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Commonwealth Museum   Secretary of the Commonwealth William Francis Galvin

Fire and Thunder: The First Black Regiments


Is the present war so much higher and holier than the war of the Revolution, that the employment of black soldiers would lower its charact er or debase its purpose? Are our Generals so much better than Washington, and Jeff erson, and Jackson, that they may be contaminated by the apparition of negro regiments in their camps?

— “What Our Fathers Did,” Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, Sept. 20, 1862)


Fire and Thunder: The First Black Regiments
African-Americans had fought bravely in both the American Revolution and the War of 1812, yet when they tried to enlist at the beginning of the Civil War they were turned away. Th e confl ict was, in the view of the War Department, a “white man’s war.” Th e Lincoln administration considered authorizing the use of black troops, but did not for fear of losing allegiance of the border states. When Generals John C. Fremont in Missouri and David Hunter in South Carolina att empted to emancipate slaves and train them as soldiers, Lincoln ordered them to stop. Such act ions, however, fueled continued debate. Passage of the Second Confi scation and Militia Act (July 1862) and Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation (January 1863) fi nally allowed for the formal enlistment of black troops into the ranks of the Union Army.


Petition to the General Court, 1861: Boston’s black community advocated for the right to serve in the military and called for repeal of restrictive laws. They petitioned the Massachusetts legislature to remove 'white' from the state militia law and organized a black drill society.

Petition to the
General Court, 1861

1st South Carolina Volunteer Infantry: One of the first black regiments raised, the 1st South Carolina saw service before official recognition. Soldiers wear regulation uniforms with red trousers likely used as an enlistment inducement. Painting by Don Troiani.

1st South Carolina

1st Regiment Louisiana Native Guards: Free African-Americans from New Orleans who first offered their services to the Confederacy in 1861. After Union capture of the city, they were reorganized and mustered into federal service, becoming the first officially sanctioned black regiment in the Union Army.

1st Louisiana Native Guards