| Emancipation and Reconstruction
Freedom and Upheaval
When war broke out in 1861, African Americans were ready. Free
African Americans flocked to join the Union army, but were rejected
at first for fear of alienating pro-slavery sympathizers in
the North and the Border States. With time, though, this position
weakened, and African Americans, both free Northerners and escaped
Southerners, were allowed to enlist. By the end of the war four
years later, more than 186,000 African American soldiers had
served, including several officers, making up 10 percent of
the Union army. More than 38,000 lost their lives, and 21 were
awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor, including Sergeant
Major Christian Fleetwood. Years later, Fleetwood would write:
After each war, of 1776, of 1812,
and of 1861, history repeats itself in the absolute effacement
of remembrance of the gallant deeds done for the country by
its brave black defenders and in their relegation to outer darkness.
History further repeats itself in the fact that in every war
so far known to this country, the first blood, and, in some
cases, the last also, has been shed by the faithful Negro, and
this in spite of all the years of bondage and oppression, and
of wrongs unspeakable.
The Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 marked
the official beginning of freedom for enslaved African Americans
in the Confederacy, although many did not hear of it for several
months. However, much of the slave population of the South had
been finding its way to freedom for some time, as African Americans
walked off their plantations and farms in vast numbers, many
making their way to the Union lines for food and clothing. This
slow-spreading freedom eventually brought the Confederate economy
to a near-standstill and helped guarantee its defeat at the
hands of the Union.
Promising Beginnings
With the end of the war, the ratification of the 13th Amendment
to the Constitution provided freedom for all African Americans
in the United States. This freedom came, however, during a time
of great national disruption, during which African Americans
faced hard times and an uncertain future. Most had been left
penniless by the war, and some had to avoid attacks by returning
Confederates. Many tens of thousands began traveling throughout
the South in search of long-lost family members, searches that
often took years. Most important, the structure of the nation
had been reordered dramatically, and it would take decades for
the aftershocks of this transformation to fully work themselves
out. African Americans were on the fault lines of that process.
The chaos of the postwar years was met, however,
by a tremendous wave of African American organization. Education,
long denied African Americans in the South, became an especially
impassioned cause. African American teachers helped found new
schools operated by the federal Freedmen's Bureau, and brought
free public education to African Americans in the South for
the first time. By 1870, there were more than 240,000 pupils
in more than 4,000 schools. Howard University, Fisk University,
and Hampton Institute were also founded during this period.
The change with perhaps the greatest transformative
potential, however, was African Americans' new participation
in electoral politics. In 1870 the 15th Amendment was ratified,
which guaranteed all males the right to vote, regardless of
"race, color, or previous condition of servitude." Within a
few years, every Southern state legislature had African American
members, and 11 African Americans had been elected to the U.S.
Congress by 1875. In this regard, at least, the nation's political
identity appeared to have changed for good.
Freedom Curtailed
Many of the victories of the postwar years were quickly withdrawn,
however, and many of the worst aspects of the slave system returned
to the former Confederacy. Federal troops left the region in
1877, and with them went much of the North's interest in the
well-being of the freed slaves. Former Confederates soon returned
to power and enacted grandfather clauses and other statutes
that rescinded African American voting rights, along with many
others.
Soon, African Americans in many Southern states
were forbidden to vote, to testify in court against a European
American, to enroll in school, to travel freely, to disobey
an order, or to leave a job without permission. In many states,
any African American traveling alone could be arrested, sentenced
to forced labor, and even rented out to private employers by
local or state authorities. Even African Americans who remained
free of the law quickly became prisoners of debt, as landowners
implemented a sharecropping system that guaranteed that workers
would never turn a profit on their land.
New codes of social segregation also came
into being, as European and African Americans were forced into
separate accommodations to an extent even greater than during
slavery. This harsh social order, sometimes known as "Jim Crow",
was enforced by new vigilante organizations, including the Ku
Klux Klan, which terrorized African Americans and tortured and
killed those who violated the new codes. Lynching skyrocketed,
peaking in 1892, when 161 African Americans were murdered by
mobs.
For all the tyranny and hardship of the postwar
years, however, they laid the foundation for tremendous changes
to come. In the next century, African Americans would seize
the national agenda as they had never done before.
For more information on the postwar years,
visit African
American Odyssey: Reconstruction and Its Aftermath. |