Little known but inspirational stories from Black history

Tag: Confederates

Frederick Douglass’s Attitude Toward Founding Fathers Who Owned Slaves

Frederick Douglass, ca. 1855
Frederick Douglass, ca. 1855. Source: Wikimedia (Public Domain)

The Founding Fathers

George Washington is renowned as “the Father of our Country.” Thomas Jefferson is held in high esteem for committing the nation to the principle, enunciated in the Declaration of Independence, that “All men are created equal.” Yet these men, traditionally acclaimed as American heroes, were, along with many others of the nation’s Founders, slave owners.

In this time of reckoning for those who have been willing participants in the national sins of racism and oppression in the name of white supremacy, does having held black people in bondage disqualify such icons of liberty from the places of honor they have until now occupied? Should their statues be torn down and consigned to the same historical ash heap as those of Robert E. Lee and Jefferson Davis?

Should the statues of Washington and Jefferson be torn down and consigned to the same historical ash heap as those of Robert E. Lee and Jefferson Davis?

There are many today who strongly argue exactly that. They believe that in order to open the way to a new future of true equality for people of color, we must make a clean sweep of public monuments to our nation’s racist past.

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How Confederates Kidnapped and Enslaved Blacks at Gettysburg

Confederates driving black people South
Confederates driving Black people South
Source: Harper’s Weekly, November 1862 via Wikimedia (public domain)

Gettysburg, Pennsylvania

Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, is justly famous for the pivotal Civil War battle that occurred there during the first three days of July in 1863. Many historians believe the defeat suffered by Robert E. Lee’s Confederate army during that battle sealed the doom of the slave-holding Southern Confederacy.

The town of Gettysburg suffered surprisingly little physical damage from the rebel invasion. There was some destruction of buildings and property, but the most significant and long-lasting damage was imposed on a specific segment of the population: the Confederates deliberately and systematically targeted the city’s Black residents with a campaign of terror that involved kidnapping and enslaving them. To this day, the Gettysburg African American community has not fully recovered from that traumatic experience.

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