James City
The City of Freedmen
It was March 5 1862 and rumors were
spreading throughout the slave populations living on the plantations in Eastern North
Carolina that the Yankees had taken Roanoke Island and soon would be sailing to New Bern, NC,
a major port located at the confluence of the Neuse and Trent Rivers. Although
the Emancipation Proclamation was still eight months away, the Union army was
already treating escaped slaves as freedmen. The thought of freedom from bondage,
which was all they had ever known, was almost beyond comprehension for the Negro
slaves.
On March 14 Union Troops broke through the
Confederate lines defending New Bern and seized control of the city. As word
spread that Union liberators
occupied New Bern, large numbers of slaves
escaped the farms and plantations throughout Eastern NC to seek their freedom.
As the slaves continued to pour into New Bern, General
Burnside was faced with the growing problem of how to feed, clothe, and house
the ever-growing population. To further complicate the matter, there were many
whites who were then unable to feed themselves as the war had disrupted the
local economy.
To address these problems General Burnside appointed Vincent Colyer as superintendent of the poor for the federally occupied areas in North
Carolina.
The freed slaves were immediately put to work by General
Burnside building fortifications in New Bern and other coastal areas that were
under the control of Union forces. During Colyer's tour of duty, the free slaves
under his care constructed Fort Totten, which was located in the center of New Bern. Fort Totten
played an important part in repelling two attempts by Confederate forces to
retake New Bern. Today it is still called Fort Totten and serves as a city park. Freed slaves also built forts on Roanoke
Island and in Washington, North Carolina. Colyer paid the laborers $8 a month
and provided them with one meal a day. Many freed slaves also worked loading and
unloading the many supply ships that came to the port city on a weekly basis. Others
worked building a railroad bridge across the Trent River to replace the bridge
that was destroyed by the Confederate soldiers when they retreated.
Colyer helped the freedmen establish churches,
as religion
had played an important role in comforting the slaves as they toiled long hard
hours in the fields. In New Bern blacks established the first African Methodist
Episcopal Zion church in the South. Colyer also felt it was important for the
freed slaves to get at least a basic education and started two evening schools
and at one time had as many as 800 pupils.
In May, 1862, President Lincoln appointed Edward Stanly as
provisional governor of North Carolina. His job was to oversee the political
reconstruction of the areas under Union control with the hopes that he could
create a loyal civil government. Stanly, although a Republican, had deep roots in the South and was for the
most part unsympathetic to the plight of the freed slaves. After assuming office,
he took measures that bought him in conflict with Colyer and others who were
trying to improve the condition of blacks in the South. Although Stanly approved of Colyer's efforts to feed and clothe blacks, he
opposed educating the blacks and ordered the evening schools closed down. Colyer
was outraged and went to Washington, D.C. where he had an interview with President
Lincoln who assured him that Stanly did not have the authority to shut down the
schools. When Colyer returned to New Bern, he had a conciliatory meeting
with Stanly who agreed not to interfere with the schools.
In the fall of 1862, General Burnside was transferred to
the Army of the Potomac. Because of his hostilities with Stanly, Colyer decided
to leave with Burnside. General John G. Foster, Burnside's successor, appointed
army chaplain James Mears to replace Colyer as the superintendent of the poor.
In 1863 when President Lincoln
issued the Emancipation Proclamation Stanly resigned in protest. Soon after the Proclamation was issued, the recruitment of black
soldiers into the Union army began in New Bern. In April, 1863, Secretary
of War, Edwin Stanton authorized Colonel Edward Wild to organize a brigade
of black troops in the department of North Carolina. That unit came to be known as the
African Brigade. The soldiers of that unit were highly motivated and willing to
perform whatever duties were assigned to them. The African brigade demonstrated
its courage and fighting ability during the two Confederates attempts to
retake New Bern.
In early 1863 superintendent of the poor James Mears died
of yellow fever. By that time there were so many freed slaves coming to New Bern
that General Foster decided to appoint someone as superintendent of Negro
affairs. He chose the Reverend Horace James, a chaplain from Massachusetts. In
order to provide the many freedmen with places to live and secure locations from
which he could implement the programs specifically set up for them, James
set up several refugee camps on land that had been abandoned because of the war
or was then in control of
the Union forces. In the spring of 1863 James established a settlement at the
confluence of the Neuse and Trent Rivers, about ½ mile south of New Bern.
The land once belonged to Richard Dobbs Speight, one of the original signers of
the United States Constitution, who later served as governor of North Carolina.
The site was named Trent River Camp and was about 30 acres in size. James was
responsible for providing basic shelter, education, and medical care to the freed
slaves. Because of the compassion exhibited by James in helping the Negro's
better their lives, the settlement was renamed James City. The area
is still referred to as James City and is still primarily an African-American neighborhood.
I hope you have enjoyed this article.
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Steve Tyson
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