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<h1> ARMY LIFE IN A BLACK REGIMENT </h1>
<h2> By Thomas Wentworth Higginson </h2>
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<h2> Chapter 1. Introductory </h2>
<p>These pages record some of the adventures of the First South Carolina
Volunteers, the first slave regiment mustered into the service of the
United States during the late civil war. It was, indeed, the first colored
regiment of any kind so mustered, except a portion of the troops raised by
Major-General Butler at New Orleans. These scarcely belonged to the same
class, however, being recruited from the free colored population of that
city, a comparatively self-reliant and educated race. "The darkest of
them," said General Butler, "were about the complexion of the late Mr.
Webster."</p>
<p>The First South Carolina, on the other hand, contained scarcely a freeman,
had not one mulatto in ten, and a far smaller proportion who could read or
write when enlisted. The only contemporary regiment of a similar character
was the "First Kansas Colored," which began recruiting a little earlier,
though it was not mustered in the usual basis of military seniority till
later. [<i>See Appendix</i>] These were the only colored regiments
recruited during the year 1862. The Second South Carolina and the
Fifty-Fourth Massachusetts followed early in 1863.</p>
<p>This is the way in which I came to the command of this regiment. One day
in November, 1862, I was sitting at dinner with my lieutenants, John
Goodell and Luther Bigelow, in the barracks of the Fifty-First
Massachusetts, Colonel Sprague, when the following letter was put into my
hands:</p>
<p>BEAUFORT, S. C., November 5, 1862.</p>
<p>MY DEAR SIR.</p>
<p>I am organizing the First Regiment of South Carolina Volunteers, with
every prospect of success. Your name has been spoken of, in connection
with the command of this regiment, by some friends in whose judgment I
have confidence. I take great pleasure in offering you the position of
Colonel in it, and hope that you may be induced to accept. I shall not
fill the place until I hear from you, or sufficient time shall have passed
for me to receive your reply. Should you accept, I enclose a pass for Port
Royal, of which I trust you will feel disposed to avail yourself at once.
I am, with sincere regard, yours truly,</p>
<p>R. SAXTON, <i>Brig.-Genl, Mil. Gov.</i></p>
<p>Had an invitation reached me to take command of a regiment of Kalmuck
Tartars, it could hardly have been more unexpected. I had always looked
for the arming of the blacks, and had always felt a wish to be associated
with them; had read the scanty accounts of General Hunter's abortive
regiment, and had heard rumors of General Saxton's renewed efforts. But
the prevalent tone of public sentiment was still opposed to any such
attempts; the government kept very shy of the experiment, and it did not
seem possible that the time had come when it could be fairly tried.</p>
<p>For myself, I was at the head of a fine company of my own raising, and in
a regiment to which I was already much attached. It did not seem desirable
to exchange a certainty for an uncertainty; for who knew but General
Saxton might yet be thwarted in his efforts by the pro-slavery influence
that had still so much weight at head-quarters? It would be intolerable to
go out to South Carolina, and find myself, after all, at the head of a
mere plantation-guard or a day-school in uniform.</p>
<p>I therefore obtained from the War Department, through Governor Andrew,
permission to go and report to General Saxton, without at once resigning
my captaincy. Fortunately it took but a few days in South Carolina to make
it clear that all was right, and the return steamer took back a
resignation of a Massachusetts commission. Thenceforth my lot was cast
altogether with the black troops, except when regiments or detachments of
white soldiers were also under my command, during the two years following.</p>
<p>These details would not be worth mentioning except as they show this fact:
that I did not seek the command of colored troops, but it sought me. And
this fact again is only important to my story for this reason, that under
these circumstances I naturally viewed the new recruits rather as subjects
for discipline than for philanthropy. I had been expecting a war for six
years, ever since the Kansas troubles, and my mind had dwelt on military
matters more or less during all that time. The best Massachusetts
regiments already exhibited a high standard of drill and discipline, and
unless these men could be brought tolerably near that standard, the fact
of their extreme blackness would afford me, even as a philanthropist, no
satisfaction. Fortunately, I felt perfect confidence that they could be so
trained, having happily known, by experience, the qualities of their race,
and knowing also that they had home and household and freedom to fight
for, besides that abstraction of "the Union." Trouble might perhaps be
expected from white officials, though this turned out far less than might
have been feared; but there was no trouble to come from the men, I
thought, and none ever came. On the other hand, it was a vast experiment
of indirect philanthropy, and one on which the result of the war and the
destiny of the negro race might rest; and this was enough to tax all one's
powers. I had been an abolitionist too long, and had known and loved John
Brown too well, not to feel a thrill of joy at last on finding myself in
the position where he only wished to be.</p>
<p>In view of all this, it was clear that good discipline must come first;
after that, of course, the men must be helped and elevated in all ways as
much as possible.</p>
<p>Of discipline there was great need, that is, of order and regular
instruction. Some of the men had already been under fire, but they were
very ignorant of drill and camp duty. The officers, being appointed from a
dozen different States, and more than as many regiments, infantry,
cavalry, artillery, and engineers, had all that diversity of methods which
so confused our army in those early days. The first need, therefore, was
of an unbroken interval of training. During this period, which fortunately
lasted nearly two months, I rarely left the camp, and got occasional
leisure moments for a fragmentary journal, to send home, recording the
many odd or novel aspects of the new experience. Camp-life was a
wonderfully strange sensation to almost all volunteer officers, and mine
lay among eight hundred men suddenly transformed from slaves into
soldiers, and representing a race affectionate, enthusiastic, grotesque,
and dramatic beyond all others. Being such, they naturally gave material
for description. There is nothing like a diary for freshness, at least so
I think, and I shall keep to the diary through the days of camp-life, and
throw the later experience into another form. Indeed, that matter takes
care of itself; diaries and letter-writing stop when field-service begins.</p>
<p>I am under pretty heavy bonds to tell the truth, and only the truth; for
those who look back to the newspaper correspondence of that period will
see that this particular regiment lived for months in a glare of
publicity, such as tests any regiment severely, and certainly prevents all
subsequent romancing in its historian. As the scene of the only effort on
the Atlantic coast to arm the negro, our camp attracted a continuous
stream of visitors, military and civil. A battalion of black soldiers, a
spectacle since so common, seemed then the most daring of innovations, and
the whole demeanor of this particular regiment was watched with
microscopic scrutiny by friends and foes. I felt sometimes as if we were a
plant trying to take root, but constantly pulled up to see if we were
growing. The slightest camp incidents sometimes came back to us, magnified
and distorted, in letters of anxious inquiry from remote parts of the
Union. It was no pleasant thing to live under such constant surveillance;
but it guaranteed the honesty of any success, while fearfully multiplying
the penalties had there been a failure. A single mutiny, such as has
happened in the infancy of a hundred regiments, a single miniature Bull
Run, a stampede of desertions, and it would have been all over with us;
the party of distrust would have got the upper hand, and there might not
have been, during the whole contest, another effort to arm the negro.</p>
<p>I may now proceed, without farther preparation to the Diary.</p>
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