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Come see Black and Blue Living History Camp
Published Wednesday, October 7, 2009
As the day draws near for our second annual Black and Blue Civil War Living History Camp at Jefferson College, the State of Mississippi has just begun organizing to commemorate the sesquicentennial (150th anniversary) of the American Civil War.
Official Commissions have been or are being established in all states of America to plan commemorating the 150th anniversary of the Civil War.
The Mississippi State Legislature passed Senate Bill 2288 effective July 1, establishing the Mississippi Sesquicentennial of the American Civil War Commission.
The commission’s job is to “prepare for and commemorate the sesquicentennial of Mississippi’s participation in the American Civil War from April 1861 to April 1865.”
After attending the commission’s first organizing meeting in Raymond on Sept. 23, I now view our Black and Blue Civil War Living History Camp as being in a great position to become an integral component for commemorating the American Civil War in Southwest Mississippi.
Commission members sounded off on subjects such as the Civil War relative to economic development, tourism, public school books and curriculum, students’ lesson plan for doing genealogy and getting the Civil War story right this time, preserving it for generations to come.
For the past 10 years Friends of the Forks of Roads Society Inc. has been on point by annually putting forth programs and activities designed to commemorate the history of and educate the public about enslaved and non-enslaved African descendants in the Miss-Lou who self-emancipated and became freedom fighters in the Union army and navy.
The other Friends of the Forks major activity is the preservation, presentation and interpretation of chattel slavery trafficking at the Forks of the Road.
Like I have emphasized to Underground Railroad proponents, you cannot talk about Underground Railroad unless you first talk about chattel slavery in America.
Thus, you cannot even begin to talk about the Civil War in America, without first talking about chattel slavery.
Friend’s of the Forks mission encompasses all of the above and more.
One of our two subcommittee action arms is Fort McPherson Sons and Daughters of U.S. Colored Troops and Sailors Chapter. This chapter holds a charter from the Sons and Daughters of U.S. Colored Troops National Organization based in the National Black Civil War Museum Washington, D.C., and is a member of the national organization of U.S. Colored Troops Living History Association based in Murfreesboro, Tenn.
At its re-organization meeting in Raleigh North Carolina in 2007, USCTLHA member Joe Certaine empowered those of us in attendance to return to our home states and start organizing to be an integral part of the sesquicentennial commemoration of the Civil War.
He placed special emphasis upon the sesquicentennial of the Civil War being the “first time in America’s history that blacks can tell our own story” of our ancestors’ and foreparents’ freedom fighting actions in the civil war.
Upon returning to Natchez from Raleigh North Carolina, as coordinator of the Friends of the Forks, I compounded our past civil war activities into our first Black and Blue Civil War Living History encampment presenting the Miss-Lou “black” experience in the Civil War in 2008.
In October of 2008 the Mississippi Department of Archives and History who co-sponsored our first Black and Blue Civil War event, adopted our black and blue Civil War event as an annual event.
MDAH is one of the 15 total state legislature designated members of Mississippi’s Sesquicentennial Commission.
MDAH’s executive director has expressed and shown his sensitivity for equal history commemorations relative to African descent people’s military role in the Civil War in Mississippi by adopting our Black and Blue Civil War event as an annual event.
Such a relationship should weigh a great deal toward the work of an “advisory council of citizens at large” the commission is empowered to establish.
It certainly should weigh in as the commission is also empowered to “provide technical and financial assistance to localities and nonprofit organizations to further the commemoration of the sesquicentennial of the American Civil War.”
I want to personally thank the businesses and individual donors, supporters, actors and re-enactors from afar and near for stepping up and helping make it happen.
I invite the Miss-Lou public to join us for what we think will be a great second annual Black and Blue Civil War Living History Camp at Jefferson College at noon Saturday. Bring your children to our Children’s Soldiers Camp at 10:30 a.m. that morning. Bring your chairs.
Ser Seshs Ab Heter-CM Boxley is the coordinator of the Friends of the Forks of the Road.





Comments
Posted by Hambone (anonymous) on October 7, 2009 at 7:26 a.m. (Suggest removal)
"He placed special emphasis upon the sesquicentennial of the Civil War being the “first time in America’s history that blacks can tell our own story” of our ancestors’ and foreparents"
What an awesome story to tell. How your very own sold you to the white man and shipped you halfway across the world. Maybe you can tie it into how 150 years later, black on black crime is still the biggest challenge you face...
Posted by tenzing (anonymous) on October 7, 2009 at 7:56 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Stay classy, "Hambone."
Posted by sobeit (anonymous) on October 7, 2009 at 9:41 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I suppose you are talking about this Saturday as the day this historical event will unfold. I feel a headache coming on for this Saturday so I will not be there.
Give me a break!
Posted by southernbelle (anonymous) on October 7, 2009 at 10:34 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Sometimes starting at the beginning with the truth is just to hard to comprehend to some. I really do get you,Hambone. And I think you do have class.But I want the blacks to tell their story and learn from it because you can't move forward if you don't look backwards first.
Posted by thetinman (Keith Reynolds) on October 7, 2009 at 12:09 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Black, White , Red, Yellow, Olive, etc,,, We all need JESUS CHRIST in our lives. Over all tell the truth, but also do it with dignity, so everyone, and I mean EVERYONE, can come out with all positives about it. Sometimes truths can hurt, but the Bible tells us, The Truth Will Set You Free.
GOD Bless the World
JESUS CHRIST is coming soon
Posted by southernbelle (anonymous) on October 7, 2009 at 12:44 p.m. (Suggest removal)
You got that that right, Keith.
Posted by reb1843 (anonymous) on October 7, 2009 at 4:18 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Be sure to tell the story of how the USCTs were required to encamp down along the flatlands under the Bluff, and ascend the "1,000 Steps" to Fort McPherson each day to drill with the white soldiers who did not want to associate with them. The USCTs buried in the National Cemetery are listed as 'Unknown' and died of disease or accident, not from engaging in battle with Confederate soldiers.
Be sure to tell the story of the 70th USCTs (under the white leadership of Lt. Col. Hubert A. McCaleb) who burned, raped, and pillaged the countryside while garrisoned at Fort McPherson. He also commanded the 6th US Colored Artillery and the 2nd Mississippi Heavy Artillery, another black unit. (All that is in the fedgov's own "War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies," published from 1880-1991. The USCTs were the least-trained, least-disciplined units in the Yankee army, and more likely to be assigned duty at a fort or in 'pioneer service' - making roads, cutting firewood, etc.
I could go on, but you get the message...
Posted by reb1843 (anonymous) on October 7, 2009 at 5:28 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Oh, and another thing: It was not a 'civil war' by any definition. A civil war is one fought by two competing factions for control of the same country. Not so with the South. They had no designs on conquest, territory, treasures, etc. The secession of the Southern states in 1860-61 was akin to the 'rebellion' of 1776, when the colonies wanted to be free of British rule. They were called 'patriots' at that time. Lincoln and his minions referred to Southerners as 'traitors,' 'rebels,' etc. If that be the case, consider me one, as well, for if the South had not been invaded by the North, we wouldn't be in all the trouble we have today.
Posted by southernbelle (anonymous) on October 7, 2009 at 8:15 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Love ya, Reb ! Tell it like it was ! It's not going to make you popular though.
Posted by reb1843 (anonymous) on October 7, 2009 at 10:17 p.m. (Suggest removal)
My dear southernbelle,
Popularity is not my goal; honesty and 'historical-correctness' is. I hear tell George Washington, Ben Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison et al, weren't getting invitations to the King's palace in London, either. As the saying goes, "The victors get to write the history..." and, thus, it is with our War for Southern Independence we must constantly defend the 'real' war and our Confederate ancestors, and not what revisionists would have us to believe.
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