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Chapter Five
The Civil War In
Charlotte-Mecklenburg
Dr. Dan L. Morrill
University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Charlotte-Mecklenburg was important
strategically to the South. The most important
local facility was the Confederate Naval Yard. |
J. W. Ratchford , a student who had left
Davidson College
to follow D. H. Hill to the North Carolina Military
Institute
, remembered attending chapel and
listening to his mentor speak. Hill spoke about
politics. When word arrived that South Carolina had
seceded from the United States on December 20, 1860,
many of the cadets from South Carolina, including
Ratchford, considered withdrawing from school and going
home to support their native state. "Gen. Hill made us a
talk . . . one morning, telling us that if we did have a
war he expected to go, and advised us to stay at school
until it was certain," Ratchford reported.
One comes away from examining
the fateful weeks in the first half of 1861 with the
distinct feeling that Hill, in keeping with his
long-held convictions, was willing to fight to protect
the Southern way of life but that he sincerely hoped
that war would not occur. D. H. Hill had no illusions
about the horrible realities of military combat.
"Recruiting sergeants, with their drums and fifes, try
to allure by 'the pride, pomp, and circumstance of war;'
they never allude to the hot, weary marches, the dreary
night-watches, the mangled limbs, and crushed carcasses
of the battle-field (sic.)," he proclaimed. Hill was
proud of the South's military tradition. "The armies of
the Revolution were commanded by Washington, a Southern
General," he told an audience in Wilmington, N.C. But
he knew that a struggle with the North would be long and
arduous.
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Daniel
Harvey Hill in his Confederate uniform. |
Steward's Hall, home of the North Carolina
Military Institute. |
Rumor and suspicion were
rampant in Charlotte-Mecklenburg in the spring of 1861.
The Western Democrat reported that
"several strangers" were prowling about different
sections of Mecklenburg County pretending to be peddlers
"but acting in such manner as to cause the belief that
this was not the real object." The newspaper went on to
state that these sneaky fellows were asking all sorts of
questions about the status of people's property. One
was even discovered "talking with Negroes at a distance
from any road or path." The article applauded the
determination of local farmers to arrest these
troublemakers and turn them over to the sheriff for
questioning. "In these times of peril," declared the
Western Democrat, "it behooves every man to be on
the alert, and we verily believe no class of persons
needs watching more than these strolling traders."
After Confederate troops
opened fire on the Federal garrison at Fort Sumter in
the harbor at Charleston, South Carolina on April 12,
1861, D. H. Hill summoned the young cadets to the
chapel in Steward's Hall on the outskirts of Charlotte
and told them what to expect in the weeks, months and
years ahead. His words were tragically prophetic.
Ratchford recalled what the Superintendent said:
He warned us that it would be no
child's play, and the chances were that it would last as
long as the Revolutionary war, and we would all get
enough of it. He mentioned the contrast between the
resources of the North and the South, both in men and
means. . . .
The second half of April 1861
witnessed a flurry of activity at the North Carolina
Military Institute . A particularly dramatic scene
occurred when the cadets raised a secession flag, made
by the ladies of Charlotte, over Steward's Hall so the
passengers on the trains moving north out of South
Carolina could see it. James H. Lane , a graduate of the
Virginia Military Institute and a member of Hill's
faculty, described what happened when the next
locomotive passed by the campus. ". . . the artillery
thundered its greetings to South Carolina as the train
passed slowly by; the male passengers yelled themselves
hoarse; the ladies waved their handkerchiefs and threw
kisses to these brave boys." One prominent North
Carolinian called Charlotte a “young Charleston” because
of the firmness with which the majority of white
citizens supported secession
North Carolina Governor John
W. Ellis summoned D. H. Hill to Raleigh to organize the
State's first military instruction camp. The cadets
followed soon thereafter. They marched as a body into
Charlotte and boarded trains headed for the State
capital on April 26th. Crowds lined the platform as the
locomotive pulled away from the station. Among the
passengers headed for Raleigh was L. Leon , a private
in the Charlotte Greys , a local Confederate unit that
had been ordered the day before to wrest control of the
Charlotte Mint from Federal authorities. "Our trip was
full of joy and pleasure, for at every station where our
train stopped the ladies showered us with flowers and
Godspeed," he recorded in his diary.
It was Friday night.
Steward's Hall was turned over to the State as a place
for volunteers to rendezvous. The halls were silent. The
classrooms were empty. The chapel was still.
Unknowingly, the Old South was entering its death agony.
Two members of the faculty of the North Carolina
Military Institute would perish in the Peninsular
Campaign, and James H. Lane would be wounded twice.
Daniel Harvey Hill , called "Harvey" by his friends, was
to see "about as much combat as any general on either
side" in the Civil War, writes historian Shelby Foote.
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Confederate troops, some very young, went off
the war with considerable bravado and enthusiasm
as the outset of the war. This father and son
served together. They are William and John
Howey of Mecklenburg County. |
The mood of Charlotte and
Mecklenburg County was hopeful and resolute at the
beginning of the Civil War. Just as they had done for
the cadets at the North Carolina Military Institute ,
the "young ladies" of Charlotte presented a flag to the
"Charlotte Greys ." Lizzie Alexander , a Confederate
supporter, gave a stirring speech on April 21st
when she addressed the Sharon Riflemen on the occasion
of their receiving a "handsome flag" from the local
ladies. "Permit me in the name of the ladies of Sharon
to present you this Flag bearing the Lone Star as an
emblem of North Carolina, to whom alone we now owe
allegiance," she began. "Together with this token of our
esteem and confidence," she exclaimed, "we also entrust
to you, brave sons of Mecklenburg, our dearest interests
and hopes of security." Eight companies of troops from
Mecklenburg County had left for the front by September
1861.
Charlotte's small community of
free African Americans also demonstrated their
commitment to the Confederate cause. No doubt motivated
mostly by desires to appease their white neighbors,
black leaders like barber Jerry Pethel , who owned $2300
of real property in 1860, and household laborer Nancy
Jenkins led a successful campaign to raise $55 for the
Soldiers' Aid Society, an organization headed by
prominent white women. "Our country's cause is a common
one with master and servant alike," proclaimed an
official of the Soldiers' Aid Society, "and it behooves
us all to . . . to show the fanatics of the North that
we of the South, regardless of colour, stand as a unit
to sustain and strengthen the arm of the soldier of our
glorious Confederacy."
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Stephen
Mallory, a lawyer and former U. S. Congressman
from Key West, Fla., served as Confederate
Secretary of the Navy throughout the Civil War.
He believed that the South could challenge the
Federal Navy only be using ironclad ships. The
Confederate Naval Yard in Charlotte was a vital
component of the South's military effort. |
"Let our people plant corn," proclaimed the
Western
Democrat
.
"Let them wear jeans and homespuns as their ancestors
did before them, when they threw off British rule." It
became commonplace for supporters of secession to
compare the actions of patriots during the War for
American Independence with the exploits of Confederates
soldiers during the Civil War. Many advocates of
secession believed that defense of liberty stood at the
heart of both conflicts. In his provocative study of
the political culture of the ante-bellum South,
Masters and Statesmen. The Political Culture of
American Slavery, Kenneth S. Greenberg asserts that
“Southern anxieties about England, inherited from the
republican ideology of the revolutionary period and
reinforced by later events, underwent a slow
transformation into a fear of New England and the
North." According to Greenberg, “Northerners just
seemed to copy everything that England had done --
encourage slave revolts, fail to return fugitive slaves,
prevent the extension of slavery, develop an
abolitionist movement, exploit labor, and threaten
liberty with power."
President Jefferson Davis drew upon the same theme
of the supposed similarities between the American
Revolutionary War and the Civil War when he addressed a
large crowd in Charlotte in September 1864. Not the
first or last visiting politician to make note of the
alleged Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence , the Confederate chief executive
said he was aware that the "people of this section were
the first to defy British authority and declare
themselves free." Davis encouraged the citizens of
Charlotte-Mecklenburg to continue to back the war effort
even in the face of mounting hardships and adversities.
By doing so, he contended, local folks would prove that
the "spirit of the sires of '75 and '76 still actuated
their descendants."
No battles of consequence
occurred in Charlotte-Mecklenburg during the Civil War.
There was to be no repetition of what had happened in
this region during the American Revolutionary War. The
closest Union troops came was Rozzelle’s Ferry in
western Mecklenburg County in April 1865, when Yankee
troops marched from Lincolnton to destroy the bridge
that carried a plank road over the Catawba River .
Ironically, that same month Confederate President
Jefferson Davis and his Cabinet traveled through
Charlotte on their flight southward from Richmond.
On learning that Federal troops were approaching,
Richard Rozzelle ,
whose home stood on the eastern bank of the Catawba
River and who had
already lost two sons in the war, one at Gettysburg and
another in the Battle of the Wilderness, scampered to
the bridge and removed the boards from the roadbed. The
Yankees, after setting the bridge ablaze and skirmishing
with a cavalry unit, fired at a Confederate officer who
had ridden into Richard Rozzelle ’s
yard. Their aim was high, and the bullets supposedly
hit the house. These were the only bullets fired in
anger by the enemy into Mecklenburg County during the
Civil War.
The absence of fighting did not make
Charlotte-Mecklenburg an unimportant place during the
so-called Great Rebellion. Because it remained in
Confederate hands until the very closing days of the
conflict and because it was a major railroad junction,
this community was of great strategic value to the
South. Trains left Charlotte laden with strategic
supplies, transforming Charlotte-Mecklenburg into a
major manufacturing and distribution center during the
Civil War. So busy did the Charlotte and South Carolina
Railroad become
that it announced in February 1863 that it had
"purchased 40 slaves to be used in working the road."
In the spring of 1862, the Confederates had to abandon
the Gosport Naval Yard in Norfolk because of the
likelihood of its imminent capture by the North.
Confederate Secretary of the Navy Stephen Mallory , an ingenuous and bold
innovator, chose Charlotte as one of the principal
locations to which to transport the invaluable machinery
and irreplaceable workmen. Laborers occupied the
Mecklenburg Iron Works and erected a series of
new wooden buildings along the tracks of the North
Carolina Railroad
in what is now First Ward in the summer of 1862 to
house the Charlotte branch of the Confederate Naval Yard .
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| Charlotte's
strategic importance resulted largely from its
position on a vital railroad link in the
Confederacy. |
About 300 machinists and foundry men moved to Charlotte,
so many that the surrounding neighborhood became known
as “Mechanicsville.” The smoke stacks of the naval yard
were spewing smoke and soot into the Carolina blue sky
by the summer of 1862. Among the products of the
factories were mines, anchors, gun carriages, and even
marine engines. The propellers and shafting for the
famous Confederate ironclad C.S.S. Albemarle , which attacked and sank
a Union gunboat at Plymouth, North Carolina in April
1864, were manufactured at the Confederate Naval Yard in Charlotte.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg had other important
industrial facilities that served the Confederacy.
These included the Confederate State Acid Works that produced sulfuric
acid and nitric acid that were necessary to make
fulminate of mercury, an essential component of
percussion caps. Sulfuric acid was also needed for wet
cell batteries that provided electric power for the
telegraph system of the South, including that used by
the Confederate military. W. F. Phifer and J. M. Springs and other local
residents established the Mecklenburg Gun Factory “for the manufacture of
ordnance and small arms.” J. M. Howie of Charlotte made belt
buckles and wire, and the New Manufacturing Company produced wooden canteens
for the army.
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Torpedoes
(the Civil War term for underwater mines) were
one of the items manufactured by the Confederate
Naval Yard. |
Industrial life was fraught with danger. This
was especially true in the case of the North Carolina
Powder Manufacturing Company near the Tuckasseegee
Ford on the
Catawba River .
Disaster struck the plant on May 23, 1863. 700 pounds
of powder exploded, killing 5 people, destroying most of
the factory, and rattling windows in Charlotte almost
ten miles away. "It is said there were about 700 pounds
of powder in the mill at the time of the explosion,"
reported the Western Democrat . Rebuilt, the plant was
destroyed again by an accidental explosion in August
1864 that killed "one white man and two mulattoes."
The mill never reopened. Remains of the North Carolina
Powder Manufacturing Company survive in what will become
a public park.
The biggest calamity that occurred in Charlotte during
the Civil War was the destruction by accidental fire in
January 1865 of the Confederate storage warehouses and
depots and platforms of the North Carolina Railroad and the Charlotte and
South Carolina Railroad . "The loss to the
Confederate Government is severe," reported the
Western Democrat
.
Large quantities of foodstuffs went up in flames, as did
"blankets, soldiers clothing, leather, and various other
articles." To witness the obliteration of such vast
amounts of food and supplies in this "terrible
conflagration" must have pained the people of
Charlotte-Mecklenburg, because they were experiencing
firsthand the deprivations caused by the lack of
essential commodities. Local newspapers complained
about the paucity of paper. "Within the past month
three of the four or five Paper Mills in this State have
stopped by the advance of the enemy," proclaimed the
Western Democrat in the final weeks of the war.
Factories found it increasingly difficult to obtain
lubricating oils. Charlotte fell into "almost complete
darkness" in March 1864 when gas supplies ran out.
Charlotte newspapers were full of articles
encouraging the people to provide greater support to the
men in uniform. "All person wishing to render the
Confederacy essential service, can do so by cultivating
the common GARDEN POPPY," declared the Western
Democrat
on
May 12, 1863. Confederate officials proceeded to
explain how one should go about extracting the "exuding
juice" from the plant. " . . . let it be collected and
forwarded to the nearest Medical Purveyor." Farmers
were told to plant "large corn crops, not only corn but
everything that will sustain life." On January 12,
1863, Confederate officials in Charlotte issued an
urgent plea for soap. "The inability of the Government
to procure Manufactured Soap will, it is hoped, induce
the people of this section to engage in making an
article so indispensable to the health and comfort of
their relatives in the army."
The people of Mecklenburg County had to endure
increasingly grim news as the war dragged on. "We have
not room to publish a list of the casualties in all of
the N. C. Regiments reported, and therefore select the
companies from this and the surrounding counties,"
announced the Western Democrat
on
May 19, 1863. The newspaper proceeded to list the names
of those who had fallen in the Battle of
Fredericksburg. Imagine the dread and apprehension with
which mothers and daughters must have scanned the
pages. "Company A -- Killed: Lieuts E. M. Campbell, R.
A. Bolick; Privates W. S. Deal, F. T. Clodfelter, A. P.
Parker, Smith Price, E. B. Austin." Hands trembling,
family members would have continued to read. "Wounded:
Lieut P. C. Carlton breast slight, Searg'ts G. W.
Condroy two fingers off, . . . H. L. Miller mouth
seriously." Such were the harsh realities of the Civil
War in Charlotte-Mecklenburg.
Unlike some sections of North Carolina, especially the
Albemarle Sound and Pamlico Sound region, the Quaker
settlements in and around Randolph County, and some
parts of the mountains, Charlotte-Mecklenburg remained
steadfast in its commitment to the Confederate cause.
“If the whole South was imbued with the same spirit of
resistance to Yankee tyranny and oppression as that
which characterizes the people of good old Mecklenburg,”
commented one soldier who visited Charlotte in 1863, “no
one need fear the result of the mighty struggle which is
now going on.” The Western Democrat
exhorted
its readers to persevere no matter how great the
obstacles. “There must be no despondency among a people
who are struggling for liberty, for property, for honor,
for existence, and for the future welfare of their
posterity,” the newspaper declared on September 20,
1864. There were some instances of defiance of
Confederate authority. Silas Davis tells a wonderful
story of how his ancestors built a trap door in a horse
stall in the barn on their farm. Whenever a Confederate
official would show up in the neighborhood, the Davis
boys would run to the barn and hide beneath the trap
door that was covered with horse manure. "Horse manure
never hurt nobody," Silas Davis told this writer.
The Charlotte press lashed out with special vengeance
against so-called “croakers” – those who unduly
criticized the Confederate government and who sought to
make peace with the North. Chief among its targets was
William Woods Holden , the editor of the
North Carolina Standard of Raleigh. Born a
bastard in Orange County in 1818, Holden had led a
successful campaign against the Whig Party in the 1850s
that had made the Democrat Party the dominant political
organization in the State. After secession, however, he
broke with the Democrats and became increasingly hostile
to continuing the war. Holden encouraged
like-minded citizens to establish committees throughout
North Carolina and to speak out against the Confederacy
and its policies. “The man who instigates another to
commit a crime is just as bad as if he had committed it
himself,” announced the Western Democrat . One anti-war group,
headed by Thomas Gluyas , did meet at Whitley’s
Mill in the Long
Creek community of Mecklenburg County in 1863 but was
never able to gain broad support locally.
Even the optimism of the Western Democrat
began
to wane during the last year of the Civil War when the
prospect of ultimate defeat loomed ever larger. “Let us
be ready to bear reverses as well as victories,” the
newspaper proclaimed. The possibility that Union troops
would raid Charlotte was becoming more of a distinct
possibility. “There is a good deal of Government
property and stores, workshops, &c at this point,” wrote
one reporter, “and the Yankees know it as well as we
do.”
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The
North Carolina Flag contained two dates. "May
20, 1861 -- the date of secession -- and May 20,
1775 -- the date of the alleged Mecklenburg
Declaration of Independence. |
The Western Democrat announced that increasing
numbers of unruly deserters from Confederate ranks were
finding their way into Mecklenburg County. Famished and
half-naked, these desperate men were further diminishing
public morale by engaging in criminal activities. “On
Wednesday night last, two armed men (supposed to be
deserters) went to the house of Mr. Sam Davis , who lives on Potter road
about 12 miles from this place, and demanded his
money," the Western Democrat declared on
December 22, 1863. The newspaper noted that several
deserters "who had been for a long time skulking in the
upper end" of Mecklenburg County were captured in
October 1864.
Its relatively secure location made Charlotte an ideal
place to treat the Confederate sick and wounded. The
Western Democrat
reported
as early as June 1861 that "large numbers of wounded
will be passing through." In July 1863, officials
erected “extensive hospital buildings on the Fair
Gounds, about 1 mile from the Public Square” or about
where South Boulevard and East Boulevard now intersect.
Steward’s Hall at
the nearby North Carolina Military Institute housed a medical
laboratory, where surgeons and doctors devised compounds
to help make the infirm soldiers well. The women of
Charlotte were indefatigable in gathering provisions for
the military hospitals of Charlotte. They brought
bedding, bandages, blankets, towels and rags. They
brought what food they could spare, including “butter,
eggs, fowls, dried fruit, vegetables, milk, etc.” Mayor
S. A. Harris
implored the "people of Mecklenburg County to send to
Charlotte meat, flour, meal and all kinds to vegetables,
to be prepared here for the large number of our wounded
soldiers who are arriving daily."
By 1865, when the ability of the South to hold
off the Yankees was approaching the breaking point,
hordes of wounded were transported by rail to Charlotte
from such cities as Raleigh and Columbia. Refugees came
too. Local residents had to open up their churches and
even their homes to the suffering soldiers. It was a
pathetic scene. So desperate did the situation become
that local officials urged refugees to stay at home or
seek shelter elsewhere. "The citizens of town are doing
what they can towards supplying the wants of the sick
soldier, but they have not the means to do much,"
lamented the Western Democrat
on
March 28, 1865.
Southern society was collapsing under the unrelenting
pressure the North was bringing to bear against it. On
February 21, 1865, the Western Democrat
warned
its readers that it did not know how long the newspaper
could continue to appear. Expecting William Tecumseh
Sherman 's army to
arrive any day, the editors declared that they would
keep the presses rolling "until the enemy prevents us
from publishing." Union troops did destroy the bridge
that carried the Charlotte and South Carolina Railroad over the Catawba River
but then turned eastward toward
Goldsboro.
Mail service, the only way in those days to communicate
with loved ones on faraway battlefields, was no longer
available in the spring of 1865. People on the home
front therefore could not continue sending boxes of
special items, such as food and clothing, to their
relatives in uniform. Everywhere there was hunger.
Everywhere fear. Everywhere suffering. "In addition to
the demands of the hospitals, thousands of soldiers are
passing though our town, requiring something to eat,"
reported the Western Democrat . President Jefferson
Davis delivered a
somber speech when he arrived by horseback in April 1865
on his flight southward from Richmond. "I am conscious
of having committed errors," he declared, " . . . but in
all that I have done, in all that I have tried to do, I
can lay my hand upon my heart and appeal to God that I
have had but one purpose to serve, but one mission to
fulfill, the preservation of the true principles of
Constitutional freedom, which are as dear to me today as
they were four years ago."
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The Confederate Battle Flag flies over the
Confederate marker and burial markers in Elmwood
Cemetery in Charlotte. |
Then it was over. The Charlotte and South Carolina
Railroad had much of its infrastructure destroyed.
As civil authority collapsed, looters began moving
unmolested through the streets of Charlotte, smashing
storefronts and stealing whatever they could find.
Drunks staggered from one street corner to another,
oblivious to the throngs of anguished soldiers who were
lying virtually unattended in makeshift hospitals all
over town. Town leaders welcomed union troops who took
control of Charlotte without a struggle in May 1865.
The first order of business for the Yankee commander,
Colonel Willard Warner of the 180th
Ohio Volunteers, was the restoration of order and the
imposition of a loyalty oath. ". . . all persons who
wish to engage or are engaged in any business, are
required to take the oath of allegiance to the United
States," announced Colonel Warner.
Days of great uncertainty were in the offing.
"When our soldiers returned to their former homes,"
wrote J. B. Alexander , a prominent Charlotte
physician, "they felt the bitterness of defeat, and were
stared in the face by poverty." Paul B. Barringer , then a young boy living
in nearby Concord, remembered what his uncle said to the
family slaves. "My uncle called all of them in and told
them that they were now free and from henceforth could
go where they willed, Mr. Lincoln's proclamation having
been made good on the field of battle."
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Refugees such as these flooded into Charlotte
during the closing weeks of the Civil War. |
Confederate soldiers returned without fanfare to their
homes in Charlotte and Mecklenburg County during the
weeks and months that followed the Civil War. There
were no crowds waiting to greet them as before. No
bands played patriotic tunes, and no ladies unfurled
ceremonial flags to welcome them back. These
beleaguered veterans, many mud-splattered and shoeless,
faced the awesome task of picking up the pieces of their
shattered lives and starting over again. Some troops
arrived by train. "A friend calls our attention to the
fact that numbers of Confederate soldiers, who have
recently been released, are daily arriving at Charlotte,
many of them sick," reported the Western Democrat
on
July 3, 1865. Others, like John Starr Neely , had to walk home.
Imprisoned by the Yankees after serving as a guard in
the Confederate prison in Salisbury, Neely did not get
back to Mecklenburg County until 1866.
Also among the returnees was Daniel Harvey Hill . One cannot help but
wonder whether the redoubtable warrior cast a nostalgic
glance toward Steward's Hall on the former campus of
the North Carolina Military Institute where only four years
earlier he had taught enthusiastic young men the art of
warfare. Surely he must have lamented the death of so
many of his beloved students in the horrific conflict
that had just ended. Writing in the first issue of
The Land We Love
, a
monthly magazine he founded in 1866, Hill gave full vent
to the agony he felt over the South's defeat. "All the
rivers of plenty have been dried up! The grass sprouts
and grows from blood only; the rains of peace can not
wash it away! Want, want, want, cries! Suffering
groans!"
The Western Democrat
shared
Hill's dreary assessment of the local economy.
"Everybody is complaining of the scarcity of money, and
nobody seems to have any," the newspaper complained on
June 13th. There was plenty of crime, especially
theft. A small minority of Union troops made
unauthorized visits to plantations and hauled off
whatever they wanted. Gangs of robbers traveled to
Charlotte by train and proceeded to plunder the
countryside. One farmer had two mules stolen. Another
lost a "thousand pounds of bacon." One unfortunate
fellow drove his horse and buggy into town only to have
them purloined by a "Negro man."
A major reason for economic hardship in Mecklenburg
County and its environs was the departure of large
numbers of former slaves from the plantations where they
had traditionally resided. Blacks swarmed into
Charlotte from the surrounding countryside. "We know of
instances where Negro men, having good homes and plenty
to eat and wear, have left the crop just at the time it
needed working and come here to town and lie about the
suburbs in idleness," complained the
Western Democrat . " . . . the first
result of the war," wrote Paul Barringer, "was the
leaving of almost all our servants."
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First United Presbyterian
Church |
Bondspeople left the plantations to give expression to
their new status as free people. The same impulse
caused African Americans to establish their own
churches. "The unifying theme underlying the diverse
efforts of the freed people remained the drive for
autonomy and independence," explains historian Peter
Kolchin. Kathleen Hayes of Charlotte summoned the
black members of First Presbyterian Church to "come down
out of the gallery and worship God on the main floor."
Rev. Samuel C. Alexander , a
white Presbyterian missionary from Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, came to Charlotte soon after the war and
purchased property at Davidson and Third Sts., where
Hayes and her small band commenced to worship. The
Seventh Street Presbyterian Church, now First United
Presbyterian Church, stands today at North College and
East Seventh Streets.
Blacks in rural areas also departed from the white
man's churches. Beginning in 1865, the Providence
Presbyterian Church
Session minutes reported the elders' concern about the
"irregularities with the Colored people" which seemed in
some way connected with their new freedom. In May of
that year, many African American members formed a Sunday
School under the supervision of William Rea . They met for one hour
starting at 10:00 a.m., devoting one-half hour to
teaching letters, spelling, and reading. The other half
hour was devoted to catechism lessons. By October 1867,
the Rev. Willis L Miller of the Presbyterian
Church, U.S.A. intervened to advise the black members or
Providence to form their own church. Now the
Matthews-Murkland Presbyterian Church, the congregation
meets in a modern building on Old Providence Road.
The African American
members of Sharon Presbyterian Church also withdrew to
form
Lloyd Presbyterian Church. Only the cemetery
remains, near the intersection of Sharon Road and Colony
Road.
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The Lloyd
Presbyterian Church Cemetery |
Missionaries for the A. M. E. Zion Church arrived in
Charlotte in May 1865 and quickly moved to establish
new houses of worship. Edward H. Hill arrived and founded
Clinton Chapel, the first black church in the city. It
stood on South Mint Street between First and Second
Streets. Reverend Hill licensed Bird Hampton Taylor , put him in charge of
Clinton Chapel, and continued his organizing activities
in the area. Before he died later that year, Hill had
laid the groundwork for nearly twenty new churches
within a fifty-mile radius of Charlotte. Thomas Henry
Lomax , a native of
Cumberland County, came to Charlotte about 1873 and soon
thereafter founded
Little Rock A.M.E. Zion Church
.
Grace A M.E. Zion Church
was
established in 1887 by dissident members of Clinton
Chapel.
African Americans residing in Mecklenburg County also
witnessed the founding of Biddle Memorial Institute , now Johnson C. Smith
University . Three
white Presbyterian ministers, Samuel C. Alexander , Sidney S. Murkland , and Willis L. Miller , were eager to impart
Christianity and such middle class values as punctuality
and frugality to the newly freed black men of the
region. "It seemed an unreasonable thing to do," wrote
Alexander's wife many years later, "when scarcely a
dozen colored people in the County could read and fewer
still could write." Excluded from the Concord Presbytery
and vilified by many of their white neighbors, the three
courageous preachers became agents of the Freedmen's
Committee of the Presbyterian Church of the North. "Any
man from the North doing what I did would have been
killed," said Miller. "But I had been the associate of
the pastors of the white churches and they kept 'the
lewd fellows' from me."
Willis Miller traveled to Missouri in May 1867 to meet
with denominational leaders. He "urged the favorable
consideration of the grave need for an educational
center in the midst of the suffering field," explains
historian Inez Moore Parker. Miller was successful in
winning the support of the General Assembly of the
Presbyterian Church, U.S.A. He and his associates came
to Charlotte, purchased a lot, and moved a building
formerly used as a hospital for Union troops to the
Charlotte site and opened the school soon thereafter.
Mrs. Henry J. Biddle of Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania made a generous donation to the college and
requested that it be named "Henry J. Biddle Memorial
Institute " in
honor of her husband who had been killed in the Civil
War. This was done.
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Rev. Willis L. Miller |
Rev. Hercules Wilson on the
far right. He served Lloyd Presbyterian Church. |
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