a lot of their service records.
I also find it interesting to see the Link where this came from: The Afro-American Civil War Memorial website. I visited the museum and inquired about the 6th US Colored Heavy Artillery and Major Lionel Booth. The curator, who was leading a tour, had never heard of either. His source was a compiled list of soldiers which have the 6 USCA men listed under the 11 USCT.
{Edited: I say curator as that is how he was introduced by the Receptionist}

Just surprised to see this article connected to this museum that doesn't seem to have follow this guideline.
 

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