Many people today are taught that the War Between The States was about slavery and that Southern whites were attempting to establish a white-only, or a white-supremacist society, andthat the north was fighting only to free the slaves. The truth about the diversity in theConfederate army is nothing like this work of fiction most of our children are taught.Not all of the Confederate soldiers came from the South, but from the North as well. Many wereof foreign-birth, or from minorities within the Confederate States of America. Mexicans andMexican-Americans enlisted, as well as African-Americans and even Native-Americans. Manyunusual nationalities, such as Egypt and Syria, were represented on the Confederate enlistmentrolls, and all of these groups made the Southern military a more interesting and diverse fightingforce. The Confederate soldiers were indeed more varied than what is commonly portrayedtoday.This pamphlet is only intended to provide the reader with an overview of those who filled theranks of the Confederate Army. I encourage all those seeking the truth concerning the minoritieswho wore the gray to explore the bibliography provided at the end of this pamphlet.***********
Confederates of European Descent
Canadians enlisted to fight for the C.S.A. No clear reasons were given, but they are probablysimilar to many of the reasons given by the others. No exact number has ever been given, but theclaim has been made by Canadians that they had 40,000 men in the Confederate ranks.In the Confederate Army there was one brigade of Irishmen, several German regiments, a Polishlegion and a European brigade of mixed nationalities came from Louisiana, that was commandedby the French Count Camille Armand Jules Marie, Prince de Polignac. His men abbreviated thatconsiderably, and simply called him Polecat.The outbreak of the War Between the States brought a flood of enlistments from the South’sIrish immigrant population who were anxious to prove their loyalty to their new homeland.The legendary Irish Brigade of the Union Army is well documented, but little has been writtenconcerning the role the Irish American soldier played for the Confederacy.Forty thousand Irish served in the Confederate Army and played significant roles in the Army ofNorthern Virginia, the Army of Tennessee, the hotly disputed coastal areas and the Mississippiand Trans-Mississippi campaigns.***********
Hispanic Confederates
Hispanics were also well represented in the Confederate ranks. Texas, Florida and Louisiana hadlarge Hispanic populations who enlisted to defend their homeland.Hispanics were well represented in the Confederate Army, such as 6th Missouri InfantryRegiment, the 55th Alabama Infantry Regiment, the 2nd Texas Mounted Rifles, the 1st FloridaCavalry Regiment and the 33rd Texas Cavalry Regiment, commanded by Col. Santos Benavides,the highest ranking Hispanic officer on the Confederate side. Others served in the LouisianaZouaves Battalion, the Spanish Legion of the European Brigade, and the Spanish Guard ofMobile, Ala. Confederate militia formations with sizable Hispanic contingents included oneindependent infantry battalion and four independent infantry companies from NewMexico.It has been estimated that about 13,000 Hispanic AmericansHispanic women were also represented in the ranks. Cuban-born Loretta Janeta Velasquez wasone of the most famous woman soldiers. She enlisted in the Confederate Army masquerading asa man and fought at First Manassas, Ball’s Bluff and Fort Pillow. Discharged when her realgender was discovered, she rejoined and fought at Shiloh. Unmasked a second time, she endedher military career working as a Confederate spy.St Johns County, Florida was home of the Sanchez sisters. The Sanchez sisters moved to Floridafrom Cuba with the return of Mauritia Sanchez before the civil war ever broke out. The Sanchezfamily was comprised of an ailing father, an invalid mother, a son who served in the Confederatearmy and three acclaimed beauties; Panchita, Lola and Eugenia, who were Confederate spies.The Sanchez sisters truly were valuable assets to the Confederate Army who effective upset theplot of the Yankees and kept a constant train of information flowing for the Confederate Army.At the outbreak of the war, the men of St Augustine formed what was to become the St.Augustine Blues or Company B, 3rdFlorida Infantry Regiment. This unit was mostly comprisedof men of Minorican or Spanish descent with the last names of Ponce, Masters, Pacetti, Bravo,Canova, Genovar, Capo, Lambias, Manucy, Papy and Solana.***********
Jewish Confederates
Contrary to popular belief, "Jews had found themselves very much at home in the South, muchmore so than elsewhere," says the University of Georgia's Emory Thomas, a historian and authorof many Civil War books. "They were accepted members of the community, and therefore theycast their loyalties with this new Confederacy, bought bonds and did everything patrioticSoutherners would do."Some 3,000 or more Jews fought for the South, practically every male of military age. Manycarried with them to the front thefamous soldiers' prayer, beginning with the sacred prayer, the "Shema," written by RichmondRabbi Max Michelbacher, who after secession, had issued a widely-published benedictioncomparing Southerners to "the Children of Israel crossing the Red Sea."Many Jewish Confederates distinguished themselves by showing, along with their Christiancomrades, amazing courage, dedication, and valor—and all enduring incredible hardships againstoverwhelming and often hopeless odds.All-Jewish companies reported to the fray from Macon and Savannah, Georgia. In Louisiana, 3Jews reached the rank of Colonel. They were S. M. Hymans, Edwin Kuncheedt and Ira Moses.Major Adolph Proskauer of Mobile, Alabama was wounded several times. A subordinate officerwrote "I can see him now as he nobly carried himself at Gettysburg, standing coolly and calmlywith a cigar in his mouth at the head of the 12thAlabama amid a perfect rain of bullets, shot andshell. He was the personification of intrepid gallantry and imperturbable courage."The most famous Southern Jew of that era was Judah Benjamin. He was educated in law at Yale.Judah Benjamin served President Davis and the Confederacy in 3 positions, Attorney General,Secretary of War and Secretary of State.Abraham Myers was a West Point graduate and classmate of Robert E. Lee. Myers served asQuartermaster General.Major Raphael Moses, General Longstreet's chief commissary officer, whose three sons alsofought for the South. Moses ended up attending the last meeting and carrying out the Last Orderof the Confederate government .History books gloss over the fact that Union generals like Ulysses Grant and William Sherman,who burned Atlanta, talked about "damned Jewish peddlers," while both Jeff Davis and RobertE. Lee were known to have many Jewish friends.General Robert E. Lee, is renowned for publicly showing great respect for his Jewish soldiers.***********
American Indian Confederates
Another interesting group were the Native-American soldiers of the Confederacy. Most membersof the Five Civilized Tribes and of Indian Territory chose the Confederate side during the CivilWar.Indian tribes who signed treaties with and served the CSA beginning in the summer of 1861,Creeks, Choctaws, Chickasaws, Seminoles, Quapaws, Senecas, Caddos, Whitchitas, Osage, and Shawnees. In late fall 1861Chief John Ross of the Cherokees abandoned his original stance of neutrality and also signed thetreaty with the Confederacy. In these treaties the Confederate government promised to assumefederal obligations, protect tribes from invasion, and invited Indian representation in theConfederate Congress. In turn these tribes were to provide troops for their own defense. About15,000 American Indians served in the Confederacy Army.The Confederate troops of Indian Territory were, by the end of the war, organized into a divisionof two brigades. Brig. Gen. Douglas H. Cooper commanded the division. Col. Tandy Walkercommanded the second, or Choctaw Brigade, composed ofChoctaw and Chickasaw units. Brig. Gen. Stand Watie, aCherokee, commanded all the Indian units not in the Choctaw BrigadeUnlike the rest of the Confederacy, Indian Territory troops grew more and more successful afterJuly 1863. The great majority of the Division, still in the field and undefeated in June of 1865,was finally surrendered at Doaksville, Choctaw Nation, on June 23, 1865, by Stand Watie, thelast Confederate general in the field to surrender.Cherokee Nation fielded 11 mounted infantry and cavalry units and 1 artillery unit.Creek Nation fielded 3 mounted infantry and cavalry units..Seminole Nation fielded 2 mounted Volunteer units.Chickasaw Nation fielded 4 mounted infantry and cavalry units.Choctaw Nation fielded 7 mounted infantry and cavalry units.Osage Nation fielded 1 mounted Volunteer unit***********
Black Confederates
Black Confederates Why haven't we heard more about them? National Park Service historian,Ed Bearrs, stated, "I don't want to call it a conspiracy to ignore the role of Blacks both above andbelow the Mason-Dixon line, but it was definitely a tendency that began around 1910."Historian, Erwin L. Jordan, Jr., calls it a "cover-up" which started back in 1865. He writes,"During my research, I came across instances where Black men stated they were soldiers, butyou can plainly see where 'soldier' is crossed out and 'body servant' inserted, or 'teamster' onpension applications."James Eaton, a professor at Florida A&M University who studied black Confederates, explainedwhy those men might have joined the cause. "Some of them were promised their freedom if they
Bibliography:
Black Southerners in Gray, By Richard RollinsBlack Confederates and Afro-Yankees in Civil War Virginia, By Ervin L. Jordan, Jr.Black Southern Heritage, By Dr. Edward Smith and Nelson Winbush, Mr. Winbush is adescendent of a Black Confederate and a member of the Sons of Confederate VeteransForgotten Confederates: An Anthology About Black Southerners By Charles K. BarrowConfederate Soldiers: Why Did They Enlist? By Michael B. ShockAmerica's Hispanics in America's Wars, Army Magazine, September 2002Encyclopedia of North American IndiansA Guide to Cherokee Confederate Military Units, 1861 - 1865 by Lars GjertveitThe American Indian in the Great War: Real and Imagined By Diane CamuratJanuary 2007 Edition of the Jewish MagazineMarch 2007 Edition of the Jewish MagazineMay 2008 Edition of the Jewish MagazineJews In The Confederacy by Charleston lawyer Robert RosenIrish Americans in the Confederate Army, by Sean Michael O'BrienHispanic Confederates from the Gulf Coast States, By John O'Donnel-Rosales
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