Memorials for 3 Black Confederates
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Confederate Groups Honor Black Soldiers

Soldiers were 'patriots who loved our Southland and suffered in its 
defense'

The United Daughters of the Confederacy dedicated memorials to three 
black soldiers from Franklin County.


By KEISHA STEWART 
THE ROANOKE TIMES 

 

 

    The following article was taken from the Roanoke Times and submitted to the SCV Dispatch by Calvin E Johnson, Jr., of the Chattahoochee Guards, for educational purposes only.

  
Sunday, September 08, 2002


    The time came for Creed Holland to get the recognition he was due. 

    He was a black slave, but also a Confederate soldier. 

    And for such, Creed Holland was honored Saturday morning at a 
graveside ceremony in a small cemetery behind Riverview Baptist Church in Rocky Mount. 

    The Jubal Early chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy 
dedicated Confederate memorial markers to Creed Holland and two other 
black Confederate soldiers, also named Holland, from Franklin County. 

    Hazel Holland Davis, a member of the Jubal Early chapter and 
great-granddaughter of a Confederate soldier, organized the service as 
part of a chapterwide project to identify Confederate soldiers' graves in 
Franklin County. 

    The three Holland soldiers, of no known relation to each other or 
to Davis, worked as slaves on Thomas J. Holland's 732-acre farm in Glade 
Hill. Thomas Holland was Davis' great-great-grandfather. 

    The service was a rare memorial that honored the little-known 
Confederate soldiers: enslaved black soldiers. 

    About 45 Confederate re-enactors and members of the United 
Daughters of the Confederacy and Sons of Confederate Veterans performed the 
ceremony, which included poems, speeches, prayers and customary military funeral rites such as cannonball volleys and rifle shots. 

    William Daniel Holland, great-grandson of Creed Holland, welcomed 
the crowd of about 60 people. He called the service a gathering of all 
people. 

    "Today is a day of unification," said William Daniel Holland, 33, 
of Atlanta. 

    Sam Lougheed, Virginia president of the United Daughters of the 
Confederacy, described the three black soldiers as "patriots who loved 
our Southland and suffered in its defense." Lougheed, of Stafford, called 
the three Hollands "Confederate heroes." 

    Brag Bowling, state commander of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, 
used the service as a platform. 

    "Southern heritage is becoming a cutting social, cultural and 
political issue in the landscape of Virginia," Bowling said. He urged the crowd to back those behind a monument protection bill that would thwart efforts to rename buildings and monuments. 

    Sen. Charles Hawkins, R-Chatham, in a spirited speech, pointed to a 
female re-enactor dressed in a black dress and veil, standing before 
Creed Holland's grave. 

    "We need to come to grips with the ghosts of our past by 
understanding our history," Hawkins said. "We need to understand this history if we are to grow and prosper." 

    Linda Stanley of the Franklin County Historical Society said the 
Confederate government required slaveowners to offer a certain 
percentage of their slaves to the war effort, possibly explaining the three Holland men's involvement in the war. 

    According to federal pension records, Creed Holland worked as a 
teamster, hauling supplies for soldiers. Cornelius Holland worked under Jubal Early as a cook. Claiborne Holland performed breastwork, which involved erecting earthen walls from which soldiers protected themselves in battle. 

    Davis and William Daniel Holland knew of their families' 
connection. But both families found out about Creed Holland's status as a Confederate veteran this year, William Daniel Holland said. 

    Davis, 61, a retired teacher living on her family's Glade Hill 
farm, asked Creed Holland's descendants if they were interested in having a 
Confederate marker and a ceremony at Creed Holland's grave. They 
agreed. 

    William Daniel Holland, along with his brother John Wayne Holland, 
47, a Yokohama tire finisher from Roanoke, and another brother are members of the Sons of Confederate Veterans. Their sister Wanda Holland Chewning, 46, an artist living in Penhook, is a member of the United Daughters of the 
Confederacy. 

    Their grandfather Sam Holland, 75, of Glade Hill, a retired worker 
for Fleetwood Homes, appreciated the ceremony for Creed Holland. "I'm glad 
they remember him," he said. 

    At the end of the ceremony, Sons of Confederate Veterans Commander 
Robert "Red" Barbour presented a folded Confederate flag to Sam Holland as 
Creed Holland's oldest known living relative. 

    The second part of the ceremony ended at Davis' Glade Hill farm off 
Virginia 40. There, Daughters members placed two magnolia wreaths for 
Cornelius and Claiborne Holland in the Holland family cemetery. Davis 
cannot find descendants of the two, or their graves.

 

 

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