''S* vV f\\\ ->^f< //n ^ xP* ,. T > — H ^ 1F---CV "'S* \\ A ^. A^ . ^ ' * . ^^. ■J^^ .c;:^% > vOv^ a I 1 ,4 c 5^"-. Ay . i- ' • » •<*;. o^ ^ " O l'^ ^r. cy * i < o o .^ \>* <"&■ ^^^■^ oV'^^^!]^'" ^^ i.-y '•^J^M^^\ ^U^rH o^^J^ML^- O^ V'O^ .V .-^, 0' "I MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY REVEALING THE SERVICES OF NEGROES IN THE EARLY WARS IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 1641 - 1815 BY LAURA E. WILKES TEACHER IN THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS OF WASHINGTON, D. C, Copyright bv Laura E. Wilkes, 1919 -{. Boston and of Charlestown being tolled meanwhile. The three pro cessions, made up of carriages in which rode distinguished men and friends of the victims, met at King street and wound their wav ti:* Middle Burying Ground on Tremont street, a few steps from, the head of the Boston Common. Here the bodies were interred in one tomb, located in the extreme northeastern corner of the cemetery. \^ery Httle more than this is known concerning the black hero of this event. He was born about 1728 in the vicinity of Cochetuate Lake, Framingham, Mass., of probably Negro and Indian pareutage. He escaped from slavery in this locality in 1750. He was a well- proportioned mulatto with curly hair. At the time cf his death he was forty-seven years of age. The spot on which Attucks fell, located on what is now State street, somewhat to the east of the old State House, is today marketl by an airow embedded in the sidewalk. On the Boston Common stands a monument of granite erected in honor of the men who fell in the m.assacre. One side of this memorial bears this quotation from Daniel Webster, "From that moment we may date the sever- ance of the British Empire," and this one from John Adams, "On that night the foundation of American independence was laid." On the other faces of the monument may be read, respectively, the date of its erection and the name of the fallen heroes, with the time of their death. After the Boston J\Iassacre March hfth was always glorified by patriotic celebrations each year until the Declaration of Independence took its place. Attucks always received due credit for his patriotism on these occasions from even such men as Han- cock and Washington, while in 1773 John Adams addressed in the Bame of the nnilatto. the following letter to the Tory governor, Hutchinson, who still continued the persecution of the colonists. "You shall hear from us with astonishment. You ought to hear from us with horror. You are charged before God and man with our blood. The soldiers were but passionate instruments, mere machines, neither moral nor voluntary instruments, in our destruction, more than the leaden bul- lets with which we were wounded. You were a free agent. You acted coolly, deliberately, with all that premeditated malice not against us in particular but against the people in general, which in the sight of the law is an ingredient in the composition of murder. You will hear from us here- aftei. (Signed) Crispus Attucks. ^ " *The bodv of one was claimed by friends and buried out of Boston. a6 Missing pA(iss iK American history NEGROES IN THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. I MaSSACITUSI'TTS. i The five years sul)sequent to the Boston Massacre saw i smoul- dering fire of sentiment, growing larger and larger in all of the col- onies in favor of independoiice from the mother country. In ]\Tas- sachusetts, by the spring of 1775. preparations had already begun for the war which the provincials felt was inevitable. Military stores had been collected and men drilled upon many village greens. Shortly after midnight on April 18th of that year a detachment of English soldiers left Boston to go to Concord that they might there destroy'a supply of cannon, sjnall arms and ammunition store^l in-^ that place by the Committee on Public Safety. To prevent this, companies of men ready to respond on the mfnute, hence called Minute Men, came out of every farm and village along the line of march taken by these troops. Negroes. Nbond and free, were among this band of defenders. Boston alone had many free colored people and over two thousand slaves at this time, to say nothing of Cam- bridge and the other towns along the road to Concord. The wrath- ful Americans met the British, first on Lexington Common, where a short skirmish occurred, in which several of the former lost their lives and the result was a defeat for the colonists. As they took up the march to Concord many recruits entered their ranks. Among them was a Negro, Peter Salem, of Framingham. He entered the ranks of the little band of patriots as a Minute Man, and when they met the foe on Concord Bridge he, with the black-man, Samuel Craft, of Newton, and a number of others of their race, helped the sturdy American farmers win a victory which forced the British to retreat to Boston. In that city, by* April 38 of the same yeaiy three thousand r^egulars were blockaded by these farmers. i The Battle of Bunker Hill. \ I In a very short while the English holdings in Boston were very much strengthened by reinforcements from England, and the Amer- icans realized that it would be to their advantage to have fortified some point from which they might overlook the city and the liarbor. Their c::mp was on the Cambridge Common, and Cambridge lay to MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORV 2? the west of Boston, across the Charles River. Of all the points of elevation nearby, Breed's Hill, on the Charlestown side of the stream, was considered most' favorable to this end. It happened, then, that on June sixteenth one thousand of the colonials secretly left, their camp and proceeded by a mistake to Bunker Hill, there to build a redoubt. When the clock struck the hour of midnight, so swift were their movements that they had already unslung their packs and were stacking their arms. The before-mentioned Peter Salem was there, as were also the black men, Titus Coburn and Sey- mour Burr, of Andovcr ; Grant Cooper and Cato Howe, the latter all the way up from Plymouth. There was also Charlestown Eads. shouldering his pick with the well-known "spirit of '7G." He en- tered the army at the very beginning of the trouble and was after- wards in Col. Bigelow's company of the Fifteenth Massachusetts. He was not discharged until December o, 1780. Barzillai Lew , the v giant cooper, born at Chelmsford, was there, too. "^ Tie later became a famous musician in the Continental Army, in the Twenty-seventh Regiment under Capt. Ford. He had served in this capacity in the French and Indian War. He it was who organized for guerrilla warfare at a later period of the struggle a band of Negro men. all of one family, known as Lew's men. He was later in the engage- ment which took place at Ticonderoga and remained in the ranks until 1777. There also was S ampson Talber t, of Bridge-water, helping to throw up the hillocks on Bunker Hill that warm night in early June. He afterwards spoke of this service as the "hottest day's work he had ever done." These men were all pensioners at - the close of the war. So well did the black and the white compatri- ots work, and so quietly, that the English knew n-othing of their nearness until daylight the next day, when the outworks were al- most closed. By an army twice the size of their own the Ame icans were attacked on the 17th day of June, and the terrible battle of Bunker Hill occurred, "in which the dead lay as thick as sheep in the fold," says one writer. Indeed, each army lost nearly a third of its number. ' Among those who fell on the American side v.-as the ^ Negro, Caesar Brown, of Westford. Twice were the American ' farmers able to repel the British before they themselves rerreated, and this they did only when powder and shot were all gone and . there was nothing left with which to fight except butts and barrels of guns. After the brave Warren had fallen, the English mounted the' hill in the wake of their commander. Maj. Pitcairn, who as he came, waving his swoTd, exclaimed, "The day is ours." It was then that the black Peter Salem seized another's gun, his own having been lost in battle, and shot the Englishman, who fell dying in the 28 MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY arms of his son, who was just behind him. For this deed of valor V/' Salem received a contribution from the army and was later pre- sented t(; Gen. Washington. Salem was born a slave. Besides the engagements already referred to, he was present at the battles of Saratoga and of Stony Point, with many others of his race. He served "as a faithful soldier in the regiment of Col. Nixon." After the war was over he resided a long time in Leisester, Massachu- setts, on a road named in his honor, leading to Auburn. He finally removed to his native town, Framingham, where he died August 16. ^^1816. There he is buried in an old cemetery. In 18S3, at a cost of \/ one hundred and fifty dollars, the town folks erected a monument three feet high, of Middlesex granite, in his honor. This gives in- formation concerning the battles in which he fought and calls him a "Soldier of the Revolution." For many years an old bank in Charlestown, the Monumental, as well as the Freedmen's Bank of / Boston, commemorated his deed by placing his picture upon their bank notes. A painting of the battle of Bunker Hill, made by an eye witness, shows the likeness of Salem. Among the other black men present at the battle of Bunker Hill were Caesar Basom, of Westford; Alexander Eames, of Boston; Saesar Jahar, of Natick ; Cuff Blanchard and Caesar Post, of Andover, and Gushar, of Framingham. Caesar Basom lost his lie in the engagement. He was at first a private in the company of Capt. John Mino, and marched with these men to Lexington from Westford. In the action on Bunker Hill he was in the company of Capt. Weyman. As he fired his last charge of powder, exclaiming, "Now, Caesar, give them some more," he was shot and fell dead into the trenches. He was a stripling of twenty-two. Another colored man who distinguished I'.imself in the battle fought on the little hill at Charlestown was Salem Poor. He killed Lieut. Col. Abercrombie, of the British Reg- ulars, as the latter sprang on the redoubt and shouted, "Surrender, you rebels." A petition in favor of Salem Poor was sent to the gen- tial court of Massachusetts six months after the battle was ^ought, signed by some of the principal officers. It read as follows: » "The subscribers beg leave to report to your Honorable Hous^, which we do in justice to the character of so brave a man, that under our own observation we declare that a Negro, called Salem Poor, of Col. Fry's regiment, Capt. Eames' company, in the late battle of Charlestown, be- hfcved like an experienced officer, as well as an excellent soldier. To set forth the particulars of his conduct would be tedious. We only beg leave to say, in the person of the MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 2$ said Negro is set forth a braxc and gallanl soldier. The reward due so great and distinguished a character we sub- mit to Congress. Jonah Brew, Colonel, Ephm Corey, Lieutenant, Joshua Row, Lieutenant, Jonas Richardson, Captain, JosiAH Foster, Captain, / ' John Morton, Sergeant, Thomas Nixon, Lieut. Colonel, Joseph Barker, Lieutenant, William Prescott, Colonel, Eliaphalett Bodwell, Sergeant, Ebenezer Varnum, 2nd Lieutenant, William H. Vallard, Captain, Richard Walsh, Lieuteufint, William Smith, Captain. "In council, December 21, 177.J. Read and sent down. "Perez AIorton, Secretary." Salem Poor did duty at Fort George, Ticonderoga, Valley Forge and White Plains. His term of enlistment did not expire untl 1780. Negroes Excluded From and Rc-Bnlisted in the Army. I The colonists, realizing that war was upon them, bent every cflfort that theirs might be the victory at its close. Washington took com- mand of the Continental Army on July 3, 1775. There he found much " to do in the wayof organization. In its ranks, as has already been said, were many Negroes. \'ery soon the consistency of eniDloying slaves in the fight for liberty became a much debated question on the part of those in authority. So, despite their manifestations of courage at Lexington, Concord and Bunker Hill, a committee ap- pointed to consider the matter resolved that all black men be ex- cluded from tlie army, except those who were free, declaring that a participation in this tight by any others would be a reflection on the jionor of the colony. On the passage of this act many slaves were emancipated that they might enlist, and this they did in very large numbers. In a short time objection was again raised to the pres- ence of Negroes in the army, and a committee, made up of Benjamin Franklin, Benjamin Harrison, Thomas Kench and the Deputy Gov- ernors of Rhode Island and Connecticut, which convened October. 1775, to consider the condition of the army and to plan for its im- 30 MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY provement, reconi;iieiulc(l fliat all black men be excluded from its lanks. Washington endorsed this decision. This act. however, met slroug protest from the officers and men who had served with per- sons of color, to say nothing of the expressions of dissatisfaction made by the latter^ themselves. They even appealed for the annul- ment of this law. About this time an affair occurred in Virginia v.-hich materially changed things in Massachusetts as far as black roldiers were concerned. This was the hearty response on th.e part of black men to an invitation, through a proclamation of Lord Dun- more, the Tory governor of that colony, to its slaves to enter the Ministerial Army with the promise of freedom. These men dis- tinguished themselves like soldiers at the battle of Kemp's Landing, the present site of Kempville, \'irginia, located t)etween Norfolk and the sea. This engagement occurred between the Loyalists and the Federalists. These facts being made known to the Commander- in-chief of the American Army, he decided to ignore the exclusion act and ordered that Negroes be re- enlisted, unless otherwise sodi- dected by Congress. Thus it came about that they were re-employed and Congress endorsed this policy on January 1(). 177G. by an act of legislation which was never thereafter set aside. Through all the ensuing years of the war they entered the ranks and not a reg- iment was seen in which there was not a goodly number "of the able-bodied, strong fellows." i I fortifications at Dorchester and Castle Ishnicl. Tn the first winter of the war occurred the Seige of Boston. A number of the boats of the enemy were then in the harbor, whose waters roared at the end of many of the streets of Boston. That the foe might not make a contemplated landing at Dorchester, a village adjoining this city, the Americans decided to make a fortification there. So one night early in March they sent a force whose van- ^;uard numbered eight hundred men with tools and carts to the high- lands overlooking Dorchester Bay. These men, many of wdiom were Negroes, among them being Primus Hall and James Easton. of Bridgewater. under the direction of Putnam, i)iled up apple boughs from the nearby orchards to make hurdles and fascines. On these they set bales of hay. packing them tightly to make them can- non-proof. They had also not far away a collection of barrels of sand and stones which they intended to roll down U])on the enemy should thev come near enough from their ships in the harbor. It was this action that made Gen. Howe's position in Boston untenable. At this period Negroes also aided in throwing up fortifications at Castle Island, another point in the Boston Harbor. MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 3I « Separate Companies of Negroes. In the spring of the same year Thomas Kench. then an officer in the regiment of artillery, stationed at Castle Island, wished to raise an^ have command of a body of two or three hundred colored men, "Sergeants, corporals, drummers and hfers," as he said, "all to be of the same race." These men were to be set free at the end of their services. Concerning the matter, he addressed the following letter to the General Assembly : \ _ "* * * And what I refer to is Negroes. We have divers of them in our service, mixed with white men. But I think it would be more proper to raise a body by them- selves than to have them intermixed with white men, and ■ their ambition would be entirely to outdo the men in every measure that the fortune of war causes a soldier to endure. And I could rely with dependence on them in the field of battle, or to any post that I was sent to defend with them, and they would think themselves happy could they gain their freedom by bearing a part of subduing the enemy that is invading our land and thus secure a peaceful in- heritance. The method that I would point out of raising a detachment of Negroes is that a company should consist of one hundred, including a commissioned officer, and that the ^. ' command should be white and consist of one captain, one captain-lieutenant, two second lieutenants, two orderly sergeants, all white, and three sergeants, four corporals, two drummers and fifers, all black, and eighty-four rank and file. These should engage to serve to the end of the war and then be free men." A committee of both houses of legislature, acting upon this let- ter, advised its adoption. It, however, came about that Kench at no time ever had command of a colored company, and yet one or two companies of this kind were created. Samuel Lawrence, of Groton, had charge of one of these, whose courage, fi'lelity and mil- itary discipline won a high degree of respect for them from their leader. Once while in an engagement he was surrounded by the enemy who was about to capture him. His brave followers, dis- covering his plight, rushed to his rescue and succeeded in saving their leader. For this deed of theirs Lawrence showed special con- sideration to all of the members of their race whom he happened to meet in the future. The County of Barnstable, Massachusetts, furnished a number of black men to serve in the Revolutionary 32 MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY ^ War. These men were of mixed blood, Indian and African. They formed a separate company and all save one lost their lives before the conflict ended. Among them were Francis Wcbsquish, Samuel Moses, Demps Squibbs, Mark Negro, Tom Caesar, Joseph Ashur, James Keeter, Joseph Keeter, Daniel Pockknitz and Joe Rimmon. .There was also another colored company commanded by a man of color by the name of Middleton. He was a noted horse breaker. These men, who called themselves the Bucks of America, rendered such meritorious service that at the close of the war they received a banner. This was presented to them by Gen. Hancock. When on a march to a neighboring town to a collation to which they had been invited they were asked to stop in front of the governor's mansion in Boston,' and that gentleman and his son came out of the house and presented the banner. Their prize is yet in existence. While it was probably a cream-colored silk, it is now of a bufif color. It !<: five feet, three inches long and three and one-half feet wide. In the upper left-hand corner there are thirteen golden stars upon a blue field. In the center is painted a pine tree, under which, in the act of leaping, is a brown buck. Above the tree is a short scroll which bears the initials '*J. G. W. H."* Below it is a long open scroll which stretches very nearly the full length of the design. Upon its blue field the words "Bucks of America" are printed. The flag or banner was undoubtedly painted by hand and is an excellent sample of the artistic handwork done in colonial days. Among the many blacks who fought in ranks with white men were Abel Benson, a farmer's boy of sixteen, who enlisted in Fram- ingham and served three years; Tony Clark, of Billeirica, who en- listed at the age of nineteen and served from 177G to 1788 ; the two Blys, of Rochester, who were likely related, and Bedunah I\Ioses, of Springfield, who took part in the capture of Peekskill, New York, and did extra duty under Gen. Glover. There, too, was Pomp Jackson, liberated for the consideration of five shillings, which he paid to his master himself in June. 1776. He served through the entire war. At its close he settled in Andover, near a pond ever since then called "Pomp's Pond." A black member of Washing- ton's bodyguard from the Bay State was Tobias Gilmore. He en- listed as a private in 177(), in the regiment of Col. George Williams. Gilmore was born an African prince. His native name was Shil bogee Turry-Werry. He was sold on the auction block at Newport as a slave to Capt. Gilmore, of Taunton, from whose home he en- tered the war as a substitute in order to secure his freedom. On *Hancock's initials. MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN 'HISTORY 33 his discharge from the army, as a reward for faithful service, he re- ceived a section of land and a cannon. Each Independence Day it was Tobias' custom to take the cannon to the Taunton Green and fire once for each of the thirteen original states and o.ice for "Massa Washington." He put an end to his patriotic demonstrations only when a man's arm was shot off. He then said he "guessed he'd better stop," and presented the gun to the historical society, whose property it is today.* In their museum may be seen also a liberty cap and a blue coat trimmed with buff. These articles are a part of the uniform worn by Tobias Gilmore in the Revolutionary War. On the red cap are the words, "Federalism and Liberty," inscribed in white letters on a blue ground. Vermont. Slavery as an institution never reached any importance in Ver- mont, for by the census of 1790 there were only seventeen bond men in this state. Here, as elsewhere, however, early in, the Revo- lutionary struggle black men were set free that they might enlist and were given a certificate of manumission by their masters, who in turn received the bounty money paid for them by the state. Nkw Hampshire. While the number of Negroes residing in the state of New Hampshire was always very small, many of those who were there were called upon to do duty in the time of the War for American Independence. By an act passed early in the history of the conflict black men entered the ranks of the colonial army. Among these were Jude Hall, born in Exeter. He served eight years in all, and tought in a great number of battles, beginning with that on Bunker Hill. Until the day of his death he was known as "Old Rock." Lemuel Haines was another native of this state who enrolled as a Minute Man as early as 1774, when preparations for the war to come were just beginning to go forward. He was at the Battle of Lexington and later became a volunteer in the ranks of the regu- lars. He took part in the expedition to Ticonderoga against Bur- goyne in 1777. He remained in the service until the war ended. There, too, was Boston Pickering, who enlisted as a lad of twenty in the first regiment of militia of New Hampshire. *1918. ^ r 34 missing pages in american history Rhod]]; Ist.and. The Battle of Port Mercer or Red Bank. In 1777. after the Battle of Braiidywine, the British planned to clear out the forts, fortifications and flotilla placed on the Delaware River by the Americans. This thing they very mucli desired to do in the hope of establishing communications between their fleets and that part of their army occupying Philadelphia. To this end they decided to storm Fort Mifflin and Fort Mercer, both located in New Jersey. The latter was on the side of the river at what is now the town of Red Bank, and was rather important because it protected the stream. At this time two Rhode Island regiments under Col. Greene and belonging to that part of the army supervised bv Gen. \'arnum, were stationed at this place. On October twenty-first Count Donup, with four batalions of Hessians, crossed the Dela- ware at Cooper's Ferry and marched to Fort Mercer. On the way they met an old Negro called "Old Mitch," whom they tried to se- cure as a guide to the American stronghold, but in this they were unsuccessful. They came upon the place, however, on the morning of the twenty-second. It was defended by four hundred and twenty men. A Hessian oifficer approached the fort and oi'dered its surren- der in the name of the English king. Col. Greene refused to obey and his refusal was reported to Dunop. The attack upon the forti- fication began that afternoon. The Americans left the north side of the fort late in the day. When this fact was discovered by the enemy they rushed triumphantly into the place under the impres- sion that the former had deserted it. Just as they were about to i:'lace their flag upon the merlon* of the ramparts they were sur- lirised by a shower of grape shot and musket balls from the em- brasures which annihilated them. Another division, under Col. Dunop himself, received the same sort of treatment on the south side of Fort Mercer, thereby suffering a terrible loss through the rapid fire of the Americans. The commander was left upon the field mortally wounded. A large number of the men with Col. Greene at this time were either blacks or mulattos, who by tliis bat- tle helped to bring to a close the efiforts of the British to approach any further inlaml against Washington before the beginning of the winter. This was very fortunate, for the American armv was at that time undergoing many hardships. During the bombardment "Old Mitch" lay hidden in a pile of straw not far away from the fort. *A battlement. MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 35 Sepat-ate Rhode IsUtitd Regiments;. ' " : Tn of (Jet- to raise- her requi'fed quota it came about the next year (1778) that Rhode Tslaud. at the request of Gen. Vainum, formed •a battalion composed entirely of Negroes. These men numbered some three hundred black and mulatto slaves. The legislative act calling them into service provided that these soldiers should enjoy all the compensation given to white soldiers, that they should serve through the war, and that their masters should be relieved of all future responsibility for their support should they be disabled or live to advanced age. The state, in either of these cases, was to assume their care.' It also arranged for their appraisement and for ti compensation which their masters were- to receive upon their en- tering the army. This battalion distinguished itself more than once, but it attained its crowning glory in the Battle of Rhode Island, fought on hills and in dales around Providence and Newport. It was on a hot summer day in August, 1778, that they went into this battle. The English were assisted by their famous hired soldiers^ the Hessians. These were a body of Germans from Hesse Cassel, Germany. These men were very brave and very fierce fighters. At one point they charged down the hill with such force as to almost varry the redoubt. It was in repelling these furious onsets that the Jiewiv raised regiments under Col. Greene distinguished themselves by deeds of desperate valor. "They three times drove back the Hessians, and so determined were they in these successive charges that the day after the battle the Hessian colonel upon, whom that duty devolved applied to exchange his command and go to New York because he dared not again lead his regiment lest his men should kill him for having occasioned them so grave a loss." Lafay- ette called this the best-fought action of the war. The slaughter was terrible. The British lost thirteen hundred, the Americans two hundred and eleven men. This engagement enabled the Americans \o leave the island, not a bit too soon, for early the next morning the English were reinforced by a large fleet commanded bv Sir Henry Clinton. A part of the Rhode Island Negro battalion came in prominently for heroism on May 14, 1781, at Font's Bridge, on the Croton River, in the state of New York. Here some of these men defended their beloved Col. Greene so well that it was only ever their dead bodies that the enemy reached and murderd him. In February. 1783, some of them went with a body of New York troops, under Col. Willett, to attack a British trading point on Lake Omtario Through the treacherv or ignorance of an Indian this c.Tndertaking was unsuccessful, these men had a very good appear- ^;i?ce. It is said that they did not receive their promised bounty 3^ MISSING PAGES INj AMERICAN HISTORY money, but were told to accept their freedom instead of it. They did not secure the allowance due them such as was given to white sol- diers, but were deprived of their wages by means of forged orders. Among them were Scipio Brown, Thomas Brown, Prince Vaughan, Sampson Hazard, Guy Watson, Richard Rhodes, Henry laber. Cuff Green, Thomas Rhodes, Blato Green, Prince Green, Prince Jenks, Reubin Roberts, Philo Phillips, Caesar Powers, York Chap- Jin, Ichabod Northrup, Richard Cousins (hfer). The Capture of Gen. Prescott. In connection with the services of colored men of Rhode Island must be given the story of Prince Whipple, or Jack Sissons, as he is sometimes called. Several diaries of the Revolution prove be- yond a doubt that this black man helped to capture the English gen- eral, Prescott, July t), 1777. It happened that some time before this date Gen. Lee liad been ordered to bring his detachment of the army into the immediate vicinity of Philadelphia. This he had failed to do and had established his headquarters in the mountains of New Jersey at Basken Ridge, about twenty miles from a British camp. Peeling that he was so far away from the enemy that he needed to use no precautions for his safety, he retained only a small body- guard near him, while the main body of his troops were in camp several miles away. The British learned of this fact through Tories/-and overcoming his sentinels Gen. Ilarcourt easily brought about Lee's arrest and conducted him, a prisoner, to British 'head- ■ quarters in New York, where he was closely confined. The military skill of this American officer was so highly esteemed by his country- men that his capture caused the greatest consternation and regret among them, and they greatly desn-ed his release. In order to se- cure this it was planned to take a man of equal rank from the foe, that Lee might be sfet free through an exchange of prisoners. To this end Lieut. Barton designed the seizure of Gen. Prescott, who had charge of the British forces on Rhode Island. He had landed 5. large number of troops at Newport in December, 1776, that they might be retained there to operate against the New England States. Finding out through a deserter from the British ranks the exact location of the English general, Barton, accompanied by fortv men, one at least of whom was a Negro, started on his expedition. The Americans landed within five miles of the place, and when near the residence of a Quaker, with whom the general was staying, Barton, with Prince Whipple and a few others of his men, proceeded to the house, having left his main party in concealment. The sentmel at the door challenged him, but after a short parley he was overpow- MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 37 ered and ordered, upon pain of death, to. he silent. The rest of the men answering to an expected given signal, then surrounded the dwelling. The Negro, with two strokes of his head, forced an entry into the house, and the landlord then came upon the scene" Ques- tioned as to the whereabouts of Prescott, he refused to give any in- formation concerning the Englishman, but when threatened with death he pointed to the door of the officer's room. This was at once opened by Prince Whipple through the same process that he had used upon the front door. The general was then informed that he was a prisoner and he surrendered without resistance to the Amer- icans. Through his capture Lee was released. Jack Sisson, or Prince Whipple, who certainly helped to bring this event to pass, was a slave, the property of Gen. Whipple, of the American army! He was born in Africa, was kidnapped and sold in Baltimore. It is his likeness that is often seen in old paintings of Washington cross- ing the Delaware. ) CONNi;CTlCUT. Many Connecticut Negroes entered the army during the War of the Revolution. Long after the struggle was over almost every white family had its tradition of a slave or a servant who had either been killed in some battle, or who, having served through the war, had come home to tell stories of hard fighting and to he pensioned. A number of these men were enlisted as substitutes in place of their masters. The recruiting officer lost little time inquiring if his recruits were white or black, and he did not question their legal status if they were able-bodied. Alost of these men were placed in the ranks with white men, but in the year 1777 the advisability of raising companies of colored troops was discussed in the General Assembly of this state, and a committee was appointed to consider the matter. The result of the deliberation of this body was a recom- mendation that Negro and mulatto slaves whose masters were to be paid the sum of their appraisement, and who themselves upon en- listing would become free, should be formed into a separate com- pany. Following this a company of fifty-six men was organized in this state. They were commanded by Col. Humphrey, who vol- unteered to do so after many other officers, upon request, bad re- fused to take charge of them. They were in Butler's regiment, in that division of the army over which Maj. Laurens had charge. "They conducted themselves with fidelity and efficiency through the war." Their names are as follows: Jack Arabus, Ned Fields, Louis Martin, Peter Mix, Prince jGecrge, Shugael Johnson, Dick Violet, Gamaliel Bagden, Ned Free- I 3^ MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY dom, Congo Zado, Pomp Liberty, Sharp Rogers, Cuff Freeman, Andrew Jack, Peter Lyon, Daniel Bradley, Sharp Camp, Solomon Sowtice, Pomp Cyrus, John Cleveland, Phineas Strong, Juba Free- man, Philo Freeman, Prince Crosbee, Jack Little, Alex Judd, Leut Munson, Ezekiel Tupham, Peter Gibbs, Cuff Liberty, Job Caesar, Juba Dyer, Peter Morando, Samson Cuff, Dick Freeman, Joe Otis, Cato Wilbrow, Pomp Freeman, Hector Williams, Isaac Higgins, Caesar Chapman, Cato Robinson, Tim Caesar, Bill Soweis, Caesar Bagden, Herman Rogers, Tom Freeman, Prince Johnson, Harry AVilliams, John Rogers, John Ball, John McLean, Jesse Vose, Pomp McCuff, James Dinah, Brewster Baker. While it is impossible to know the exact number, some hundreds of dark men enlisted in this state in mixed companies, among these were Sambo Lathon, or Lambert, and Jordan Freeman, both of whom fought with the bravest at Groton after the Americans had been forced to retreat to that place from New London. In Septem- ber, 1778, after a terrible engagement at Fort Griswold, on the heights of Groton, the fortification was surrendered by Col. Led- yard, the commander in charge. The English officer who took the fort committed the unwarrantable atrocity of stabbing him. It was Lathon who quickly avenged this unusual act by running his bayonet through the Briton. For this deed he received thirty thrusts from the enemy's bayonets. On the same occasion Jordan Freeman re- ceived the victorious Maj. Montgomery on his pike as the latter was lifted over the wall of the fortress. I\Iany slaves, who entered the conflict under a promise of freedom, had to petition the Connecticut Legislature for the same after it was over. Nineteen of them were not pensioned until the year 1818. t)ne of these was Prime Babcock, who held a discharge in the hand- writing of Washington. New York. Battle of Stony Point. There were many desirable places for fortificatiotis on the Plud^ son River. One of these was at Stony Point, on the west side of the stream, on a great highway connecting the Middle and the New England States. Nature had protected this point on three sides by the river and on the fourth by a swamp which could be crossed at low tide by a causeway. The Americans had lost a stronghold here in 1777, and they were very desirous of regaining it. Gen. Anthony Wayne was appointed by Washington for this exploit. Learning that Pom"J)ey Lamb, a Negro living on a nearby farm, visited the MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN ttlSTORV 39 fort regularly to sell fresh vegetables and berries, >Vayne decided to employ him as a spy. Contact with this slave had very mil'ch pleased the English officers. This was due to his low, prices, as well as to his engaging manner, and this doubtless facilitated his efforts to closely observe the plan of the fortification. At first he made only daytime trips, but acting upon the instruction of the officer who had employed him and that of his master, Cairt. Lamb, he told the Brit- ish that as he hereafter had to hoe corn he could no longer come in tlie day, but would serve them at night if given a pass. Unwilling to lose his fresh vegetables, the English gave him their countersign, "The fort is our own," that he might pass the guards at any lime he v.'as able to come. On the night of July loth, having killed all the dogs in the neigh- borhood that their bark might not arouse suspicion, the Amer- icans made an Attack upon the fort. First came Ponipey, carrying his fruit and vegetables, accompanied by two soldieis disguised as farmers. He engaged the first sentinel he met in conversation, giv- ing him some fruit meanwhile. The disguised soldiers seized and gagged this man, and soon after a second sentinel was similarly treated. By this means the causeway was left unprotected, and Anthony Wayne and the rest of his men, hidden not far away, were enabled to make an entry into the fortification. So silently did they ascend the cliff that their presence was not known until the\ were within pistol range of the guards on the highland. Here a skirmish occurred which awoke the entire fort. The Americans forced their way in amidst a terrible fire. At the close of the battle the garrison of six hundred men was sui»rendered by Capt. de Fleurry. For his deed Pompey received a horse from his master and was never required by him to work again. In the ranks of the Americans at this time were several Negroes, one of whom was "Father Stanup." He was wounded and left on the field for dead. He, however, re- covered, and died many years later, near Urbana, in Champagne County, Ohio. Peter Salem, of Bunker Hill, was also in this battle. On March 20, 1781, the legislature of New York passed an act worded as follows : "Sec. 6. And be it further enacted by the authority of the aforesaid that any person who shall deliver one or mo'-e of his or her ablebodied slaves to any one in office, as afore- said, to serve in either of the said regiments, or independent corps, and produce a certificate thereof signed by any per- sons authorized to muster and receive the men to be raised by this act and produce such certificate to the Surveyor Gen- eral, shall for every male slave so mustered and entered, as aforesaid, be entitled to the location and grant of one right 4° MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY in manner as by and in this act is directed shall be and here- by is disclmrged from any further maintenance of such slave, any law to the contrary notwithstanding. And such slave so entered as aforesaid, who shall serve for the term of three years, or until regularly discharged, shall imme- diately after such service or discharge be and is hereby declared to be a free man of this state." This statute provided for the raising of two Separate regiments of men of color from the empire state. How many entered the army through its enactment it seems impossible to tell, yet at the same, time it is obvious that black men in goodly numbers served their country here as elsewhere. The name of "Negro Tom" appears as early as March 18, 1776, on the rolls of the Orangetown, New York, regiment, as a drum- mer in the company of Capt. Egbert. Phillip Field is m.entioned as having enlisted April 15, 1777, in the vSecond New York Regi- ment. This man was a slave, of Duchess County, New York. He died in Valley Forge. August, 1778. These facts prove indisputably that black men of New York entered the American army at the very earliest period of the strife. This is not at all surprising when it is recalled that on July 21, 1776, the English were repo-ted to have collected in their ranks on Staten Island alone, eight hundred slaves, the property of American masters. These men had gone over to assist the enemy with the promise of receiving their freedoin. To prevent any more of this, as well as to strengthen their own forces, the Americans early saw the necessity of enlisting the blacks in this state. Many Negroes fell in the Battle of Long Island. This engage- ment occurred in August, 1776. It was an effort made by the Brit- ish to take the fortifications situated on Brooklyn Heights with the hope of finally securing New York City. To this end they landed a force of twenty thousand men, English and Hessians, the latter under Gen. De Heister, at Sandy Hook and at Gravesend Cove, the last-named place near the present site of Fort Hamilton. The foe advanced through four passes upon the American position, which was held by a force of some ten thousand men. A fierce fight oc- curred on the road to Flatbush, in which a part of the colonial army was badly crippled. Later all of the American forces were forced to join in a midnight flight across the river to New York. MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 41 Biirgoy lie's Surrender. \ Gen. Burgoyne planned to seize Albany in the early fall of 17?7, boasting that he would eat his Christmas dinner in that city. It was his hope to make a junction with the forces of Great Britain, stationed in various parts of this section, by forcing his way, to the Hudson River from Upper New York. Toward the accomplish- ment of this effort he was successful in capturing Crown Point and the artillery at Ticonderoga that Gen. Sinclair was t'"ying to move. He was able also to force the Americans to leave the latter place. Reaching Fort Edward, a point on the Hudson, he sent a force of Hessians into Vermont to capture some military stores and horses there belonging to the colonials. The result of this expedition was the Battle of Bennington, fought by the Americans under Stark, which resulted in a complete defeat for the enemy. Seven hundred of the men were taken prisoners. When Stark asked for a rope to secure some of these, a Mrs. Robinson, of whom he made the re- quest, said she would give the last one belonging to her bedstead if her Negro slave might harness up her old mare and lead the British, Hessian and Tory captives away. The general acquiesced, and a black man led a part of the left wing of Burgoyne's army over the state line down the road leading to Boston. Burgoyne led his re- maining forces to Stillwater, New York, a Hudson River village, near which place, on Bemis Heights, on September 19th, he was hotly attacked by white and by black Americans. At the close of this battle he was forced to surrender. A Negro who aided in bringing about this result was Ebenezer Hills, born a slave in Con- necticut. This man was also at the Battle of Saratoga, and died at an advanced age in Vienna, New York. ^ . New Jersey. It is probable that black men of New Jersey went into the con- flict at the very first call to arms, for when facilitated by the partmg of the ice at McConkey's Ferry Washington crossed the Delaware on that memorable Christmas night, the "mulatto" Oliver Cromwell was there, with others of his race, to take part in the Battle of Tren- ton on the next day. This battle resulted in a victory 'for the con- tinentals, who took about a thousand prisoners from the foe. When describing it Cromwell often said,' "We knocked the British about quite lively." This man was a farmer. He enlisted in the company of Capt. Loney, Second Regiment, New Jersey, under Col. Israel Shreeve. He remained in the army until the war was over, serving ^i 42 MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY in all about six years and nine months, and receiving a discharge in Washington's own handwriting. He was also in the Battles of Rrandywine and of Monmouth. At the end of the war he became a pensioner, receiving ninety-six dollars a year. In many old paint- ings of the famous passage across the Delaware may be seen the likeness of a Negro near the commander-in-chief in the fore of the boat. The original was Prince Whipple, an African chief, who had Been sent to America by his father to be educated, but who had been sold instead as a slave in Baltimore to Gen. Whipple by the very captain on whose ship he sailed from his native home. He entered the war with his master, but was emancipated before its close. The Battles of Brandytvine and Monmouth. All of the cities on the Atlantic coast were in turn viewed with covetous eyes by the British. They desired very greatly to capture Philadelphia and fought several battles to this end. Among them was one known as the Battle of Brandywine, which occurred Sep- tember 11, 1777, on the steep banks of a stream bearmg that name. The black men, Brazaillai Lew and Sanford Talbert, were in this engagement. The Battle of Monmouth. The Battle of Monmouth was another contest fought to prevent the British from seizing the City of Brotherly Love. This engage- ment took place when the English, under Gen. Clinton, on their way t(. New York, met the Americans near the village of Monmouth, on Wrennock Creek, June 28, 1778. It appeared in the early part of the fight that the enemy would be victorious, for much apathy was manifested on the part of the Americans, due, it is said, to the treachery of one of Washington's aides. At any rate, whether this be true or not, the commander-in-chief, after seeing many of his colonels passing in swift retreat from the onslaught of their oppo- nents, was forced to conduct the rally in person, and affairs then took a turn in favor of the colonists. In this engagement, and to v/hom much of its success was due, were over seven hundred black men, standing side by side with the other Americans. They belonged not only to New Jersey but to several other sections of the country, as a glance at the army return, made public a few months later, will show : Present. Sick-Absent. On Command. Total. 43 10 6 58 36 3 1 40 64 ' 26 8 98 20 ' 3 1 24 DC 15 2 60 2' [- — ■ 2 33 1 1 35 33 2 4 39 117 -12 19 148 56 2 4 62 2t3 1 27 64 13 12 89 34 4 8 46 16 7 4 27 MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 43 RETURN OF NEGROES IN THE ARMY, 24th AUG., 1778. Brigades. North Carolina Woodford Muhlenburg Smallwood 2nd Maryland Wayne 2nd Maryland Clinton Parsons Huntington Nixon Patterson Late Learned Poor 586 98 71 755 Alexander Scannnel, Adjutant General. One of these men was Samuel Charlton, a native of New Jersey. He entered the service as a substitute for his master. At first he 'was only a teamster, but in this engagement he gave artillery serv- ice, and stood very near the famous Molly Pitcher when she took her wounded husband's place at the cannon. Charlton's conduct brought him personal notice from \\^ashington. He was in several other battles in this state. New Jersey seems to have offered no resistance to the entrance of her men of color into the army. The master's consent was nec- essary before a slave could enlist, it is true, but only that the for- mer might not be deprived of the services of his bondman without the equivalent in money. In 1784 the legislature of this state set free all slaves who had taken part in the American Revolution, lib- erating also those doing war service belonging to Tory masters. Among these were Peter Williams, who w^as taken by his master into the British lines. He escaped and served a while with the state troops. Later he entered the ranks of the continental army, where he remained until the war was over. Cato , of the same town, became free under like conditions. He was liberated by a special act passed in 1789, which declared he had rendered "essential serv- ice, both to the state and to the United States in time of war." Be- 44 MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY side these there was Prime , of Princeton. He was emanci- pated because "He was entitled to special notice from the legisla- ture" for reasons similar to those which gave Cato his liberty. PSNNSVLVANIA. As early ks 1777, and perhaps sooner, Negroes of Pennsylvania had enlisted in the struggle which freed the colonists from the rule of Great Britain. In that year there were thirty-three blacks in the 2nd Regiment of Pennsylvania under Washington just after the famous Battle of Monmouth, and state records prove conclusively that all during the early period of the war bond servants, as slaves were here called, were enlisted even without their masters' consent, although this was against the law. Freemen, without a doubt, were taken into the army to aid the colonials during the entire period of the war. Maryland. - '' Maryland was not unlike her sister colonies in calling upon Negroes to aid her in the struggle for independence. A field return of Negroes in the main army in August, 1778, shows that at that time there were sixty blacks in the Second Maryland Brigade. By an act passed in 1780 all males previously exempted (Negroes) werii made liable to draft, and all able-bodied slaves were recruited, with their own or their masters' consent. The following year, when only a part of a certain quota called for months before had been raised, two extra battalions were ordered added to the army by the enlist- ment of free blacks (of whom there were not a few m this state), as well as others, over the age of sixteen, if idle or without means of support or family. This same year (1781) the legislature voted on the motion of John Calwalader in order to raise two regiments of a grant of unappropriated land be given every slave holder for each able-bodied slave that he or she enlisted. This act relieved the mas- ter from further responsibility for the black who was to be free at the end of three years' service unless regularly discharged before then. These men were to be incorporated with the rest of the army and some of them were doubtless at the Battle of Camden. It was in this engagement, occurring in South Carolina in 1780, that the JMaryland and Delaware troops displayed much valor, althovigh the enemy won the day. Baron De Kalb was mortally wounded at this time. Among these men of Maryland was Thomas Holland, a MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 45 . Negro, of Dorset County. He and his uncle served together jn the war and they were attached to the regiment of Col. Charles Gold- berg. Virginia. Almost at the very beginning of the Revolutionary War Lord Dunmore, the Royalist Governor of Virginia, issued a proclamation in which he invited slaves to enter the ministerial army. Very many responded to his call. These people were inspired to leave their mas- ters by the hope of receiving their freedom, which was promised them by the English. The enlistment of Negroes in the ranks of the Tories caused great concern in the minds of the Federalists who, in their turn, made an apeal to them to stand by their true friends. This appeal was printed in a newspaper of Williamsburg, Virginia, on November 23, in the year 177G, and read : "CAUTION TO NEGROES." "The second class of people for whose sake a few remarks upon this proclamation seem necessary is the Negroes. They have been flattered with their freedom if they be able to bear arms and will speedily join Lord Dunmore's troops. To none of them is freedom promised but to such as are able to do Lord Dunmore's service. The aged, the infirm, the women, the children are still to remain the property of their masters, who will be provoked to severity should part of their slaves desert them. Lord Dunmore's declaration, then, is a cruel declaration to the Negroes. He does not pretend to make it out of any tenderness to them, but solely on his own account, and should it meet with success it leaves by far the greater number at the mercy of an enraged and injured people. But should there be any among the Negroes weak enough to believe that Lord Dunmore intends to do them a kindness and wicked enough to provoke the fury of the Americans against their defenseless fathers and moth- ers, their wives, their w^omen, and their children, let them only con- sider the difiiculty of effecting their escape and what they must ex- pect to suffer if they fall into the hands of the Americans. Let them consider further what must be their fate if the English prove conquerors, li we can judge the future from the past it will not be much mended. Long have the Americans, moved by compassion and actuated by sound policy, endeavored to stop the progress of slavery. Our assemblies have repeatedly passed acts laying heavy duties upon importing Negroes, by which they meant altoge'ilTer to prevent the horrid traffic. But their humane intentions have been 46 MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY as often frustrated by the cruelty and covetousness of a set ot:' Eng- lish nierchants who prevailed upon the king to repeal our kind and merciful act, little, indeed, to his credit or humanity. Can it be supposed that the Negroes will be better used by the English, who have always encouraged and upheld this slavery, than by their pres- ent masters who pity their condition, who wish in general to make il as easy and comfortable as possible, and who would, were it in their power, or were they permitted, not only prevent any more Negroes from losing their freedom but restore i-t to such as have lost it already? No, the ends of Lord Dunmore and his party being answered, they would either give up the offending Negroes to the rigor of the law they have broken or sell them in the West Indies, where every year they sell many thousands of their miserable brethren, to perish either by the inclemency of the weather or through the cruelty of barbarous masters. Be not then, ye Negroes, tempted by this proclamation to ruin yourselves. I have given you a faithful view of what you are to expect, and declare before God in doing it I have considered your welfare as well as that of the country. Whether you will profit by my advice I cannot tell, but this I know, that whether we suff"er or not, if you desert us you cer- tainly will." For a time many slaves entered the British ranks, in spite of the warning at the end of this appeal. A number of them "acquitted themselves like soldiers" in the Battle of Kemp's Landing, in the fall of 1776. Indeed, so great was their desertion of their masters that the latter saw fit to offer pardon to all who w^ould return to them within ten days, in the following terms : "Whereas, I^ord Dunmore. by his proclamation dated on board the ship William, off Norfolk, the seventh day of November, 1776, / liath offered freedom to such able-bodied slaves as are wiliing to join him and take up arms against the good people of this colony, giving thereby encouragement to a general insurrection which may induce the necessity of inflicting the severest punishment upon these unhappy people, already deluded by his base and insiduous arts, and whereas, by an act of the General Assembly, now in force in this colony, it is enacted that all Negro or other slaves conspiring to rebel or make insurrection shall suffer death and be excluded oi, all benefit of clergy, we think it proper to declare that all slaves whoi have been or shall be seduced by his lordship's proclamation or other arts to desert their masters' service and take up arms against the in- habitants of this colony, shall be lialole to such punishment as shall hereafter be directed bv general convention. And to that; end, that, all such who have taken this unlawful and wicked step may return in safety to their duty and escape the punishment due their crimes, MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 47 we hereby promise pardon to them, they surrenderhig themselves to Col. William Woodward or any other commander of our- troops, and not appearing in arms after the publication hereof. And we do fur- ther recommend it to all humane and benevolent persons in this colony to explain and make known this, our offer of mercy to those unfortunate people." Shortly after this the exodus into the ranks of the English began to decrease, for it developed that many of the blacks, instead of being used as soldiers, were being sold into slavery in the West Indies by the British. Many free Negroes entered the ranks of the Colonial Army be- fore 1777. Slaves also went in as substitutes, and so many ran away and pretended to be free, that they might enlist, that in this year an act was passed by which all Negroes were compelled to show cer- tificates of freedom before being taken into the army. A little later those who were above the age of thirty-one, even though bondmen, were regularly enlisted. A number of free mulattoes served as drummers and fifers, and as time went on many slaves were offered by their masters as substitutes. For the reward of such men as were known to be slaves at the time of their mustering into the service, an act was passed in 1783 giving them their freedom, and manumission was extended even to those who had received only verbal promises of freedom from thei*- owners if serving as substitutes for the same. The act providing for this emergency reads in this manner : "1st. Whereas, it. has been represented to the General Assembly that during the course of the war many persons in this state have caused their slaves to enlist in certain regiments or corps raised witbin the same, having tendered such slaves to the officers ap- pointed to recruit forces within the state as substitutes for free per- sons whose lot or duty it was to serve in such regiments or corps, at the same time representing to such recruiting officers that the slaves so enlisted by their direction and concurrence were free men ; and it appearing further to this assemply that on the expiration of the term of enlistment of such slaves that the former owners have attempted again to force them to return to a state of servitude, con - t^ary to the principles of justice and to their own solemn ptomise: "2nd. And. whereas", it appears just and reasonable that all persons so enlisted, as aforesaid, who have faithfully served agree- able to the terms of enlistment and have thereby, of course, con- tributed toward the establishment of American liberty and independ- ence, should enjoy the blessings of freedom as a reward fo-- their toils and labors; / 48 '• MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY "Be it therefore enacted, that-each and every slave who by the ap- pointment and direction of his master hath enHsted in any rcgimqnt or corps raised within this state, either on continental or state estab- lishment, and hath been received as a substitute for any free person, whose duty or lot it was to serve in such regiments or corps, and who have served faithfully during the term of such enlistment or hath been discharged from such service by some officer duly ruthor- ized to grant such discharge, shall from and after the passing of this act be fully and completely emancipated, shall be held and deemed flee in as full and as ample a manner as if each and every one of them had been named in this act. And the Attorney General for the Comnpnwealth is hereby authorized to commence an action in forma pauperis in behalf of any person above described, who shall after the passing of this act be detained in servitude by any ]3erson whatsoever, and if, upon such prosecution, it shall appear that the pauper is entitled to his freedom, in consequence of this act. a jury shall be empanelled to assess the damages for his detention.'' After the clQse of the war slaves rendering public service were often set free by special laws for such cases, as the following pas- sage indicates : "3. And whereas it has been represented to this General Assem- bly that Aberdeen, a Negro slave, hath labored a number t f years in the lead mines, and for his meritorious services is entitled to free- dom, be it therefore enacted that the said slave Abeideen shall be, and is hereby emancipated and declared free, in all full and ample a manner as if he had been born free." For Negroes who had served as spies in the camps of Great Brit- ain the following statute was passed in October, 178G : "1st. Whereas, it is represented that James, a Negro slave, the propertv of William Armstead, gentleman of the County of ^New Kent, did, with the permission of his master, in the year one thou- sand seven hundred eighty-one, enter into the service of the Marquis de Lafayette, and at the peril of his' life found means to frequent the British camp, and thereby faithfully executed important com- missions entrusted to him by the marquis, and the said James hath made application to this assembly to set him free and to make his said master adequate compensation for his value, which is judged reasonable and right to do; "2nd. Be it therefore enacted that the said James shall from and after the passing of this act enjoy as full freedom as if he had been born iree, any law to the contrary notwithstanding. MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 49 "3rd. And be it further enacted that the executive shall, as soon as may be, appoint a proper person, and the said William Armstead another, who shall ascertain and fix the value of the said Tames, and to certify such valuation to the auditor of accounts, who shall issue his warrant to the treasurer for the same, to be paid out of the general fund." For the benefit of another black man it was decreed in Novem- ber, 1792, that: "1st. In consideration of many very essential services rendered to this Commonwealth during the late war by a certain Negro named Saul, now the property of George Kelley, of Norfolk ; ^ "Section 3. Be it enacted by the General Assembly that the execu- tive shall forthwith, or as soon as may be, appoint one fit person and George Kelley, owner of the said slave, one other person, who shall jointly ascertain and fix the value of said slave and certify such valuation to the auditor of public accounts, who shall there- upon issue to said George Kelley a warrant for the amount, payable cut of the contingent fund. "Section 3. And be it further enacted that from and after the said valuation the said Saul shall have and enjoy full liberty and freedom in like manner as if he had been born free. "Section 4. This act shall commence and be in force from and after the passing thereof." In October, 1789, manumission was extended to two Negro sailors of the revolution in this manner : "Whereas, Jack Knight and William Boush. two Negro slaves be- longing to the Commonwealth, have faithfully served on board the armed vessels thereof for some years past, and said armed vessels are no longer continued on public establishment; "Be it enacted by the General Assembly, that the said Jack Knight and W'illiam Boush are hereby manumitted, set free and discharged from servitude, to all intents and purposes, saving, however, that all persons and bodies politic and corporate, other than those claiming under the Commonwealth all legal or equitable rights, which they might have asserted to the said slaves, if this act had never been made." William Lee, a Virginian, belonging to George Washington, was granted his freedom by his master and offered an annuity, or a life support, as he preferred, for faithful services in the war. Benja- min Morris, the driver of a baggage wagon, so well acquitted him- self that he was set free. Richard Venie served in the army of the^ Americans, enlisting with other slaves under his master's command when given a promise of freedom. He fought in the Battles of 5° MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY Camden. King's Mounta,in and Eutaw Springs, all occurring in the southern campaign, near the close of the war. He was in the serv- ice at the time of Cornwallis' surrender at Yorktown. Not realizing his expectation of being liberated at the close of the struggle, he ran away, but finally received his freedom through an act of the legisla- ture. There was also a Caesar , who, very early in the con- flict, entered the service of his country and piloted some of the armed vessels of his native state. According to the following stat- ute he was set free at public expense : "Whereas, it is represented that Mary Tarrant, in the County of Elizabeth City, hath a Negro named Caesar, who entered very early into the service of his country and continued to pilot the armed vessels of his country during the war, in consideration of which meritorious service it is judged expedient to purchase the freedom of said Caesar ; . "Be it therefore enacted by the General Assembly that the execu- tive shall appoint a proper person to contract with the said Mary Tarrant for said Caesar, and if they should agree, the person so appointed by the executive shall deliver to said Mary Tarrant a cer- tificate expressing such purchase and the sum, and upon producing such certificate to the auditor of accounts he shall issue a warrant for the same to the treasurer, to be paid by him out of the lighthouse fund. "And be it further enacted that from and after the execution of the aforesaid certificate the said Caesar shall be manumitted and set free to all intents and purposes." North Carolina. North Carolina was not unlike the other states at this period in that there were quite a number of free colored people on her soil at the outbreak of the revolution. Persons of this type were required to bear arms and without doubt many of them fought m the struggle for American independence, both in the state and in the continental forces. In the general division of the army under Washington in 1778, there were fifty-eight black men in the North Carolina bri- gade. Between 1777 and 1783 many acts are to be found on the statute books which forbade the enlisting of slaves as substitutes in the army, and yet they entered in this capacity as well as under other conditions. A law of 1778 declares that they were not to be deprived of their freedom, promised as a reward for enlisting, if entering the army either in the service of the United States or in that of North Carolina. Up to 1780 they were evidently received as substitutes, for a law passed in that year orders military men no longer to recruit them as such. MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 51 During the latter part of the war. when the southern campaign was on and food had grown scarce in this state, due partly to the fact that many of the masters of food-bearing vessels were un- acquainted with the rivers running through this section, Negroes served as pilots. Such men were first examined, and if their mas- ters gave bond of good security for them they received a certificate to act as the pilots of vessels running into such ports as Bathtown, "Roanoke. Beaufort and Brunswick. That they did not always receive their liberty for military service without resort to legal aid is made manifest by the following act, passed in 1787: "Whereas. Ned Griffin, late the property of William Kitchin, of Edgecomb County. North Carolina, was promised the full enjoy- ment of his liberty on condition that he, the said Ned Griffin, should faithfully serve as a soldier in the continental lines of this state for and during the term of twelve months, and whereas, the said Grif- fin did faithfully on his part perform the condition and, whereas, it is just and reasonable the said Griffin should receive the reward promised for his service as performed ; "Be it therefore enacted by the General Assembly of the State of North Carolina, and it is hereby enacted by the authority of the same, that the said Ned Griffin, late the property of William Kitchin. shall forever hereafter be, in every respect, declared to be a free man. and he shall be and is hereafter enfranchised and for- ever delivered of the yoke of slavery. Any law, usage or custom to the contrary thereof in any ways notwithstanding." The Edenton Whig, published in IS-tO, gives an account of the death of a colored soldier of the Revolution who died in that vear at one hundred and one years of age. This man, whose name was Jonathan Overton, served under Washington at Yorktown. This "last scene of t'lie struggle for American freedom was located on the York River, in the State of \'irginia. The English, having sur- rounded themselves with fortifications, were in possession of the place. Very early in October the Americans made a furious attack upon them, which was of sufficient degree to force Cornwallis, who was in charge, to send to Clinton, then in New York, for aid. Some time elapsed before this could be secured. During this time the English commander, although advised to do otherwise, remamed behind his Virginia fortification, believing that he could hold out until help came. In this he was verv much mistaken, for the Amer- icans kept up the seige until October 19th, 1781. By this time, hard pressed and uncertain as to the time of arrival of the forces from the north. Cornwallis held out a flag of truce to Washington, and a 52 MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY little later surrendered his army of 'seven thousand men as prisoners, of war to the Amerian leader. It is said that one black patriot who helped to bring about this victory and who was an eye witness to the scene, remarked jocosely that "Cornwallis would be better called Cobwallis in the future, as the Americans had about knocked off all the kernels (colonels)." South Carolina. For the defense and security of the state, South Carolina, in 1775, provided, by a resolution of her General Assembly, for the use of slaves in the army for one year. They might be employed by col- onels of regiments as pioneers, laborers and in any other capacity required. Seven shillings and sixpence were allowed to be paid for the services of each slave while actually employed. A little later a resolution was adopted by the same l)ody which forbade the use of the slave in the war, in any capacity, under any condition. This brought about the emancipation of many Negroes that they might enter' the service, where their conduct was such that they often re- ceived great praise. 71ie Defense of Port Maul trie. Early in 1770 it was decided to fortify Charleston against a prob- able attack from the enemy's guns. Negroes were drilled in ex- tinguishing fires, placing ladders and in meeting other emergencies that would arise were the city to be shelled. They (Negroes) took lead from the roofs of houses and churches and melted it into 'bul- lets that the supply of amnnniition might be increased. x\s the citj' is near the sea it was necessary to place defenses about the harbor by which it is approached. It was therefore decided to erect breast- works on SuUivan'.s Island, in Charleston Harbor. This piece of land is a low, sandy bar on the right of the inlet. At the time of the war it was covered with marshes, thickets and many trees. This point was selected because it had a deeper channel than that made by the other islands in the neighborhood, and because the Britisli ship:: were sure to pass that way if they made an effort to storm the city. A fort put up liere was laid out in four bastiles. A fascine battery was also erected. Most of this work was done by Negroes, a large force being called in from the outlying plantations. Under tJie^ di- rection oj Col. Moultrie "these men ably assisted the whites." They dovetailecl the spongy palmetto, whose bullet resisting power is so well known, into a number of pens, connected with each other. >4 MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 53 These were filled with sand, making a parapet sixteen feet thick and h.igh enough to shiekl the defenders and their guns. By April 36 one hundred guns were in opei-ation. On May 31st the expected British fleet, after having made sev- eral unsuccessful attacks off the coast of Virginia and North Caro- lina, appeared twenty miles off the mouth of the Ashley River. This was followed by some weeks of extra preparation on tlie part of the Charlestonians. The defenses were attacked on the fifteen of June, at which time a division of Clinton's force opened fire upon the fort, where the Negroes were still at work even when the action began. In the city the blacks, who had been previously trained, took charge of the fire apparatus. So furious was the assault of the Americans that at no time were Clinton's men able to land upon Sullivan or Fort Moultrie, as the point was afterward called. An advance guard of some eight hundred men of both races defended the island at its lower extremity, while there was a force of four hundred and thirty-five in the fort. It was Clinton's plan to proceed to Charles- ton from this point, but neither the first nor the second division of the British fleet ever effected a landing. Badly crippled, they sailed away up the coast toward New York, where a large force of George III was concentrating. This victory brought security to South Car- olina and to Georgia for the next three years. "Much of it, if not most of it, was due the efiforts of Negroes." An effort to Raise a Large Body of Negro Troops. In March, 1779, Henry Laurens, of this state, wrote the following letter to Washington on the subject of using black men in the army: "Our affairs in the Southern Department are more favorable than we had considered them a few days ago. Nevertheless, the country is greatly distressed and will be more so unless reinforcements are sent to its relief. Had we arms for three thousand j^lack men such as I could select from Carolina, I should have no doubt of success in driving the British out of Georgia and subduing East Florida be- fore the end of July." This was a request for the raising of a large body of Negio sol- diers. Secretary of Treasury Hamilton approved of this plan, saying that he believed "that the Negroes would make excellent sol- diers with proper management." Congress, to whom the matter was referred, considered it of great importance, and appointed a special committee to deliberate upon it. This body recommended that the states of South Carolina and Georgia, if they shall think the same expedient take measures immediately for the raismg of three thou- 54 MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY sand able-bodied Negroes.' These men, Congress further advised, should be formed in a separate corps and battalion according to the arrangements adopted for the main army which 'should be commanded by white commissioned and noncommissioned officers. It was also resolved that Congress should pay to the own- ers of such Negroes as should be enlisted full compensation for the same, not exceeding one thousand dollars, for each able-bodied Negro man of standard size and less than thirty-five years of age. The Negroes were not to receive pay or bounty, but were to be clothed and supported by the United States. Those who served^ well to the end of the war were to return their arms, receive fifty dollars and their emancipation. Col. George Laurens, a son of the man whose request had called forth these resolutions, went home to South Carolina as soon as they were made known, hoping that he might arouse sentiment sufficient to bring about their materialization. Meanwhile Cornwallis,' Clinton and Provost were encouraging the slaves to enter the ministerial ranks with the promise of freedom, and they were responding in no small number.* In 1780 Gen. Lin- *Jefferson said the Americans lost twenty thousand of their slaves to the British. coin also asked that the army of the Continentals be augmented by black men, saying in a letter, "I think the measure of raising a black corps a necessary one. I have great reason to ])elieve if i)ermission is given for it that many men would soon be obtained. I have repeat- edly urged this matter not only because Congress has recommended it and because it becomes my duty to attempt to have it executed, but because my own mind suggests the utility and importance of the measure as the safety of the town (Charleston) makes it necessary." This letter was w^ritten after the reduction of Charleston by the Brit- ish under Clinton. It was in January, 1782, that Gen. Greene wrote the following communication to Washington anent the same matter: "I have rec- ommended to this state to raise some black regiments. To fill up the regiments with whites is impracticable, and to get reinforcements from the northward precarious and at least difficult from the prej- udices respecting the climate. Some are for it, but the greater part of the people are opposed to it." To the governor of South Caro- lina he wrote in part: "The national strength of the country, in point of numbers, it seems to me to consist much more in the blacks than in the whites. Could they be incorporated and employed for its defense it would double your security. That they would make MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 55 good soldiers I have not the least doubt, and I am nersuaded that the state has it not in its power to give sufficient rdnfocfem without mcorporatmg them either to seture the country fe enemy mean to act vigorously upon an offensive plan, or to furn sh a force sufficient to dispossess them at Charleston should it be de- fensive The number of whites in this state is too small, and the ^binM .r"' '^i ^'^J '°''^' ^° '^''^ ^ ^^'"^e '" ^^y other way. .Should the measure be adopted it may prove a good means of pre- venting the enemy from further attempts upon this country when tney find they not only have the whites but the blacks also 'to con- tend with And I believe it is generally agreed that if the national strength of this country could have been emploved in its defense the enemy would have found it a little less impracticable to have gotten a footing here, much more to have overrun the country by which the inhabitants have suffered infinitelv greater loss than would have been sufficient to have given you perfect securitv and I am persuaded the incorporation of a part of- the Negroes ' would rather tend to secure the fidelity of others than excite discontent mutiny and desertion among them. The force I would ask for this purpose, in addition to what we have and what may probably join us from the northward, or from the militia of this state, would be four regiments, two upon the Continental and two upon the state establishment, a corp of pioneers and a corp of artificers, each to consist of about eighty men. The last two may be either on a tem- porary or a permanent establishment, as may be the most agreeable to this state. The others should have their freedom and be clothed and treated in all respects as other soldiers, without which they would be unfit for the duties expected of them."' Despite these requests on the part of military officers for the en- listment of a large force of blacks, and despite the endorsement and approval of the same by such men as Washington. Hamilton and Adams, and although Laurens worked for it most faithfully until the year 1T83, the time of his death, nothing was accomplished along that line. In the legislature of South Carolina it was out-voted and the chief promoter had passed away before it was settled in the Georgia assembly, where he had hoped for a more satisfactory ter- mination of the matter. Thus ended the eft'ort to organize separate bodies of Negro troops in the South. They were, however, attached to the southern army until the end of the struggle, and not a few were spies and drummers. Numbers of them were engaged in building breastworks, driving teams, and piloting the army through dense woods and swamps and across rivers. In 1783 an act was passed in this state enfranchasing the wife and child of a Negro who, 56 MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY wliile"^ in the employ of Gen. Rutledge, had served as a spy. The emancipation of his wife and child were deemed a just and reason- able reward "because he had executed the commissions with which he was entrusted with diligence and fidelity, and had at the risk of his own life frequently secured important information from the enemy's line." Sati Domingo Negroes in the Revolution. In December, 1778, Savannah was captured by a British force of thr^e thousand men under Col. Campbell. Following this Gen. Pro- vost set up a form of government in the State of Georgia with Savannah as its capital. This place was at that time an unpaved village, protected on the north by the Savannah River and exposed on the eastern and the southern sides, wl^re, after destroying all the bridges entering the town, the British had constructed an unbroken line of fortifications upon the broad field that extended from the river to the swamp. It was in October of the year 1779 that the Continentals, aided by their allies, the French, made an efifort to take Savannah out of the hands of the foe. Dividing their forces they made several lines of approach, hoping to weaken the strength of the enemy b> a di- vision of the centers of attention. The rear of the fortifications was attacked by troops under . Gen. Dillon. These men became en- tangled in a morass and were thereby exposed to ihe fire of the British batteries from two strong redoubts. Many of the forces under Gen. Huger became trapped in low-lying rice fields in the neighborhood, while two hundred cavalrymen under Count Pulaski made an unsuccessful' attempt to enter the lines of the enemy be- tween their fortifications. In the confusion which ensued the brave Pole himself received a mortal injury. So steady a fire was kept up from the well-stocked garrison of the English that the main body of the Americans under D'Estaing and Lincoln were forced into re- treat. Into the breach thus made the black men, slave and free, of San Domingo, placed themselves, commanded by Vicount de Front- ages. They numbered about eight hundred blacks and mulattoes, who had responded to the call of D'Estaing to enter the French di- vision of the American army. Rushing into the conflict "they saved the Franco-American army from total disaster by heroically cov- ering its retreat," which had been very nearly cut ofif by the marines and grenadiers under Lieut. Col. Maitland. These forces did not remain in America very long after this en- gagement, but soon a part of the French fleet returned to France MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 57 and the rest to the West Indies. In this brave black battahon were men, some of wliom afterward became heroes in the fight for the hberty of their own native soil Among these were Jean Baptiste Chavanne, who became one of the principals in a slave uprising in Haiti in 1T90. For this he was very cruelly put to death on the road to the La Grande Rivere, opposite the estate of Poisson, in the presence of the northern provincial assemply of Haiti, which convened for the special purpose on Feb- ruary 25, 1791. Another of these soldiers was Andre Riguard, who later refused a bribe of three million francs. This sum was offered him by the English, who were operating in the isle of San Domingo in 1791, and whose military bases had been more than once suc- cessfully stormed by the forces under Riguard. This made him, of course, a very desirable ally, for all through the stormy period that •produced the Negro republic of Haiti he was extremely active. In 1799 he was elected a deputy to their Legislative Assembly. By 1800 he had secured the displeasure of Touissant, who feared him as a rival. For that reason the former fled in a Danish ship to St. Thomas. He reached France, the land for which he had set out, a year later, in the meanwhile having been captured and imprisoned on the Island of St. Christopher by the Americans, who were at that time friendly to the first president of the black republic. He lemained in France for some years. In 1810 he returned to Haiti and with- out bloodshed set up'a government independent of the president's in the southern part of the island. This concession came to an end when he died, in Cayes, on September 17, 1811. Others of the vol- unteers who saved the day at Savannah for the Americans were Beauvais, Martial Besse, Jaurdain. Lambert. Christophe, Morne, Villet, Toureaux, Cange, Leveille, :SIonsieur Belley and Monsieur Beauregard. On' this occasion Beauregard received a severe wound in the hip, which made him a cripple for life. In the engagement he stood near Pulaski and saw him fall. His last days were spent in South Carolina, where he died at an advanced age. - Georgia. Like South Carolina. Georgia was a colony of plantations, on which many Negroes rendered efficient service. Some of these, as elsewhere, did pioneer work in the American Revolution. As early as November, 177G, the slaves of Gov. Wright were, by order of tlie Council of Safety, directed to build a battery on the Tybee River. These men are spoken of as "able ax men." On another occasion Negroes of the same plantation erected a strong fort and ^11 of the 5^ MISSING PACES IN AMERICAN HISTORY slaves and twenty white men were there armed in its defens^i. About this time Negroes were employed to repair Ihe causeway of Great Ogechee Ferry. A resolution of the house of the assembly in Savannah, Georgia. J\Iay, 1778, empowered the governor to draft from confiscated estates of Loyalists two hundred able-bodied slaves for the use of the Continental army, to act as pioneers in the expe- dition agaiTist East Florida, and one hundred more for the use of the militia and state forces in the same expedition. These men were to do fatigue duty. Trustees were appointed to take cfiarge of the estates and to see that these slaves were furnished for duty. Until these men were available divisions of the army marching into Georgia to join the governor of the state from South Carolina had the bad roads over which they passed repaired by Negroes from neighboring plantations. It became necessary to use force to sep- arate the slaves from their Loyalist masters, and a resolution of the executive council ordered captains whose militia companies were in districts in which there were confiscated estates to bring the re- quired blacks to Savannah. State records reveal the fact that until the war closed these men saw service of various grades with the military corps to which they were assigned. Negroes in the United States Navy During the Revolution. At the outbreak of the Revolutionary War the United States had no navy. Therefore many vessels, previously used in trade or for traffic, were fitted up for warfare on the high seas. By these a large number of British ships whose object it was to supply powder on this side of the Atlantic were captured. Most of these improvised war ships, as well as the regulars of the later period, were more or less manned by men of color. There were twenty Negroes on the Royal Lewis, a boat of twenty-six guns, commanded by Capi. Stephen Decatur. They were found in varying numbers on the Trumble. the South Carolina, the Randolph, the Confederacy and the Alliance. Among the crew of the latter vessel was the black Joshua Tiffany. He afterwards served in the war of 1 812. Here also was James Forten,* of Pennsylvania, who, with his mother's consent, entered the navy at the early age of twelve, where he served as a powder boy. On his second voyage Forten was made a prisoner of war. He was placed on board the English ship Amphyon where he was offered liberty and a life' of ease in England by the *This gentleman was the grandfather of the late Mrs. Francis Grimke, of Washington, D, C. MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 59 captain, with whose son he had become very friendly aboard ship, but always when tempted by such prospects he would answer, "I am a prisoner for the liberties of my country. I shall never prove traitor to her interests." This he said in spite of the fact that he was well aware he might any day be sold as a slave in the British West Indies. He was finally sent to the Old Jersey prison ship, carrying a letter of commendation from Capt. Be^sley, of the Amphyon, and asking for his exchange wdien possible. On this vessel he remained seven months, watching always for a chance to escape. His gener- ous nature caused him to give up his first opportunity to a young friend, who went ofif in a chest of old clothes, in which Forten had planned to leave. He was detained on the Old Jersey about fourteen months. In after years when urged to request a pension he would proudly say, "I was a volunteer, sir." On the Alliance was also David Mitchell, a free Negro, who had been captured while on his way from Bermuda to Nova Scotia in an English vessel. On being carried into Newburyport, Massachusetts, he petitioned for his lib- erty, saying he wished to remain in this country. The petition was granted and he enlisted in the navy of the United States. The naval records show the names of Caesar , a mere boy, serving on the Brig Hazard under Capt. Job Williams ; Cato Blackney, a pri- vate, who did duty on the volunteer ship Deane ; Cato , a cooper, of Boston, who enlisted on the brig Prospect, commanded by Capt. Joseph V'esey, and John ]\Ioore, a skipper, of Maryland, on the sloop Roebuck. This boat was captured by the English vessel Dragon, and Moore and others of the crew were kept prisoners at Newport for some time. ' A Talk of thd; Frontiivr. Sometime between 1780 and 1785 the Staton family moved from North Carolina to a point near what is now known as Crab Orchard, in the State of Kentucky. xA.fter building a log cabin, the head of the family returned to his native state with pack horses to bring back the property which could not be transported on the first trip, leaving his wife and children \v'ith no other protection than that of a faithful Negro slave named Pete. Two clays after Mr. Staton had gone away his wife and oldest son. Jack, were attacked by In- dians while the mother was doing the family washing in a spring not far from the house. The redskins, after mutilating and murdering the woman, left her dead body hanging in the bushes. The boy, however, succeeded in escaping, and climbing the steep bank leading to the house, he gave warning to Pete, who was minding the other 6o MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY children. In a short time the trusty hlack man had rushed into the house, seized his master's gun and ammunition, and ordered the children to proceed ahead of him to the forest. When about half a mile away from the house he remembered he had left behind the youngest, an infant in the cradle, and leaving the children he re- turned to the house, where ''he not oVly rescued the baby, but brought along some provisions as well. He earried all to the hills, where they lived safely in his care until the return of the father and mas- ter. Mr. Staton set Peter free and named the infant in his honor. Since then one child in each generation of the family has been so named for the same reason. Peter did not leave his master's roof after securing his liberty, but spent much of his time in hunting and killing Indians. He became one of the most noted Indian hunters of that period. (Note: The truthfulness of this story is vouched for by W. R. Jones, a banker of Yellville, Arkansas. Mr. Jones is a direct de- srendent of the baby rescued by the Negro Peter. Chief Justice Harlan, late of the United States Supreme Court, was also a de- scendent of the Staton family.) MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 6 1 WAR OF 1812. Cause;s. In spite of the Treaty of 1783, Great Britain was refiictant to rec- ognize the independence of America, and manifested her unwilHng- ness in many ways that were unpleasant to the young repubHc. One of these annoyances consisted in continuing to hold military posts on the western frontier. These she refused to pass over to the United States, and from them she supplied the Indians with arms, and for years incited them to hostility. When the Napoleonic wars were in progress she recruited her navy by press-gangs, whom she disciplined by floggings. In order to escape from this severe treat- ment many men deserted. Often, to secure more liberal wages, they entered the merchant marine of the United States, which at that time seemed destined to rival that of England, to whom manv desirable ports were then closed and whose coasts were blockaded by the French. That she might secure her men. Great Britain ordered her captains to reclaim them on American boats. Succeed- ing in this, her next move was to declare that a British subject had no right to enter into any military or marine service save fhat of his own country, and that on this ground she could take English- men wherever she found them, be they deserters or not. Acting •upon this assumption, her warships stopped American merchant vessels anywhere upon the high seas and sent their officers and men aboard to look for and to secure British subjects. The ablest sea- men were, of course, selected, and any sailor unable on the ?pot to prove that he was not a part of the British nation was carried to serve on the decks of his captors. Some of these kidnapped per- sons were released upon the application of American consuls on duty in the po#ts where they happened to be taken. When the case was brought up the English always defended themselves by saying that since both nation^ spoke the same Inaguage it was a (hfficult matter to be sure as to the citizenship of those they had caotured. They overlooked the fact that beside Negroes they had taken many Swedes, Danes and Portuguese. It is estimated that through these violations of the sovereignty of nations (for the chip's deck is the territory of the country to which it belongs), fourteen thousand men were forced to service in the navy of Great Britain. These im- pressments were made, not only on the high seas, but within the three-mile limit, and coasting and fishing schooners, as well as all other kinds of ships, were robbed of their men. 62 MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY Tllli ClIliSAPIvAKE; Al'l'WlR. In the year 1800 the American frigate Chesapeake was captured hy the English man-of-war Leopard after tlie former's commander had refused to allow her to be searched for deserters. In the fusi- lade coincident with her capture some of the crew were killed and several others were w'ounded by the British. Four men were taken from the Chesapeake. One of these, David Martin, was a Negro of Massachusetts. He was an American, but had been impressed at ar; earlier date on the Melampus, in the service of England, from an American boat in the Bay of Biscay. The captives were all carried to Halifax, Nova Scotia. It developed that only one was an Eng- lishman. He was hanged on the charge of desertion. The rest were reprieved, on the condition that they enter the British service. It was not until June, 1812, that two of these men were restored to their native land. At that time they were returned to the same ship from which they had been taken. The boat was then lying in the Boston harbor. At her gangway they were received by Lieut. Wil- kinson from Lieut. Simpson, a British officer. They were then es- corted to the deck, where they were presented to Commodore Bain- bridge, who said, "My lads. I am glad to see you. From this deck vou were taken by a British outrage. For your return you owe gratitude to your country. Your country now offers you an oppor- tunity to revenge your wrongs, and I cannot doubt you will be de- sirous of doing so on board this v£ry ^lip. I trust this flag that flies on board of her shall gloriously defend you in the future." The affair between the Chesapeake and the Leopard caused great excitement in this country. Many international complications fol- lowed, and an apology was demanded, but the English refused to discontinue their search. Not wishing to declare war, the United States first ordered British men-of-war to leave our waters, and a little later laid an embargo on all shipping in American ports, thus prohibiting the sending of exports therefrom. In 1809 the Embargo Act was repealed and a svstem of non-intercourse and non-importa- tion was established in tlie cases of both Great Britain and France until either or both would repeal the decrees that they had formerly made against neutral commerce. While France seemed inclined to revoke her decree, England evaded meeting the issue. Such a state of dissatisfaction followed that w^ar was declared in June. 1812. Our countrv had, bv the census of 1810, a slave population of over a million, while there were almost two hundred thousand free people of color here. Most of the latter w^ere to be found, of course, in .the North. The free Negro had, in spite of much opposition and prej- MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 63 udice, become much Americanized. In some places he had even the right, of suffrage. This was true in five of the original states. He was the owner of property and the depositor in banks. He was sending his children to school in Washington, Baltimore, Philadel- phia, New York and Boston, and he had organized one separate church.* His patriotism kept pace with his progress along other lines, and when the war began he responded to the call to enlist, vol- unteering in large numbers, especially in the navv where, says one x writer, who lived in those days, "there seems to be an entire ab- sence of prejudice against black messmates among the crews of all / ships." The battles of the various campaigns of this war were fought all oyer that part of the United States lying east of the Mississippi River, between the Great Lakes and the Gulf of Mexico. Some of large moment occurred on the high seas. Indeed, this war has not been incorrectly called "a sailors' war." The first year of the con- ( flict was marked by several disasters on land, notably among them being a defeat at Detroit and the loss of many men from the Ameri- can ranks in a battle fought in Michigan on the Raisin River. Attacks on Washington, Baltimore and Other Towns on THE Coast. In the spring of the years 1813-14 the scene shifted somewhat from the northern border to the Middle Atlantic States. Many depredations were made by the English on the coast at this period. There were attacks at Havre de Grace, Maryland, and on the Dela- ware shore, which were made with the hope of drawing away the American forces from Canada. At last the conduct of the enemy made the Americans entertain great fear for the safety of the na- tional capital, for the forces of Great Britain had succeeded in en- tering the waters of the Chesapeake Bay. Gen. Winder was then ii, charge of the military district which included Maryland and the District of Columbia. Early in August it was reported that the enemy had entered the Patuxent River, a tributary to the Chesa- ' peake. It was expected that the English would make a landing from this stream and proceed overland to Washington. To prevent this Gen. Winder, with a force of several thousand men, awaited their coming at Wood Yard, about twelve miles from the capital city. *The African Metlxodist Episcopal Church, established in Phila- delphia, Pa, 64 MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY This body of militia had been hastily gathered from Maryland and Virginia. Black men were in its ranks. Among them were John B. Vashon, who volunteered in Leesburg, Virginia, for land service, when the colored men of the northern part of his state were called upon to aid in the defense of the country, as soon as the alarm was given that the British were nearing the capital. Another Negro who entered the army of the United States at this time was Louis Boulagh, a freeman of the State of Virginia. Later he was trans- ferred to the squadron of Commodore J. Shaw, and served in the navy until the close of the war. Effecting a landing on the Potomac River, the British marched in the opposite direction to that which it had been expected they w^ould, and turned toward Washington by way of Bladensburg, a small village about six miles to the northeast of the capital. Here they met the men under Commodore Barney, whose flotilla had for some weeks previous patrolled the tributaries of the Chesapeake Bay, these men being now the only available force for defensive service for Washington. The meeting, which occurred August 18, 1814, resulted only in a skirmish. The scene of the encounter was a slope, upon which a slight earthwork had been thrown up by the Americans! Black men helped in the erection of this fortification, and served also as soldiers and teamsters. Six guns were mounted at this place. The Americans were put to route in this fight and the brave Barney was very badly wounded. IVashington, D. C. \ The proximity of the British greatly alarmed the citizens of Wash- ington, and yet there was little they could do to defend themselves. Following the skirmish at Bladensburg the capital of the nation was stormed. The White House, the Capitol and many other pub- lic buildings, as well as a great deal of private p-operty, were burned. In the navy yard there were but a few officers and order- lies Most of the latter were black men, and a few of the same race were on duty about the city. The rest of the militia were still m Maryland with Gen. Winder. Baltimore, Md. The trouble in Washington caused much excitement in Baltimore, whose inhabitants felt it might be their turn next. Therefore, through an order of the Vigilance Committee, issued on August 27, the Monumental City was divided into four sections, as follows: MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 65 First Section : The eastern precinct and the eighth ward becond Section : Fifth, sixth and seventh wards. Third Section: Second, third and fourth wards. Fourth Section : First ward and western precinct. Breastworks were erected in all of these sections. Exempts and free people of color of the first section were called out on Sunday morning at six o'clock to Hampstead Hill, where, with provisions to last them through the day they went to work. This same class of people was set to work at the same hour at Myer Garden in the second section on Monday morning. On Tuesday, those residing in the third district began throwing up breastworks in Washington Square, while the black and the white inhabitants of the fourth\ dis- trict proceeded to the corner of Eutaw and Market streets on Wednesday morning that they might do their share in preparing de- fences for the city. Owners of slaves were asked to'send the same to work on the days assigned to the several districts in whicij Ihev lived. The masters complied with this request. No event is said to have occurred on the part of the black and white compatriots "to sully the character of an individual soldier." On the third of Sep- tember the Vigilance Commitiee resolved : "That all free people of color be, and they are hereby ordered, to attend daily, commencing with Wednesday, the fifth instant, at the dififerent works erected about the city for the purpose of laboring thereon, and for which they shall receive an allowance of fifty cents a day. together with a soldier's rations.'' Following these preparations Baltimore was at- tacked both by land and by sea. The battle on the sea was the hombarding of Fort McHenry. It was at this time that the song, "The Star Spangled Banner," was written. A land engagement took place about two miles out of the city, near Bear Cieek, on the road to North Point. Beside working at putting up fortifications, colored men were employed in and about the city of Baltimore in other capacities, for they manned the batteries and also carried mus- kets. Philadelphia. ' -J Alarmed by the conduct of the foe at Washington and Baltimore, many of the other coast cities began to make preparation for their own protection. In Philadelphia, the Vigilance Committee solicited the aid of Absolem Jones, Richard Allen and James Forten, all Negroes. It was desired that these men should secure the services of members of their own race in erecting defences about the city. Through their efforts twenty-five hundred black men w-ere gathered 66 MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY in the yard of the State House in August and marched to Grey's Ferry, on the west side o the Schuylkill River, where for two days they were employed in throwing up fortifications, for which they received a vote of thanks, tendered them by the city. Mr. Forten himself worked on these breastworks with twenty of his journey- men. A body of colored troops was organized here at this time and - placed under an officer of the United States Army. » New York, N. Y. On October 24, 1814, the state of New York, in its legislature, provided for the raising of two regiments of free men for service in the army in this way : "Section 1. Be it enacted by the people of the State oi New York, represented in the senate and the assembly, that the governor of this state be, and is hereby authorized to raise by voluntary en- listment, two regiments of free men of color for the defense of the state for three years, unless sooner discharged. "Section 2. And be it further enacted, that the said regiments shall consist of one thousand and eighty able-bodied men, and the said regiment shall be formed into a brigade or be organized in such manner and employed in such service as the governor of the state shall deem best adapted to defend the said state. "Section 3. And be it further enacted, that all the commissioned oflficers of said regiments and brigades shall be white men, and the governor of the state shall be, and is hereby, authorized to com- mission by brevet all the officers of the said regiments and Vigades who shall hold their respective commission until the council of ap- pointment shall have appointed the officers of said regiments and brigades in pursuance of the constitution and laws of said state. "Section 4. * * * "Section 5 * * *, "Section 6. And be it further enacted, that it shall be lawful for any able-bodied slave, with a written consent of a master or mistress to enlist in such corps and the master or mistress of such slaves, shall be entitled to the pay and bounty allowed him for his service. And further, that the said slave, at the time of his receiving his discharge, shall be deemed and adjudged to have been legally manumitted from that time, and his master or mistress shall not thenceforward be liable for his maintenance," missing pages in american history 67 _ Service on the High Seas. Capt. Porter, who afterward became an admiral in the United States Navy, sailed around Cape Horn in the year 1813. He made this trip into the Pacific Ocean on the Essex in order to meet the Constitution and the Hornet, with both of which vessels he had orders to co-operate. Failing to find either of these men-of-war, he made attacks upon British whalers and largely destroyed their activities in the Pacific, securing four thousand tons of British ship- ping and four hundred prisoners through his operations. Among the engagements in which Porter took part on this trip was that be- tween his ship and the Phoebe and the Chemf. Black boys as well as men were in the service on the Essex. When Lieut. Wilmer lost his life through a shot which swept him overboard, so great was the grief of Rufif,* a little Negro boy employed by the former, that he committed suicide by jumping overboard. The Essex was finally captured ofif the coast of Chile. The Shannon Affair. The battle between the Shannon and the American boat Chesa- peake occurred between Cape Cod and Cape Anne, about thirty miles from Boston Light. It was so near the coast that it might be seen from Salem Heights. It began shortly after six-thirty on the morning of June first, 1813, at which time the boats became en- tangled. A little later an order was issued that the Chesapeake's boarders be called out.f There were many Negroes on this ship, one of them George Brown, a bugler, was told to give the necessary signal which would summon these men (boarders). This duty was usually performed by a drummer and the unfortunate bugler, not clearly comprehending his task, sounded only a feeble blast. It then became necessary to give all orders orally, most of which were misunderstood. Much confusion and many blunders were the sequence, and after a very short but hot engagement the Americans were overwhelmed and the brave Lawrence and all his officers lost their lives at this Jime. ♦This boy. was doubtless, a powder boy. It was his duty to carry powder for the gunner. fSailing ships used to fight with their yard arms interlocked. The "boarders" were those who went aboard the enemy's ship to fight him. 68 MISSING f AGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY The Battles of Lake Champlain and of Plattsburg. During the fall of 1814: the Americans won some important vic- tories in northern New York. For several days in the month of August a large force of some fourteen thousand picked men had been encamped on Lake Saranac, under the British Gen. Macomb. During a trip from Plattsburg to Sackett's Hafbor, N. Y., the Americans put these men into such rapid retreat that they left be- hind them great quantities of provisions and were forced to de- stroy a great deal of ammunition which they could not carry. "A very fine martial-looking set of colored men were attached to the American Army on this occasion." Among tkese was Robert Van \^ranken, of Albany. While the conflict raged on land, another was being waged on nearby Lake Champlain, September 11, 181L When it began the enemy's ships were about three hundred yards away from those of the Americans. Starting at nine o'clock, a furious iire was kept up for two hours, at the end of which time the Briti^Ji surrendered. The fight was so terrific "there was not a mast left on either squad- ron that could stand to make a sail on." This battle was won by a "superiority of gunnery," and a large proportion of the gunners were men of color. Among these were John Day, who was a marine on board the row gallev \''iper. and stood like a man at his post in the thickest of the fight, while the blood of his associates washed the deck. Later he was drafted to go with Commodore Bainbridge's relief squadron to the Mediterranean Sea. This expedition went out to rescue American commerce. Day was discharged from the' navy March 18. 1816. The result of these two engagements was that the Americans regained possession of northern New York. Another Negro who helped to bring about this satisfactory condi- tion was Charles Black, who had been an impressed seaman. He lost nine hundred dollars owed him by England when he refused to serve that countrv at the outbreak of this war. For his refusal he was placed in Dartmoor prison, along with many others of his_ fel- low-countrymen of the same race. This prison was located m a lonely part of Devonshire Countv, England, about fifteen miles from Plymouth and was surrounded bv a dreary, barren marshland. It was enclosed by circular walls, the outside one being a mile in cir- cumference. It was necessary to pass through five gates to get be- hind the prison walls, and a reservoir was built m front of the first pate The prison consisted of several stone buildings, each large enough to hold fifteen hundred men. The guard consisted of two thousand militia and two companies of artillery. During the time MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 69 when England was seizing seamen, besides whites four hundred ^egroes were here imprisoned. Their sufferings were 'terrible and escape was almost impossible. In some manner, however, Black g:ot away, returned to his own country and entered the navy in time to participate in the action on the lake. His father was at Bunker Hill and his grandfather was in the French an lightening her cargo and throwing her ammunition overboard. Her escape was not accomplished before the furious fire from the enemy had killed two men and wounded six others. Writing of this event to his agent in the city of New York, on January 1, 1813, the ■captain, Nathaniel Shaler, says : ''The name of one of my poor fel- lows, who was killed outright, ought to be registered on the book •of fame and remembered with reverence as long as bravery is con- sidered a virtue. He was a black man by the name of John John- son. A twenty- four-pound shot struck him in the hip and took away the lower part of his body. In this state the poor brave fellow lay on the deck and several times exclaimed, 'Fire away, boys; never " haul the colors down.' The other was a black man by the name of John Dayij^^ who was struck in much the same way. He fell near ■^ 70 MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY me, and several times requested to be thrown overboard, saying that he was only in the way of the others. While America has such tars she has little to fear from the tyrants of the ocean." The David Porter. In March, 1814, the schooner David Porter, a privateer carrying cotton to France from the United 'States, bore a government com- mission to take, burn, sink or destroy the enemy's boats. When in the Bay of Biscay this vessel captured several merchant ships. One of the guns of the David Porter was an eighteen-pounder, mounted on a pivot. in midships. This cannon, the only large gun used in the capture of these ships, was commanded by a hugh black man about six feet high and large in proportion. He was said to be the "best natured fellow in the world," and was a general favorite with both the officers and the men. His name was Phillip , and his gun was the only dependable weapon on the ship, because the other (there was only one more and that was a small one) could not be used in rough weather. When the Porter made a landing at Lie Dieu, of the west coast of France, Phillip accompanied his com- mander ashore and attracted very much attention from the natives, many of whom had never seen a Negro before. Even the "gov- ernor's lady" asked to have a look at him, and he was carried to her residence, where he was asked many questions concerning his birth place, his traits of character and the like. Feeling he was being used as a show he sought and obtained permission to return to the boat. ' J Ji! J The Battle of Lake Brie. In 1813 the United States had good reasons for fearing that the English forces stationed in Canada might enter the very heart of our country through the lakes on its northern border. By these ap- proaches it would have been an easy matter to have seized Fort Meigs, on the Maumee River, and thus decided the fate of that di- vision'of the American Army under Gen. Harrison, then stationed ill this region. To secure the ascendency of these waters a cam- paign was planned and Capt. O. H. Perry, a yoimg naval officer, was appointed to conduct it. Young Perry had the twofold task of creating his squadron as well as that of supermtendmg the con- struction of his boats, for the brigs, schooner^ and gunboats com- prising his fleet were all built under his eye and direction at Presque Island, now Erie, Pennsylvania, during the winter of MISSING PXGES IN AMERICAN HISTCJry 71 1813-14. By the tenth of July all of the ships were armed and equipped. There were ten vessels, carrying fifty-iive guns. The guns were manned by a force of four hundred men, "one-fourth of whom were Negroes.'^ Perry was much dissatisfied with the latter class of seamen, who had been sent to him by Commodore Chaun- cey, so much so that on July 26th he wrote to his superior officer saying, "The men that came by Mr. Chaplin were a motley set' blacks, soldiers and boys. I cannot think that you saw them after they were selected. I am, however, pleased to see anything in the shape of a man." A few days later to this letter the gallant Chaun- cey replied, "I regret you were not pleased with the men sent you by Messrs. Chaplin and Forrest, for to my knowledge a part of them are not surpassed by any seamen we have in the fleet, and I have yet to learn that the color of the skin or the cut and trimmings of the coat can affect a man's qualifications or usefulness. I have nearly fifty blacks on this boat, and many of them are among the best of my men, and those people you call soldiers have been on the sea from two to seventeen years." Chauncey was about this time on board the Pike and engaged in the capture of Port George, in the northern part of New York State. As he says, many blacks saw service with him in that engagement. When the cruise of Perry's fleet began, in its search for the enemy, so hurried had been the preparations, that the work was not all com- pleted. There had been little time for training of guns and the like. The winter had been a hard one and many of the men had been sick. On September 13th the enemy was sighted in Put In Bay with a fleet of six boats manned by sixty-five guns. The engagement began a few minutes before twelve on the same day, the British fir- ing as soon as the Americans were half a mile away. As the boats neared each other the guns of three or four of the largest of those belonging to the foe were centered upon the Lawrence, Perry's flagship. This caused her to lose many of her spars and soon ren- dered all of her guns, save one on the starboard side, unfit for serv- ice. So fierce was the attack upon this boat that she was finally forced to drop out of the fight, and Perry's flag was transferred to the Niagara. The passage was made in a small sailboat, in which rode the commander, his young brother and several of the crew. Among the latter was a black man, Cyrus Tift'any. It is he whos5 likeness is seen in the painting representing the Battle of Lake Erie hanging in the Capitol in Washington, D. C. This man was a res- ident of Taunton, Massachusetts. He was a noted musician, having fifed with the drummer, Simeon Crossman, for the Revolutionary soldiers of his native town, and served on the warship, the Alliance, 72 MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY in 1797. When passing from the frigate Lawrence to the Niagara, through a storm of bullets and shot. Tiffany, acting on the impulse, tried to pull Perry down into a seat out of danger. The painting above referred to. shows him in this act, of which he was very proud, and concerning which he often spoke on his return home after the war was over.* Through Perry he was pensioned. He later lived in Newport. Rhode Island, with that officer, and at last died in the service on board the Java at the age of eighty, in 1815. While the Lawrence took part in the conflict many of her men were fatally wounded on her decks. Among them was John Brook, a captain of the marines, who was terribly mangled in the hip by a cannon ball. The^death of this officer so affected the little mulatto boy of, twelve, employed in carrying cartridges on the ship, that he threw himself on the deck, crying pitifully; indeed, so great was his ex- pression of grief that he was ordered carried below. Upon hearing this order he immediately stopped crying and resumed, his work at carrying cartridges. This lad was a favorite of Brook as well as his property, and just before he breathed his last he gave directions into whose hands the boy should pass, asking that he be kindly treated. ^ As soon as Perry had made his passage to th.e Niagara firing was resumed on both sides. In a short time thereafter great confusion reigned on the British line, due to the fouling of two of their ves- sels when an-effort w^as being made to bring their uninjured broad- sides to bear. Taking advantage of this condition the commander of the Niagara sailed through the line, having two of the enemy's boats on one side and three on the other, firing in both directions as he went. This was done at close range and was followed by a rapi. 73 Chavanne, Jean 57 Chelmsford .\ 27 Concord, The Battle of ^6 Cromwell, Oliver 4i D Davis, John ». 69 Dorchester, Fortification of 30 Dunmore, His Proclamation to Negroes 45 E Eads, Charlestown , 27 Esther, a Negro Heroine 74 Essex, The Voyage of the , ,...,.,....,. ^7 \ r 9° MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY F • Freedom of Slaves (Soldiers), Petitions for, in Connecticut -g New Jersey ^ North Carolina ■. ^, Virginia /. ;^ ^q Free Negroes in Colonial Wars ^q 15 The Revolutionary War -. 20 47 The War of 1812 Fifers, Negroes Who Served as ^_ 71 67 Fortification, The, of Charleston 152 " Dorchester 30 Fort Boyer 75 Fort Mims 73 Fort Moultrie 52 Fort St. Phillips [[..........[.'. 84 Forten, James 58 Frontier, A Tale of 59 G Gilmore, Tobias 32 Governor Tompkins 69 Groton Heights >. ., 38 Gunner, A Negro 70 Gunnery, Superiority of Negro 68 H Hall, Primus .^ 30 Hall, Faneuil , 25 Hancock, John 32 Hester, a Negro Heroine * 74 J Jack, Susquehanna or Black 19 Jackson, Andrew, His Proclamation to Negroes , ■. From Mobile ■, 76 In Alabama 80 Jones, Absolom , 65 Johnson, John . . , 69 K Kemp's Landing, The Battle 30 Kench, Thomas, His Letters Concerning Negro Soldiers 31 L Lamb, Pompey 39 Lathon or Lambert Pompey 38 Laws Concerning the Enlistrii^ of Negroes in Colonial Wars 8 9, 10, II, 12, I I The French gnd Indian War » 22 The Revolutionary War 33 -jc ^7 The War of 1812 65 66 MISSING PAGES IN AMERICAN HISTORY 9I Letters of Chauncey ' 7i Greene |4 Jackson ». ., °^ 83 Kench"" 31 Laurens 53 Lincoln 54 Perry • 73 . Lew, Barzaillai ' 27^ M Mich, Old .^ 34 Mims, The Attack on Fort 73 Monmouth, The Battle of 42 Morris, Benjamin > ' 49 N Negro Mountain ■ 21 Negro Troops, Separate Bodies of ^i 35, 37, 44 Negroes, in the Battle of Bladensburg 64 Building Defences in Baltimore 65 In the Battle of Bunker Hill 27 In Colonial Wars 8 9, 10, II In the French and Indian War ig 20, 21 P Poor, Salem ..,•• 28 Pilots, Negro in North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia 51 55, 50 Prison, Dartmore • 68 Ponts Bridge 35 Prescott, Gen., The Capture of 36 Q Quadroon Women, Nursing of 83 R Rigaud, Andre 57 Ruflf, A Negro Powder Boy 67 Ryckert, The Story of 8 S Salem, Peter <■ ., 27 Separate Bodies of Negro Troops tj 35, 37, 44 Sisson, Jack •..,... -- Shannon, The Battle of the 67---* Spies, Negroes as > ^o 48 -'^ Staton, Peter, The Story of i5q Story, a Boarder " 8 Stony Point, The Battle of 39 Sullivan's Island, The Battle of >.., 52 \3 5 26 ^4, 9 ' m ti^ ■» ^°-^^^ o so" ,0^ tf^ .A 0^ .-^O^ - <^ . « o , ^ ^V ^. :, . ^^V %^ ? • .-O. ^ *'d^ > aV -^ A'' "'"' ^ '<^^ o"^ . ^ ' * •» o j> ° "^ -» '<^^ o"^ • ^ " ' r-K, '■^^ *o^ .■<°^ ^ . f?. S *-..fi^iJ?^% ^^ 0" A°^ ^0 -^^ ^-^-..^^ K-" /% '^WS #'% "--W*" /\- Wl^' **'^-"< "o^^^r^^'o'^ V'^-^*\^^ %^*-°'*ao'^ "V "•-• o •■■ ^"^ .. %_ ''■'' .0 _.,. <-. * > A % 5 • • , o . %,'-' °^ « o K V -^ V 1 FFB.69 5,7* N. MANCHESTER INDIANA