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Army Life in a Black Regiment

Chapter 12 The Negro as a Soldier

Word Count: 6141    |    Released on: 29/11/2017

in the war Trowbridge had been once sent to Amelia Island with a squad of men, under direction of Commodore Goldsbo

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Army Life in a Black Regiment
Army Life in a Black Regiment
“Thomas Wentworth Higginson, a Unitarian minister, was a fervent member of New England's abolitionist movement, an active participant in the Underground Railroad, and not only corresponded with John Brown before the ill-fated raid on Harper's Ferry, but was part of a group that supplied material aid to Brown. When the Civil War broke out, his reputation, enhanced by his impassioned articles about Denmark Vesey and Nat Turner in the Atlantic, made him the perfect candidate to head the first regiment of emancipated slaves, and in 1862, he was commissioned as a colonel for the troops training in the Sea Islands off the coast of the Carolinas. Army Life in a Black Regiment is Higginson's stirring account of his wartime experiences. Shaped by American Romanticism and imbued with Higginson's interest in both man and nature, the narrative ranges from detailed reports on daily life to a vivid description of the author's near escape from cannon fire to sketches that conjure up the beauty and mystery of the Sea Islands.”
1 Chapter 1 Introductory2 Chapter 2 Camp Diary3 Chapter 3 Mary's4 Chapter 4 John's5 Chapter 5 Out on Picket6 Chapter 6 A Night in the Water7 Chapter 7 Up the Edisto8 Chapter 8 The Baby of the Regiment9 Chapter 9 Negro Spirituals10 Chapter 10 Life at Camp Shaw11 Chapter 11 Florida Again 12 Chapter 12 The Negro as a Soldier13 Chapter 13 Conclusion