LEST WE FORGET
Compiled by Bennie J. McRae, Jr.
The list only represents a small number of heroic and caring
individuals and groups who dedicated their lives to the cause of freedom and
citizenship for all Americans during the most turbulent period in this country's
history.
- Frederick Douglass - A fugitive slave who rose from
bondage to become a foremost orator, writer, abolitionist, and the most
influential black leader of the mid-nineteenth century.
- Harriet Tubman - Conductor on the Underground Railroad.
During the Civil War she served as a scout, and nurse and was described as
“the head of the intelligence service in the Department of the South. She
planned and guided a raid by black soldiers under the command of Colonel
Montgomery that dashed into enemy country, destroying millions of dollars
worth of commissary stores and cotton...and freed nearly 800 slaves without
losing a man. The only American woman to lead troops on the field of battle.
- The over 178,000 ex-slaves and freedmen that served in
the United States Colored Troop and the 30,000 that served in the Union Navy
during the Civil War.
- Martin Delaney - Born free in Virginia in 1812, attended
school in Pennsylvania and later studied medicine and law at Harvard. He was a
recognized geographer, anthropologist, author, and lecturer. Appointed to the
rank of Major and assigned to the 104th United States Colored Infantry
Regiment, becoming the second Black field grade officer in the Union Army.
- Susie King Taylor - Born a slave in Georgia and at age 14
escaped with an Uncle behind the Union lines. During the Civil served as a
teacher, nurse, and laundress to the men of the 1st South Carolina Volunteer
Regiment, later redesignated the 33rd United States Colored Infantry Regiment.
- Charlotte L. Forten - Born in Philadelphia in 1838 of
relatively wealthy parents, her persistent and primary concerns were the
liberation and uplifting of her race. She volunteered to participate in the
Port Royal Experiment, an educational and work program for ex-slaves.
- Caldonia Vaughn - Born in Topeka, Kansas, and during the
Civil War served with the 3rd Illinois Cavalry and 12th Missouri as a cook and
nurse. She died in 1939 at the age of 95.
- Allen Allensworth - Born a slave in Louisville, Kentucky,
he taught himself to read with the Bible and a Webster Speller. Attempted to
escape twice to Canada and subsequently sold to a slave trader going south.
Escaped from Mississippi and travelled to Illinois. During the Civil War
attached himself to the 44th Illinois Infantry serving as a Corpsman and went
back south with the unit to Tennessee. Joined the Union Navy and served aboard
several gunboats on the Mississippi River.
- Andrew Jackson Smith - Born a slave in Kentucky on
September 3, 1842, he “fell in” with the 41st Illinois Volunteer Infantry as
the unit was travelling southward. Served as a laborer and subsequently
servant to Colonel John Warner. Both were wounded during the Battle of Shiloh
after which they went to the Colonel’s hometown to recuperate. He later
travelled to Massachusetts and enlisted in the 55th Massachusetts Volunteer
Infantry and became the Color Sergeant of the regiment.
- Alfred Wood - A fugitive slave from Mississippi, he
became a scout with the 1st Mississippi Colored Cavalry (later redesignated,
the 3rd United States Colored Cavalry), and served gallantly throughout the
Civil War as an outstanding spy and scout.
- Private William H. Barnes, 38th USCI; First Sergeant Powhattan
Beaty, 5th USCI; First Sergeant James H. Bronson, 5th USCI; First Lieutenant
Nathan H. Edgerton, 6th USCI; Sergeant Major Christian A Fleetwood, 4th USCI;
Private James Gardiner, 36th USCI; Sergeant James H. Harris, 38th USCI;
Sergeant Alfred B. Hilton, 4th USCI; Sergeant Major Milton M. Holland, 5th
USCI; Corporal Miles James, 36th USCI; First Sergeant Alexander Kelly, 6th
USCI; First Sergeant Robert Pinn, 5th USCI; First Sergeant Edward Ratcliff,
38th USCI; and Private Charles Veal, 4th USCI - - All were awarded
the Medal of Honor for gallantry in action during the Battle Of Chapin’s Farm
(New Market Heights, Virginia) on September 29, 1864.
- Eliza Jones - Nurse at the U.S. Army Hospital,
Huntsville, Alabama.
- Amanda Wright - Nurse at the Union Hospital, Vicksburg,
Mississippi.
- Catherine Thomas - Nurse at U.S. Army Hospital, Natchez,
Mississippi.
- Captain Andre Cailloux - 3rd Louisiana Native Guard
Regiment - gloriously died in advance of his company while cheering his men on
during the Battle of Port Gibson, Louisiana on May 27, 1863.
- Sojourner Truth - Antislavery crusader and advocate of
equal political and legal rights for women. She toured the Midwest to rally
support for the Union war effort. Counselled free blacks after the Civil War
and worked as an administrator at the Freedman’s Hospital.
- The over 7,000 White Officers who served under the Bureau
of Colored Troops.
- Charles Tyler Trowbridge - believed to be the first
person who ever enlisted colored soldiers in the Civil War, and after the War
while commander of the 33rd United States Colored Infantry Regiment dealt
fairly with the concern and sensitivity required in an effort to assist all of
the downtrodden people whose lives had been devastated by slavery and the
Civil War.
- Fred Brown - Company D, 33rd U.S. Colored Infantry
Regiment who saved the lives of his comrades on board a train deliberately
uncoupled over a railroad bridge. He put a pistol to the head of the engineer
and forced him to back up the engine and pull the train forwarded before the
soldiers were ambushed by Rebel renegades
- The Officers of the 4th Illinois Cavalry who organized
the 1st Mississippi Colored Cavalry (3rd U.S. Colored Cavalry Regiment),
recruited and trained ex-slaves from Mississippi and Tennessee into one of the
most effective fighting forces in the Mississippi Valley.
- Joshua Dunbar - Escaped slave from Kentucky who went to
Canada, returned to Ohio, recruited in Troy, Ohio and travelled to
Massachusetts to enlist in the 55th Massachusetts Volunteers. After being
discharged with a disability on October 28, 1863, he returned to Massachusetts
and enlisted in the 5th Massachusetts Colored Cavalry and rose to the rank of
Sergeant. Mustered out of the unit on October 31, 1865 in Clarksville, Texas.
(NOTE: The father of Poet Paul Laurence Dunbar).
- Joseph T. Wilson - Born in Norfolk, Virginia in 1836, and
settled in New Bedford, Massachusetts. He was a seaman and in Chile when news
of the Civil War reached him. He sailed to New Orleans in search of his father
who reportedly had been sold in that city. Enlisted in the 2nd Louisiana
Marine (Native) Guard Regiment on October 30, 1862 and was discharged on
September 1, 1963. He reenlisted in Company C, 54th Massachusetts Volunteer
Infantry on December 18, 1863 and was wounded during the Battle of Olustee,
Florida on February 29, 1864. Discharged on May 8, 1864 in Boston, he began to
gather documents which was later compiled into a book, “The Black Phalanx,” an
indepth account of the role Black men played in the Civil War.
- The thousands of other men and women too numerous to mention. The
Afro-British North Americans, the foreign born of African and European
ancestry, and others who sacrificed, suffered and died in an effort
to ensure the well-being and freedom of a once enslaved people.
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