Yes, during the Civil War, many enslaved individuals participated in the burial of Union soldiers. After battles, enslaved people often helped with the grim task of collecting and interring the bodies of fallen soldiers. This was sometimes done under the supervision of Union forces, and it highlighted their complex roles in the war, as they navigated the challenges of their circumstances while contributing to the war effort.
The Union soldiers thought that they were fighting for slaves to be free.
Union soldiers
When the union troops were in an area they often had the freed slaves come to them for protection and to help. At one point slaves came to one unit and the confederate officer demanded the return of the slaves from the union commander. The union commander told the Confederate that the slaves were contraband. By declaring them contraband he didn't have to return the slaves. After that event they called themselves "contraband."
Yes. After the Union army defeated the Southern soldiers in battles, many blacks left the places where they were kept as slaves and went over to the Union lines, showing the Union soldiers places in the nearby area that might help them to win the war. Many former black slaves joined General William T. Sherman's army as he marched through the south from Georgia, to South and North Carolina.
Many slaves were freed by the Union armies in their Southern campaigns, and these ex-slaves were generally employed around the Union army camps as fatigue-parties, some of them gradually being accepted as soldiers and put into uniform. The Confederates resisted any idea of putting slaves into uniform until it was much too late. They were only starting to recruit black troops when the whistle went.
The Union soldiers thought that they were fighting for slaves to be free.
to free the slaves for ever
They thought their uniforms were funny
Union soldiers
When the union troops were in an area they often had the freed slaves come to them for protection and to help. At one point slaves came to one unit and the confederate officer demanded the return of the slaves from the union commander. The union commander told the Confederate that the slaves were contraband. By declaring them contraband he didn't have to return the slaves. After that event they called themselves "contraband."
Many white Union soldiers were not in favor of having Blacks serve in the US army. In Baton Rouge for example, Union soldiers mutinied when a Black regiment camped nearby in 1863.It was clear that a large number of Americans, both North and South did not believe that Blacks were equal to whites. There are various incidents concerning this. In Kentucky, for example, Union soldiers assaulted a Black church for no reason other than racism.
it made it ok for the Union soldiers to free slaves as they went through the south
As union troops moved through the south they provided help and safety for the slaves. There was one indecent where slaves were behind Union lines and southern soliders wanted the slaves returned to them. In war when there is contraband the side that has it is allowed to keep it, so the union officer told the southern officer the slaves were contraband and couldn't be returned. From that point on all former slaves who sought refuge with union troops were called contraband. I think this explains the response of the Union soldiers to the proclamation.
The Emancipation Proclamation freed the slaves in the Southern states, who already broke off from the union. This meant that President Lincoln had no control over whethere these slaves would be free or not. But once a Southern town or area was freed by Union soldiers, the slaves would be free. This caused help for the Union army from former slaves. The Emancipation Proclamation went into effect January 1, 1863.
The Emancipation Proclamation freed the slaves in the Southern states, who already broke off from the union. This meant that President Lincoln had no control over whethere these slaves would be free or not. But once a Southern town or area was freed by Union soldiers, the slaves would be free. This caused help for the Union army from former slaves. The Emancipation Proclamation went into effect January 1, 1863.
They were defeated and unemployed Confederates, young men with too little to do - always a menace.
It didn’t set all slaves free. It only freed slaves in the states of the confederacy. One of the consequences was the slaves began to follow the union troops and many enlisted as soldiers.