ThunderKiss1965
Platinum Member
Propaganda ? It's history you lunatic and how the fuck do you know what their skin tone was ? You calling me a moron is a laugh I couldn't think as slow as you if I tried.That's propaganda not a source. The only Blacks that came close to fighting for the confederates were a bunch of light skinned free Blacks in Louisiana. I forget their names. The confederates were not going to have it for obvious reasons. You must be retarded to think they were going to give guns to enslaved Blacks and they would willingly fight for the loser south. You're a fucking moron.Another source.The sons of confederate veterans?Wow you fuckers will ignore any history that doesn't conform to your retarded progressive beliefs.You do know that Lee was the first person Lincoln asked to command the Union Army ? Did you also know that there where Black Confederate troops ?Robert E. Lee was a great American hero to tens of millions of Americans and your Libtard hate and ignorance of history is despicable.
He was not a hero to the four million people he fought to keep in slavery
I can’t believe you guys are still pushing that Confederate black troops lie
The following is a list of 4 soldiers captured at Ft. Fisher when it fell to Union troops in January 1865:
Charles Dempsey, Private, Company F, 36th NC Regiment, Negro. Captured at Ft. Fisher and confined at Point Lookout, Md., until paroled and exchanged at Coxes Landing, Va. 14-15 Feb 1865. (Taken from North Carolina Troops, Volume I)
Henry Dempsey, Private, Company F, 36th NC Regiment, Negro. Captured at Ft. Fisher and confined at Point Lookout, Md., until paroled at Coxes Landing, Va. 14-15 Feb 1865. (Taken from North Carolina Troops, Volume I)
J. Doyle, Private, Company E, 40th NC Regiment, Negro, Captured at Ft. Fisher and confined at Point Lookout, Md., until paroled at Boulware’s Wharf, Va. On 16 Mar 1865. (Taken from North Carolina Troops, Volume I)
Daniel Herring, Cook, Company F, 36th NC Regiment, Negro. Captured at Ft. Fisher, and confined at Point Lookout, Md. Until released after taking Oath of Allegiance June 19, 1865. (Taken from North Carolina Troops, Volume I)
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The Role of Black Soldiers in the Confederate Army
By SSG Harry W. Tison, II Many historians would have you believe that all minority groups such as Blacks, Indians, and Hispanics hated the Confederacy and what it stood for. This is completely untrue according to records that are recently been brought to the forefront of history. Groups such as...scv.org
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