Re: Blacks in the CS Ranks?
First, the officer commanding might not have mentioned it, but I find it difficult to believe the practice would have escaped everyone else's notice and mention. This would include the white men serving alongside the black soldiers, the white men issuing government clothing and equipment to them, and the white men inspecting the unit. The idea that a commander could keep his company or regiment as an island onto itself -- speculative to begin with -- fades away entirely when we start thinking about what being in the army actually means on a day to day basis.
The more intriguing question is the one you raise about the union officer. This isn't the only instance of union soldiers providing anecdotal accounts of blacks in the ranks of the enemy. There are some fleeting examples of black sharpshooters from the Peninsula, for example. But none of them are corroborated by southern accounts, so we're again left with speculation.
The northern officer could be saying that the confederates are using blacks so we should -- the reverse of the southern argument you speculate on above (and just as speculative), but not too dissimilar from some of the arguments made for raising the USCT. The officer could also simply have been confused by unwashed, powder-stained soldiers.
But we don't know and all we can do with accounts like these is speculate. To answer the historical question, however, demands more. If any significant numbers of blacks served in the ranks we ought to see some mention of it in confederate letters or reports. So far, with the exception of the companies mentioned as being raised in Richmond in '65, we don't.
Originally posted by PaulJ
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First, the officer commanding might not have mentioned it, but I find it difficult to believe the practice would have escaped everyone else's notice and mention. This would include the white men serving alongside the black soldiers, the white men issuing government clothing and equipment to them, and the white men inspecting the unit. The idea that a commander could keep his company or regiment as an island onto itself -- speculative to begin with -- fades away entirely when we start thinking about what being in the army actually means on a day to day basis.
The more intriguing question is the one you raise about the union officer. This isn't the only instance of union soldiers providing anecdotal accounts of blacks in the ranks of the enemy. There are some fleeting examples of black sharpshooters from the Peninsula, for example. But none of them are corroborated by southern accounts, so we're again left with speculation.
The northern officer could be saying that the confederates are using blacks so we should -- the reverse of the southern argument you speculate on above (and just as speculative), but not too dissimilar from some of the arguments made for raising the USCT. The officer could also simply have been confused by unwashed, powder-stained soldiers.
But we don't know and all we can do with accounts like these is speculate. To answer the historical question, however, demands more. If any significant numbers of blacks served in the ranks we ought to see some mention of it in confederate letters or reports. So far, with the exception of the companies mentioned as being raised in Richmond in '65, we don't.
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