United States Colored Troops
The Role of African Americans in the U.S. Army
United States Colored Troops (USCT) were the embodiment of Frederick Douglass’s belief that “he who would be free must himself strike the blow." 179,000 men – many who were former slaves – volunteered to fight in the Union army; nearly 37,000 gave their lives for the cause. With every engagement they fought in, the USCT time and again proved their mettle. At Port Hudson in Louisiana, Fort Wagner in South Carolina, Spotsylvania, New Market Heights and Wilson's Wharf in Virginia, and elsewhere, USCT units displayed courage under fire and won glory on the field of battle. By the end of the war, African-Americans accounted for 10 percent of the Union army. The USCT were a watershed in American history, and one of the first major strides toward equal civil rights.
Explore the Role of the USCT in the Civil War
Edward Ratcliff's Legacy
Charleston Harbor
Thomas Wentworth Higginson
Landscape Transformed: From USCT Fort to African American School in Athens, Alabama
Battle Flags of New Market Heights: History and Conservation
Colored Troops Under General Wild, Liberating Slaves in South Carolina
More about the USCT
- Fort Wagner »
- New Market Heights »
- Nashville »
- Olustee »
- The Color of Bravery: United States Colored Troops in the Civil War »
- USCT Soldiers Proved Their Heroism at New Market Heights »
- Storming Battery 9: Petersburg - June 15, 1864 »
- The United States Colored Troops at the Battle of New Market Heights »
- African Americans in America's Wars »
- African Americans in the Armed Forces Timeline »
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- Camp Nelson »
- The Loyal League »
- Saving Morris Island »
- Travel to Morris Island with Medal of Honor Recipient Melvin Morris »
- Medal of Honor Recipient Melvin Morris Visits Morris Island »
- "The Year of Jubilee Has Come" - The First South Carolina Infantry at Camp Saxton »