Monuments honor the Blacks who wore gray
BY LISA
HOFBAUER
Of The Post and Courier Staff
Agnes Corbett always knew that her hometown of Camden had once had its share of
Confederate soldiers. What she didn't know was that some of them were
Black.
Corbett, the director of the Camden Archives,
learned about the town's Black veterans when her organization decided to survey
local cemeteries and document the names of everyone who fought in the Civil
War.
When she learned of a tombstone at a Black
church that had a Confederate States of America seal on it, she was
amazed.
"That is a part of our history that has not
been brought to the surface. Nobody has researched it," Corbett said. "We didn't
even know about it until we did the survey."
Memorials to Blacks who served in the Confederacy are rare, but not unheard of.
Though the debate rages on about the Confederate battle flag atop the statehouse
in Columbia and the Confederate monument in Walterboro, many people haven't
learned about the role that southern Blacks played in the Civil
War.
At least two Black Confederate monuments exist
in South Carolina, and several others can be found in other
states.
One monument in Darlington is dedicated to
Henry Dad Brown, a drummer for the Confederate troops who, according to
Darlington resident and historian Horace Rudisell, was not allowed to carry a
firearm because of his race.
Brown was able to draw
a Confederate pension after the war, however, and was said to be highly
respected in town because he had served. The monumnent was erected shortly after
Brown's death in 1907.
Rudisell said that the
monument used to be kept up by a local Black teacher until the county offered to
maintain it.
Darlington County also had 10 to 12
other Black men who were body servants, or valets, to soldiers and who also drew
CSA pensions. The Darlington Historical society is trying to determine the
burial sites of those men so they can erect a monument honoring
them.
Another Black Confederate monument was erected
in 1895 in Fort Mill. That monument is dedicated to the Confederate slaves who
helped protect and defend the women and children left alone during the
war.
The granite obelisk has carvings of Blacks on
its sides along with the names of roughly 15 slaves. Two other monuments, one
dedicated to the women and children and a third for the Catawba Indians who
fought for the Confederacy, stand on the same site.
William J. Bradford, the unofficial but widely respected town historian and
former editor of the Fort Mill Times, said that even locally it has been
underappreciated. Since the monument belongs to the people of Fort Mill and not
the county, funds aren't available to keep it in top
condition.
"We have always felt that it should
receive more attention than it has," Bradford said. "It hasn't been vandalized,
but it hasn't been kept up. None of them have been preserved as they should have
been."
A monument that honors a Black Confederate
soldier killed in battle also exists in Canton,
Miss.
Efforts to bring to light the Black's role in
the Civil War continue - and from some unlikely sources. Several chapters of the
Sons of the Confederate Veterans are trying to identify Blacks who fought in the
war. Terrell's Texas Calvalry 34th Regiment, a Confederate reenactment group
with members in several states, is raising funds for a monument to Confederate
soldiers of color. They plan to erect the monument in Richmond, Va., where the
White House of the Confederacy still stands.
According to John Danylchuck, captain of a 34th Texas Calvary unit in Killeen,
Texas, some reenactors have trouble believing that there were Black and Hispanic
soldiers in the Confederate Army.
Danylchuck
recalled one incident in which his unit was asked to reenact a battle for a
television miniseries. After he and two other men - one of whom was Black - went
to meet with the casting director, Danylchuck got a strange phone
call.
"(The director) said, `Yeah, we'd like to have
all you guys - but not the Black guy,' " Danylchuck
recalled.
When asked if he knew why that happened,
he said, "I know why. They don't want to see Black people wearing
gray."
Many historians agree that Blacks did play a
role in the Confederate army. According to the Appomattox Courthouse National
Historic Site, 36 Black Confederates were among those who surrendered to the
Union army at Appomatox Courthouse in Virginia on April 9, 1865. Most were
teamsters, guards, cooks or musicians.
Historians
estimate the total number of Black men who sided with the Confederates either as
laborers or soldiers range anywhere from 60,000 to
90,000.
James Eaton, a professor at Florida A &
M University who studies Black Confederates, explained why those men might have
joined the cause. He said that one reason many of them did so because they were
afraid their lives would be more difficult if they
didn't.
"Some of them were promised their freedom if
they fought. Others went out of loyalty for their masters, and stayed with them
in times of trouble," Eaton said.
"Black men did
fight on both sides," he continued. "There's been a whole lot of credible work
done about the side of the Union, but we have not given any scholarly research
to the Confederate side."