The Civil War
When Confederate batteries fired on Fort Sumter on April 12, 1861. Black men were eager to wear the Union blue, but it would not come easy.
On the first anniversary of Fort Sumter, General David Hunter organized a regiment of all Black men. But his effort was abortive, and the regiment was “turned off without a shilling, by order of the War Department.” Seven months later Colonel T. W. Higginson of Massachusetts took command of the First Regiment of South Carolina Volunteers, the first slave regiment mustered into service of the United States By the end of the war 180,000 black men had served in the Union Army and taps had sounded over the bodies of 33,380 of them. 166 regiments were raised for the United States Colored Troops, as they were officially known, comprising more than 200,000 black soldiers and more than 7,000 white officers. Yet, they didn’t fight only in Union Blue. Sadly, little has ever been written of the black men that served in the Confederate Army, so we know little of their reasons for fighting for the Confederacy or the outcome of their efforts. The number of black troops in the Union Army was larger than the entire Confederate Army in the final months of the Civil War. We know that the black soldiers fought bravely and Sergeant William H. Carney became the first African American to earn the Medal of Honor for his role at Fort Wagner, South Carolina.
Post-Civil War
Shortly after the Civil War on July 28th, 1866, provisions were made for Black men to serve in the regular peacetime army. Six regiments, 2 of Cavalry and 4 Infantry were commissioned by Congress. For twenty-four years these regiments campaigned on the Great Plains along the Rio Grande, New Mexico, Texas, Arizona, Colorado and finally in the Dakotas. The Ninth (9th) and Tenth (10th) U. S. Cavalry Regiments duties included guarding the mail, escorting and / or guarding stagecoaches, cattle drives, wagon trains, railroad crews, surveyors and they were the Law. They built roads and telegraph lines, mapped and explored. They played a major role in the building of the west and making it safe for the westward expansion.
White Officers
In the beginning there were no black officers, and the military was not willing to deal with this issue. It was still unclear how black men would hold up in the Military peacetime army. The process of recruiting officers for these new regiments was a slow process and by February 1867, only 11 officers had reported to duty. While waiting for the necessary number of officers, the troopers became surly and unruly.
Mutiny
In March 1867 Colonel Edward Hatch received orders transferring his regiment to Texas. Two companies, L and M were to be stationed in Brownsville on the Rio Grande while the remaining 10 companies were encamped near San Antonio and undergo further training. But marching orders had come to soon. Hatch had a little more than an ill-disciplined mob on his hands and the stage was set for violence and tragedy. EnRoute to San Antonio Mutiny flared in K company and was suppressed only with great difficulty. When the city was reached, no brass bands turned out to welcome black men in blue uniforms, after all this had been Confederate territory, and friction developed quickly between the troopers and citizens. Clashes with the police became an almost daily occurrence. Serious trouble was only a matter of time, and it came on April 9th as too few officers strove to control their men. Mutiny broke out in A, E and K company and he was forced to shoot two of his own troopers Colonel Hatch placed the blame on a shortage of officers. Captain W. W. Albert, of the Sixth Cavalry, was assigned to investigate the mutiny. His report found that many of the men were “too light, too young and had a weak constitution”. He should have added that careless or indifferent recruiters had enlisted far too many men who were unfit for military service.
Enlistment
Recruits were plentiful, though officers were scarce. Black men were eager to enlist, as the army gave them the chance for social and economic betterment. Something difficult to achieve in a society all but closed to blacks. The Civil War was over, but many knew nothing of the world outside, the world beyond the city or plantation where they had spent their whole life. They could not go back, now they were free, but many did not have skills to go forward or a place to go. So many felt that the army would be a new home. To others, it was the adventure of being sent west to help tame an untamed wilderness. Perhaps this could lead to their great dream of building a new life on their own land.
Those who were accepted, for the minimum of 5 years, received the basic troopers pay of thirteen dollars per month, plus quarters, meals and uniforms. They felt they were now on their way to acceptance, little did they know of the hardship they would face in the west. Most started with uniforms and equipment that was castoff remnants of both
armies. New recruits used cotton compressors as barracks, ate boiled beef, hash, beans, corn bread, and occasionally sweet potatoes, molasses and coffee, not much better off than what they had come from. But to most, the major inducement for enlistment was the prospect of learning how to read and write. They felt this would bring them closer to learning and earning the respect of white men, and by knowing what the white man knew would help them to survive and prosper.