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A TRUE BLACK HISTORY MOMENT

 

When elected representatives were statesmen.......

 

The following article from The Charleston Voice appears in the book War For What by Francis W Springer

 

 

    In Mississippi on Feb. 1, 1890 an appropriation for a monument to the Confederate dead was being considered. A  delegate had just spoken  against the bill, when John F. Harris, a Negro Republican delegate from Washington, County, rose to speak:

        "Mr. Speaker! I have arisen here in my  place to offer a few  words on the bill. I have come from a sick bed.  Perhaps it was not prudent for me to come. But sir, I could not rest quietly in my room without contributing a few remarks of my own.  I was sorry to hear the speech of the young gentlemen from Marshall County. I am sorry that any son of a soldier should go on record as opposed to the erection of a monument in honor of the brave dead. And, Sir,  I am convinced that had he seen what I saw at Seven Pines, and in the Seven Day's fighting around Richmond, the battlefield covered with the  mangled forms of those who fought for their country and for their country's  honor, he would not have  made the speech. When the news came that the South had been  invaded, those men went  forth to fight for what they believed, and they  made no requests for  monuments. But they died, and their virtues should be remembered. Sir, I went with them. I, too, wore the gray, the same color my master wore.  We stayed four long years, and if that war had  gone on till now I would have been there yet. I want to honor those brave men who died for their convictions. When my mother died I was a boy.  Who, Sir, then acted the  part of a mother to the orphaned slave boy, but  my old MISSUS! Were she  living now, or could speak to me from those high realms where are gathered the sainted dead, she would tell me to vote for this bill. And, Sir, I shall vote for it. I want it known to all the world that my vote is given in favor of the bill to erect a  monument in HONOR OF THE  CONFEDERATE DEAD."

    When the applause died down, the measure passed  overwhelmingly, and  every Negro member voted "AYE".

 

 

    Taken from: War For What? By Francis W.  Springer - Bill Coates Limited  Pub. 1990.

    The above article was sent to the SCV Dispatch by Eddy Cresap, a member of  John C Pemberton Camp SCV 1354,  Ike Whitaker Chapter MOSB 28  Vicksburg, Ms

 

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