Baptists and the American Civil War: February 1, 1865

13th_amendmentToday U.S. President Abraham Lincoln signs the Thirteenth Amendment, thus sending it to the states for ratification.

Also today, from Savannah Assistant Adjutant-General E. D. Townsend writes to the U.S. War Department concerning the January 12 meeting that took place between General William T. Sherman and “the colored ministers in Savannah.”

From that meeting, during which Savannah’s black ministers were represented by Baptist minister Garrison Frazier, arose Sherman’s decision to provide 40 acres of land to each freedmen family, a policy enacted four days later, on January 16. The land reserved for freedmen is along the South Carolina coast, formerly property of large slaveholders. Already, freedmen, many Baptist, are being resettled upon the very plantations where vast numbers of slaves had toiled for generations.

Townsend’s letter reads:

WAR DEPARTMENT, ADJUTANT-GENERAL’S OFFICE,
Washington, February 1, 1865.

I do hereby certify that the foregoing is a true and faithful report of the questions and answers made by the colored ministers and church members of Savannah in my presence and hearing at the chambers of Major-General Sherman, on the evening of Thursday, the 12th day of January, 1865. The questions of General Sherman and the Secretary of War were reduced to writing and read to the persons present. The answers were made by the reverend Garrison Frazier, who was selected by the other ministers and church members to answer for them. The answers were written down in his exact words, and read over to the others, who, one by one, expressed his concurrence or dissent, as above set forth.

E. D. TOWNSEND,
Assistant Adjutant-General.

Freedom and land are that for which slaves have long hoped. Many freedmen are now experiencing the fulfillment of their dreams.

Determined to thwart the hopes of blacks in the South is the Confederate States of America. With the Confederacy barely standing at this point, devoted white Southerners pin their final hopes on Confederate General Robert E. Lee, this week promoted to General-in-Chief of Confederate Armies. Mired in trench warfare at Petersburg and his Army of Northern Virginia hemorrhaging deserters, the renowned general is himself in desperate need of a miracle.

Sources: “Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution” (link) and (link); Letter from Townsend to War Department, February 1, 1865 (link); Robert E. Lee (link)