BY WILLIAM WELLS BROWN AUTHOR OF " SKETCHES OF PLACES
AND PEOPLE ABROAD," "THE BLACE MAN," ETC BOSTON LEE & SHEPARD, 149
WASHINGTON STREET i867 pis ltroism and aid $tittifta i L,
, I t.;." . —'; i Entered, according to Act of
Congress, in the year i866, by ~- -. --- WILLIAM WELLS BROWN, In the Clerk's
Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts. 41~ - ~ c BOS TON
AN 5l PRINTERS i 1GO. RANDi AV ER ST }D5ERECSQ IN,%~u -ew a r k - P -L I
TO WENDELL PHILLIPS, ESQ., AS A TOKEN OF 3dutivati
-atd (atitudt FOR HIS LONG DEVOTIOio TO THE CAUSE OF FREEDOM, AND HIS UNTIRING
ADVOCACY OF THE EQUALITY OF THE NEGRO, IS MOST RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED BY THE A
UTHOR. I
" hit
PREFACE. FEELING anxious to preserve for future
reference an account of the part which the Negro took in suppressing the
Slaveholders' Rebellion, I have been induced to write this work. In doing so, it
occurred to me that a sketch of the condition of the race previous to the
commencement of the war would not be uninteresting to the reader. For the
information concerning the services which the blacks rendered to the Government
in the Revolutionary War, I am indebted to the late George Livermore, Esq.,
whose "Historical Research" is the ablest work ever published on the early
history of the negroes of this country. In collecting facts connected with the
Rebellion, I have availed myself of the most reliable information that could be
obtained from newspaper correspondents, as well as from those who were on the
battle-field. To officers and privates of several of the colored regiments I am
under many obligations for detailed accounts of engagements. i II I
PREFACE. No doubt, errors in fact and in judgment will
be discovered, which I shall be ready to acknowledge, and correct in subsequent
editions. The work might have been swelled to double its present size; but I did
not feel bound to introduce an account of every little skirmish in which colored
men were engaged. I waited patiently, before beginning this work, with the hope
that some one more competent would take the subject in hand; but, up to the
present, it has not been done, although many books have been written upon the
Rebellion. WILLIAM WELLS BROWN. CAMBRIDGEPORT, MASS., Jan. 1, 1867. ' vi
CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. BLACKS IN THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR
AND IN 1812. The First Cargo of Slaves landed in the Colonies in 1620.- Slave
Representation in Congress. -Opposition to the Slave-trade. Crispus Attucks, the
First Victim of the Revolutionary War. Bancroft's Testimony.- Capture of Gen.
Prescott.- Colored Men in the War of 1812.- Gen. Andrew Jackson on Negro
Soldiers. CHAPTER II. THE SOUTH-CAROLINA FRIGHT. Denmark Vesey, Peter Poyas, and
their Companions. - The De Plans. - Religious Fanaticism. - The Discovery. - The
Tr Convictions. - Executions......... CHAPTER III. THE NAT TURNER INSURRECTION.
Nat Turner. - His Associates. - Their Meetings. - Nat's Religious Enthusiasm.-
Bloodshed.- Wide-spread Terror.- The Trials and Executions.............. CHAPTER
IV. SLAVE REVOLT AT SEA. Madison Washington. -His Escape from the Soul Liberty.-
His Return. - His Capture. - The The Slave-traders. - Capture of the Vessel. - F
pressed........ I I . is 19 2,6 vii
CONTENTS. CHAPTER V. GROWTH OF THE SLAVE-POWER.
Introduction of the Cotton-gin. - Its Effect on Slavery. - Fugitive Slave Law. -
Anthony Burns. - The Dred Scott Decision. - Im prisonment for reading "Uncle
Tom's Cabin."- Struggles with Slavery.................... 87 CHAPTER VI. THE
JOHN BROWN RAID. John Brown. - His Religious Zeal. - His Hatred to Slavery.- Or
ganization of his Army.- Attack on Harper's Ferry.- His Exe cution. - John
Brown's Companions, Green anid Copeland. - Th Executions.............. CHAPTER
VII. THE FIRST GUN OF THE REBELLION. Nomination of Fremont. - Nomination of
Lincoln. - The Mob Spirit. - Spirit of Slavery.- The Democracy.- Cotton.-
Northern Promises to the Rebels. - Assault on Fort Sumter. - Call for 75,000
Men.- Response of the Colored Men... CHAPTER VIII. THE UNION AND SLAVERY BOTH TO
BE PRESERVED. Union Generals offer to suppress Slave-insurrections.- Ret Slaves
coming into our Army.......... CHAPTER IX. INTELLIGENT CONTRABANDS. James
Lawson. - His Bravery.- Rescue of his Wife and Children. He is sent out on
Important Business.- He fights his Way back. - He is admired by Gens. Hooker and
Sickles.- Rhett's Servant. -" Foraging for Butter and Eggs"......... 60 I i viii
. 44 50 . 56
CONTENTS. CHAPTER X. PROCLAMATIONS OF FREMONT AND
HUNTER. Gen. Fremont's Proclamation, and its Effect on the Public Mind. Gen.
Hunter's Proclamation; the Feeling it created... 69 CHIIAPTER XI. HEROISM OF
NEGROES ON THE HIGH SEAS. Heroism of Negroes.- William Tillman recaptures " The
S. G. Wa ring." -George Green. - Robert Small captures the Steamer "Planter." -
Admiral Dupont's Opinion on Negro Patriotism. 74 CHIIAPTER XII. GENERAL BUTLER
AT NEW ORLEANS. Recognition of Negro Soldiers with Officers of their own Color.
Society in New Orleans. - The Inhuman Master. - Justice. - Change of Opinion. -
The Free Colored Population.. 82 CHAPTER XIII. THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA FREE.
Emancipation in the District.- Comments of the Press. - The Good Result. -
Recognition of Hayti and Liberia. - The Slave- trader Gordon............... 93
CHAPTER XIV. THE BLACK BRIGADE OF CINCINNATI. The Great Fright.- Cruel Treatment
of the Colored People by the Police. -Bill Homer and his Roughs.- Military
Training.- Col. Dickson. — The Work. - Mustering Out. - The Thanks.. 100 i, ix
CONTENTS. CHAPTER XV. PROCLAMATION OF FREEDOM.
Emancipation Proclamation.- Copperhead View of it. - "Abraham, spare the South."
- The Contrabands Rejoicing. - The Songs. Enthusiasm. -Faith in God. -Negro Wit.
- "Forever Free". 109 CHIIAPTER XVI. THE NEW POLICY. A New Policy announced.-
Adjutant-Gen. Thomas. - Major-Gen. Prentiss. - Negro Wit and Humor. - Proslavery
Correspondents. - Feeling in the Army. - Let the Blacks fight... 124 CHAPTER
XVII. ARMING THE BLACKS. Department of the South.- Gen. Hunter enlisting Colored
Men. Letter to Gov. Andrew.- Success.- The Earnest Prayer. - Th Negro's
Confidence in God............ CHAPTER XVIII. BATTLE OF MILLIKEN'S BEND.
Contraband Regiments; their Bravery; the Surprise. -Hand-to-hand Fight. - "No
Quarter." - Negroes rather die than surrender. The Gunboat and her Dreadful
Havoc with the Enemy...137 CHAPTER XIX. RAISING BLACK REGIMENTS AT THE NORTH.
Prejudices at the North.- Black Laws of Illinois and Indiana.- Ill Treament of
Negroes. - The Blacks forget their Wrongs, and come to the Rescue...............
x . 130 . 142
CONTENTS. CHAPTER XX. FIFTY-FOURTH MASSACHUSETTS
REGIMENT. Its Organization.- Its Appearance.-Col. Shaw. - Presentation of
Colors. - Its Dress-parade. - Its Departure from Boston. 147 CHAPTER XXI. BLACKS
UNDER FIRE IN SOUTH CAROLINA. Expedition up the St. Mary's River. - The Negroes
long for a Fight. - Their Gallantry in Battle............. 159 CHAPTER XXII.
FREEDMEN UNDER FIRE IN MISSISSIPPI. Bravery of the Freedmen. - Desperation of
the Rebels. - Severe Bat tle. Negroes Triumphant............ 163 CHAPTER XXIII.
BATTLE OF PORT HUDSON. The Louisiana Native Guard. - Capt. Callioux.- The
Weather. Spirit of the Troops. - The Battle begins.-" Charge." - Great Bravery.-
The Gallant Color-bearer.- Grape, Canister, and Shell sweep down the Heroic
Men.- Death of Callioux.- Comments. 167 CHAPTER XXIV. GENERAL BANKS IN
LOUISIANA. Gen. Banks at New Orleans.- Old Slave-laws revived. - Treatment of
Free Colored Persons. - Col. Jonas H. French. -Ill Treatment; at Port
Hudson............... 177 i III
CONTENTS. CHAPTER XXV. HONORS TO THE NOBLE DEAD. Capt.
Andr6 Callioux.- His Body lies in State.- Personal Appear ance.- His Enthusiasm.
- His Popularity.- His Funeral. - The great Respect paid the Deceased.- General
Lamentation.. 186 CIIAPTER XXVI. THE NORTHERN WING OF THE REBELLION. The
New-York Mob. - Murder, Fire, and Robbery. - The City given up to the Rioters.-
Whites and Blacks robbed in Open Day in the Great Thoroughfares.- Negroes
murdered, burned, and their Bodies hung on Lamp-posts.- Southern Rebels at the
Head of the Riot.................192 CHAPTER XXVII. ASSAULT ON FORT WAGNER. The
Fifty-fourth Massachusetts Regiment. - Col. Shaw.- March to the Island.-
Preparation.- Speeches. - The Attack. - Storm of Shot, Shell, and Canister.-
Heroism of Officers and Men. - Death of Col. Shaw. - The Color-sergeant. - The
Retreat. - "Buried with his Niggers."- Comments....... CIIAPTER XXVIII. THE
SLAVE-MARTYR. The Siege of Washington, N.C. -Big Bob, the Negro Scout. - The
Perilous Adventure. -- The Fight. - Return. - Night-expedition - The Fatal
Sandbar.- The Enemy's Shells.- " Somebody's go to die to get us out of this, and
it may as well be me." - Death o Bob.- Safety of the Boat..... CHAPTER XXIX.
BATTLE OF OLUSTEE, FLORIDA. The Union Troops decoyed into a Swamp.- They arc
outnumbered. - Their Great Bravery. - The Heroism of the Fifty-bfourth Massa
chusetts. - Death of Col. Friblev........... 217 xii . 198 . 212
CONTENTS. CHAPTER XXX. BATTLE OF POISON SPRINGS,
ARKANSAS. Hard-fought Battle.- Bravery of the Kansas Colored Troops. - They die,
but will not yield. -Outnumbered by the Rebels. -Another Severe Battle.- The
Heroic Negro, after being wounded, fights till he dies.................225
CHAPTER XXXI. THE MASSACRE AT FORT PILLOW. Assault and Capture of the Fort.-" No
Quarter." -Rebel Atroci ties. - Gens. Forrest and Chalmers. - Firing upon Flags
of Truce. -Murder of Men, Women, and Children.- Night after the As sault.-
Buried Alive. - Morning after the Massacre... 230 CHAPTER XXXII. INJUSTICE TO
COLORED TROOPS. The Pay of the Men. - Government refuses to keep its Promise. -
Ef forts of Gov. Andrew to have Justice done. - Complaint of the Men. - Mutiny.
- Military Murder. -Everlasting Shame...248 CHAPT E R XXXIII. BATTLE OF HONEY
HILL, SOUTH CAROLINA. Union Troops.- The March.- The Enemy.- The Swamp.
Earth-works.- The Battle.- Desperate Fighting.- Great Bra very.- Col. Hartwell.
- Fifty-fifth Massachusetts. - The Dyin and the Dead. - The Retreat.- The
Enemy's Position. - Earth works. - His Advantages. - The Union Forces. - The
Blacks. Our Army outnumbered by the Rebels. - Their Concealed Ba teries. -
Skirmishing. - The Rebels retreat to their Base.- Th Battle.- Great Bravery of
our Men.- The Fifty-fifth Massach setts saves the Army...2 xiii . 255
CONTENTS. CHAPTER XXXIV. BEFORE PETERSBURG AND
RICHMOND. Assault and Failure. - Who to blame. - Heroic Conduct of the Blacks. -
The Mine.- Success at the Second Attack. - Death of a Gallant Negro.- A Black
Officer.......... 265 CHAPTER XXXV. WIT AND HUMOR OF THE WAR. Negro Wit and
Humor.- The Faithful Sentinel. - The Sentinel's Re spect for the United-States
Uniform.- The "Nail-kag."- The Poetical Drummer-boy.- Contrabands on Sherman's
March. Negro Poetry on Freedom. - The Soldier's Speech. - Contraband capturing
his Old Master.............. 273 CHAPTER XXXVI. A THRILLING INCIDENT OF THE WAR.
Heroic Escape of a Slave.- His Story of his Sister.- Resides - Joins the Army,
and returns to the South during the Rebell Search for his Mother.- Finds her.-
Thrilling Scene. stranger than Fiction........ C IHA P T E R XXXVII. PROGRESS
AND JUSTICE. Great Change in the Treatment of Colored Troops.- Negro Appoint
ments. -Justice to the Black Soldiers.- Steamer "Planter." - Progress. - The
Paymaster at last.- John S. Rock...291 C H IA P T E R XXXVIII. FOURTH-OF-JULY
CELEBRATION AT THE HOME OF JEFF. DAVIS. Fourth-of-July Celebration at the Home
of Jeff. Davis in Mississippi. - The Trip. - Joe Davis's Place. - Jeff.'s Place.
- The Dinner. Speeches and Songs.- Lively Thnimes.- Return to Vicksburg. 298 xiv
. 283
CONTENTS. CHAPTER XXXIX. GALLANTRY, LOYALTY, AND
KINDNESS OF THE NEGRO. The Nameless Hero at Fair Oaks.- The Chivalry whipped by
their Former Slaves. - Endurance of the Blacks. - Man in Chains. - One Negro
whips Three Rebels. - Gallantry. - Outrages on the Blacks. -Kindness of the
Negroes. - Welcome... 309 CHAPTER XL. FALL OF THE CONFEDERACY, AND DEATH OF
PRESIDENT LINCOLN. Flight of Jeff. Davis from Richmond.- Visit of President
Lincoln to the Rebel Capital. - Welcome by the Blacks.- Surrender of Gen. Lee.-
Death of Abraham Lincoln.- The Nation in Tears.. 323 CHAPTER XLI. PRESIDENT
ANDREW JOHNSON. Origin of Andrew Johnson.- His Speeches in Tennessee.- The
Negro's Moses. - The Deceived Brahmin. - The Comparison. - Interview with
Southerners. — Northern Delegation. -Delegation of Colored Men.- Their
Appeal........... 328 CHAPTER XLII. ILL TREATMENT OF COLORED PEOPLE SOUTH. The
Old Slaveholders.- The Freedmen. - Murders.- School-teach ers.- Riot at Memphis.
- Mob at New Orleans.- Murder of Union Men. - Riot at a Camp-meeting...........
345 CHAPTER XLIII. PROTECTION FOR THE COLORED PEOPLE. Protection for the Colored
People South.- The Civil Rights Bill. Liberty without the Ballot no Boon. -
Impartial Suffrage. - Tes Oaths not to be depended upon...... xv . 355
CONTENTS. CHIIAPTER XLIV. CASTE. Slavery the
Foundation of Caste. - Black its Preference.- The Gen eral Wish for Black Hair
and Eyes.- No Hatred to Color.- Th White Slave.- A Mistake.- Stole his Thunder.-
The Burman -Pew for Sale........ CHAPTER XLV. SIXTH REGIMENT UNITED-STATES
VOLUNTEERS. Organization of the Regiment.- Assigned to Hard Work. -Brought under
Fire. - Its Bravery. - Battle before Richmond.- Gallantry of the Sixth.-
Officers' Testimony......375 xvi . 361
THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. CHAPTER I BLACKS IN
THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR AND IN 1812. The First Cargo of Slaves landed in the
Colonies in 1620. - Slave Reproe. sentation in Congress. - Opposition to the
Slave-Trade. - Crispns Attucks, the First Victim of the Revolutionary War. -
Bancroft's Testimony. - Capture of Gen. Prescott.- Colored Men in the War of
1812.- Gen. Andrew Jackson on Negro Soldiers. I NOW undertake to write a history
of the part which the colored men took in the great American Rebellion. Previous
to entering upon that subject, however, I may be pardoned for bringing before
the reader the condition of the blacks previous to the breaking out of the war.
The Declaration of American Independence, made July 4, 1776, had scarcely been
enunciated, and an organization of the government commenced, ere the peopl)le
found themselves surrounded by new and trying difficulties, which, for a time,
threatened to wreck the ship of state. The forty- five slaves landed on the
banks of the James
2 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. River, in the
colony of Virginia, from the coast of Africa, in 1620, had multiplied to several
thousands, and were influencing the political, social, and religious
institutions of the country. Brought into the colonies against their will; made
the "hewers of wood and the drawers of water;" considered, in the light of law
and public opinion, as mere chattels, - things to be bought and sold at the will
of the owner; driven to their unrequited toil by unfeeling men, picked for the
purpose from the lowest and most degraded of the uneducated whites, whose moral,
social, and political degradation, by slavery, was equal to that of the slave,
-the condition of the negro was indeed a sad one. The history of this people,
full of sorrow, blood, and tears, is full also of instruction for. mankind. God
has so ordered it that one class shall not degrade another, without becoming
themselves contaminated. So with slavery in America. The institution bred in the
master insulting arrogance, deteriorating sloth, pampered the loathsome lust it
inflamed, until licentious luxury sapped the strength and rottened the virtue of
the slave-owners of the South. Never were the institutions of a people, )r the
principles of liberty, put to such a severe test as those of the American
Republic. The convention to 'rame the Constitution for the government of the
United States had not organized before the slave-masters began to press the
claims of their system upon the delegates. They wanted their property
represented in the national Congress, and undue guarantees thrown around it;
they wanted the African slave-trade made lawful, and their victims returned if
they should attempt to escape; they begged that an article might be inserted in
the Constitution, making it the duty of the General Government to
BLACKS IN THE REVOI,UTIONARY WAR. put down the slaves if
they should imitate their masters in striking a blow for freedom. They seemed
afraid of the very evil they were clinging so closely to. "Thus conscience doth
make cowards of us all." In all this early difficulty, South Carolina took tile
lead against humanity, her delegates ever showing themselves the foes of
freedom. Both in the Federal Convention to frame the Constitution, and in the
State Conventions to ratify the same, it was admitted that the blacks hEad
fought bravely against the British, and in favor of the American Republic; for
the fact that a black man (Crispus Attucks) was the first to give his life at
the commencement of the Revolution was still fresh in their minds. Eighteen
years previous to the breaking out of the war, Attucks was held as a slave by
Mr. William Brown of Framingham, Mass., and from whom he escaped about that
time, taking up his residence in Boston. The Boston Massacre, March 5, 1770, may
be regarded as the first act in the great drama of the American Revolution.
"From that moment," said Daniel Webster, "we may date the severance of the
British Empire." The presence of the British soldiers in King Street excited the
patriotic indignation of the people. The whole community was stirred, and sage
counsellors were deliberating and writing and talking about the public
grievances. But it was not for "the wise and prudent " to be the first to act
against the encroachments of arbitrary power. "A motley rabble of saucy boys,
negroes and mulattoes, Irish Teagues, and outlandish Jack tars" (as John Adams
described them in his plea in defence of the soldiers) could not restrain their
emo tion, or stop to inquire if what they must do was according to the letter of
any law. Led by Crispus Attucks, 3
4 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. the mulatto
slave, and shouting, "The way to get rid of these soldiers is to attack the main
guard; strike at the root; this is the nest," with more valor than discretion,
they rushed to King Street, and were fired upon by Capt. Preston's Company.
Crispus Attucks was the first to fall: he and Samuel Gray and Jonas Caldwell
were killed on the spot. Samuel Maverick and Patrick Carr were mortally wounded.
*The excitement which followed was intense. The bells of the town were rung. An
impromptu townmeeting was held, and an immense assembly was gatliered. Three
days after, on the 8th, a public funeral of the martyrs took place. The shops in
Boston were closed; and all the bells of Boston and the neighboring townls were
rung. It is said that a greater number of persons assembled on this occasion
than were ever before gatlered on this continent for a similar purpose. The body
of Crispus Attucks, the mulatto slave, had been placed in Faneuil Hall, with
that of Caldwell, both being strangers in the city. Maverick was buried from his
mother's house, in Union Street; and Gray from his brother's, in Royal Exchange
Lane. The four hearses formed a junction in King Street and there the procession
marched in columns six deep, with a long file of coaches belonging to the most
distinguished citizens, to the Middle Burying-ground, where the four victims
were deposited in one grave, over which a stone was placed with this
inscription: "Long as in Freedom's cause the wise contend, Dear to your country
shall your fame extend; While to the world the lettered stone shall tell Where
Caldwell, Attucks, Gray, and Maverick fell."
BLACKS IN THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR. The anniversary of this
event was publicly commemorated in Boston, by an oration and other exercises,
every year until after our national independence was achieved, when the Fourth
of July was substituted for the Fifth of. March as the more proper day for a
general celebration. Not only was the event commemorated, but the martyrs who
then gave up their lives were remembered and honored. For half a century after
the close of the war, the name of Crispus Attucks was honorably mentioned by the
most noted men of the country who were not blinded by foolish prejudice. At the
battle of Bunker Hill, Peter Salem, a negro, distinguished himself by shooting
Major Pitcairn, who, in the midst of the battle, having passed the storm of fire
without, mounting the redoubt, and waving his sword, cried to the "rebels" to
surrender. The fall of Pitcairn ended the battle in' favor of liberty. A single
passage from Mr. Bancroft's history will give a succinct and clear account of
the condition of' the army, in respect to colored soldiers, at the time of the
battle of Bunker Hill: "Nor should history forget to record, t at, as in the
army at Cambridge, so also in this gallant band, the free negroes of the colony
had their representatives. For the right of free negroes to bear arms in the
public defence was, at that day, as little disputed in New England as their
other rights. They took their place, not in a separate corps, but in the ranks
with the white man; and their names may be read on the pension-rolls of the
country, side by side with those of other soldiers of the Revolution." -
Bancroft's History of the United States, vol. vii. p. 421. 6
6 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. The capture of
Major-Gen. Prescott, of the British army, on the 9th of July, 1777, was an
occasion of great joy throughout the country. Prince, the valiant negro who
seized that officer, ought always to be remembered with honor for his important
service. The exploit was much commended at the time, as its results were highly
important; and Col. Barton, very properly, received from Congress the
complinment of a sword for his ingenuity and bravery. It seems, however, that it
took more than one head to plan and to execute the undertaking. The following
account of the capture is historical: "They landed about five miles from
Newport, and three-quarters of a mile from the house, which they approached
cautiously, avoiding the main guard, which was at some distance. The colonel
went foremost, with a stout, active negro close behind him, and another at a
small distance: the rest followed so as to be near, but not seen. "A single
sentinel at the door saw and hailed the colonel: he answered by exclaiming
against, and inquiring for, rebel prisoners, but kept slowly advancing. The
sentinel again challenged him, and required the countersign. He said he had not
the countersign, but amused the sentry by talking about rebel prisoners, and
still advancing till he came within reach of the bayonet, which, he presenting,
the colonel studlenly struck aside, and seized him. He was immediately secured,
and ordered to be silent on pain of instant death. Ileanwhile, the rest of thle
men surrounding the house, the negro, with his head. at the second stroke,
forced a passage into it, and then into the landlord's apartment. The landlord
at first relfused to give the necessary in
BLACKS IN THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR. telligence; but, on the
prospect of present death, he pointed to the general's chamber, which being
instantly opened by the negro's head, the colonel, calling the general by name,
told him he was a prisoner." - Pennsylvania Evening Post, Aug. 7, 1777 (in Frank
Moore's "Diary of the American Revolution," vol. i. p. 468). There is abundant
evidence of the fidelity and bravery of the colored patriots of Rhode Island
during the whole war. Before they had been formed into a separate regiment, they
had fought valiantly with the white soldiers at Red Bank and elsewhere. Their
conduct at the "Battle of Rhode Island," on the 29th of August, 1778, entitles
them to perpetual honor. That battle has been pronounced by military authorities
to have been one of the best-fought battles of the Revolutionary War. Its
success was owing, in a great degree, to the good fighting of the negro
soldiers. Mr. Arnold, in his " History of Rhode Island,'," thus closes his
account of it: "A third time the enemy, with desperate courage and increased
strength, attempted to assail the redoubt, and would have carried it, but for
the timely aid of two Continental battalions despatched by Sullivan to support
his almost exhausted troops. It was in repelling these furious onsets, that the
newly raised black regiment, under Col. Greene, distinguished itself by deeds of
desperate valor. Posted behind a thicket in the valley, they three times drove
back the Hessians, who charged repeatedly down the hill to dislodge them; and so
de termined were the enemy in these successive charges, that, the day after the
battle, the Hessian colonel, upon whom this duty had devolved, applied to
exchange his command, and go to New York, because he dared not 7
8 THE NEGRO IN. THE AMERICAN REBELLION. lead his
regiment again to battle, lest his men should shoot him for having caused them
so much loss." -.4r. nold's History of Rhlode Island, vol. ii. pp. 427, 428.
Three years later, these soldiers are thus mentioned by the Marquis de
Chastellux: "The 5th [of January, 1781] I did not set out till eleven, although
I had thirty miles' journey to Lebanon. At the passage to the ferry, I met with
a detachment of the Rhode-Island regiment,- the same corps we had with us all
the last summer; but they have since been recruited and clothed. The greatest
part of them are negroes or mulattoes: they are strong, robust men; and those I
have seen had a very good appearance."Chastellux's Travels, vol. i. p. 454;
London, 1789. When Col. Greene was surprised and murdered, near Points Bridge,
New York, on the 14th of May, 1781, his colored soldiers heroically defended him
till they were cut to pieces; and the ene,my reached him over the dead bodies of
his faithful negroes. That large numbers of negroes were enrolled in the army,
and served faithfully as soldiers during the whole period of the war of the
Revolution, may be regarded as a well-established historical fact. And it should
be borne in mind, that the enlistment was not confined, by any means, to those
who had before enjoyed the privileges of free citizens. Very many slaves were
offered to, and received by, the army, on the condition that they were to be
emancipated, either at the time of enlisting, or when they had served out the
term of their enlistment. The inconsistency of keeping in slavery any person who
had taken up arms for the defence of our national liberty had led to the passing
of an order forbidding "slaves," as such, to be received as soldiers.
BLACKS IN THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR. That colored men were
equally serviceable in the last war with Great Britain is true, as the following
historical document will show: GENERAL JACKSON'S PROCLAMATION TO THE NEGROES.
HEADQUARTERS, SEVENTH MILITARY DISTRICT, MOBILE, Sept. 21, 1814. .To the Free
Colored Inhabitants of Louisiana. Through a mistaken policy, you have heretofore
been deprived of a participation in the glorious struggle for national rights in
which our country is engaged. This no longer shall exist. As sons of freedom,
you are now called upon to defend our most inestimable blessing. As Americans,
your country looks with confidence to her adopted children for a valorous
support, as a faithful return for the advantages enjoyed under her mild and
equitable government. As fathers, husbands, and brothers, you are summoned to
rally around the standard of the Eagle to defend all which is dear in existence.
Your country, although calling for your exertions, does not wish you to engage
in her cause without amply remunerating you for the services rendered. Your
intelligent minds are not to be led away by false representations. Your love of
honor would cause you to despise the man who should attempt to deceive you. In
the sincerity of a soldier, and the language of truth. I address you. To every
noble-hearted, generous freeman of color, volunteering to serve during the
present contest with Great Britain, and no longer, there will be paid the same
bounty, in money and lands, now received by the white 9
10 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. soldiers of the
United States; viz., one hundred and twenty dollars in money, and one hundred
and sixty acres of land. The non-commissioned officers and privates will also be
entitled to the same monthly pay, and daily rations, and clothes, furnished to
any American soldier. On enrolling yourselves in companies, the Major-General
Commanding will select officers for your government from your white
fellow-citizens. Your non-commissioned officers will be appointed from among
yourselves. Due regard will be paid to the feelings of freemen and soldiers. You
will not, by being associated with white men in the same corps, be exposed to
improper comparisons or unjust sarcasm. As a distinct, independent battalion or
regiment, pursuing the path of glory, you will, undivided, receive the applause
and gratitude of your countrymen. To assure you of the sincerity of my
intentions, and my anxiety to engage your invaluable services to our country, I
have communicated my wishes to the Governor of Louisiana, who is fully informed
as to the manner of enrollment, and will give you every necessary information on
the subject of this address. ANDREW JACKSON, Major-General Commanding. [Niles's
Register, vol. vii. p. 205.1 Three months later, Gen. Jackson addressed the same
troops as follows: "To TRHE MEN OF COLOR. Soldiers! From the shores of Mobile I
collected you to arms. I invited you to share in the perils and to divide the
glory of your white countrymen. I expected much from you; for I was
BLACKS IN THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR. not uninformed of
those qualities which must render you so formidable to an invading foe. I knew
that you could endure hunger and thirst, and all the hardships of war. I knew
that you loved the land of your nativity, and that, like ourselves, you had to
defend all that is most dear to man. But you surpass my hopes. I have found in
you, united to these qualities, that noble enthusiasm which impels to great
deeds. "Soldiers! The President of the United States shall be informed of your
conduct on the present occasion; and the voice of the Representatives of the
American nation shall applaud your valor, as your general now praises your
ardor. The enemy is near. Hiis sails cover the lakes. But the brave are united;
and, if he finds us contending with ourselves, it will be for the prize of
valor, and fame its noblest reward."-Niles's Register, vol. vii. pp. 345, 346.
Black men served in the navy with great credit to themselves, receiving the
commendation of Com. Perry and other brave officers. Extract of a Letter from
Nathaniel Shaler, Commander of the private-armed S chooner Gen. Tompkins, to his
A4gent in New York, dated, "AT SEA, Jan. 1, 1813. "Before I could get our light
sails in, and almost before I could turn round, I was under the guns, not of a
transport, but of a large frigate! and not more than a quarter of a mile from
her.... Hler first broadside killed two men, and wounded six others.... My
officers conducted themselves in a way that would have done honor to a more
permanent service.... 11 -w
12 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. The name of one
of my poor fellows who was killed ought to be registered in the book of fame,
and remembered with reverence as long as bravery is considered a virtue. Hie was
a black man, by the name of John Johnson. A twenty-four pound shot struck him in
the hip, and took away all the lower part of his body. In this state, the poor
brave fellow lay on the deck, and several times exclaimed to his
shipmates,'IFire away, my boy: no haul a color down.' The other was also a black
man, by the name of John Davis, and was struck in much the same way. He fell
near me, and several times requested to be thrown overboard, saying he was only
in the way of others. " When America has such tars, she has little to fear from
the tyrants of the ocean." - Niles's Weekly Register, Saturday, Feb. 26, 1814.
4m
CHIIAPTER II. THE SOUTH-CAROLINA FRIGHT. Denmark Vesey,
Peter Poyas, and their Companions. - The deep-laid Plans. - Religious
Fanaticism. - The Discovery. - The Trials. - Convi. tions.- Executions. HIUMAN
bondage is ever fruitful of insurrection, wher. ever it exists, and under
whatever circumstances it may be found. An undeveloped discontent always
pervaded the black population of the South, bond and free. Many attempts at
revolt were made: two only, however, proved of a serious and alarming character.
The first was in 1812, the leader of which was Denmark Vesey, a free colored
man, who had purchased his liberty in the year 1800, and who resided in
Charleston, S.C. A carpenter by trade, working among the blacks, Denmark gained
influence with them, and laid a plan of insurrection which showed considerable
generalship. Like most men who take the lead in revolts, he was deeply imbued
with a religious duty; and his friends claimed that he had "a magnetism in his
eye, of which his confederates stood inll great awe: if he once got his eye on a
man, there was no resisting it." After resolving to incite the slaves to
rebellion, Denmark began taking into his confidence such persons as he could
trust, and instructing them to gain adherents from among the more reliable of
both bond and free. 13
14 THE NEGRO IN THIE AMERICAN REBELLION. Peter Poyas, a
slave of more than ordinary foresight and ability, was selected by him as his
lieutenant; and to him was committed the arduous duty of arranging the mode of
attack, and of acting as the military leader. Poyas voluntarily undertook the
management of the most difficult part of the enterprise, the capture of the main
guard-house, and had pledged himself to ad vance alone, and surprise the
sentinel. Gullah Jack, Tom Russell, and Ned Bennett, -the last two were not less
valuable than Peter Poyas; for Tom was an ingenious mechanic, and made
battle-axes, pikes, and other instruments of death with which to carry on the
war, - all of the above were to be generals of brigades, and were let into every
secret of the intended rising. It had long been the custom in Charleston for the
country slaves to visit the city in great numbers on Sunday, and return to their
homes in time to commence work on the following morning. It was, therefore,
determined by Vesey to have the rising take place on Sunday. The slaves of
nearly every plantation in the neighborhood were enlisted, and were to take
part. The details of the plan, however, were not rashly committed to the mass of
the confederates: they were known only to a few, and were finally to have been
announced after the evening prayer-meeting on the appointed Sunday. But each
leader had his own company enlisted, and his own work marked out. When the clock
struck twelve, all were to move. Poyas was to lead a party ordered to assemble
at South Bay, and to be joined by a force from James' Island: he was then to
march up and seize the arsenal and guard-house opposite St. Michael's Church,
and detach a sufficient number to cut off all white citizens who should appear
at the alarm-posts. A second
THE SOUTH-CAROLINA FRIGHT. body of blacks, from the
country and the Neck, headed by Ned Bennett, was to assemble on the Neck, and
seize the arsenal there. A third was to meet at Governor Bennett's Mills under
the command of Rolla, another leader, and, after putting the governor and
intendant to death, to march through the city, or be posted at Cannon's Bridge,
thus preventing the inhabitants of Cannonsborough from entering the city. A
fourth, partly from the country and partly from the neighboring localities in
the city, was to rendezvous on Gadsden's Wharf, and attack the upper
guard-house. A fifth, composed of country and Neck blacks, was to assemble at
Bulkley's Farm, two miles and a half from the city, seize the upper powder
magazine, and then march down; and a sixth was to assemble at Vesey's, and obey
his orders. A seventh detachment, under Gullah Jack, was to come together in
Boundry Street, at the head of King Street, to capture the arms of the Neck
company of militia, and to take an additional supply from Mr. Duguercron's shop.
The naval stores on Meg's Wharf were also to be attacked. Meanwhile a horse
company, consisting of many draymen, hostlers, and butcher boys, was to meet at
Lightwood's Alley, and then scour the streets to prevent the whites from
assembling. Every white man coming out of his own door was to be killed, and" if
necessary, the city was to be fired in several places; a slow match for this
purpose having been )urloined from the public arsenal, and placed in an
accessible position. The secret and plan of attack, however, were incautiously
divulged to a slave named Devany, belonging to Col. Prioleau; and he at once
informed his master's family. The mayor, on getting possession of the facts,
called the city council together for 15
16 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. consultation.
The investigation elicited nothing new, for the slaves persisted in their
ignorance of the matter; and the authorities began to feel that they had been
im. posed upon by Devany and his informants, when another of the conspirators,
being bribed, revealed what lhe knew. Arrest after arrest was made, and the
mayor's court held daily examinations for weeks. After several weeks of
incarceration, the accused, one hundred and twenty in number, were brought to
trial: thirty-four were sentenced to transportation, twenty-seven acquitted by
the court, twenty-five discharged without trial, and thirty-five condemned to
death. With but two or three ai exceptions, all of the conspirators went to the
gallows feeling that they had acted right, and died like men giving their lives
for the cause of freedom. A report of the trial, written soon after, says of
Denmark Vesey, "For several years before he disclosed his intentions to any one,
he appears to have been constantly and assiduously engaged in endeavoring to
imbitter the minds of the colored population against the whites. He rendered
himself perfectly familiar with those parts of the Scriptures which he could use
to show that slavery was contrary to the laws of God; that slaves were bound to
attempt their emancipation, however shocking and bloody might be the
consequences; and that such efforts would not only be pleasing to the Almighty,
but were absolutely enjoined, and their success predicted, in the Scriptures. "
His favorite texts, when he addressed those of his own color, were Zech. xiv.
1-3, and Joshua vi. 21; and, in all his conversations, he identified their
situation with that of the Israelites. Even while walking through the streets in
company with another, he was not idle; for, if
THE SOUTH-CAROLINA FRIGHT. his companion bowed to a
white person, he would rebuke him, and observe that all men were born equal, and
that he was surprised that any one would degrade himself by such conduct; that
he would never cringe to the whites, nor ought any one who had the feelings of a
man. When answered,'We are slaves,' he would sarcastically and indignantly
reply,' You deserve to remain slaves;' and if he were further asked,'IWhat can
we do?' he would remark,' Go and buy a spelling-book, and read the fable of
Hercules and the wagoner,' which he would then repeat, and apply it to their
situation. "He sought every opportunity of entering into conversation with white
persons, when they could be overheard by slaves near by, especially in
grog-shops, during which conversation, he would artfully introduce some bold
remark on slavery; and sometimes, when from the character of the person he was
conversing with he found hlie might be still bolder, he would go so far, that,
had not his declarations in such situations been clearly proved, they would
scarcely have been credited. He continued this course till some time after the
commencement of the last winter; by which time he had not only obtained
incredible influence amongst persons of color, but many feared him more than
they did their masters, and one of them declared, even more than his God." The
excitement which the revelations of the trial occasioned, and the continual
fanning of the flame by the newspapers, was beyond description. Double guard in
the city, the country patrol on horseback and on foot, the watchfulness that was
observed on all plantations, showed the deep feeling of fear pervading the
hearts of the slave-holders, not only in South Carolina, but the fever extended
to the other Southern States, and all 2 1.7
18 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. seemed to feel
that a great crisis had been passed. And indeed, their fears appear not to have
beeif without ground; for a more complicated plan for an insurrection could
scarcely have been conceived. Many were of opinion, that, the rising once begun,
they would have taken the city, and held it, and might have sealed the fate of
slavery in the South. The best account of this whole matter is to be found in an
able article in the "Atlantic Monthly" for June, 1861, from the pen of Col. T.
W. Higginson, and to which I am indebted for the extracts contained in this
sketch.
CIHAPTER III. THE NAT TURNER INSURRECTION. Nat Turner.
- His Associates. - Their Meetings. - Nat's Religious En thusiasm. - Bloodshed.-
Wide-spread Terror. - The Trrials and Exe cutions. The slave insurrection which
occurred in Southampton County, Va., in the year 1831, although not as well
planned as the one portrayed in the preceding chapter, was, nevertheless, more
widely felt in the South. Its leader was Nat Turner, a slave. On one of the
oldest and largest plantations in Southarnpton County, Va., owned by Benjamin
Turner, Esq., Nat was born a slave, on the 2d of October, 1800. His parents were
of unmixed African descent. Surrounded as he was by the superstition of the
slave-quarters, and being taught by his mother that hlie was born for a prophet,
a preacher, and a deliverer of his race, it was not strange that the child
should have imbibed the principles which were afterwards developed in his
career. Early impressed with the belief that he had seen visions, and received
commrunications direct from God, he, like Napoleon, regarded himself as a being
of destiny. In liis childhood, Nat was of an amiable disposition; but
circumstances in which he was placed as a slave brought out incidents that
created a change in his disposition, and turned his kind and docile feeling into
the most intense hatred to the white race. 19
20 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. The
ill-treatment he experienced at the hands of the whites, and the visions he
claimed to have seen, caused Nat to avoid, as far as he could, all intercourse
with his fellow-slaves, and threw around him a gloom and melancholy that
disappeared only with his life. Both the young slave and his friends averred
that a full knowledge of the alphabet came to him in a single night. Impressed
with the belief that his mission was a religious one, and this impression
strengthened by the advice of his grandmother, a pious but ignorant woman, Nat
commenced preaching when about twenty-five years of age, but never went beyond
his own master's locality. In stature, he was under the middle size, long-armed,
round-shouldered, and strongly marked with the African features. A gloomy fire
burned in his looks, and he had a melancholy expression of countenance. Hle
never tasted a drop of ardent spirits in his life, and was never known to smile.
In the year 1828, new visions appeared to Nat; and he claimed to have direct
communication with God. Unlike most of those born under the influence of
slavery, he had no faith in conjuring, fortunetelling, or dreams, and always
spoke with contempt of such things. Being hired out to a cruel master, he ran
away, and remained in the woods thirty days, and could have easily escaped to
the Free States, as did his father some years before; but he received, as he
says in his confession, a communication from the Spirit, which said, "Return to
your earthly master; for he who knoweth his Master's will, and doeth it not,
shall be beaten with many stripes." It was not the will of his earthly but his
heavenly Master that he felt bound to do; and therefore Nat returned. His
fellow-slaves were greatly incensed at him for coming back; for they knew well
his
THE NAT TURNER INSURRECTION. ability to reach Canada,
or some other land of freedom, if he was so inclined. He says further, "About
this time I had a vision, and saw white spirits and black spirits engaged in
battle; and the sun was darkened, the thunder rolled in the heavens, and blood
flowed'in streams; and I heard a voice saying,' Such is your luck, such are you
called on to see; and let it come, rough or smooth, you must surely bear it! "
Some time after this, Nat had, as he says, another vision, in which the spirit
appeared and said, "The Serpent is loosened, and Christ has laid down the yoke
he has borne for the sins of men; and you must take it up, and fight against the
Serpent, for the time is fast approaching when the first shall be last, and the
last shall be first." There is no doubt but that this last sentence filled Nat
with enthusiastic feeling in favor of the liberty of his race, that he had so
long dreamed of. "The last shall be first, arind the first shall be last,"
seemed to him to mean something. He saw in it the overthrow of the whites, and
the establishing of the blacks in their stead; and to this end he bent the
energies of his mind. In February, 1831, Nat received his last communication,
and beheld his last vision. He said, "I was told I should arise and prepare
myself, and slay my enemies with their own weapons." The plan of an insurrection
was now formed in his own mind, and the time had arrived for him to take others
into the secret; and he at once communicated his ideas to four of his friends,
in whom he had implicit confidence. Hark Travis, Nelson Williams, Sam Edwards,
and Henry Porter were slaves like himself, and, like him, had taken their names
from their masters. A meeting must be held with these, and it must take place in
some secluded place where the whites would not disturb 21 .
22 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. them; and a
meeting was appointed. The spot where they assembled was as wild and romantic as
were the visions that had been impressed upon the mind of their leader. Three
miles from where Nat lived was a dark swamp, filled with reptiles, in the middle
of which was a dry spot, reached by a narrow, winding path, and upon which human
feet seldom ever trod, on account of its having been the place where a slave had
been tortured to death by a slow fire, for the crime of having flogged his cruel
and inhuman master. The night for the meeting arrived, and they came together.
Hark brought a pig, Sam bread, Nelson sweet potatoes, and Henry brandy; and the
gathering was turned into a feast. Others were taken in, and joined the
conspiracy. All partook heartily of the food, and drank freely, except Nat. Hle
fasted and prayed. It was agreed that the revolt should commence that night, and
in their own masters' households, and that each slave should give his oppressor
the death-blow. Before they left the swamp, Nat made a speech, in which he said,
"Friends and brothers! We are to commence a great work to-night. Our race is to
be delivered from slavery, and God has appointed us as the men to do his
bidding; and let us be worthy of our calling. I am told to slay all the whites
we encounter, without regard to age or sex. We have no arms or ammunition, but
we will find these ill the houses of our oppressors; and, as we go on, others
can join us. Remember that we do not go forth for the sake of blood and carnage;
but it is necessary, that, in the commencement of this revolution, all the
whites we meet should die, until we have an army strong enough to carry on the
war upon a Christian basis. Remember that ours is not a war for robbery, and to
satisfy
THE NAT TURNER INSURRECTION. our passions: it is a
struggle for freedom. Ours must be deeds, and not words. Then let's away to the
scene of action." Among those who had joined the conspirators was Will, a slave,
who scorned the idea of taking his master's name. Though his soul longed to be
free, he evidently became one of the party as much to satisfy revenge as for the
liberty that he saw in the dim distance. Will had seen a dear and beloved wife
sold to the negro-trader, and taken away, never to be beheld by him again in
this life. His own back was covered with scars, from his shoulders to his feet.
A large scar, running from his right eye down to his chin, showed that he had
lived with a cruel master. Nearly six feet in height, and one of the strongest
and most athletic of his race, he proved to be the most unfeeling of all the
insurrectionists. His only weapon was a broad-axe, sharp and heavy. Nat and his
accomplices at once started for the plantation of Joseph Travis, with whom the
four lived; and there the first blow was struck. In his confession, just before
his execution, Nat said, - "On returning to the house, Hark went to the door
with an axe, for the purpose of breaking it open,- as we knew we were strong
enough to murder the family should they be awakened by the noise; but,
reflecting that it might create an alarm in the neighborhood, we determined to
enter the house secretly, and murder them whilst sleeping. Hark got a ladder,
and set it against the chimney, on which I ascended, and, hoisting a window,
entered and came down stairs, unbarred the doors, and removed the guns from
their places. It was then observed that I must spill the first blood. On which,
armed with a hatchet, and accompanied by Will, I en 23
24 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. tered my
master's chamber. It being dark, I could not give a death-blow. The hatchet
glanced from his head: he sprang from the bed, and called his wife. It was his
last word. Will laid him dead with a blow of his axe." They went from plantation
to plantation, until the whole neighborhood was aroused; and the whites turned
out in large numbers to suppress the rebellion. Nat and his accomplices fought
bravely, but to no purpose. Reinforcements came to the whites; and the blacks
were overpowered and defeated by the superior numbers of the enemy. In this
battle, many were slain on both sides. Will, the blood-thirsty and revengeful
slave, fell with his broad-axe uplifted, after having laid three of the whites
dead at his feet with his own strong arm and his terrible weapon. Hiis last
words were, "Bury my axe with me." For he religiously believed, that, in the
next world, the blacks would have a contest with the whites, and that he would
need his axe. Nat Turner, after fighting to the last with his short sword,
escaped with some others to the woods near by, and was not captured for nearly
two months. When brought to trial, he pleaded "not guilty," feeling, as he said,
that it was always right for one to strike for his own liberty. After going
through a mere form of trial, he was convicted and executed at Jerusalem, the
county-seat for Southhampton County, Va. Not a limb trembled, or a muscle was
observed to move. Thius died Nat Turner, at the early age of thirty-one years, a
martyr to the freedom of his race, and a victim to his own fanaticism. He
meditated upon the wrongs of his oppressed and injured people till the idea of
their deliverance excluded all other ideas from his mind; and he devoted his
life to its realization. Every thing appeared to him a vision, and
THE NAT TURNER INSURRECTION. all favorable omens were
signs from God. H'Ie foretold, that, at his death, the sun would refuse to
shine, and that there would be signs of disapprobation given from Heaven. And it
is true that the sun was darkened, a storm gathered, and more boisterous weather
had never appeared in Southampton County than on the day of Nat's execution. The
sheriff, warned by the prisoner, refused to cut the cord that held the trap. No
black man would touch the rope. A poor old white man, long besotted by drink,
was brought forty miles to be the executioner. Fifty-five whites and
seventy-three blacks lost their lives in the Southampton Rebellion. On the fatal
night, when Nat and his companions were dealing death to all they found, Capt.
Harris, a wealthy planter, had his lite saved by the devotion and timely warning
of his slave Jim, said to have been half-brother to his master. After the revolt
had been put down, and parties of whites were out hunting the suspected blacks,
Capt. Harris, with his faithful slave, went into the woods in search of the
negroes. In saving his master's life, Jim felt that he had done his duty, and
could not consent to become a betrayer of his race; and, on reaching the woods,
he handed his pistol to his master, and said, "I cannot help you hunt down these
men: they, like myself, want to be free. Sir, I am tired of the life of a slave:
please give me my freedom, or shoot me on the spot." Capt. Harris took the
weapon, and pointed it at the slave. Jim, putting his right hand upon his heart,
said, " This is the spot; aim here." The captain fired, and the slave fell dead
at his feet. 25
CHAPTER IV. SLAVE REVOLT AT SEA. Matison Washington.-
His Escape from the South.- His Love of Lib erty. -tIis Return.- His Capture.-
The Brig " Creole." - The Slave traders.- Capture of the Vessel.- Freedom of the
Oppressed. THE revolt on board of the brig "Creole,"' on the high seas, by a
number of slaves who had been shipped for the Southern market, in the year 1841,
created at the time a profound sensation throughout the country. Before entering
upon it, however, I will introduce to the reader the hero of the occasion. Among
the great number of fugitive slaves who arrived in Canada towards the close of
the year 1840, was one whose tall figure, firm step, and piercing eye attracted
at once the attention of all who beheld him. Nature had treated him as a
favorite. His expressive countenance painted and reflected every emotion of his
soul. There was a fascination in the gaze of his finely cut eyes that no one
could withstand. Born of Aftrican parentage, with no mixture in his blood, he
was one of the handsomest of his race. His dignified, calm, and unaffected
features announced at a glance that he was endowed with genius, and created to
guide his fellow-men. He called himself Madison Washington, and said that his
birthplace was in the "Old Dominion." He might have been twenty-five years; but
very few slaves have any correct idea of their age. Madison was not poorly 26
SLAVE REVOLT AT SEA. dressed, and had some money at the
end of his journey, which showed that he was not from amongst the worst used
slaves of the South. He immediately sought em ployment at a neighboring farm,
where he remained some months. A strong, able-bodied man, and a good worker, and
apparently satisfied with his situation, his employer felt that he had a servant
who would stay with him a long while. The farmer would occasionally raise a con
versation, and try to draw from Madison some account of his former life, baut in
this he failed; for the fugitive was a man of few words, and kept his own
secrets. His leisure hours were spent in learning to read and write; and in this
he seemed to take the utmost interest. He appeared to take no interest in the
sports and amusements that occupied the attention of others. Six months had not
passed ere Madison began to show signs of discontent. In vain his employer tried
to discover the cause. "Do I not pay you enough, and treat you in a becoming
manner? " asked Mr. Dickson one day when the fugitive seemed in a very
desponding mood. "Yes, sir," replied Madison. "Then why do you appear so
dissatisfied of late?" "Well, sir," said the fugitive," since you have treated
me with such kindness, and seem to take so much interest in me, I will tell you
the reason why I have changed, and appear to you to be dissatisfied. I was born
in slavery, in the State of Virginia. From my earliest recollections I hated
slavery, and determined to be free. I have never yet called any man master,
though I have been held by three different men who claimed me as their property.
The birds in the trees and the wild beasts of the forest made me feel that I,
like them, ought 27
28 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. to be free. My
feelings were all thus centred in the one idea of liberty, of which I thought by
day and dreamed by night. I had scarcely reached my twentieth year, when I
became acquainted with the angelic being who has since become my wife. It was my
intention to have escaped with her before we were married, but circumstances
prevented. "I took her to my bosom as my wife, and then resolved to make the
attempt. But, unfortunately, my plans were discovered; and, to save myself from
being caught and sold off to the far South, I escaped to the woods, where I
remained during many weary months. As I could not bring my wife away, I would
not come without her. Another reason for remaining was that I hoped to get up an
insurrection of the slaves, and thereby be the means of their liberation. In
this, too, I failed. At last it was agreed, between my wife and I, that I should
escape to Canada, get employment, save my earnings, and with it purchase her
freedom. With the hope of attaining this end, I came into your service. I am now
satisfied, that, with the wages I can command here, it will take me not less
than five years to obtainii by my labor the amount sufficient to purchase the
liberty of my dear Susan. Five years will be too long for me to wait; for she
may die, or be sold away, ere I can raise the money. This, sir, makes me feel
low spirited; and I have come to the rash determination to return to Virginia
for my wife." The recital of the story had already brought tears to the eyes of
the farmer, ere the fugitive had concluded. In vain did Mr. Dickson try to
persuade Madison to give up the idea of going back into the very grasp of the
tyrant, and risking the loss of his own freedom without
SLAVE REVOLT AT SEA. securing that of his wife. The
heroic man had made up his mind, and nothing could move him. Receiving the
amount of wages due him from his employer, Madison turned his face once more
towards the South. Supplied with papers purporting to have been made out in
Virginia, and certifying to his being a freeman, the fugitive had no difficulty
in reaching the neighborhood of his wife. But these "free papers" were only
calculated to serve him where he was not known. Madison had also provided
himself with files, saws, and other implements, with which to cut his way out of
any prison into which he might be cast. These instruments were so small as to be
easily concealed in the lining of his clothing; and, armed with them, the
fugitive felt sure he should escape again were he ever captured. On his return,
Madison met, in the State of Ohio, many of those whom he had seen on his journey
to Canada; and all tried to prevail upon him to give up the rash attempt. But to
every one he would reply, "Liberty is worth nothing to me while my wife is a
slave." When near his former home, and unable to travel in open day without
being detected, Madison betook himself to the woods during the day, and
travelled by night. At last he arrived at the old farm at night, and hid away in
the nearest forest. Here he remained several days, filled with hope and fear,
without being able to obtain any infor. mation about his wife. One evening,
during this suspense, Madison heard the singing of a company of slaves, the
sound of which appeared nearer and nearer, until he became convinced that it was
a gang going to a corn-shucking; and the fugitive resolved that he would join
it, and see if he could get any intelligence of his wife. In Virginia, as well
as in most of the other corn-rais 29
30 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. ing
slave-States, there is a custom of having what ie termed "a corn-shucking," to
which slaves from the neighboring plantations, with the consent of their mas.
ters, are invited. At the conclusion of the shucking, a supper is provided by
the owner of the corn; and thus, together with the bad whiskey which is freely
circulated on such occasions, the slaves are made to feel very happy. Four or
five companies of men may be heard in different directions, and at the same
time, approaching the place of rendezvous; slaves joining the gangs along the
roads as they pass their masters' farms. Madison came out upon the highway; and,
as the company came along singing, he fell into the ranks, and joined in the
song. Through the darkness of the night he was able to keep from being
recognized by the remainder of the company, while he learned from the general
conversation the most important news of the day. Although hungry and thirsty,
the fugitive dared not go to the supper-table for fear of recognition. However,
before he left the company that night, he gained information enough to satisfy
him that his wife was still with her old master; and he hoped to see her, if
possible, on the following night. The sun had scarcely set the next evening, ere
Madison was wending his way out of tile forest, and going towards the home of
his loved one, if the slave can be said to have a home. Susan, the object of his
affections, was indeed a woman every way worthy of his love. Madison knew well
where to find the room usually occupied by his wife, and to that spot he made
his way on arriving at the plantation; but, in his zeal and enthusiasm, and his
being too confident of success, he committed a blunder which nearly cost him his
life. Fearful that if he waited until a late hour,
SLAVE REVOLT AT SEA. Susan would be asleep, and in
awakening her she would in her fright alarm the household, Madison ventured to
her room too early in the evening, before the whites in the "great house" had
retired. Observed by the overseer, a sufficient number of whites were called in,
and the fugitive secured ere he could escape with his wife; but the heroic slave
did not yield until he with a club had laid three of his assailants upon the
ground with his manly.blows; and not then until weakened by loss of blood.
Madison was at once taken to Richmond, and sold to a slave-trader, then making
up a gang of slaves for the New-Orleans market. The brig "Creole," owned by
Johnson & Eperson of Richmond, and commanded by Capt. Enson, lay at the
Richmond dock, waiting for her cargo, which usually consisted of tobacco, hemp,
flax, and slaves. There were two cabins for the slaves, -one for the men, the
other for the women. The men were generally kept in chains while on the voyage;
but the women were usually unchained, and allowed to roam at pleasure in their
own cabin. On the 27th of October, 1841, "The Creole" sailed from Hampton Roads,
bound for New Orleans, with her full load of freight, a hundred and thirty-five
slaves, and three passengers, besides the crew. Forty of the slaves were owned
by Thomas McCargo, nine belonged to Henry Hewell, and the remainder were held by
Johnson & Eperson. Hewell had once been an overseer for McCargo, and on this
occasion was acting as his agent. Among the slaves owned by Johnson &
Eperson, was Madison Washington. He was heavily ironed, and chained down to the
floor of the cabin occupied by the men, which was in the forward hold. As it was
known 3-1
32 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. by Madison's
purchasers that he had once escaped, and had been in Canada, they kept a
watchful eye over him. The two cabins were separated, so that the men and women
had no communication whatever during the passage. Although rather gloomy at
times, Madison on this occasion seemed very cheerful, and his owners thought
that he had repented of the experience he had undergone as a runaway, and in the
filture would prove a more easily-governed chattel. But, from the first hour
that he had entered the cabin of" The Creole," Madison had been busily engaged
in the selection of men who were to act parts in the great drama. He picked out
each one as if by intuition. Every thing was done at night and in the dark, as
far as the preparation was concerned. The miniature saws and files were
faithfully used when the whites were asleep. In the other cabin, among the
slave-women, was one whose beauty at once attracted attention. Though not tall,
she yet had a majestic figure. Her well-moulded shoulders, prominent bust, black
hair which hung in ringlets, mild blue eyes, finely-chiselled mouth, with a
splendid set of teeth, a turned and well-rounded chin, skin marbled with the
animation of life, and veined by blood given to her by her master, she stood as
the representative of two races. With only one-eighth of African blood, she was
what is called at the South an "octoroon." It was said that her grandfather had
served his country in the Revolutionary War, as well as in both HIouses of
Congress. This was Susan, the wife of Madison. Few slaves, even among the
best-used house-servants, had so good an opportunity to gain general information
as she. Accustomed to travel with her mistress, Susan had of.
SLAVE REVOLT AT SEA. ten been to Richmond, Norfolk,
White-Sulphur Springs, and other places of resort for the aristocracy of the Old
Dominion. Her language was far more correct than that of most slaves in her
position. Susan was as devoted to Madison as she was beautiful and accomplished.
After the arrest of her husband, and his confinement in Richmond jail, it was
suspected that Susan had long been in possession of the knowledge of his
whereabouts when in Canada, and knew of his being in the neighborhood; and for
this crime it was resolved that she should be sold, and sent off to a Southern
plantation, where all hope of escape would be at an end. Each was not aware that
the other was on board "The Creole;" for Madison and Susan were taken to their
respective cabins at different times. On the ninth day out, "The Creole"
encountered a rough sea, and most of the slaves were sick, and therefore were
not watched with that vigilance that they had been since she first sailed. This
was the time for Madison and his accomplices to work, and nobly did they perform
their duty. Night came on, the first watch had just been summoned, the wind
blowing high, when Madison succeeded in reaching.the quarter-deck, followed by
eighteen others, all of whom sprang to different parts of the vessel, seizing
whatever they could wield as weapons. The crew were nearly all on deck. Capt.
Enson and Mr. Merritt, the first mate, were standing together, while Hewell was
seated on the companion, smoking a cigar. The appearance of the slaves all at
once, and the loud voice and commanding attitude of their leader, so completely
surprised the whites, that "They spake not a word; But, like dumb statues or
breathless stones, Stared at each other, and looked deadly pale." 33
34 THE NE(RIO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. The officers
were all armed; but so swift were the motions of Madison that they had nearly
lost command of the vessel before they attempted to use them. Hiewell, the
greater part of whose life had been spent on the plantation in the capacity of a
negro-driver, and who knew that the defiant looks of these men meant something,
was the first to start. Drawing his old horsepistol from under his coat, he
fired at one of the btAacks, and killed him. The next moment Hewell lay dead
upon the deck, for Madison had struck him with a capstan bar. The fight now
became general, the white passengers, as well as all the crew, taking part. The
battle was Madison's element, and he plunged into it without any care for his
own preservation or safety. He was an instrument of enthusiasm, whose value and
whose place was in his inspiration. " If the fire of heaven was in my hands, I
would throw it at those cowardly whites," said he to his companions, before
leaving their cabin. But in this he did not mean revenge, only the possession of
his freedom and that of his fellow-slaves. Merritt and Gifford, the first and
second mates of the vessel, both attacked the heroic slave at the same time.
Both were stretched out upon the deck with a single blow each, but were merely
wounded: they were disabled, and that was all that Madison cared for for the
time being. The sailors ran up the rigging for safety, and a moment more he that
had worn the fetters an hour before was master of the brig "Creole." His
commanding attitude and daring orders, now that he was firee, and his perfect
preparation for the grand alternative of liberty or death which stood before
him, are splendid exemplifications of the true heroic. After his accomplices
hlad covered-thele slaver's deckl Madison forbade the shedding of more blood,
and ordered the sailors to come down, which they
SLAVE REVOLT AT SEA. did, and with his own hands
dressed their wounds. A guard was placed over all except Merritt, who was re.
tained to navigate the vessel. With a musket doubly charged, and pointed at
Mlerritt's breast, the slaves made him swear that he would safely take the brig
into a 13iBitish port. All things now secure, and the white men in chains or
under guard, Madison ordered that the fetters should be severed from the limbs
of those slaves who still wore them. The next morning "Capt. Washington" (for
such was the name he now bore) ordered the cook to provide the best breakfast
that the storeroom could furnish, intending to surprise his fellow. slaves, and
especially the females, whom he had not yet seen. But little did he think that
the woman for whom he had risked his liberty and life would meet him at the
breakfast-table. The meeting of the hero and his beautiful and accomplished
wife, the tears of joy shed, and the hurrahs that followed from the men, can
better be imagined than described. Madison's cup of joy was filled to the brim.
He had not only gained his own lib. erty, and that of one hundred and
thirty-four others, but his dear Susan was safe. Only one man, Hewell, had been
killed. Capt. Enson, and others who were wounded, soon recovered, and were
kindly treated by Madison, and for which they proved ungrateful; for, on the
second night, Capt. Enson, Mr. Gifford, and Merritt, took advantage of the
absence of Madison from the deck, and attempted to retake the vessel. The
slaves, exasperated at this treachery, fell upon the whites with deadly weapons.
The captain and his men fled to the cabin, pursued by the blacks. Nothing but
the heroism of the negro leader saved the lives of the white men on this
occasion; for, as the slaves were rushing into the cabin, 35
36 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. Madison threw
himself between them and their victims, exclaiming, "Stop! no more blood. My
life, that was perilled for your liberty, I will lay down for the protection of
these men. They have proved themselves unworthy of life which we granted them;
still let us be magnanimous." By the kind heart and noble bearing of Madison,
the vile slave-traders were again permitted to go unwhipped of justice. This act
of humanity raised the uncouth son of Africa far above his Anglo-Saxon
oppressors. The next morning "The Creole " landed at Nassau, New Providence,
where the noble and heroic slaves were warmly greeted by the inhabitants, who at
once offered protection, and extended hospitality to them. But the noble heroism
of Madison Washington and his companions found no applause from the Government,
then in the hands of the slaveholders. Daniel Webster, then Secretary of State,
demanded of the British- authorities the surrender of these men, claiming that
they were murderers and pirates: the English, however, could not see the point.
Had the " Creole" revolters been white, and committed their noble act of heroism
in another land, the people of the United States would have been the first to
recognize their claims. The efforts of Denmark Vesey, Nat Turner, and Madison
Washington to strike the chains of slavery from the limbs of their enslaved race
will live in history, and will warn all tyrants to beware of the wrath of God
and the strong arm of man. Every iniquity that society allows to subsist for the
benefit of the oppressor is a sword with which she herself arms the oppressed.
Right is the most dangerous of weapons: woe to him who leaves it to his enemies.
CHIIAPTER V. GROWTH OF THE SLAVE-POWER. Introduction of
the Cotton-gin. - Its effect on Slavery. - Fugitive Slave Law. -Anthony Burns. -
The Dred Scott Decision. - Imprisonment for reading "Uncle Tom's Cabin." -
Struggles with Slavery. THE introduction of the cotton-gin into the South, by
Whitney of Connecticut, had materially enhanced the value of slave property; the
emancipation societies of Virginia and Maryland had ceased to petition their
Legislatures for the "Gradual Emancipation" of the slaves; and the above two
States had begun to make slave-raising a profitable business, when the American
Antislavery Society was formed in the city of Philadelphia, in the year 1833.
The agitation of the question in Congress, the mobbing of William Lloyd Garrison
in Boston, the murder of the Rev. E. P. Lovejoy in Illinois, and the attempt to
put down free speech throughout the country, only hastened the downfall of the
institution. In the earlier days of the Antislavery movement, not a year,
sometimes hardly a month, passed that did not bear upon its record the report of
mobs, almost always ferocious in spirit, and sometimes cruel and blood-stained
in act. It was the first instinctive and brutal response of a proslavery people
convicted of guilt and called to repentance; and it was almost universal.
Wherever antislavery was preached, honestly, and effectually, there the
mobocratic spirit followed it; so that, in those times, 87
38 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. he who escaped
this ordeal was, with some justice, held to be either inefficient or unfaithful.
Hardly a town or city, from Alton to Portland, where much antislavery labor was
bestowed, in the first fifteen years of this enterprise, that was not the scene
of one of these attempts to crush all free discussion of the subject of slavery
by violence or bloodshed. Hardly one of the earlier public advocates of the
cause that was not made to suffer, either in person or in property, or in both,
from popular violence, -the penalty of obedience to the dictates of his own
conscience. Nor was this all: official countenance was often given to the mad
proceedings of the mob; or, if not given, its protection was withheld from those
who were the objects of popular hatred; and, as if this were not enough,
legislation was invoked to the same end. It was suggested to the Legislature of
one of the Southern States, that a large reward be offered for the head of a
citizen of Massachusetts who was the pioneer in the modern antislavery movement.
A similar reward was offered for the head of a citizen of New York. Yet so foul
an insult excited neither the popular indignation nor legislative resentment in
either of those States. Great damage was done to the cause of Christianity by
the position assumed on the question of slavery by the American churches, and
especially those in the Southern States. Think of a religious kidnapper! a
Christian slave-breeder! a slave-trader, loving his neighbor as himself,
receiving the "sacraments" in some Protestant church from the hand of a
Christian apostle, then the next day selling babies by the dozen, and tearing
young women from the arms of their husbands to feed the lust of lecherous New
Orleans! Imagine a
GROWTH OF THE SLAVE-POWER. religious man selling his
own children into eternal bondage! Think of a Christian defending slavery out of
the Bible, and declaring there is no higher law, but atheism is the first
principle of Republican Government! Yet this was the stand taken, and
maintained, by the churches in the slave States down to the day that Lee
surrendered to Grant. One of the bitterest fruits of slavery in our land is the
cruel spirit of caste, which makes the complexion even of the free negro a badge
of social inferiority, exposing him to insult in the steamboat and the railcar,
and in all places of public resort, not even excepting the church; banishing him
from remunerative occupations; expelling him from the legislative hall, the
mnagistrate's bench, and the jury-box; and crushing his noblest aspirations
under a weight of prejudice and proscription which he struggles in vain to throw
off. Against this unchristian and hateful spirit, every lover of liberty should
enter hib solemni protest. This hateful prejudice caused the breaking up of the
school of Miss Prudence Crandall, in the State of Connecticut, in the early days
of the antislavery agitation. Next came the burning of Pennsylvania Hall, one of
the most beautiful edifices in the City of Brotherly Love, simply because
colored persons were permitted to occupy seats by the side of whites. The
enactment by Congress of the Fugitive Slave Law caused the friends of freedom,
both at home and abroad, to feel that the General Government was fast becoming
the bulwark of slavery. The rendition of Thomas Sims, and still later that of
Anthony Burns, was, indeed, humiliating in the extreme to the people of the
Northern States. 39
40 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. On that
occasion, the sons of free, enlightened, and Christian Massachusetts,
descendants of the Pilgrim Fathers, bowed submissively to the behests of a
tyranny more cruel than Austrian despotism; yielded up their dignity and
self-respect; became the allies of slavecatchers, the associates and companions
of bloodhounds. At the bidding of slaveholders and serviles, they seized the
image of God, bound their fellow-man with chains, and consigned him to torture
and premature death under the lash of a piratical overseer. God's law and man's
rights were trampled upon; the self-respect, the constitutional privileges, of
the free States, were ignominiously surrendered. A people who resisted a paltry
tax upon tea, at the cannon's mouth, basely submitted to an imposition tenfold
greater, in favor of brutalizing their fellowmen. Soil which had been moistened
with the blood of American patriots was polluted by the footsteps of
slavecatchers and their allies. The Boston Court House in chains, two hundred
rowdies and thieves sworn in as special policemen, respectable citizens shoved
off the side-walks by these slavecatchers; all for the purpose of satisfying
"our brethren of the South.'? -But this act did not appease the feelings, or
satisfy the demands, of the slave-holders, while it still further inflamed the
fire of abolitionism. The "Dred Scott Decision" added fresh combustibles to the
smouldering heap. Dred Scott, a slave, taken by his master into free Illinois,
and then beyond the line of 36~ 30', and then back into Missouri, sued for and
obtained his freedom on the ground, that, having been taken where by the
Constitution slavery was illegal, his master had lost all claim. But the Supreme
Court, on appeal, reversed the judgment; and Dred Scott, with his wife
GROWTH OF THE SLAVE-POWER. and children, was taken back
into slavery. By this decision in the highest court of American law, it was
affirmed that no free negro could claim to be a citizen of the United States,
but was only under the jurisdiction of the separate State in which he resided;
that the prohibition of slavery in any Territory of the Union was
unconstitutional; and that the slave-owner might go where he pleased with his
property, throughout the United States, and retain his right. This decision
created much discussion, both in America and in Europe, and materially injured
the otherwise good name of our country abroad. The Constitution, thus
interpreted by Judge Taney, became the emblem of the tyrants and the winding
sheet of liberty, and gave a boldness to the people ofthe South, which soon
showed itself, while good men at the North felt ashamed of the Government under
which they lived. The slave-holders in the cotton, sugar, and rice growing
States began to urge the re-opening of the African slave-trade, and the driving
out from the Southern States of all free colored persons. In the Southern
Rights' Convention, which assembled at Baltimore, June 8, 1860, a resolution was
adopted, calling on the Legislature to pass a law driving the free colored
people out of the State. Nearly every speaker took the ground that the free
colored people must be driven out to make the slave's obedience more secure.
Judge Mason, in his speech, said, "It is the thrifty and well-to-do free
negroes, that are seen by our slaves, that make them dissatisfied." A similar
appeal was made to the Legislature of Tennessee. Judge Catron, of the Supreme
Court of the United States, in a long and able letter to "The Nashville Union,"
opposed the driving out 41
42 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. of the colored
people. He said they were among the best mechanics, the best artisans, and the
most indus. trious laborers in the State, and that to drive them out would be an
injury to the State itself. This is certainly good evidence in their behalf. The
State of Arkansas passed a law driving the free colored people out of the State,
and they were driven out three years ago. The Democratic press howled upon the
heels of the free blacks until they had all been expatriated; but, after they
had been driven out, "The Little Rock Gazette "- a Democratic paper - made a
candid acknowledgment with regard to the character of the free colored people.
It said, "Most of the exiled free negroes are industrious and respectable. One
of them, Henry King, we have known from our boyhood, and take the greatest
pleasure in testifying to his good character. The community in which he casts
his lot will be blessed with that noblest work of God, an honest man." Yet these
free colored people were driven out of the State, and those who were unable to
go, as many of the women and childrenf were, were reduced to slavery. "The New
Orleans True Delta" opposed the passage of a similar law by the State of
Louisiana. Among other things, it said, "There are a large free colored
population here, correct in their general deportment, honorable iin their
intercourse with society, and free from reproach so far as the laws are
concerned; not surpassed in the inoffensiveness of their lives by any equal
number of persons in any place, North or South." And yet these free colored
persons were not permitted by law to school their children, or to read books
that treated against the institution of slavery. The Rev. Samuel Green, a
colored Methodist preacher, was con
GROWTH OF THE SLAVE-POWER. victed and sent to the
Maryland penitentiary, in 1858, for the offence of being found reading "Uncle
Tom's Cabin." The growth of the "Free-Soil" party, which had taken the place of
the "Liberty" party; and then the rapid increase of' the "Republican" party; the
struggle in Kansas; thie " Oberlin Rescue Trials;" and, lastly, the "John Brown
Raid," carried the discussion of slavery to its highest point. All efforts, in
Congress, in the proslavery political conventions, and in the churches, only
added fuel to the flame that was fast making inroads upon the vitals of the
monster. 43
CHAPTER VI. THE JOHN BROWN RAID. John Brown. - His
Religious Zeal. - His Hatred to Slavery.- Organi zation of his Army.- Attack on
Harper's Ferry.- His Execution. - John Brown's Companions, Green and Copeland.-
The Executions. THE year 1859 will long be memorable for the bold attempt of
John Brown and his companions to burst the bolted door of the Southern house of
bondage, and lead out the captives by a more effectual way than they had yet
known: an attempt in which, it is true, the little band of heroes dashed
themselves to bloody death, but, at the same time, shook the prison-walls from
summit to foundation, and shot wild alarm into every tyrant-heart in all the
slave-land. What were the plans and purposes of the noble old man is not
precisely known, and per haps will never be; but, whatever they were, there is
reason to believe they had been long maturing,-brooded over silently and
secretly, with much earnest thought, and under a solemn sense of religious duty.
As early as the fall of 1857, he began to organize his band, chiefly from among
the companions of his warfare against the " Border Ruffians" in Kansas. Nine or
ten of these spent the winter of 1857-8 in Iowa, where a Col. Forbes was to have
given them military instruction; but he, having fallen out with Brown, did not
join them, and Aaron D. Stevens, one of the company, took his place. About the
middle of April, 1858, they left Iowa, and went to Chathain, Canada, where, on
the 8th of May, was 44 I
THE JOHN BROWN RAID. held a convention, called by a
written circular, which was sent to such persons only as could be trusted. The
convention was composed-mostly of colored men, a few of whom were from the
States, but the greater part residents in Canada, with no white men but the
organized band already mentioned. A "Provisional Constitution," which Brown had
previously prepared, was adopted; and the members of the convention took an oath
to support it. Its manifest purpose was to insure a perfect organization of all
who should join the expedition, whether free men or insurgent slaves, and to
hold them under such strict control as to restrain them from every act of wanton
or vindictive violence, all waste or needless destruction of life or property,
all indignity or unniecessary severity to prisoners, and all immoral practices;
in short, to keep the meditated movement free from every possibly avoidable evil
ordinarily incident to the armed uprising of a long-oppressed and degraded
people. And let no one who glories in the revolutionary struggles of our fathers
for their freedom deny the right of the American bondsman to imitate their high
example. And those'who rejoice in the deeds of a Wallace or a Tell, a Washington
or a Warren; who cherish with unbounded gratitude the name of Lafayette for
volunteering his aid in behalf of an oppressed people in a desperate crisis, and
at the darkest hour of their fate, -cannot refuse equal merit to this strong,
free, heroic man, who freely consecrated all his powers, and the labors of his
whole life, to the help of the most needy, friendless, and unfortunate of
mankind. The picture of the Good Samaritan will live to all future ages, as the
model of human excellence, for helping one whom he chanced to find in need. 45
THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. John Brown did
more: he went to seek those who were lost that he might save them. On Sunday
night, Oct. 16, John Brown, with twenty followers (five of them colored),
entered the town of Harper's Ferry, in the State of Virginia; captured the
place, making the United-States Armory his headquarters; sent his men in various
directions in search of slaves with which to increase his force. The whole
thing, though premature in its commencement, struck a blow that rang on the
fetters of the enslaved in every Southern State, and caused the oppressor to
tremble for his own safety, as well as for that of the accursed institution.
John Brown's trial, heroism, and execution, an excellent history of which has
been given to the public by Mr. James Redpath, saves me from making any
lengthened statement here. His life and acts are matters of history, which will
live with the language in which it is written. But little can be said of his
companions in the raid on slavery. They were nearly all young men, unknown to
fame, enthusiastic admirers of the old Puritan, entering heartily into all of
his plans, obeying his orders, and dying bravely, with no reproach against their
leader. Of the five colored men,two only were captured alive,Shields Green and
John A. Copeland. The former was a native of South Carolina, having been born in
the city of Charleston in the year 1832. Escaping to the North in 1857, he
resided in Rochester, N.Y., until attracted by the unadorned eloquence and
native magnetism of the hero of Harper's Ferry. The latter was from North
Carolina, and was a mulatto of superior abilities, and a genuine lover of
liberty and justice. The 46
THE JOHN BROWN RAID. following letter, written a short
time before his execution, needs no explanation:. "CHARLESTOWN, VA., Dec. 10,
1859. " MY DEAR BROTHER,-I now take my pen to write you a few lines to let you
know how I am, and in answer to your kind letter of the 5th inst. Dear brother,
I am, it is true, so situated at present as scarcely to know how to commence
writing: not that my mind is filled with fear, or that it has become shattered
in view of my near approach to death; not that I amn terrified by the gallows
which I see staring me in the face, and upon which I am so soon to stand and
suffer death for doing what George Washington, the so-called father of this
great but slaverycursed country, was made a hero for doing while he lived, and
when dead his name was immortalized, and his great and noble deeds in behalf of
freedom taught by parents to their children. And now, brother, for having lent
my aid to a general no less brave, and engaged in a cause no less honorable and
glorious, I am to suffer death. Washington entered the field to fight for the
freedom of the American people,- not for the white man alone, but for both black
and white. Nor were they white men alone who fought for the freedom of this
country. The blood of black men flowed as freely as that of white men. Yes, the
very first blood that was spilt was that of a negro. It was the blood of that
heroic man (though black he was), Crispus Attucks. And some of the very last
blood shed was that of black men. To the truth of this, history, though
prejudiced, is compelled to attest. it is true that black men did an equal share
of the fighting for American independence; and they were assured by the whites
that they should 47
48 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. share equal
benefits for so doing. But, after having performed their part honorably, they
were by the whites most treacherously deceived, - they refusing to fulfil their
part of the contract. But this you know as well as I do; and I will therefore
say no more in reference to the claims which we, as colored men, have on the
American people.... "It was a sense of the wrongs which we have suffered that
prompted the noble but unfortunate Capt. Brown and his associates to attempt to
give fireedom to a small number, at least, of those who are now held by cruel
and unjust laws, and by no less cruel and unjust men. To this freedom they were
entitled by every known principle of justice and humanity; and, for the
enjoyment of it, God created them. And now, dear brother, could I die in a more
noble cause? Could I, brother, die in a manner and for a cause which would
induce true and honest men more to honor me, and the angels more readily to
receive me to their happy home of everlasting joy above? I imagine that I hear
you, and all of you, mother, father, sisters and brothers, say, "No, there is
not a cause for which we, with less sorrow, could see you die!" "Your
affectionate brother, "JOHN A. COPELAND." "The Baltimore Sun" says, " A few
moments before leaving the jail, Copeland said,'If I am dying for freedom, I
could not die for a better cause. I had rather die than be a slave!' A military
officer in charge on the day of the execution says,'I had a position near the
gallows, and carefilly observed all. I can truly say I never witnessed more firm
and unwavering fortitude,
THE JOHN BROWN RAID. more perfect composure, or more
beautiful propriety, than were manifested by young Copeland to the very last.' "
Shields Green behaved with equal heroism, ascending the scaffold with a firm and
unwavering step, and died, as he had lived, a brave man, and expressing to the
last 'his eternal hatred to human bondage, prophesying that slavery would soon
come to a bloody end. 49 $I do
CHAPTER VII. THE FIRST GUN OF THE REBELLION. Nomination
of Fremont.- Nomination of Lincoln.- The Mob Spirit. - Spirit of Slavery. - The
Democracy.- Cotton. - Northern Promises to the Rebels. - Assault on Fort
Sumter.- Call for 75,000 Men. Response of the Colored Men. THE nomination of
John C. Fremont by the Republican party in 1856, and the large vote given him at
the election that autumn, cleared away all doubts, if any existed, as to the
future action of the Federal Government on the spread and power of slavery. The
Democratic party, which had ruled the nation so long and so badly, saw that it
had been weighed, and found wanting; that it must prepare to give up the
Government into the hands of better men. But the party determined to make the
most of Mr. Buchanan's administration, both in the profuse expenditure of money
among themselves, and in getting ready to take the Southern States out of the
Union. Surrounded by the men who believed that the Goveriment was made for them,
and that their mission was to rule the people of the United States, Mr. Buchanan
was nothing more than a tool, -clay in the hands of the potters; and he
permitted them to prepare leisurely for disunion, which culminated, in 1860, in
the nomination of Abraham Lincoln for the presidency. The proslavery Democracy
became furious at the 60
THE FIRST GUN OF THE REBELLION. prospect of losing the
control of the situation, and their hatred of free speech was revived. From the
nominal tion of Mr. Lincoln to his inauguration, mob-law ruled in most of the
cities and large villages. These disgrace ful scenes, the first of which
commenced at the anti slaverymeeting at the Tremont Temple, Boston, was always
gqtten up by members of the Democratic party, who usually passed a series of
resolutions in favor of slavery. New York, Philadelphia, Albany, Buffalo, Troy,
Cincinnati, and Chicago, all followed the example set by Boston. These
demonstrations were caused more by sympathy with the South, and the
long-accustomed subserviency of the Northern people to slaveholding dictation,
than to any real hatred to the negro. During all this time the Abolitionists
were laboring faithfully to widen the gulf between the North and South. Towards
the close of the year 1860, the spirit of compromise began to show itself in
such unmistakable terms as to cause serious apprehension on the part of the
friends of freedom for the future of American liberty. The subdued tone of the
liberal portion of the press, the humiliating offers of Northern political
leaders of compromises, and the numerous cases of fugitive slaves being returned
to their masters, sent a thlrill of fear to all colored men in the land for
their safety, and nearly every train going North found more or less negroes
fleeing to Canada. At the South, the people were in earnest, and would listen to
no proposals whatever in favor of their continuance in the Union. - The vast
wealth realized by the slave-holder had 51
52 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. made him feel
that the South was independent of the rest of the world. Prosperity had made him
giddy. Cotton was not merely king: it was God. Moral considerations were
nothing. The sentiment of right, he argued, would have no influence over
starving operatives; aniid England and France, as well as the Eastern States of
the Union, would stand aghast, and yield to the masterstroke which should
deprive them of the material of their labor. Millions were dependent on it in
all the great centres of civilization; and the ramifications of its power
extended into all ranks of society'and all departments of industry and commerce.
It was only necessary to wave this imperial sceptre over the nations; and all of
them would fall prostrate, and acknowledge the supremacy of the power which
wielded it. Nothing could be more plausible than this delusion. Satan himself;
when about to wage war in heaven, could not have invented one better calculated
to marshal his hosts, andgive promise of success in rebellion against the
authority of the Most Hiigh. But, alas! the supreme error of this anticipation
lay in omitting from the calculation all power of principle. The right still has
authority over the minds of men and in the counsels of nations. Factories may
cease their din; men and women may be thrown out of emnployment; the marts of
commerce may be silent and deserted: but truth and justice still command some
respect among men; and God yet remains the object of their adoration. Drunk with
power, and dazzled with prosperity, mo. nopolizing cotton, and raising it to the
influence of a veritable fetich, the authors of the Rebellion did not admit a
doubt of the success of their attack on the Fed
THE FIRST GUN OF THE REBELLION. eral Government. They
dreamed of perpetuating sla very, though all history shows the decline of the
system as industry, commerce, and knowledge advance. The slave-holders proposed
nothing less than to reverse the currents of humanity, and to make barbarism
flourish in the bosom of civilization. Weak as were the Southern people in point
of num bers and political power, compared with those of the opposite section,
the haughty slave-holders easily persuaded themselves and their dependents that
they could successfully cope in arms with the Northern adversary, whom they
affected to despise for his cowardly and mercenary disposition. Proud and
confident, they indulged the belief that their great political prestige would
continue to serve them among their late party associates in the North, and that
the counsels of the adversary would be distracted, and his power weakened, by
the fatal effects of dissension. The proslavery men in the North are very much
to blame for the encouragement that they gave the rebels b)efore the breaking
out of the war. The Southerners had promises from their Northern friends, that,
in the event of a rebellion, civil war should reign in the free States,- that
men would not be permitted to leave the North to go South to put down their
rebellious brethren. All legitimate revolutions are occasioned by the growth of
society beyond the growth of government; and they will be peaceful or violent
just in proportion as the people and government shall be wise and virtuous or
vicious and ignorant. Such revolutions or reforms are generally of a peaceful
nature in communities in which the government has made provision for the gradual
expansion of its institutions to suit the onward 53
54 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. march of
society. No government is wise in overlook ing, whatever may be the strength of
its own traditions, or however glorious its history, that human institutions
which have been adapted for a barbarous age or state of society will cease to be
adapted for more civilized and intelligent times; and, unless government makes a
provision for the gradual expansion, nothing can prevent a storm, either of an
intellectual or a physical nature. Slavery was always the barbarous institution
of America; and the Rebellion was the result of this incongruity between it and
freedom. The assault on Fort Sumter on the 12th of April, 1861, was the dawn of
a new era for the negro. The proclamation of President Lincoln, calling for the
first 75,000 men to put down the Rebellion, was responded to by the colored
people throughout the country. In Boston, at a public meeting of the blacks, a
large number came forward, put their names to an agreement to form a brigade,
and march at once to the seat of war. A committee waited on the Governor three
days later, and offered the services of these men. His Excellency replied that
he had no power to receive them. This was the first wet blanket thrown over the
negro's enthusiasm. "This is a white man's war," said most of the public
journals. "I will never fight by the side of a nigger," was heard in every
quarter where men were seen in Uncle Sam's uniform. Wherever recruiting offices
were opened, black men offered themselves, and were rejected. Yet these people,
feeling conscious that right would eventually prevail, waited patiently for the
coming time, pledging themselves to go at their country's call, as the following
will show:
THE FIRST GUN OF THE REBELLION. "Resolved, That our
feelings urge us to say to our countrymen that we are ready to stand by and
defend the Government as the equals of its white defenders; to do so with "our
lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor," for the sake of freedom and as good
citizens; and we ask,you to modify your laws, that we may enlist,- that full
scope may be given to the patriotic feelings burning in the colored man's
breast." - Colored MLen's Meeting, Boston." 55
CHIIAPTER VIII. THE UNION AND SLAVERY BOTH TO BE
PRESERVED. Union Generals offer to suppress Slave Insurrections. -Return of
Slaves coming into our Army. AT the very commencement of the Rebellion, the
proslavery generals in the field took the earliest opportunity of offering their
services, together with those under their commands, to suppress any slave
insurrection that might grow out of the unsettled condition of the country.
Major-Gen. B. F. Butler led off, by tendering his services to Gov. Hicks of
Maryland. About the same time, Major-Genl. Geo. B. McClellan issued the
following, " To the Union Men of Western Virginia," on entering that portion of
the State with his troops: - "The General Government cannot close its ears to
the demands you have made for assistance. I have ordered troops to cross the
river. They come as your friends and brothers, -as enemies only to the armed
rebels who are preying upon you. Your homes, your families, your property, are
safe under our protection. All your rights shall be religiously respected.
Notwithstanding all that has been said by the traitors to induce you to believe
our advent among you will be signalled by an interference with your slaves,
understand one 66
UNION AND SLAVERY BOTH TO BE PRESERVED. 57 thing
clearly: not only will we abstain from all such interference, but we shall, on
the contrary, WITH AN IRON HAND, crush any attempt at insurrection on their
part." Slaves escaping from their masters were promptly returned by the officers
of the army. Gen. W. S. Harney, commanding in Missouri, in responding to the
claims of slave-holders for their blacks, said, "Already, since the commencement
of these unhappy disturbances, slaves have escaped from their owners, and have
sought refuge in the camps of United-States troops from the Northern States, and
commanded by a Northern general. They were carefully sent back to their owners.
The correspondent of "The New-York Herald" gave publicity to the following: "The
guard on the bridge across the Anacostia arrested a negro who attempted to pass
the sentries on the Maryland side. He seemed to feel confident that he was among
friends, for he made no concealment of his character and purpose. He said he had
walked sixty miles, and was going North. He was very much surprised and
disappointed when he was taken into custody, and informed that he would be sent
back to his master. He is now in the guard-house, and answers freely all
questions relating to his weary march. Of course, such an arrest excites much
comment among the men. Nearly all are restive under the thought of acting as
slave-catchers. The Seventy-first made a forced march, and the priva. tions they
endured have been honorably mentioned in the country's history. This poor negro
made a forced march, twice the length in perils often, in fasting,-hurrying
toward the North for his liberty! And the Seventy-first catches him at the end
of his painful journey,- the goal
68 -THE NEGBO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. in sight, -and
sends him back to the master who even now may be in arms against us, or may take
the slave, sell him for a rifle, and use it on his friends in the Seventy-first
New-York Regiment. Humanity speaks louder here than it does in a large city; and
the men who in New York would dismiss the subject with a few words
about'constitutional obligations' are now the loudest in denouncing the abuse of
power which changes a regiment of gentlemen into a regiment of negro-catchers."
At Pensacola, Slemmer did even more, putting in irons filgitives who fled to him
for protection, and returning them to their masters to be scourged to death.
Col. Dimmick, at Fortress Monroe, told the rebel Virginians that he had not an
Abolitionist in his command, and that no molestation of their slave-system would
be suffered. Gen. D. C. Buell, commanding in Tennessee, said, in reply to a
committee of slave-holders demanding the return of their fugitives, "It has come
to my knowledge that slaves sometimes make their way improperly into our lines,
and in some instances they may be enticed there; but I think the number has been
magnified by report. Several applications have been made to me by persons whose
servants have been found in our camps; and, in every instance that I know of,
the master has removed his servant, and taken him away. "I need hardly remind
you that there will always be found some lawless and mischievous persons in
every army; but I assure youthat the mass of this army is law-abiding, and
thatit is neither its disposition nor its policy to violate law or the rights of
individuals in any particular." Yet, while Union soldiers were returning escaped
UNION AND SLAVERY BOTH TO BE PRESERVED. 59 slaves to
rebels, it was a notorious fact that the enemy were using negroes to build
fortifications, drive teams, and raise food for the army. Black hands piled up
the sand-bags, and raised the batteries, which drove Anderson out of Sumter. At
Montgomery, the capital of the confederacy, negroes were being drilled and armed
for military duty.
CHAPTER IX. INTELLIGENT CONTRABANDS. James Lawson. -
His Bravery. - Rescue of his Wife and Children. - He is sent out on Important
Business. - He fights his Way Back. - He is Admired by Gens. Hooker and Sickles.
- Rhett's Servant. - " For aging for Butter and Eggs." I SPENT three weeks at
Liverpool Point, the outpost of Hooker's Division, almost directly opposite
Aquia Creek, waiting patiently for the advance of our left wing to follow up the
army, becoming, if not a participator against the dying struggles of rebeldom,
at least a chronicler of the triumphs in the march of the Union army. During
this time I was the guest of Col. Graham, of Mathias-Point memory, who had
brought over from that place (last November) some thirty valuable chattels. A
part of the camp was assigned to them. They built log huts, and obtained from
the soldiers many comforts, making their quarters equal to any in the camp. They
had friends and relatives. Negroes feel as much sympathy for their friends and
kin'as the whites; and, from November to the present time, many a man in
Virginia has lost a'very likely slave, for the camp contains now upwards of a
hundred fat and healthy negroes, in addition to its original number from Mathias
Point. One of the number deserves more honor than that ac. corded to Toussaint
L'Ouverture in the brilliant lecture delivered by Wendell Phillips. He is
unquestionably 60 0
INTELLIGENT CONTRABANDS. the hero of the Potomac, and
deserves to be placed by the side of his most renowned black brethren. The name
of this negro is James Lawson, born near Hempstead, Virginia, and he belonged to
a Mr. Taylor. He made his escape last December. On hearing his praises spoken by
the captains of the gunboats on the Potomac, I was rather indisposed to admit
the possession of all the qualities they give himrn credit for, and thought
possibly his exploits had been exaggerated. His heroic courage, truthfulness,
and exalted Christian character seemed too romantic for their realization.
However, my doubts on that score were dispelled; and I am a witness of his last
crowning act. Jim, after making his escape from Virginia, shipped on board of"
The Freeborn," flag-gunboat, Lieut. Samuel Magaw commanding. He furnished Capt.
Magaw with much valuable intelligence concerning the rebel movements, and, from
his quiet, every-day behavior, soon won the esteem of the commanding officer.
Capt. Magaw, shortly after Jim's arrival on board " The Freeborn,2' sent him
upon a scouting tour through the rebel fortifications, more to test his
reliability than anything else; and the mission, although fraught with great
danger, was executed by Jim in the most faithful manner. Again Jim was sent into
Virginia, landing at the White House, below Mount Vernon, and going into the
interior for several miles; encountering the fire of picketguards and posted
sentries; returned in safety to the shore; and was brought off in the captain's
gig, under the fire of the rebel musketry. Jim had a wife and four children at
that time still in Virginia. They belonged to the same man as Jim did. He was
anxious to get them; yet it seemed impossible. 61
62 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. One day in
January, Jim came to the captain's room, and asked for permission to be landed
that evening on the Virginia side, as he wished to bring off his family. "Why,
Jim," said Capt. Magaw, "how will you be able to pass the pickets?" "I want to
try, captain: I think I can get'em over safely," meekly replied Jim. " Well, you
have my permission;" and Capt. Magaw ordered one of the gunboats to land Jim
that night on whatever part of the shore he designated, and return for him the
following evening. True to his appointment, Jim was at the spot with his wife
and family, and wa taken on board the gunboat, and brought over to Liverpool
Point, where Col. Graham had given them a log-house to live in, just back of his
own quarters. Jim ran the gauntlet of the sentries unharmed, never taking to the
roads, but keeping in the woods, every foot-path of which, and almost every
tree, he knew from his boyhood up. Several weeks afterwards another
reconnoissance was planned, and Jim sent on it. He returned in safety, and was
highly complimented by Gens. Hooker, Sickles, and the entire flotilla. On
Thursday, week ago, it became necessary to * abajurn~~fmatin Ba the Movements.
\Since then, batteries at Shipping and Cockpit Points had been evacuated, and
their troops moved to Freder icksburg. Jim was the man picked out for the
occasion, by Gen. Sickles and Capt. Magaw. The general came down to Col.
Graham's quarters, about nine in the even ing, and sent for Jim. There were
present, the general, Col. Graham, and myself. Jim came into the colonel's.
"Jim." said the general, "I want you to go over to
INTELLIGENT CONTRABANDS. Virginia to-night, and find
out what forces they have at Aquia Creek and Fredericksburg. If you want any men
to accompany you, pick them out." "I know two men that would like to go," Jim
answered. "Well, get them, and be back as soon as possible." Away went Jim over
to the contraband camp, and, returning almost immediately, brought into our
presence two fevex,y-oki g dariies_.. "Are you all ready? " inquired the
general. "All ready, sir," the trio responded. "Well, here, Jim, you take my
pistol," said Gen. Sickles, unbuckling it from his belt; "and, if you are
successful, I will give you $100." Jim hoped he would be, and, bidding us
good-by, started off for the gunboat "Satellite," Capt. Foster, who landed them
a short distance below the Potomac-Creek Batteries. They were to return early in
the morning, but were unable, from the great distance they went in the interior.
Long before daylight on Saturday morning, the gunboat was lying off at the
appointed place. As the day dawned, Capt. Foster discovered a mounted
picket-guard near the beach, and almost at the same instant saw Jim to the left
of them, in the woods, sighting his gun at the rebel cavalry. He ordered the
"gig" to be manned, and rowed to the shore. The rebels moved along slowly,
thinking to intercept the boat, when Foster gave them a shell, which scattered
them. Jim, with only one of his original companions, and two fresh contrabands,
came on board. Jim had lost the other. He had been challenged by a picket when
some distance in advance of Jim, and the negro, instead of answering the
summons, fired the contents of Sickles's revolver at the 63
64 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. picket. It was
an unfortunate occurrence; for at that time the entire picket-guard rushed out
of a small house near the spot, and fired the contents of their muskets at Jim's
companion, killing him instantly. Jim and the other three hid themselves in a
hollow, near a fence, and, after the pickets gave up pursuit, crept through the
woods to the shore. From the close proximity of the rebel pickets, Jim could not
display a light, which was the signal for Capt. Foster to send a boat. Capt.
Foster, after hearing Jim's story of the shooting of his companion, determined
to avenge his death; so, steaming his vessel close in to the shore, he sighted
his guns for a barn, where the rebel cavalry were hiding behind. He fired two
shells: one went right through the barn, killing four of the rebels, and seven
of their horses. Capt. Foster, seeing the effect of his shot, said to Jim, who
stood by, "Well, Jim, I've avenged the death of poor Cornelius " (the name of
Jim's lost companion). Gen. Hooker has transmitted to the War Department ail
account of Jim's reconnoissance to Fredericksburg, and unites with the army and
navy stationed on the left wing of the Potomac, in the hope that the Government
will present Jim with a fitting recompense for his gallant services.- War
Correspondent of the New- York Times. On Thursday, beyond Charlestown, our
pickets descried a solitary horseman, with a bucket on his arm, jogging soberly
towards them. He proved to be a dark mulatto, of about thirty-five. As he
approached, they ordered a halt. "Where are you from?" "Southern Army, cap'n,"
giving the military salute.
INTELLIGENT CONTRABANDS. "Where are you going?" "Coming
to yous all." "What do you want?" "Protection, boss. You won't send me back,
will you? " "No: come in. Whose servant are you?" "Cap'n Rhett's, of South
Carliny: you's heard of Mr. Barnwell Rhett, editor of' The Charleston Mercury'?
His brother commands a battery." "Hiow did you get away?" "Cap'n gove me fifteen
dollars this morning, and said, 'John, go out, and forage for butter and eggs.'
So you see, boss (with a broad grin), I'se out foraging! I pulled my hat over my
eyes, and jogged along on the cap'n's horse (see the brand S.C. on him?) with
this basket on my arm, right by our guards and pickets. They never challenged me
once. If they had, though, I brought the cap'n's pass." And the new corner
produced this document from his pocket-book, written in pencil, and carefully
folded. I send you the original: "Pass my servant, John, on horseback, anywhere
between Winchester and Martinsburg, in search of butter, &c., &c. " A.
BURNETT RHETT, Capt. Light Artillery, Lee's Battalion." "Are there many negroes
in the rebel corps?" "Heaps, boss." t "Would the most of them come to us if they
could?" "All of them, cap'n. There isn't a little pickanniny so high (waving his
hand two feet from the ground) that wouldn't." "Why did you expect protection?"
"Heard so in Maryland, before the Proclamation." "Where did you hear about the
Proclamation?" 5 65
66 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. "Read it, sir,
in a Richmond paper." "What is it?" "That every slave is to be emancipated on
and aftei the thirteenth day of January. I can't state it, boss." "Something
like it. When did you learn to read?" "In'49, sir. I was head waiter at Mrs.
Nevitt's boarding-house in Savannah, and Miss Walcott, a New York lady, who was
stopping there, taught me." "Does your master know it?" "Capt. Rhett doesn't
know it, sir; but he isn't my master. He thinks I'm free, and hired me at twenty
five dollars a month; but he never paid me any of it. I belong to Mrs. John
Spring. She used to hire me out summers, and have me wait on her every winter,
when she came South. After the war, she couldn't come, and they were going to
sell me for Government because I belonged to a Northerner. Sold a great many
negroes in that way. But I slipped away to the army. Have tried to come.to you
twice before in Maryland, but couldn't pass our pickets." "Were you at
Antietam?" "Yes, boss. Mighty hard battle!" "Who whipped?" "Yous all, massa.
They say you didn't; but I saw it, and know. If you had fought us that next
day,Thursday, - you would have captured our whole army. They say so themselves."
"Who?" " Our officers, sir." "Did you ever hear of old John Brown?" "Hear of
him? Lord bless you, yes, boss: I've read his life, and have it now in my trunk
in Charleston; sent to New York by the steward of' The James Adger,'
INTELLIGENT CONTRABANDS. and got it. I've read it to
heaps of the colored folks. Lord, they think John Brown was almost a god. Just
say you was a friend of his, and any slave will almost kiss your feet, if you
let him. They say, if he was only alive now, he would be king. How it did
frighten the white folks when he raised the insurrection I It was Sunday when we
heard of it. They wouldn't let a negro go into the streets. I was waiter at the
Mills House in Charleston. There was a lady from Massachusetts, who came down to
breakfast that morning at my table.'John,' she says,'I want to see a negro
church; where is the principal one?' Not any open to-day, mistress,' I told
her.'Why not?' Because a Mr. John Brown has raised an insurrection in
Virginny.'' Ah!' she says; 'well, they'd better look out, or they'll get the
white churches shut up in that way some of these days, too!' Mr. Nicholson, one
of the proprietors, was listening from the office to hear what she said. Wasn't
that lady watched after that? I have a History of San Domingo, too, and a Life
of Fred. Douglass, in my trunk, that I got in the same way." "What do the slaves
think about the war?" "Well, boss, they all wish the Yankee army would come. The
white folks tell them all sorts of bad stories about you all; but they don't
believe them." John was taken to Gen. McClellan, to whom he gave all the
information he possesseTdabo sition, numt-)ers, and organization of the re bl
-Is knowledge was tu —iland rvaua%r We;TheorrForad by all the facts we have
learned from other sources. The principal features of it I have already
transmitted to you by telegraph. At the close of the inrterview,he asked
anxiously, - 67
68 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. " General, you
won't send me back, will you?" "Yes," replied the general, with a smile, "I
believe I will." "I hope you won't, general. If you say so, I know I will have
to go; but I come to yous all for protection, and I hope you won't." "Well,
then, I suppose we will not. No, John, you are at liberty to go where you
please. Stay with the army, if you like. No one can ever take you against your
will." "May the Lord bless you, general. I thought you wouldn't drive me out.
You's the best friend I ever had; I shall never forget you till I die." And John
made the salute, re-mounted his horse, and rode back to the rear, his dusky face
almost white with radiance. An hour later, he was on duty as the servant of
Capt. Batchelor, Quartermaster of Couch's Second Division; and I do not believe
there was another heart in our corps so light as his in the unwonted joy of
freedom.New- York Tribune.
CIHAPTER X. PROCLAMATIONS OF FREMONT AND HUNTER. Gen.
Fremont's Proclamation, and its Effect on the Public Mind. - Gen. Hunter's
Proclamation; the Feeling it created. WHILE the country seemed drifting to
destruction, and the Administration without a policy, the heart of every loyal
man was made glad by the appearance of the proclamation of Major-Gen. John C.
Fremont, then in command at the West. The following extract from that document,
which at the time caused so much discussion, will bear insertion here: - "All
persons who shall be taken with arms in their hands within these lines shall be
tried by court martial, and, if found guilty, will be shot. The property, real
and personal, of all persons in the State of Missouri, who shall take up arms
against the United States, or who shall be directly proven to have taken active
part with their enemies in the field, is declared to be confiscated to the
public use, and their slaves, if any they have, are hereby declared free men."
The above was the first official paper issued after the commencement of the war,
that appeared to have the ring of the right kind of mettle. But while the public
mind was being agitated upon its probable effect upon the Rebellion, a gloom was
thrown over the whole conmunity by the President's removal of Gen. Fremont, and
the annulling of the proclamation. This act of Mr. Lin 69
70 THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION. coin gave
unintentional "aid and my, and was another retrograde of crushing out the
Rebellion. Gen. Fremont, before the arri letter, had given freedom to a nu
cordance with his proclamation. ] be seen in the following deed of n " Whereas,
Thomas L. Snead, o of St. Louis, State of Missouri, hae part with the enemies of
the Unit ent insurrectionar