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Posts by Freedmen and Southern Society Project

1864 photo of five women with military regalia sown onto their dresses for an Army Relief Bazar. The photo is discussed in the linked article as an example of how women complicated gender boundaries in their wartime performances of patriotism.

Original from the Library of Congress here: https://www.loc.gov/resource/ppmsca.58008/

1864 photo of five women with military regalia sown onto their dresses for an Army Relief Bazar. The photo is discussed in the linked article as an example of how women complicated gender boundaries in their wartime performances of patriotism. Original from the Library of Congress here: https://www.loc.gov/resource/ppmsca.58008/

FSSP editor William Horne discusses what we can learn abt gendered struggles for liberation, recognition, & dignity from the cases of two women caught by the Army in men's clothes.
www.journalofthecivilwarera.org/2026/04/i-wa...

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We are just on the cusp of making it public. Will be sharing on here & @fssp.bsky.social when it’s live.

3 weeks ago 6 1 1 0
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The Unspendable Pension of Henrietta Emory Meads - The Journal of the Civil War Era Sometime in July 1867, Henrietta Emory wrote to a clerk in the Claim Division of the Maryland Freedmen’s Bureau describing the challenges she had faced in trying to get money due to her as a soldier’s...

FSSP editor William Horne writes about what we can learn of postemancipation citizenship & rights through the experiences of Black war widow Henrietta Emory Meads. You check out the full transcription & original images embedded in the article.

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The Unspendable Pension of Henrietta Emory Meads - The Journal of the Civil War Era Sometime in July 1867, Henrietta Emory wrote to a clerk in the Claim Division of the Maryland Freedmen’s Bureau describing the challenges she had faced in trying to get money due to her as a soldier’s...

FSSP editor William Horne writes about what we can learn of postemancipation citizenship & rights through the experiences of Black war widow Henrietta Emory Meads. You check out the full transcription & original images embedded in the article.

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Former Alabama Slave to the Freedmen's Bureau Superintendent of the Subdistrict of Louisville, August 14, 1865, Enclosing the Former Slave's Affidavit

Amy Moore & her enslaved family were freed by the Union Army in Alabama, only to be arrested & sold as slaves behind Union lines. "We claim protection," Moore wrote in 1865, "under that [Emancipation] Proclamation from the fact of our living in one of the States mentioned in Said Proclamation."

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Former Alabama Slave to the Freedmen's Bureau Superintendent of the Subdistrict of Louisville, August 14, 1865, Enclosing the Former Slave's Affidavit

Moore's testimony offers an important window into the tactics of forced relocation, the precarity of refugee status, & the lawlessness of local authorities, who leveraged their family's vulnerability as migrants to treat them as property.

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Former Alabama Slave to the Freedmen's Bureau Superintendent of the Subdistrict of Louisville, August 14, 1865, Enclosing the Former Slave's Affidavit

Union authorities, Moore testified, "brought us all to Nashville Tenn where we were put on board of a transport & Started for Cincinnati Ohio... when we arrived at Louisville Ky we were arrested by a man who Said he was a watchman & taken to the Slave pen on Second Street Louisville Ky."

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Former Alabama Slave to the Freedmen's Bureau Superintendent of the Subdistrict of Louisville, August 14, 1865, Enclosing the Former Slave's Affidavit

Moore noted the lawlessness of her re-enslavement & requested help "in procuring our wages for the time we have labored for these parties as slaves since we have been actually free."

2 months ago 7 1 1 0
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Former Alabama Slave to the Freedmen's Bureau Superintendent of the Subdistrict of Louisville, August 14, 1865, Enclosing the Former Slave's Affidavit

Amy Moore & her enslaved family were freed by the Union Army in Alabama, only to be arrested & sold as slaves behind Union lines. "We claim protection," Moore wrote in 1865, "under that [Emancipation] Proclamation from the fact of our living in one of the States mentioned in Said Proclamation."

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Black New Yorker to the Secretary of War, April 18, 1864

"Act first in this matter," Hodgkins advised, & then "afterward explain or threaten" since "the act tells" without which "the threat or demand is regarded as idle." War crimes, he concluded, must be punished visibly & severely to offer any hope of protection against future lawlessness.

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Black New Yorker to the Secretary of War, April 18, 1864

"This request or suggestion is not made in a spirit of vindicativeness," Hodgkins explained, "but simply in the interest of my poor suffering confiding fellow negros who are even now assembling at Annapolis and other points to reinforce the army of the Union."

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Black New Yorker to the Secretary of War, April 18, 1864

If the US treated war crimes seriously, "the rebels will learn that the U.S. Govt. is not to be trifled with & the black men will feel not a spirit of revenge for have they not often taken the rebels prisoners even their old masters without indulging in a fiendish spirit of revenge or exultation."

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Black New Yorker to the Secretary of War, April 18, 1864

"If the murder of the colored troops at Fort Pillow is not followed by prompt action on the part of our government," Hodgkins warned, "it may as well disband all its colored troops for no soldiers whom the goverment will not protect can be depended upon."

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Black New Yorker to the Secretary of War, April 18, 1864

After Confederate war crimes against Black troops, Theodore Hodgkins, a Black New Yorker wrote to Secretary of War Stanton that "black soldiers have been murdered again & again yet where is there an instance of retaliation."

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Commander of the Department of the South to the Confederate President, April 23, 1863

"This is the kind of liberty," Hunter warned the Confederate President, "the liberty to do wrong–which Satan, Chief of the fallen Angels, was contending for when he was cast into Hell."

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Commander of the Department of the South to the Confederate President, April 23, 1863

"You say you are fighting for liberty," he concluded, "liberty to keep four millions of your fellow-beings in ignorance & degradation–liberty to separate parents & children, husband & wife, brother & sister–liberty to steal the products of their labor, exacted with many a cruel lash & bitter tear."

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Commander of the Department of the South to the Confederate President, April 23, 1863

Gen. Hunter observed that Black soldiers "are fighting for liberty in its truest sense; and Mr [Thomas] Jefferson has beautifully said,–'in such a war, there is no attribute of the Almighty, which will induce him to fight on the side of the oppressor.'"

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Commander of the Department of the South to the Confederate President, April 23, 1863

"On your authorities will rest the responsibility of having inaugurated this barbarous policy," he fumed, "and you will be held responsible, in this world and in the world to come, for all the blood thus shed."

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Commander of the Department of the South to the Confederate President, April 23, 1863

These Confederate war crimes, Gen. Hunter threatened, "shall be followed by the immediate execution of the Rebel of highest rank in my possession; man for man, these executions will certainly take place, for every [Black soldier] murdered, or sold into a slavery worse than death."

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Commander of the Department of the South to the Confederate President, April 23, 1863

After learning that captured Black soldiers "have been cruelly murdered by your authorities, & others sold into slavery," U.S. Major General David Hunter wrote to Confederate President Jefferson Davis to condemn "every outrage of this kind against the laws of war and humanity."

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Black Former Officers in a Louisiana Black Regiment to the Commander of the Department of the Gulf, April 7, 1863

"If the world doubts our fighting," they argued, "give us A chance and we will show then what we can do–" Instead, the Union commander continued to refuse Black officers & deployed Black troops primarily as manual laborers.

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Black Former Officers in a Louisiana Black Regiment to the Commander of the Department of the Gulf, April 7, 1863

"Give us A commander," the group of former Black officers pleaded, "who will appreciate us as men and soldiers, And we will be willing to surmount all outer difficulties."

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Black Former Officers in a Louisiana Black Regiment to the Commander of the Department of the Gulf, April 7, 1863

After the Army forced Black officers out of the ranks in 1863, a group of Black former officers from Louisiana petitioned to be reinstated "to assist in putting down this wicked rebelion. And in restoring peace to our once peaceful country."

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Mississippi Black Soldier to the Freedmen's Bureau Commissioner, December 16, 1865

This relentless white conservative state & vigilante violence against Black Southerners could only be resolved in one way:

"get Congress to stick in a few competent colered men [into public service] as they did in the army & the thing will all go right."

5 months ago 14 3 0 1
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Mississippi Black Soldier to the Freedmen's Bureau Commissioner, December 16, 1865

Not only did local police & officials refuse to protect Black rights in the state, but actually worked to undermine them. "They have been accusing the colered peple of an insorection which is a lie, in order that they might get arms to carrie out their wicked designs–"

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Mississippi Black Soldier to the Freedmen's Bureau Commissioner, December 16, 1865

Some Black Mississippians, he asserted, "are being knocked down for saying they are free, while a great many are being worked just as they ust to be when Slaves, without any compensation."

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Mississippi Black Soldier to the Freedmen's Bureau Commissioner, December 16, 1865

One Black mother reported, he wrote, that "the coldest day that has been this winter & said that she & her eight children lay out last night, & come near friezing after She had paid some wrent on the house." The white landowner evicted her, despite her rent having been paid.

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Mississippi Black Soldier to the Freedmen's Bureau Commissioner, December 16, 1865

After emancipation, a Black Mississippi veteran reported that his white neighbors "outraged [Black Southerners] beyound humanity. Houses have been tourn down... & the old Negroes after they have worked there till they are 70 or 80 yers of age drive them off in the cold to frieze & starve to death."

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We’ve published a fantastic new primary source collection—"Radicalism and Popular Protest in Georgian Britain, c. 1714–1832”.

Visit the collection landing page at buff.ly/Mf1q0nH.

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Of course! Happy to help!

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