From Pine View Farm

CSA Propaganda 2

The South seceded from the union to protect and preserve the institution of chattel slavery.

Too many white Southerners not only refuse to admit that, but also lie about it to our children.

From today’s local rag:

An elementary-school textbook that asserts many black soldiers fought for the South during the Civil War is circulating in some area schools.

That claim has been widely discredited, according to historians. Moreover, they say, it is often made by groups looking to rewrite history.

The book is being used by fourth-graders in Norfolk and fourth- and fifth-graders in Chesapeake. In Suffolk, it is not the official textbook, but it is used as a resource for fourth grade.

To countenance this lie is despicable. To spread it . . . .

Vivian Paige reacts.

Share

2 comments

  1. J. Tyler Ballance

    October 21, 2010 at 3:25 pm

    I am an active member of the Sons of Confederate Veterans. Our organization has many members who are either of Negro or Latino heritage. In order to be a member, one must show a genealogical link to someone who served in the CSA. While some of our “African American” members trace their connection to a Negro militia member or other member of the CSA, with the growth of racially blended families, some of our members who identify as, “African American” trace their connection to the Confederate forces to a White soldier or sailor.
    If Barrack Obama had a son, his son could claim membership in the SCV through his wife’s Confederate ancestors.
    The entire premise of the SCV is to provide a truthful telling of the history of the Confederate era, NOT to provide any slanted view or fabricated versions.
    The SCV sponsors ongoing historic research with the only requirement placed upon the researcher, being that the whole truth be told.
    What I have learned over my two decades as a Life Member of the SCV, is that various events and details of the War for Southern Independence, are still rigorously debated. The main difference between the SCV and various “revisionist historians” is that all of the material and archives are made available for researchers to make conclusions and to debate the merits of the research in the public square.
    The SCV and our sister organization, the United Daughters of the Confederacy, provide superbly researched and archived information on the Confederate era.
    The preponderance of scholarly work on the Confederacy is conclusive in that there were, in fact, Negroes, both freed men and slaves, who remained loyal to their respective Confederate states, including serving as both support roles and in a limited number of instances, in combat positions.
    It is a fact that the CSA government debated the merits of creating all Negro regiments before the idea was proposed in the Union.
    We do have records of some Negroes serving in local militia groups in the South, as well as significant numbers of Latino and several Indian tribes serving in the Confederate Army.
    When reading the Union version of the history from that period, it is prudent for the reader to recognize that war time propaganda was the norm. One instance that I recently discovered was a Negro militia that served in New Orleans. In the Union record, the Negro militia was described as loyalists. In the historic documents in New Orleans, it was recorded that the Negro militia served the Confederacy until the Union captured the town, then the Negro militia was asked by the Union force commander to sign an oath to serve the Union occupation forces. Some of the Negro militia did sign the pledge, while others refused and returned to their homes.
    The SCV does not promote the idea that there were any specific number of Negro Confederates, but the evidence support that there were Negroes who participated in either support roles and a few who were armed combatants, but any description of “thousands” must be counting all of the slaves/servants who remained loyal during and in some cases, after the war.

     
  2. Frank

    October 21, 2010 at 8:37 pm

    Thank you for a most level headed comment and reasonable comment.

     

    There were certainly some blacks who participated with the Confederate Army; many of them were no doubt in a chattel role, rather than as free-will enlistees.  Radio Times had an excellent show about this topic back in the spring.

    By the way, were I female, I could be UDC.

     

    Among my ancesters are several Confederate soldiers and at least one general.  I can honor their memory while understanding that they were children of their times and fought honorably for a dishonorable cause.

    My issue is with folks who try to use the myth that thousands of blacks fought for the South to obscure the underlying cause of the war and to paint slavery as having been some sort of benign institution.