History of the Fifty-fourth regiment of Masachusetts volunteer infantry, 1863-1865, Part 2

Author: Emilio, Luis Fenollosa, b. 1844
Publication date: 1891
Publisher: Boston, The Boston book co.
Number of Pages: 932


USA > Massachusetts > History of the Fifty-fourth regiment of Masachusetts volunteer infantry, 1863-1865 > Part 2


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Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31



6


FIFTY-FOURTH MASSACHUSETTS INFANTRY.


Captain Shaw arrived in Boston on February 15, and at once assumed the duties of his position. Captain Hallo- well was already there, daily engaged in the executive business of the new organization ; and about the middle of February, his brother, Edward N. Hallowell, who had served as a lieutenant in the Twentieth Massachusetts Infantry, also reported for duty, and was made major of the Fifty-fourth before its departure for the field.


Line-officers were commissioned from persons nominated by commanders of regiments in the field, by tried friends of the movement, the field-officers, and those Governor Andrew personally desired to appoint. This freedom of selection, - unhampered by claims arising from recruits furnished or preferences of the enlisted men, so powerful in officering white regiments, - secured for this organization a corps of officers who brought exceptional character, ex- perience, and ardor to their allotted work. Of the twenty- nine who took the field, fourteen were veteran soldiers from three-years regiments, nine from nine-months regi- ments, and one from the militia; six had previously been commissioned. They included representatives of well- known families; several were Harvard men; and some, descendants of officers of the Revolution and the War of 1812. Their average age was about twenty-three years.


At the time a strong prejudice existed against arming the blacks and those who dared to command them. The sentiment of the country and of the army was opposed to the measure. It was asserted that they would not fight, that their employment would prolong the war, and that white troops would refuse to serve with them. Besides the moral courage required to accept commissions in the Fifty-fourth at the time it was organizing, physical cour-


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age was also necessary, for the Confederate Congress, on May 1, 1803, passed an act, a portion of which read as follows : -


" SECTION IV. That every white person being a commissioned officer, or acting as such, who, during the present war, shall command negroes or mulattoes in arms against the Confederate States, or who shall arm, train, organize, or prepare negroes or mulattoes for military service against the Confederate States, or who shall voluntarily aid negroes or mulattoes in any mili- tary enterprise, attack, or conflict in such service, shall be deemed as inciting servile insurrection, and shall, if captured, be put to death or be otherwise punished at the discretion of the Court."


The motives which influenced many of those appointed are forcibly set forth in the following extracts from a letter of William H. Simpkins, then of the Forty-fourth Massachusetts Infantry, who was killed in action when a captain in the Fifty-fourth : -


" I have to tell you of a pretty important step that I have just taken. I have given my name to be forwarded to Massa- chusetts for a commission in the Fifty-fourth Negro Regiment, Colonel Shaw. This is no hasty conclusion, no blind leap of an enthusiast, but the result of much hard thinking. It will not be at first, and probably not for a long time, an agreeable position, for many reasons too evident to state. . . . Then this is nothing but an experiment after all ; but it is an experiment that I think it high time we should try, - an experiment which, the sooner we prove fortunate the sooner we can count upon an immense number of hardy troops that can stand the effect of a Southern climate without injury ; an experiment which the sooner we prove unsuccessful, the sooner we shall establish an important truth and rid ourselves of a false hope."


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FIFTY-FOURTH MASSACHUSETTS INFANTRY.


From first to last the original officers exercised a con- trolling influence in the regiment. To them - field, staff, and line - was largely due whatever fame was gained by the Fifty-fourth as the result of efficient leadership in camp or on the battlefield.


In his " Memoirs of Governor Andrew " the Hon. Peleg W. Chandler writes: -


" When the first colored regiment was formed, he [Governor Andrew] remarked to a friend that in regard to other regi- ments, he accepted men as officers who were sometimes rough and uncultivated, 'but these men,' he said, 'shall be com- manded by officers who are eminently gentlemen.'"


So much for the selection of officers. When it came to filling the ranks, strenuous efforts were required outside the State, as the colored population could not furnish the number required even for one regiment.


Pending the effort in the wider field available under the plan proposed, steps were taken to begin recruiting within the State. John W. M. Appleton, of Boston, a gentleman of great energy and sanguine temperament, was the first person selected for a commission in the Fifty- fourth, which bore date of February 7. He reported to the Governor, and received orders to begin recruiting. An office was taken in Cambridge Street, corner of North Russell, upstairs, in a building now torn down. On February 16, the following call was published in the columns of the "Boston Journal " : -


TO COLORED MEN.


Wanted. Good men for the Fifty-fourth Regiment of Mas- sachusetts Volunteers of African descent, Col. Robert G. Shaw.


-


Colored Officers.


CHAPLAIN SAMUEL HARRISON. LIEUT. STEPHEN A. SWALL.S.


LIEUT. FRANK M. WELCH. LIEUT. PETER VOGELSANG.


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$100 bounty at expiration of term of service. Pay $13 per month, and State aid for families. All necessary information can be obtained at the office, corner Cambridge and North Russell Streets.


LIEUT. J. W. M. APPLETON,


Recruiting Officer.


In five days twenty-five men were secured; and Lieu- tenant Appleton's work was vigorously prosecuted, with measurable success. It was not always an agreeable task, for the rougher element was troublesome and insult- ing. About fifty or sixty men were recruited at this office, which was closed about the last of March. Lieutenant Appleton then reported to the camp established and took command of Company A, made up of his recruits and others afterward obtained.


Early in February quite a number of colored men were recruited in Philadelphia, by Lieut. E. N. Hallowell, James M. Walton, who was subsequently commissioned in the Fifty-fourth, and Robert R. Corson, the Massa- chusetts State Agent. Recruiting there was attended with much annoyance. The gathering-place had to be kept secret, and the men sent to Massachusetts in small parties to avoid molestation or excitement. Mr. Corson was obliged to purchase railroad tickets himself, and get the recruits one at a time on the cars or under cover of dark - ness. The men sent and brought from Philadelphia went to form the major part of Company B.


New Bedford was also chosen as a fertile field. James W. Grace, a young business man of that place, was se- lected as recruiting officer, and commissioned February 10. He opened headquarters on Williams Street, near the post- office, and put out the United States flag across the street.


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FIFTY-FOURTH MASSACHUSETTS INFANTRY.


Colored ministers of the city were informed of his plans; and Lieutenant Grace visited their churches to interest the people in his work. He arranged for William Lloyd Garri- son, Wendell Phillips, Frederick Douglass, and other noted men to address meetings. Cornelius Howland, C. B. H. Fessenden, and James B. Congdon materially assisted and were good friends of the movement. While recruiting, Lieutenant Grace was often insulted by such remarks as, "There goes the captain of the Negro Company! He thinks the negroes will fight! They will turn and run at the first sight of the enemy ! " His little son was scoffed at in school because his father was raising a negro com- pany to fight the white men. Previous to departure, the New Bedford recruits and their friends gathered for a farewell meeting. William Berry presided; prayer was offered by Rev. Mr. Grimes; and remarks were made by Lieutenant-Colonel Hallowell, Lieutenant Grace, C. B. H. Fessenden, Ezra Wilson, Rev. Mr. Kelly, Wesley Furlong, and Dr. Bayne. A collation at A. Taylor and Company's followed. Temporarily the recruits took the name of "Morgan Guards," in recognition of kindnesses from S. Griffiths Morgan. At camp the New Bedford men, - some seventy-five in number, - with others from that place and elsewhere, became Company C, the representative Massachusetts company.


Only one other commissioned officer is known to the writer as having performed effective recruiting service. This is Watson W. Bridge, who had been first sergeant, Company D, Thirty-seventh Massachusetts Infantry. His headquarters were at Springfield, and he worked in Wes- tern Massachusettts and Connecticut. When ordered to camp, about April 1, he had recruited some seventy men. .


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RECRUITING.


Much the larger number of recruits were obtained through the organization and by the means which will now be described. About February 15, Governor Andrew appointed a committee to superintend the raising of re- cruits for the colored regiment, consisting of George L. Stearns, Amos A. Lawrence, John M. Forbes, William I. Bowditch, Le Baron Russell, and Richard P. Hallowell, of Boston; Mayor Howland and James B. Congdon, of New Bedford; Willard P. Phillips, of Salem; and Francis G. Shaw, of New York. Subsequently the membership was increased to one hundred, and it became known as the "Black Committee." It was mainly instrumental in pro- curing the men of the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Massa- chusetts Infantry, the Fifth Massachusetts Cavalry, besides 3,967 other colored men credited to the State. All the gentlemen named were persons of prominence. Most of them had been for years in the van of those advanced thinkers and workers who had striven to help and free the slave wherever found.


The first work of this committee was to collect money ; and in a very short time five thousand dollars was received, Gerrit Smith, of New York, sending his check for five hundred dollars. Altogether nearly one hundred thousand dollars was collected, which passed through the hands of Richard P. Hallowell, the treasurer, who was a brother of the Hallowells commissioned in the Fifty-fourth. A call for recruits was published in a hundred journals from east to west. Friends whose views were known were communicated with, and their aid solicited; but the response was not for a time encouraging.


With the need came the man. Excepting Governor Andrew, the highest praise for recruiting the Fifty-fourth


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FIFTY-FOURTH MASSACHUSETTS INFANTRY.


belongs to George L. Stearns, who had been closely iden- tified with the struggle in Kansas and John Brown's projects. He was appointed agent for the committee, and about February 23 went west on his mission. Mr. Stearns stopped at Rochester, N. Y., to ask the aid of Fred Doug- lass, receiving hearty co-operation, and enrolling a son of Douglass as his first recruit. His headquarters were made at Buffalo, and a line of recruiting posts from Boston to St. Louis established.


Soon such success was met with in the work that after filling the Fifty-fourth the number of recruits was suffi- cient to warrant forming a sister regiment. Many news- papers gave publicity to the efforts of Governor Andrew and the committee. Among the persons who aided the project by speeches or as agents were George E. Stephens, Daniel Calley, A. M. Green, Charles L. Remond, William Wells Brown, Martin R. Delany, Stephen Myers, O. S. B. Wall, Rev. William Jackson, John S. Rock, Rev. J. B. Smith, Rev. H. Garnett, George T. Downing, and Rev. J. W. Loquecr.


Recruiting stations were established, and meetings held at Nantucket, Fall River, Newport, Providence, Pittsfield. New York City, Philadelphia, Elmira, and other places throughout the country. In response the most respectable, intelligent, and courageous of the colored population every. where gave up their avocations, headed the enlistment rolls, and persuaded others to join them.


Most memorable of all the meetings held in aid of recruiting the Fifty-fourth was that at the Joy Street Church, Boston, on the evening of February 16, which was enthusiastic and largely attended. Robert Johnson, Jr., presided; J. R. Sterling was the Vice-President, and Fran-


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RECRUITING.


cis Fletcher Secretary. In opening, Mr. Johnson stated the object of the gathering. He thought that another year would show the importance of having the black man in arms, and pleaded with his hearers, by the love they bore their country, not to deter by word or deed any person from entering the service. Judge Russell said in his remarks, "You want to be line-officers yourselves." He thought they had a right to be, and said, -


" If you want commissions, go, earn, and get them. [Cheers. ] Never let it be said that when the country called, this reason kept back a single man, but go cheerfully."


Edward L. Pierce was the next speaker; and he re- minded them of the many equalities they had in common with the whites. He called on them to stand by those who for half a century had maintained that they would prove brave and noble and patriotic when the opportunity came. Amid great applause Wendell Phillips was intro- duced. The last time he had met such an audience was when he was driven from Tremont Temple by a mob. Since then the feeling toward them had much changed. Some of the men who had pursued and hunted him and them even to that very spot had given up their lives ou the battlefields of Virginia. He said . -


" Now they offer you a musket and say, 'Come and help us.' The question is, will you of Massachusetts take hold? I hear there is some reluctance because you are not to have offi- cers of your own color. This may be wrong, for I think you have as much right to the first commission in a brigade as a white man. No regiment should be without a mixture of the races. But if you cannot have a whole loaf, will you not take a slice ?"


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FIFTY-FOURTH MASSACHUSETTS INFANTRY.


He recited reasons why it would be better to have white officers, stating among other things that they would be more likely to have justice done them and the prejudice more surely overcome than if commanded by men of their own race. He continued : -


" Your success hangs on the general success. If the Union lives, it will live with equal races. If divided, and you have done your duty, then you will stand upon the same platform with the white race. [Cheers. ] Then make use of the offers Government has made you; for if you are not willing to fight your way up to office, you are not worthy of it. Put yourselves under the stars and stripes, and fight yourselves to the marquee of a general, and you shall come out with a sword. [Cheers.]"


Addresses were then made by Lieutenant-Colonel Hal- lowell, Robert C. Morris, and others. It was a great meeting for the colored people, and did much to aid recruiting.


Stirring appeals and addresses were written by J. M. Langston, Elizur Wright, and others. One published by Frederick Douglass in his own paper, at Rochester, N. Y., was the most cloquent and inspiring. The following is extracted : -


" We can get at the throat of treason and slavery through the State of Massachusetts. She was first in the War of Inde- pendence ; first to break the chains of her slaves ; first to make the black man equal before the law ; first to admit colored chil- dren to her common schools. She was first to answer with her blood the alarm-cry of the nation when its capital was menaced by the Rebels. You know her patriotic Governor, and you know Charles Sumner. I need add no more. Massachusetts now welcomes you as her soldiers." ...


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RECRUITING.


In consequence of the cold weather there was some suffering in the regimental camp. When this became known, a meeting was held at a private residence on March 10, and a committee of six ladies and four gentle- men was appointed to procure comforts, necessities, and a flag. Colonel Shaw was present, and gave an account of progress. To provide a fund, a levee was held at Chicker- ing Hall on the evening of March 20, when speeches were made by Ralph Waldo Emerson, Wendell Phillips, Rev. Dr. Neale, Rev. Father Taylor, Judge Russell, and Lieu- tenant-Colonel Hallowell. Later, through the efforts of Colonel Shaw and Lieutenant-Colonel Hallowell, a special fund of five hundred dollars was contributed to purchase musical instruments and to instruct and equip a band.


Besides subscriptions, certain sums of money were re- ceived from towns and cities of the State, for volunteers in the Fifty-fourth credited to their quota. The members of the committee contributed liberally to the funds re- quired, and the following is a partial list of those who aided the organization in various ways : -


George Putnam,


George Higginson, Thomas Russell,


C. G. Loring,


J. H. Walcott,


E. P. Philbrick,


S. G. Ward,


Oliver Ellsworth,


J. M. Barnard,


R. W. Hooker,


William F. Weld,


J. H. Stephenson,


J. Wiley Edmands,


John II. Silsbee,


William Endicott, Jr.,


Manuel Fenollosa,


Francis L. Lee,


G. Mitchell,


Oakes Ames,


J. W. Brooks,


James L. Little,


Marshall S. Scudder,


S. Cabot, Jr., John Lowell,


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FIFTY-FOURTH MASSACHUSETTS INFANTRY.


James T. Field,


Henry Lee, Jr., George S. Hale, William Dwight, R. P. Waters,


Miss Halliburton, Frederick Tudor, Samuel Johnson, Mary E. Stearns, Mrs. William J. Loring,


Avery Plummer, Jr., Alexander II. Rice.


Mrs. Governor Andrew, Mrs. R. C. Waterston.


John J. May,


Wright & Potter,


John Gardner,


J. B. Dow,


Mrs. Chas. W. Sumner,


Albert G. Browne,


William Cumston, J. A. Higginson, Peter Smith,


Ralph Waldo Emerson,


W. B. Rogers,


Theodore Otis,


Charles Buffum,


A. Plummer,


John S. Emery,


Gerrit Smith,


Albert G. Browne, Jr.,


Mrs. Urbino,


Josiah Quincy. William Claflin,


W. & J. Ritchie,


Mrs. Harrison Gray Otis.


Pond & Duncklee,


George Bemis,


John H. and Mary E. Cabot.


Edward Atkinson,


Mary P. Payson,


Professor Agassiz,


Manuel Emilio, H. N. Holland,


J. G. Palfrey,


besides several societies and fraternities.


Most of the papers connected with the labors of the committee were destroyed in the great Boston fire, so that it is difficult now to set forth properly in greater detail the work accomplished.


In the proclamation of outlawry issued by Jefferson Davis, Dec. 23, 1862, against Major-General Butler, was the following clause : -


James Savage, Samuel May,


Mrs. May,


E. W. Kinsley,


COL. EDWARD N. HALLOWELL. BREVET BRIG. GEN. U.S. V.


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"Third. That all negro slaves captured in arms be at once delivered over to the executive authorities of the respective States to which they belong, to be dealt with according to the laws of said States."


The act passed by the Confederate Congress previously referred to, contained a scetion which extended the same penalty to negroes or mulattoes captured, or who gave aid or comfort to the enemies of the Confederacy. Those who enlisted in the Fifty-fourth did so under these acts of outlawry bearing the penalties provided. Aware of these facts, confident in the protection the Government would and should afford, but desirous of having official assurances, George T. Downing wrote regarding the status of the Fifty-fourth men, and received the follow- ing reply : -


COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS, EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT, BOSTON, March 23, 1863.


GEORGE T. DOWNING, Esq., New York.


DEAR SIR, - In reply to your inquiries made as to the posi- tion of colored men who may be enlisted into the volunteer service of the United States, I would say that their position in respect to pay, equipments, bounty, or any aid or protection when so mustered is that of any and all other volunteers.


I desire further to state to you that when I was in Washing- ton on one occasion, in an interview with Mr. Stanton, the Secretary of War, he stated in the most emphatic manner that he would never consent that free colored men should be ac- cepted into the service to serve as soldiers in the South, until he should be assured that the Government of the United States was prepared to guarantee and defend to the last dollar and the last man, to these men, all the rights, privileges, and immu- nities that are given by the laws of civilized warfare to other soldiers. Their present acceptance and muster-in as soldiers


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FIFTY-FOURTH MASSACHUSETTS INFANTRY.


pledges the honor of the nation in the same degree and to the same rights with all. They will be soldiers of the Union, nothing less and nothing different. I believe they will earn for themselves an honorable fame, vindicating their race and redressing their future from the aspersions of the past.


I am, yours truly,


JOHN A. ANDREW.


Having recited the measures and means whereby the Fifty-fourth was organized, the history proper of the regiment will now be entered upon.


CHAPTER II.


READVILLE CAMP.


L IEUTENANT E. N. HALLOWELL, on Feb. 21, 1863, was ordered to Readville, Mass., where, at Camp Meigs, by direction of Brig. - Gen. R. A. Peirce, commandant of camps, he took possession with twenty- seven men of the buildings assigned to the new regi- ment. Readville is on the Boston and Providence Rail- road, a few miles from Boston. The ground was flat, and well adapted for drilling, but in wet weather was muddy, and in the winter season bleak and cheerless. The barracks were great barn-like structures of wood with sleeping-bunks on either side. The field, staff, and com- pany officers were quartered in smaller buildings. In other barracks near by was the larger part of the Second Massachusetts Cavalry, under Col. Charles R. Lowell, Jr., a brother-in-law of Colonel Shaw.


During the first week seventy-two recruits were received in camp, and others soon began to arrive with a steady and increasing flow ; singly, in squads, and even in detach- inents from the several agencies established throughout the country.


Surgeon-General Dale, of Massachusetts, reported on the Fifty-fourth recruits as follows : -


" The first recruits were sent to Camp Meigs, Readville, in February, 1863 ; their medical examination was most rigid and thorough, nearly one third of the number offering being peremp-


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FIFTY-FOURTH MASSACHUSETTS INFANTRY.


torily rejected. As a consequence, a more robust, strong, and healthy set of men were never mustered into the service of the United States."


Companies A and B were filled by March 15; Company D was then formed; Company C came to camp from New Bedford on March 10. These four companies were mus- tered into the United States service on March 30. Lieu- tenant Partridge on March 28 was assigned to begin Company E; Lieutenant Bridge, reporting from recruit- ing service, was placed in command of Company F, just forming; Lieutenant Smith, on April 10, was chosen to organize Company G. As recruits came in during April at the rate of one hundred per week, these three compa- nies were ready for muster on April 23. Companies H, I, and K were mustered May 13, completing the regiment.


With some twenty-one officers and four hundred men in camp, on April 1, the regiment was fairly under way. The material of which it was to be composed could fairly be judged from what was at hand. There were ample grounds for encouragement even to the most sceptical. It is pleasant to record that the soldier appointed to the command was early assured of the fact that he had not dared to lead in a hopeless task, for on March 25, Colonel Shaw wrote: -


" If the success of the Fifty-fourth gives you so much pleasure, I shall have no difficulty in giving yon good words of it whenever I write. Everything goes on prosperously. The intelligence of the men is a great surprise to me. They learn all the details of guard duty and camp service infinitely more readily than most of the Irish I have had under my command. There is not the least doubt that we shall leave the State with as good a regiment as any that has marched."


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READVILLE CAMP.


A considerable number of the men had prepared them- selves in some measure for bearing arms, others had been officers' servants or camp followers; and as has been noted in all times and in all races of men, some were natural soldiers. Passive obedience - a race trait - characterized them. During their whole service their esprit du corps was admirable.


Only a small proportion had been slaves. There were a large number of comparatively light-complexioned men. In stature they reached the average of white volunteers. Compared with the material of contraband regiments, they were lighter, taller, of more regular features. There were men enough found amply qualified to more than supply all requirements for warrant officers and clerks. As a rule, those first selected held their positions throughout service. The co-operation of the non-commissioned officers helped greatly to secure the good reputation enjoyed by the Fifty- fourth; and their blood was freely shed, in undue propor- tion, on every battlefield. Surgeon-General Dale, in the report previously quoted from, speaks further of the Fifty- fourth as follows : -


"From the outset, the regiment showed great interest in drilling, and on guard duty it was always vigilant and active. The barracks, cook-houses, and kitchens far surpassed in cleanliness any I have ever witnessed, and were models of neatness and good order. The cooks, however, had many of them been in similar employment in other places, and had therefore brought some skill to the present responsibility.




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