The Families' Civil War: Black Soldiers and the Fight for Racial Justice by Holly A. Pinheiro Jr (review)

IF 0.2 3区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY CIVIL WAR HISTORY Pub Date : 2023-11-15 DOI:10.1353/cwh.2023.a912511
Angela M. Riotto
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For decades, scholars of the American Civil War have also published on USCT experiences, examining their recruitment, training, combat, and struggles against racism. Historians have also considered Southern formerly enslaved people’s attempts to serve and support the war effort, their postwar trials, and the nascent civil rights movement. What historians have overlooked, however, are the experiences <strong>[End Page 94]</strong> of Northern-born free African Americans and their experiences throughout the Civil War era. Holly A. Pinheiro Jr. seeks to remedy this oversight and examine the lived experiences of Philadelphia-born USCT soldiers and their kin from before the war and into the 1930s. For him, the Civil War is only part of the story and to understand African Americans’ fight for racial justice, historians must look beyond the war and even beyond the soldiers.</p> <p>To uncover the lived experiences of native-born African American Philadelphian men and their families, Pinheiro focuses on soldiers from Pennsylvania’s first three USCT regiments: the Third, Sixth, and the Eighth USCT Regiments. Although the state raised eleven USCT regiments, the author explains that the first three received much more local and national attention, thus warranting his focus. From these, Pinheiro creates a sample of 185 USCT soldiers and 771 of their multigenerational family members. Using this sample as his focal point, he traces their experiences over seventy years. He supplements his sample with the Compiled Military Service Record, pension applications; the US Census; letters, diaries, newspaper articles; and stories from other USCT soldiers and their families across the United States. As a result, Pinheiro constructs a collage of African Americans’ experiences, which enables the reader to see how these individuals fought and persevered against racism throughout the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.</p> <p>To begin, the author details prewar African American familial experiences in Philadelphia. He chose the City of Brotherly Love because it was an important Northern city with the nation’s largest population of free African Americans, almost 4 percent of the city’s population of 22,185 in 1860 (5). Moreover, the city’s significance to nineteenth-century industrialization and wartime mobilization and production made it an epicenter of racial, class, gender, and citizenship issues. With Philadelphia as the backdrop, Pinheiro surveys life for working-poor African Americans in both private and public spaces. He illustrates that African Americans, regardless of gender, occupation, education, or socioeconomic status struggled against systemic racism. He uses the census and enlistment records to determine the USCT soldiers’ prewar occupations and familial situation. Here, he introduces the concept of <em>fictive kin</em>. In many of the households he analyzes, people lived together without being bound by law or blood. He reasons that they are better understood as <em>fictive kin</em>, a term for individuals treated as “family” or “kin” without adoptive, biological, or marital ties (6). Pinheiro argues that African American families often welcomed fictive kin into their homes to assist with finances <strong>[End Page 95]</strong> and share limited resources. Although these relationships—and not to mention nonlegal marriages—did not fit into white ideas of family and gender responsibilities, Northern African Americans accepted and applied models that helped them survive, and even possibly thrive, in a racist system.</p> <p>Pinheiro then shifts to the war and the Federal government’s recruitment of African American men to serve in newly created USCT units. Just as before, African American men and their families looked for opportunities to find security, fight for equality, and earn citizenship. Many saw military service as an avenue for socioeconomic and political advancement. Yet, Pinheiro warns the readers that military service also brought hardship on families at home, and service to one’s country did not mean an escape from racism. In chapters 2, 3, and 4 he...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":43056,"journal":{"name":"CIVIL WAR HISTORY","volume":"64 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-11-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"CIVIL WAR HISTORY","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/cwh.2023.a912511","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"历史学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"HISTORY","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • The Families’ Civil War: Black Soldiers and the Fight for Racial Justice by Holly A. Pinheiro Jr
  • Angela M. Riotto (bio)
The Families’ Civil War: Black Soldiers and the Fight for Racial Justice. Holly A. Pinheiro Jr. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2022. ISBN: 978-0-8203-6196-3, 242 pp., paper, $26.95.

The remarkable story of US Colored Troops (USCT) is familiar to most Americans—the 1989 film Glory made sure of that. For decades, scholars of the American Civil War have also published on USCT experiences, examining their recruitment, training, combat, and struggles against racism. Historians have also considered Southern formerly enslaved people’s attempts to serve and support the war effort, their postwar trials, and the nascent civil rights movement. What historians have overlooked, however, are the experiences [End Page 94] of Northern-born free African Americans and their experiences throughout the Civil War era. Holly A. Pinheiro Jr. seeks to remedy this oversight and examine the lived experiences of Philadelphia-born USCT soldiers and their kin from before the war and into the 1930s. For him, the Civil War is only part of the story and to understand African Americans’ fight for racial justice, historians must look beyond the war and even beyond the soldiers.

To uncover the lived experiences of native-born African American Philadelphian men and their families, Pinheiro focuses on soldiers from Pennsylvania’s first three USCT regiments: the Third, Sixth, and the Eighth USCT Regiments. Although the state raised eleven USCT regiments, the author explains that the first three received much more local and national attention, thus warranting his focus. From these, Pinheiro creates a sample of 185 USCT soldiers and 771 of their multigenerational family members. Using this sample as his focal point, he traces their experiences over seventy years. He supplements his sample with the Compiled Military Service Record, pension applications; the US Census; letters, diaries, newspaper articles; and stories from other USCT soldiers and their families across the United States. As a result, Pinheiro constructs a collage of African Americans’ experiences, which enables the reader to see how these individuals fought and persevered against racism throughout the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

To begin, the author details prewar African American familial experiences in Philadelphia. He chose the City of Brotherly Love because it was an important Northern city with the nation’s largest population of free African Americans, almost 4 percent of the city’s population of 22,185 in 1860 (5). Moreover, the city’s significance to nineteenth-century industrialization and wartime mobilization and production made it an epicenter of racial, class, gender, and citizenship issues. With Philadelphia as the backdrop, Pinheiro surveys life for working-poor African Americans in both private and public spaces. He illustrates that African Americans, regardless of gender, occupation, education, or socioeconomic status struggled against systemic racism. He uses the census and enlistment records to determine the USCT soldiers’ prewar occupations and familial situation. Here, he introduces the concept of fictive kin. In many of the households he analyzes, people lived together without being bound by law or blood. He reasons that they are better understood as fictive kin, a term for individuals treated as “family” or “kin” without adoptive, biological, or marital ties (6). Pinheiro argues that African American families often welcomed fictive kin into their homes to assist with finances [End Page 95] and share limited resources. Although these relationships—and not to mention nonlegal marriages—did not fit into white ideas of family and gender responsibilities, Northern African Americans accepted and applied models that helped them survive, and even possibly thrive, in a racist system.

Pinheiro then shifts to the war and the Federal government’s recruitment of African American men to serve in newly created USCT units. Just as before, African American men and their families looked for opportunities to find security, fight for equality, and earn citizenship. Many saw military service as an avenue for socioeconomic and political advancement. Yet, Pinheiro warns the readers that military service also brought hardship on families at home, and service to one’s country did not mean an escape from racism. In chapters 2, 3, and 4 he...

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《家庭的内战:黑人士兵与为种族正义而战》作者:小霍莉·a·皮涅罗
代替摘要,这里是内容的简短摘录:回顾:家庭内战:黑人士兵和争取种族正义的斗争,作者:小霍莉a .皮涅罗安吉拉M.里奥托(传记)家庭内战:黑人士兵和争取种族正义的斗争。Holly A. Pinheiro Jr.雅典:佐治亚大学出版社,2022。ISBN: 978-0-8203-6196-3, 242页,纸质版,26.95美元。美国有色人种部队(USCT)的非凡故事对大多数美国人来说都是熟悉的——1989年的电影《光荣》确保了这一点。几十年来,研究美国内战的学者也发表了关于南加州大学的经验,研究他们的招募、训练、战斗和反对种族主义的斗争。历史学家还考虑了南方前奴隶为战争服务和支持的努力,他们的战后审判,以及新生的民权运动。然而,历史学家忽略了北方出生的自由非裔美国人的经历以及他们在内战时期的经历。Holly A. Pinheiro Jr.试图弥补这一疏忽,并研究了费城出生的USCT士兵及其亲属从战前到20世纪30年代的生活经历。对他来说,南北战争只是故事的一部分,要理解非裔美国人为种族正义而战,历史学家必须超越战争,甚至超越士兵。为了揭示土生土长的非裔费城人及其家庭的生活经历,Pinheiro将重点放在宾夕法尼亚州前三个USCT团的士兵身上:第三,第六和第八USCT团。虽然该州组建了11个USCT团,但发件人解释说,前三个团在地方和全国得到了更多的关注,因此值得他的关注。根据这些资料,皮涅罗创建了185名USCT士兵和771名他们的多代家庭成员的样本。以这个样本为重点,他追溯了他们70多年来的经历。他还补充了兵役记录汇编、养老金申请;美国人口普查;信件、日记、报纸文章;以及美国各地其他USCT士兵及其家人的故事。因此,皮涅罗构建了一幅非裔美国人经历的拼贴画,使读者能够看到这些人是如何在19世纪末和20世纪初与种族主义作斗争并坚持不懈的。首先,作者详细描述了战前非裔美国人在费城的家庭经历。他之所以选择“兄弟之爱之城”,是因为它是一个重要的北方城市,拥有全国最多的自由非裔美国人,在1860年占该市22185人口的近4%。此外,这座城市对19世纪工业化和战时动员和生产的重要性使它成为种族、阶级、性别和公民身份问题的中心。皮涅罗以费城为背景,从私人和公共空间调查了工作贫困的非裔美国人的生活。他展示了非裔美国人,无论性别、职业、教育程度或社会经济地位如何,都在与系统性的种族主义作斗争。他利用人口普查和入伍记录来确定USCT士兵的战前职业和家庭状况。在这里,他引入了有效亲属的概念。在他分析的许多家庭中,人们住在一起,不受法律或血缘的约束。他的理由是,他们最好被理解为“实际亲属”,这是一个术语,指的是那些被视为“家庭”或“亲属”的人,没有收养、生物关系或婚姻关系(6)。皮涅罗认为,非裔美国家庭通常欢迎实际亲属到他们家里来帮助他们处理财务问题,并分享有限的资源。尽管这些关系——更不用说非法婚姻了——不符合白人关于家庭和性别责任的观念,但北非裔美国人接受并应用了一些模式,这些模式帮助他们在种族主义制度中生存下来,甚至可能茁壮成长。接着,皮涅罗转向战争和联邦政府招募非裔美国人加入新成立的USCT部队。就像以前一样,非裔美国男人和他们的家庭寻找机会来获得安全、争取平等和获得公民身份。许多人认为服兵役是社会经济和政治进步的途径。然而,皮涅罗警告读者,服兵役也会给家庭带来困难,为国家服务并不意味着逃避种族主义。在第二、三、四章中,他……
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来源期刊
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0.20
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期刊介绍: Civil War History is the foremost scholarly journal of the sectional conflict in the United States, focusing on social, cultural, economic, political, and military issues from antebellum America through Reconstruction. Articles have featured research on slavery, abolitionism, women and war, Abraham Lincoln, fiction, national identity, and various aspects of the Northern and Southern military. Published quarterly in March, June, September, and December.
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Contesting "the Insatiable Maw of Capital": Mine Workers' Struggles in the Civil War Era Contributors The Open-Shop Movement and the Long Shadow of Slavery, the Civil War, and Reconstruction Book Review Essay: After War and Emancipation, an Irrepressible Conflict "We Can Take Care of Ourselves Now": Establishing Independent Black Labor and Industry in Postwar Yorktown, Virginia
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