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Collection Reference Number GLC02970
From Archive Folder Unassociated Civil War Documents 1863 
Title Abraham Bogart to his wife regarding the siege and fall of Fort Wagner
Date 9 September 1863
Author Bogart, Abram (fl. 1825-1865)  
Document Type Correspondence
Content Description Details the aftermath of the siege at Fort Wagner and also the soldiers' wishes for the war to be over.
Subjects Civil War  Military History  Soldier's Letter  Union Soldier's Letter  African American History  African American Troops  Battle  Union Forces  
People Bogart, Abram (fl. 1825-1865)  
Theme African Americans; The American Civil War
Sub-collection Papers and Images of the American Civil War
Additional Information Black soldiers participated in the war at great threat to their lives. The Confederate government threatened to summarily execute or sell into slavery any captured black Union soldiers--and did sometimes carry out those threats. Lincoln responded by threatening to retaliate against Confederate prisoners whenever black soldiers were killed or enslaved. In July 1863, the 54th Massachusetts Infantry, the first black regiment raised in the North, led an assault against Fort Wagner, which guarded Charleston, South Carolina's harbor. Two of Frederick Douglass's sons were members of the regiment. Over forty percent of the regiment's members were killed or wounded in the unsuccessful attack, including Colonel Robert Gould Shaw, a member of a prominent antislavery family, who was shot dead in the charge. This soldier's letter reveals the grim realities of the war as Union forces attempted to conquer Charleston.
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945
Civil War: Recipient Relationship Wife  
Civil War: Unit 54th Massachusetts Infantry  
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