Today's Date: May 3, 2024
National Institutes of Health All of Us Research Program Mobile Tour Visits Rochester, NY   •   Melmark's Dream Maker's Ball Raised $500,000 to Support Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities   •   High School Women Launch First of its Kind Energy Literacy Podcast   •   WWPR WELCOMES RETURNING MEMBERS TO 2024 - 2025 ADVISORY COUNCIL   •   Government of Canada and the Government of Manitoba announce partnership to develop a Red Dress Alert together with Indigenous p   •   i3 Verticals Announces Earnings Release and Conference Call Date for Second Quarter of Fiscal 2024   •   Anaergia Announces Additional Delay in the Filing of Its Audited Financial Statements and Related Disclosures   •   Valley Children's Receives Historic $15 Million Gift to Create Advanced Cell Therapy Program for Pediatric Cancer   •   AHF Backs FTC Challenge to Big Pharma Junk Patents   •   The Iconic Caribbean Posh Weekend Returns To The USVI; Will Honor Dr. Yvette Noel-Schure   •   ZACAPA RUM AND RAUL LOPEZ OF LUAR UNVEIL A LIMITED-EDITION COLLECTION: AN ODE TO HERITAGE, COMMUNITY, AND CRAFTSMANSHIP   •   University of Phoenix College of Nursing Alumna and Faculty Publish Article on Lived Experiences of Intensive Care Unit Nursing   •   Brown Books Kids Publishes Children’s Picture Book, Perfect for Summer Reading   •   KB Home Announces the Grand Opening of Its Newest Community in Desirable Buckeye, Arizona   •   Lac Seul First Nation and Canada settle Flooding Claim   •   Northern Trust Named Best Private Bank in U.S. for Digital Wealth Planning, Best Digital Innovator of the Year in U.S.   •   Tennant Company Announces Senior Leadership Updates to Direct ERP Transformation and Drive Product Innovation   •   Innovative partnership to bring 100 units of social and affordable housing units for independent seniors to Terrebonne   •   Statement - Public Safety Minister   •   CORRECTING and REPLACING Wheaties™ Pushes the Limits of Breakfast with New Wheaties Protein
Bookmark and Share

Little Known Stories Of Blacks And The Civil War

 

BLACK NEWS, AFRICAN AMERICAN NEWS, MINORITY NEWS, CIVIL RIGHTS NEWS, DISCRIMINATION, RACISM, RACIAL EQUALITY, BIAS, EQUALITY, AFRO AMERICAN NEWS 

 

Dr. Frank Smith Jr. is executive director of the African American Civil War Museum and Monument.  

BLACK NEWS, AFRICAN AMERICAN NEWS, MINORITY NEWS, CIVIL RIGHTS NEWS, DISCRIMINATION, RACISM, RACIAL EQUALITY, BIAS, EQUALITY, AFRO AMERICAN NEWS

 

 

WASHINGTON - For White America - both North and South -  the firing on Fort Sumter April 12, 1861, was a cause for tribulation and anxiety. But, for free and enslaved Black Americans, the onset of the Civil War was a cause for celebration and a time for jubilee. 

The Northern press fretted over whether the union could be saved. The Southern press railed on about the threat to the demise of the South's "Peculiar Institutions" - slavery - while the Black Press rejoiced in headlines, such as, "The Coming Hour", and declared for "Emancipation or Extermination".  Yes, there were Black newspapers during slavery - since March 16, 1827.

The Weekly Anglo-African, April 13th, 1861 heralded: "Better be a DEAD MAN, than a live slave!  Better to die fighting, than to live to breed children for the shambles! Death slays only the body; the spirit, [disenthralled], will pass on, working out its immortal destiny. Rather say we, 'Ten Reigns of Terror' than one year of bondage!  Better a thousand guillotines, than one fugitive returned. 'let the Union go to pieces, if the slaves go free'".

Black leaders faced the reality and inevitability of the consequence of the coming sectional conflict with resolution, while white leaders were in denial of the unions transformation and the certain demise in the preservation of slavery.  Frederick Douglass editorialized in his Douglass Monthly on May, 1861, just one month after the start of the war: "God be praised! That it has come at last. We should have been glad if the North, of its own proper virtue, had given this quietis to doubt and vacillation. She [the Union], did not do it, and perhaps it is best that she [the Union], did not.  What her negative wisdom withheld, has now come to us through the vengeance and rashness of slaveholders. Another instance of the wrath of man working out the purposes in praise of eternal goodness!"

Free and Enslaved Blacks transformed a Civil War for reunion into a war for liberation. It would take five years of fratricidal conflict for White America to arrive at the meaning of the war that was clear to Black America at its beginning - the reaffirmation of the founding universal human principle of America that all men are created equal  "This [the Civil War] is but another step in the drama of American progress. We say progress, for we know that no matter what may be the desires of the men of Expediency who rule, or seem to, the affairs of the North, the tendencies are for Liberty.  God speed the conflict. The strife will be deadly, but the end is certain. It matters not whether the government is successful, whether the union is preserved, the ideas underlying the struggle will triumph", Weekly Anglo-African, April 20th, 1861.

April 12, 2011 will mark the 150th Anniversary of the firing on Ft. Sumter and the start of the American Civil War. The African American Civil War Memorial Foundation will commemorate the beginning Civil War with celebrities reading from Civil War period newspapers, speeches,  and other documents announcing the coming of the war and its profound effect on the ending of slavery in America. We will also have celebrities read from selected press responses to the election of President Lincoln and the anti- slavery platform of the Republican party of 1860.

The African American Civil War Memorial lists the names of 209,145 Black union soldiers who joined President Lincoln to save the Union and keep it united under one flag. The monument, located at the corner of 10th and U Streets NW Washington, D. C., was built by a private foundation that operates a museum.  On July 18, 2011 the museum will host a Grand Opening for its newly renovated 5,000 sq. ft. space with new exhibits, artifacts, and state of the art educational programs adjacent to the monument.
 

 

Little Known Stories of Blacks and the Civil War is a four-part Black History Month Series, sponsored by The African American Civil War Museum and Monument and the Association for the Student of African American Life and History (ASALH).


STORY TAGS: BLACK NEWS, AFRICAN AMERICAN NEWS, MINORITY NEWS, CIVIL RIGHTS NEWS, DISCRIMINATION, RACISM, RACIAL EQUALITY, BIAS, EQUALITY, AFRO AMERICAN NEWS



Back to top
| Back to home page
Video

White House Live Stream
LIVE VIDEO EVERY SATURDAY
alsharpton Rev. Al Sharpton
9 to 11 am EST
jjackson Rev. Jesse Jackson
10 to noon CST


Video

LIVE BROADCASTS
Sounds Make the News ®
WAOK-Urban
Atlanta - WAOK-Urban
KPFA-Progressive
Berkley / San Francisco - KPFA-Progressive
WVON-Urban
Chicago - WVON-Urban
KJLH - Urban
Los Angeles - KJLH - Urban
WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
New York - WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
WADO-Spanish
New York - WADO-Spanish
WBAI - Progressive
New York - WBAI - Progressive
WOL-Urban
Washington - WOL-Urban

Listen to United Natiosns News