Homelands
and Waterways: The American Journey of the Bond Family,
1846-1926
by Adele Logan Alexander
Homelands and Waterways: The
American Journey of the Bond Family, 1846-1926
is a monumental history that traces the rise of an
African-American family (the author's own) from poverty
to the middle class, exploding the stereotypes that
have shaped and distorted our thinking about African
Americans, both as slaves and in freedom.
The result of exhaustive research in
academic archives and family papers, this remarkable
account follows three generations of the Bond family
from Victorian England to antebellum Virginia, from
suburban Boston to the Jim Crow South, from black
college campuses to Harvard, from naval skirmishes
during the Civil War to the battlefields of Argonne.
We see how, over the course of eighty crucial years
in American history the Bond family both unwittingly
and willfully interacted with the major political,
technological, and cultural issues of their time,
and how notions of race, class, and gender both limited
and inspired their lives.
Adele Logan Alexander's brilliant narrative and
analysis of the Bonds' journey through extraordinary
adversity to their realization of the American dream
is an achievement of both rich personal specificity
and epic historical scope.
Adele Logan Alexander is a professor of history
at George Washington University, a former board member
of the Civil War Preservation Trust, and a frequent
contributor to the Women's Review of Books.
She is also the author of Ambiguous Lives: Free
Women of Color in Rural Georgia, 1789-1879. She
lives in Washington, D.C., with her husband, former
Secretary of the Army, Clifford Alexander.
Homelands and Waterways features 16 pages
of black-and-white photographs and is available from
Pantheon Books, a division of Random House, for $30.00.
Call 1-800-793-BOOK or visit the website, .
The Civil War Preservation Trust is pleased to present
four excerpts from this new gem. The
is a brief look at the battle between the USS Monitor
and the CSS Virginia at Hampton Roads. The
concerns
the Boston and New York City draft riots of 1863.
The
looks at the 54th Massachusetts regiment and its assault
on Battery Wagner. Finally, the
outlines a minor navy skirmish.
First Excerpt: Battle
of the Ironclads at Hampton Roads
During the winter of 1862, the Union navy and its
ground troops occupied Fortress Monroe, Hampton Roads
and Newport News, while the Confederates controlled
Portsmouth, Norfolk, and Hampton Roads' south shore
as the Virginia was being readied to depart
from the local navy yard. Spearheaded by that powerful
vessel, manned by almost three hundred sailors, the
Rebel armada planned to establish full command over
Hampton Roads and the lower James River.
The first week of March 1862, the USS Arrago,
one of many Union vessels anchored at Newport News,
prepared to tackle the hazardous assignment of trying
to sink the unseen, untested, but reputedly fearsome
CSS Virginia. When they learned of their daunting
mission however the Arrago's predominantly
white crew deserted. The quartermaster in charge of
contraband laborers at Fortress Monroe requested and
promptly obtained seven times the number of black
volunteers needed to replace the defectors. The replacements
signed on as seamen, but their designated task was
never fulfilled due to the next few days' unprecedented
events.
On the morning of March 3, silenced crowds watched
from both banks as the innovative ironside Virginia
steamed slowly out of port, north along the sheltered
Elizabeth River, past Craney Island, into Hampton
Roads. As on many other Confederate ships, a few slaves
served on board in menial positions. The massive,
homely vessel rode low in the water, reminding some
observers of a "half-submerged crocodile." It was
clumsy and difficult to maneuver, needing an hour
to negotiate a full turn, but was nonetheless a menacing
presence.
It built up a head of steam, moved into attack position,
then fired on the powerful USS Cumberland and
the fifty-gun frigate Congress. Mauled and
crippled by the Virginia's assaults, those
Union ships and several smaller vessels, became "scene[s]
of carnage unparalleled in the war," an observer reported.
The Cumberland's decks were "covered with dead
and wounded and awash with blood," and it was rammed
repeatedly before plunging beneath the surface. The
gory detritus of mutilated bodies, timbers, and jagged
metal littered Hampton Roads' choppy waters. During
those fateful hours, the apparently unstoppable Virginia
caused the deaths of 250 Union seamen, wounded many
more, and grounded, but did not destroy, the once
mighty Minnesota. That ship included among
its crew a mulatto youngster (tattooed with the figure
of a woman perched atop an anchor) from New England
named James Wolff, plus fourteen other Negroes manning
the afterguns. "No gun in the fleet was more steady
than theirs," boasted the accolades about those men's
pluck and expertise. Over the course of that daunting
day's exploits just off Norfolk, however, the Virginia
proved itself as invincible as Confederates had hoped
and Yankees feared.
The Union armada's diverse ships valiantly counterattacked
the Rebel ironside. Cannon fire suffused the air with
acrid smoke and a deafening clamor, but barrages from
the Yankees' most powerful guns barely dented the
CSS Virginia's armor. By afternoon, though
its commander was grievously wounded, the Virginia
had scored a remarkable success and, surrounded by
sundry support vessels, stood read to dominate Hampton
Roads. Following that battle, whites throughout the
South applauded their acclaimed ship and laudatory
messages hummed through the region's telegraph wires.
In contrast, distraught accounts carried via the slaves'
ever active "grapevine telegraph" rued the day.
What jubilant Confederates aboard the Virginia
did not know as they anchored and retired for the
evening, was that a similarly outfitted Union ship,
the USS Monitor. had been dispatched from New
York City. It steamed south along the Atlantic coast
toward the mouth of the Chesapeake, and after dusk
slipped into Hampton Roads. Though 170 feet in length,
the Monitor, an awkward-looking vessel, disparagingly
referred to as the "cheese box on a raft" was much
smaller than the Virginia. It was equipped
with comparable armor plate plus potent cannons, and
was far more maneuverable than its southern counterpart.
The next morning, scarcely the hallowed Sunday it
might have been, the struggle recommenced. But as
the Monitor, with its Dahlgren guns blazing,
emerged from behind the firmly grounded USS Minnesota,
the balance of power shifted and the participation
of other ships became immaterial. In the confrontation
that followed, one glancing blow by the heavier Rebel
vessel--by then commanded by Alabama's Commander Catesby
Jones--spun its Union counterpart like a crazed gyroscope
but inflicted little harm. The ironclads battled on
without cease for more than four hours, "backing,
filling and jockeying for position," directing thunderous
cannonades at one another.
Finally, low on ammunition and hindered by the ebbing
tide, the Virginia swerved slowly toward port.
Both ironclads suffered trivial damage plus minimal
injuries and loss of life among their crews, but survived
the ordeal well. The day ended, not with a bang but
a depleted whimper, as the Monitor redirected
its attention toward one of its major goals--rescuing
the stranded, battered Minnesota. Although
the USS Monitor did not destroy or even disable
the CSS Virginia in the world's first encounter
between armored vessels, it cleared the way for the
Union navy to control the whole mouth of the Chesapeake.
Those ships had bombarded each other and fought
to a stand-off in history's most widely observed naval
confrontation. Slaves and contrabands...all around
Hampton Roads' periphery abandoned work in fields,
homes, and shipyards and thronged shoreward to watch
that terrifying yet exhilarating contest. Few had
been formally educated, but they understood that the
war's progress and outcome--perhaps Hampton Roads'
recent brawl especially--would significantly affect
their lives. "I never found one at Hampton or Monroe,"
wrote a correspondent from the New York World,
"who did not perfectly understand the issues of the
war." Negroes closely followed military developments,
and for them, the battle of attrition off Newport
News Point remained a memorable event. As one woman
recalled, "we was all standin' on de sho' watchin'."
Her mother raised her "up in her arms so dat I could
see." She heard the "awful noise dem guns was makin',"
and remembered that "lots of men got kilt." Another
man, vividly recollecting that milestone of his earliest
years, reported that "the shores was lined thick with
people watching that strange fight [but] all I could
see was the flash of the guns."
Although absolute maritime supremacy remained unresolved,
Hampton Roads had been kept open to Yankee gunboats.
Between the Union navy's enhanced efforts, the presence
of the Army of the Potomac on the Hampton peninsula,
plus the forces headed up from North Carolina led
by the intriguingly bewhiskered General Ambrose Burnside
the South's optimistic interlude was drawing to a
close. Nonetheless, many Rebels, for whom averting
a loss seemed almost as great an accomplishment as
victory, acted as if they had won, not only the naval
stalemate but the war itself.
Southerners celebrated the CSS Virginia's
debatable success. One booster reported that "gratulatory
words are passing from one to another as people meet
in the streets...and thanksgiving is made in the churches."
Though neither side definitively established its preeminence
that March day, the confrontation conclusively demonstrated
that steam-powered iron vessels represented the maritime
face of the future, and the era of the graceful wooden
sailing ships' supremacy was grinding to a close.
Second Excerpt: Draft
Riots On July 14, 1863...Boston's draft riot
began in the largely immigrant North End when a group
of angry. women assaulted two agents who had served
conscription notices on several local lads. Idlers
joined the fray and, armed with only fists and clubs,
almost killed a constable who, tried to, restore order.
The mayor mobilized militia companies and called in
a contingent of United States troops garrisoned nearby.
Crowds attacked the armory where they assembled, and
authorities resorted to cannon fire to repulse the
rioters. Protesters surged out of their neighborhood
seeking weapons, but the well-armed police and soldiers
soon terminated the uprising. Father James Healy,
an up-and-coming priest of Irish and African heritage--and
a brother of the ambitious young U.S. Navy Cutter
Service officer Michael Healy--issued a timely call
for order that many of the local Catholic clergy read
at Sunday masses to help quell the simmering unrest.
Despite the uproar Boston defused its draft protests
with far less loss of life and property than did New
York City that same week.
Many of that larger port's immigrant dockworkers
had gone on strike for higher wages, and some employers
replaced them with lower-paid black men. By 1860,
the Irish had come to perceive the waterfront as their
occupational preserve, and New York's Herald
sarcastically declared that the stevedores "must feel
enraptured at the prospects of hordes of darkeys…working
for half wages and thus ousting them from employment."
Adding insult to injury, as idle and irate workers
viewed it, they found themselves susceptible to conscription
in a war of which most of them wanted no part. Many
whites considered it an effort to emancipate (and
then insinuate into America's mainstream) black people,
some of whom already had supplanted them on the docks.
On July 13, crowds of predominantly poor, often Irish-born
residents--victims of harsh nativist bigotry themselves--began
gathering in curbside knots, venting their fury at
the perceived injustices they suffered. The Democratic
Party, representing that immigrant constituency, encouraged
them. Many women shared the men's outrage at the draft
law's economic discrimination, and joined in a four-day
rampage of terror and destruction. Wielding clubs,
throwing bricks (victims called them "Irish confetti"),
even potatoes, they attacked draft offices. But blacks
became the preferred targets, with "mobs chasing isolated
negroes as hounds would chase a fox." They were hunted
down, hanged from lampposts, battered and murdered
in their ransacked residences. A white woman was beaten
to death as she tried to rescue her mulatto child
from cremation at the hands of the rabble, while drunken
vandals incinerated the city's Colored Orphan Asylum.
A few of thc hoodlums reportedly even mutilated black
corpses.
More than a hundred people died in New York's disturbances,
and many times that number were injured. Losses from
theft, arson, and property destruction mounted into
the millions. Union troops straight from a costly
victory at Gettysburg had to be called in to quell
the savagery, Most participants went unpunished, but
authorities arrested, tried, convicted, and imprisoned
some of the more heinous offenders, A Negro physician
swore that his people would hold the city responsible
for their losses, though any municipal action or reparations,
he mourned, "cannot bring back our murdered dead or
remove the insults we feel."
Third Excerpt:
The 54th Massachusetts at Battery Wagner
[Only a few days after the Boston and New York draft
riots in July 1863] the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts,
supported by the navy and joined by other army units,
prepared to assault Battery Wagner. It was a key Confederate
stronghold guarding Charleston's harbor, across from
the notorious Fort Sumter. The evening prior to the
battle, Harriet Tubman (an Underground Railroad leader,
wartime nurse and scout who once led Union cavalrymen
on a foray that freed dozens of slaves and destroyed
valuable southern cotton) purportedly served Colonel
Robert Gould Shaw his last supper.
According to the New York Tribune, a cynical
Union general declared, "I guess we'll . . . put those
damned [Negroes] from Massachusetts in the advance;
we might as well get rid of them one time as another."
Waves of "those damned [Negroes]" besieged the battery,
but the southerners lay low. Suddenly, a cannon barrage
deluged the Yankees, and, one participant observed,
"a sheet of flame, followed by a running fire, like
electric sparks, swept along the parapets,"' When
his company's flag bearer fell, Norfolk and New Bedford's
wounded Sergeant William Carney (who would become
the first black soldier awarded a Congressional Medal
of Honor) seized the Stars and Stripes and raised
it aloft. "The old flag never touched the ground!"
he cried.
In that hard-fought struggle, the rebels ultimately
repulsed the onslaught and maintained control over
the citadel. Bloodied, often dismembered bodies, many
of them African Americans, littered the harborside
combat zone. "When we came to get in de crops," Harriet
Tubman mourned, "it was dead men that we reaped."
Nurse Clara Barton, the "angel of the battlefield,"
later recalled "the scarlet flow of blood as it rolled
over the black limbs beneath my hands." Though unsuccessful
militarily, that Union effort, spear-headed by a new
Negro regiment, at least briefly deflected many white
Americans' doubts about black soldiers' courage or
capabilities.
Numerous members of the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts
lost their lives that July day, including its leader,
Colonel Shaw. Confederates dumped Shaw's body into
a pit, then heaped his dead black troops on top. The
rebel commander Johnson Hagood supposedly announced;
"We have buried him with his [Negroes]." Despite heavy
casualties and the Yankee defeat at Battery Wagner,
equal rights advocates considered the battle more
an epiphany than an apocalypse. "This regiment has
established its reputation as a fighting regiment,"
wrote Sergeant Lewis Douglass about his comrades-in-arms,
not a man flinched, though it was a trying time."
"I wish we had a hundred thousand colored troops,"
he concluded, "we would put an end to this war." In
fact, before the conflict ended, twice as many backs
as Douglass's proposed "hundred thousand" served with
the Union forces. The avid abolitionist Angelina Grimké
Weld, who soon thereafter moved to a home near the
Fifty-fourth Massachusetts's training grounds, added,
"I have no tears to shed over their graves, because
I see that their heroism is working a great change
in public opinion, forcing all...to see the sin and
shame of enslaving such men."
Fourth Excerpt:
A Navy Skirmish
At dawn on February 10, 1864, the weather was "hazy
and thick," the temperature unusually mild for midwinter.
Clement breezes blew three to five knots out of the
northeast. The Cambridge anchored and prepared
to investigate the seemingly helpless and abandoned
blockade runners. Just after nine that fog-shrouded
morning, Captain Spicer dispatched a detachment of
men, including John Robert Bond, under the command
of two junior officers. They lowered a pair of dinghies
over the side and rowed through the shallows toward
the beach. But as they debarked from the landing boats
and started down the misty shoal preparing to board
and secure the Emily, a squad of armed privateers
who had secreted themselves behind the dunes opened
fire. Members of the ambushed Yankee search party
scrambled toward their side boats, heading for the
ship to obtain reinforcements. Before they reached
safety, however, a well-aimed rifle ball fired by
one of the shoreside snipers hit Seaman Bond; ripping
through his right upper chest and shoulder, passing
near the main arteries and vital organs.
The skirmish ended quickly. Bond's shipmates rowed
their fallen comrade back to the Cambridge,
carrying him to the ship's infirmary for medical attention.
Then they returned to the sandy island, where they
managed to salvage only one puny dinghy from the stranded
barks. They failed to take a single prisoner or recover
any cargo. The frustrated crew destroyed the Fanny
and Jeanne then sank the Emily with its
once valuable, but now sodden, payload of salt, thereby
closing out that infamous vessel's checkered career
as an illicit slave carrier, a Union supply craft,
and finally, a Confederate blockade runner of British
registry. Shortly before six that evening, its mission
complete and all men back on ship, the Cambridge
charted a new course, stoked the engine, "weighed
kedge and steered northward."
His race or foreign birth notwithstanding, a sailor
in the military service of the United States had been
grievously wounded. The retaliatory demolition of
the Emily and the Fanny and Jeanne therefore,
could have provided Bond's predominantly white, American
shipmates with a solid measure of satisfaction. To
some extent, their destruction of those belligerent
blockade runners that mild winter afternoon may have
helped to avenge the dark-skinned Englishman's injury.
On the other hand, despite one significant casualty
plus the competence and valor demonstrated by the
intrepid sailors from the USS Cambridge, none
of them, received medals or prize money for that day's
dangerous exploits. As for Seaman John Robert Bond,
his climactic year before the mast of an American
navy ship had ended and he was able-bodied no more.
He had served in battle, he briefly but clearly had
"seen the elephant," and at least on that one inauspicious
February day in 1864, the treacherous behemoth of
war prevailed.
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