blacks were still looked down and wasn’t allowed to join in some place. Although some were beginning to lack and the idea of having blacks on board was a bad idea anymore. In 1862, President Lincoln was told to separate the blacks and the whites in laborers and the whites would control those labors. Blacks were only paid $7.00 dollars a month. Were whites were paid $13.00 dollars. More places soon allowed blacks to join the service. The congress allowed the black soldiers in four different regiments to serve. They served along the Mexican border and Canadian border. By June 25,1950 President Truman was organizing an attack. The Korean troop was crossing over the 38th parallel to invaded the republic. By December 16 he had caused a mess. He
Enrollment began in September of 1862 (Allen 225). Thousands of black men enlisted. They would be commanded, led, and trained by all white officers. There were not to be any black officers commissioned and all African American soldiers were to be regarded as laborers. They would receive less pay than a white soldier. Instead of $13 plus clothing expenses, they would only receive $10 without clothing expenses (The American Civil War: A Multicultural Encyclopedia 55).
When the Civil War started in 1861 African-Americans offered their services to help fight, but were turned down by both the North and the South. Blacks were thinking that by offering their services they might get more respect and equality. Eventually, blacks got more established through the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 and then the government started to create all black regiments. The establishment of the 54th Mass Regiment created social implications giving them hope, Trying to gain authority and the necessity of having Black troops fight.
Slavery was a complicated issue for Northern whites. As pointed out by historian Kevin M. Schultz (2011), Northerners were generally in agreement that slavery was wrong, yet they were very uneasy with the idea of creating a large, free black population in the U.S. The Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 was a step toward that idea. The Proclamation did not free all slaves, since the border states of Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland and Delaware were exempted, as were Tennessee and areas of Virginia and Louisiana already under Union occupation (Schultz, 2011, p. 265). An important provision, however, was that black Americans would now be allowed to join the military. In the two years following the Emancipation Proclamation, 180,000 black men enlisted (Schultz, p. 265). They were poorly treated but eager to fight for a cause in which they had a high stake. Their numbers and their passion for the cause made African-American soldiers a powerful asset to the Union.
For centuries African American have been struggled against racial in America. During World War II the U.S. government asked for volunteers to join the army of defense, over 2.5 million of black men registered for the draft World, around 1 million served as draftees or volunteers in the armed forces within all branches. But didn’t received the same opportunity to serve in the same manner as white soldiers. They were to segregated combat support groups. In 1942, President Franklin Roosevelt and civil rights organizations pressured U.S Navy to recruited blacks for service.
Approximately 180,000 Negros served in the Union during the Civil War. The Negro Soldier was overall a good one. One example was at the Assault on Fort Wagner, South Carolina. The 54th Massachusetts Colored troops led the assault and scaled the fort’s parapet and were only driven back after brutal hand-to-hand fighting. The Negro faced some discrimination in the Union Army in areas such as pay. It wasn’t until June 15th, 1864 that the Congress granted equal pay to Negro troops. Several Negro soldiers earned the Medal of Honor. The North attitude towards Negro troops was mainly positive, while the South did not want Negros to serve in the Confederate Army. It wasn’t until the Confederates were running low on men did they allow Negros to serve. The Negros serving in the North felt it as their duty to serve and support the cause for their own freedom.
Black soldiers impacted many white lives during the 54th massachusetts infantry. The black soldiers were called into battle by John A. Andrew on February 14, 1863. Many camps were open to the black men and women. There were about 1000 black men, and black women volunteers for the civil war. There were about 179,000 black soldiers that went into combat.
Prejudice was also very evident towards African Americans in the Union forces in that they were usually assigned to labor duties, such as cleaning camps, building defenses and garrison duty, and in many cases not allowed to fight. Up until 1864, there was even a difference in pay for black soldiers, and they were not allowed to be commissioned officers.
Many Blacks wanted to seize the opportunity to go war mainly because they wanted to attain a sense of patriotism and obtain better treatment and better lives for their families. They were welcomed to serve in the war, but were barred from the Coast Guard, the Marine Corps and Air Corps. While the Navy accepted Blacks, they were limited to being mess men and filling mediocre positions. This was otherwise known as the Jim Crow Military. Aboard many naval bases, naval policy makers were reluctant to allow African Americans to fight equally with their white counterparts. The navy was different because it was specifically segregated dependent upon the type of service duty. They created separate specific tasks and duties that were only allotted for African Americans. Some of these tasks included cooks, waiters, and domestic servants. These acts were very discriminatory and humiliating especially considering that in most wars, African Americans have helped swing victory towards the side of the United States. During the 1940’s the USS Mason was commissioned. This was an experimental integrated naval base used for warfare. Many white Americans believed that this would have a detrimental effect on the Navy’s efficiency by allowing African Americans to become enlisted as personnel. The USS Mason had an
For many African Americans, the war offered an opportunity to get out of the cycle of crushing rural poverty. Black joined the military in large numbers, escaping a decade of Depression and tenant farming in the South and Midwest. Yet, like the rest of America in the 1940s, the armed forces were segregated. The Army accepted black enlistees but created separate black infantry regiments and assigned white commanders to them. Of the more than 2.5 million African Americans who registered for the draft in WWII, about 900,000 served in the Army. But about only 50,000 African Americans were allowed to serve in combat.
Although soldiers can seem intimidating, most Union soldiers were just normal people. The average soldier was white, single and around the age of twenty five. They were farmers, doing their best to protect their land back home the best way they knew how. Over two million men joined the Union army, but only 1.4 million came home. The Civil war saw more casualties than any other fought by American soldiers.
Although many of the Negro soldiers had proved themselves as very reputable soldiers, the discrimination in pay, and in many other areas, had remained very widespread. According to the notable Militia Act of 1862, all soldiers of any African descent, were to only receive $10.00 a month, plus
The African American saw only limited military service, the negative attitude toward enlisting black men came from master unwilling to give up their servants or from the fear of putting guns in the hands of people who were not free. South Carolina and Georgia, both heavily populated by African Americans, refused to legalize slave enlistments. When General Washington took command of the army, white colonists decided that not only should no black slaves or freemen be enlisted, but that those already serving in the Army should be dismissed.
As freed black men escaped their captivity as being enslaved in the South, racial equality in society was not reciprocated by white Americans. Even though African Americans were away from the constraints of slavery, they held a lower social status and were racially inferior by their community. Racial hierarchies were not only imposed in society but also in the military during the Civil War. As the Civil War broke out between the Union and the Confederate, President Lincoln believed that an all-white army had the capability of fighting off the Confederate units and that this war would be swift. The war progressed and the Union soon realized that they needed more reinforcements which would come from the freed black men in the North. During the Civil War, black soldiers would challenge and reinforce the existing racial hierarchies because the dispute of manhood amongst races would be enforce by violence that deterred black men from challenging their social status.
When America entered the Second World War, in 1942, they required Black men to fight. Many Black men fought for America in the war and did everything expected of them. Although they fought in different regiments to White Americans they were treated with respect, something many Black Americans had not experienced before. Whilst at war they noticed that many other countries- such as Britain- had integrated regiments without complications, so many wondered why America could not do the same. When
The federal government placed many restrictions and discriminatory actions on the black troops. At the beginning of the Civil War, African Americans were not allowed to serve in the U.S. military. By the summer of 1862 it was clear that additional troops were needed. To meet the need, Congress passed two bills that allowed the participation of black soldiers in the Union Army. The Government established segregated units called The Bureau of Colored Troops. The measure lacked popular support and the U.S. Army did not begin recruiting black soldiers until 1863.