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Commonwealth Museum   Secretary of the Commonwealth William Francis Galvin

Fire and Thunder: The Call to Fight for Freedom


A determined and far-reaching recruitment effort provided soldiers for the black regiments.


The 54th Infantry Regiment recruitment poster appearing as a yellow aged poster with black text, torn edges.
54th Infantry Regiment Recruitment Poster

State aid was a Massachusetts program that supported families while the breadwinner was at war. While this was an attractive inducement to enlistment, the many black soldiers in the regiment from outside Massachusetts found that they were not eligible for this benefit.
- Courtesy of Massachusetts Historical Society

In Massachusetts, recruitment of troops occurred mainly on a local level, with each city or town given a series of quotas to fulfill. Governor John Andrew, an early proponent of black military service, finally gained permission to establish a Massachusetts black regiment in 1863. New recruiting methods were needed, as Massachusetts itself did not have a large enough black population to fill one. African-Americans from other states also sought ways to enlist in order to seek freedom for their black brothers in bondage. Recruiting agents for the Massachusetts black regiments were est ablished in a number of states, with most joining from New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Ohio. Prominent members of the African-American community, including Frederick Douglass and Lewis Hayden, were involved in promoting recruiting efforts. These efforts provided not only enough men to form the 54th infantry, but a second regiment, the 55th, as well. 

A drawing of the Barracks at Readville
Barracks at Readville

Camp Meigs at Readville (then part of Dedham, now Hyde Park) was the major Massachusetts rendezvous camp where recruits were sent and regiments formed and trained, including the 54th Infantry (which left May 28, 1863), the 55th Infantry (left July 7 1863) and the 5th Cavalry (left May 5-8, 1864).
- Illustration by C.W. Reed, from Hardtack and Coffee, by John Billings

A photograph of John M. Langston

-Courtesy of Oberlin College Archives

John Mercer Langston
John Mercer Langston, an Oberlin College graduate and the first black lawyer in Ohio, was the western recruiting agent for the Massachusetts 54th and 55th regiments.

An old document with signatures entitled "Enlistment roll, 1863-1864"
Enlistment roll, 1863-1864

Th is roll of Bristol County recruits includes descriptions of African-Americans assigned to the 54th Infantry and the 5th Cavalry. Th e occupation “hostler” describes one who cares for horses - an ideal background for a soldier in a cavalry unit
- Illustration by C.W. Reed, from Hardtack and Coffee, by John Billings