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struggle4progress

(118,294 posts)
Sat Aug 8, 2015, 05:52 PM Aug 2015

The Myth of the Black Confederate Soldier

08.08.1512:01 AM ET

... the black Confederate narrative is a fairly recent phenomenon. The proliferation of these stories and the zeal for the black Confederate soldier expressed by many would be alien to their Confederate ancestors, who lived under a constitution strongly devoted to protecting if not extending slavery. It was not until March 1865 — after a contentious debate that took place throughout the Confederacy — that the Confederate Congress passed legislation authorizing the enlistment of slaves who were first freed by their masters. Even those who finally came to support the legislation as the only alternative to defeat would have agreed with Howell Cobb: “If slaves will make good soldiers our whole theory of slavery is wrong.” Other than a small number that briefly trained in Richmond, Virginia, no black men served openly and there is no evidence that the Richmond recruits saw the battlefield in the final weeks of the war.

Throughout the postwar period and much of the 20th century, stories of loyal black Confederate soldiers were decidedly absent. This changed in 1977 following the release and success of the popular television series Roots. At the time, the leadership within the SCV expressed concern over how the institution of slavery and race relations were portrayed in the film as well as the Confederacy itself.

SCV Commander in Chief Dean Boggs called on members to research the contributions of African Americans to the Confederate war effort to counter the series’s “propaganda.” Boggs claimed that, “Politics often ignores the truth, and the truth is that the majority of Southern Negroes, slave and free, sided [with] the Confederate effort tremendously. Some were under arms and in combat.” Both the SCV and UDC made a concerted effort to expand their membership to include African Americans by decorating the graves of former slaves who were present in the army in one of many supportive roles such as camp servants ...

Misinformation abounds. In 2010 a Virginia history textbook,
Our Virginia: Past and Present, authored by Joy Masoff, included the claim that “thousands of Southern blacks fought in Confederate ranks, including two battalions under the command of Stonewall Jackson.” When asked for the source of this claim, Masoff admitted it had been discovered online after conducting a simple search. Today it is impossible to find a reputable historian who subscribes to this history ...

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/08/08/the-myth-of-the-black-confederate-soldier.html

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The Myth of the Black Confederate Soldier (Original Post) struggle4progress Aug 2015 OP
Always knew that claim was bs. Thanks for the research. n/t freshwest Aug 2015 #1
Funny how they couch their argument... Wounded Bear Aug 2015 #2

Wounded Bear

(58,666 posts)
2. Funny how they couch their argument...
Sat Aug 8, 2015, 10:21 PM
Aug 2015

Their problem is not with slavery, it is with "how it is portrayed in the TV series"....

Thus is born obfuscation, denial, and falsehoods. Part and parcel of the "Southern Heritage."

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