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Collection Reference Number GLC00698
From Archive Folder Unassociated Civil War Documents 1863 
Title General orders No. 46 concerning the recruitment of non-white troops
Date 5 December 1863
Author Davis, Robert S. (b. ca. 1832)  
Document Type Government document; Military document
Content Description States "The recruitment of colored troops has become the settled purpose of the Government. It is therefore the duty of every officer and soldier to aid in carrying out that purpose, by every proper means, irrespective of personal predilection." Instructs recruitment to proceed "so that as few of the negros as possible shall become chargeable either upon the bounty of Government or the charities of the benevolent, and at the same time to do justice to those who shall enlist ... " Discusses the possibility of equal pay for white and non-white troops. Issued by Davis as Major and Assistant Adjutant General based on the command of Major General Benjamin Franklin Butler. Contains a hand-drawn sketch appearing to show the layout of a town or military compound on the last page. There is a handwritten note on the top of page one which states "Read page 2." The handwritten note on page two refers to an underlined passage of text: "The colored man fills an equal space in ranks while he lives, and an equal grave when he falls."
Subjects African American History  African American Troops  Military History  Civil War  Union Forces  Recruitment  Union General  Charity and Philanthropy  Soldier's Pay  Death  
People Davis, Robert S. (b. ca. 1832)  Butler, Benjamin Franklin (1818-1893)  
Place written Fort Monroe, Virginia
Theme African Americans; Law; The American Civil War
Sub-collection Papers and Images of the American Civil War
Additional Information Despite promises of equal treatment, blacks were relegated to separate regiments commanded by white officers. Black soldiers received less pay than white soldiers, inferior benefits, and poorer food and equipment. While a white private was paid $13 a month plus a $3.50 clothing allowance, blacks received just $10 a month, out of which $3 was deducted for clothing. Furthermore, black soldiers were not provided with the enlistment bonuses commonly given to white soldiers, and, until the end of the war, the federal government refused to commission black officers. African American soldiers won their right for equal pay in 1864, and in 1865 they were allowed to serve as line officers. In this general order, General Benjamin F. Butler directs his men to treat black soldiers with respect and declares his opposition to the government's policy of paying African American soldiers less than white soldiers. This document is extremely revealing and illustrative of the most "liberal" and "best-intentioned" values of the 1860s.
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945
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