The Overlooked Black History Of Memorial Day | Chicago Defender (2024)

When the last Monday of May comes around, Americans fire up the grill, welcome the upcoming summer season, and most importantly, honor U.S. soldiers who gave their lives to defend the country.

Initially called Decoration Day, the observance was held in remembrance of Union troops who perished during the Civil War. Over the next century, more states and government agencies started observing the holiday for all U.S. soldiers who died in wars. It didn’t become a national holiday until 1971.

While many American towns claim to have held the earliest celebrations of the holiday, U.S. officials declared Waterloo, New York the “birthplace” of Memorial Day. Historians say residents closed businesses, flew flags at half-staff, and held a ceremony to remember local Civil War soldiers on May 5, 1866 — three years after the bloody conflict ended.

It wasn’t until a resourceful historian stumbled upon forgotten evidence of one of the earliest recorded Memorial Day celebrations that we learned about the Black community’s role in establishing the well-known holiday.

A Massive Tribute In Charleston

The Overlooked Black History Of Memorial Day | Chicago Defender (1)

Award-winning historian David W. Blight discovered the information while going through Howard University’s archive in 1996. According to a New York Tribune article he found, freed Black slaves and some white missionaries organized a Decoration Day commemoration that occurred on May 1, 1865, in Charleston, South Carolina.

In Blight’s 2001 book Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory, the event unfolded at a former planter’s racetrack where Confederates held captured Union soldiers during the last year of the war. Over 250 prisoners died, most of them from disease, and were buried in unmarked graves. Black Charlestonians decided to give them a proper burial by reorganizing the graves and erecting a fence around them, TIME cites from the book. They named the burial site “Martyrs of the Race Course.”

Then came May 1, when thousands of Black residents and schoolchildren showed up to sing patriotic songs, listen to religious sermons and speeches, and hold picnics in honor of the fallen Union troops. Black Union regiments concluded the event by marching around the graves. According to Blight, nearly 10,000 people, mostly Black, attended the massive tribute.

The history professor said the celebration “gave birth to an American tradition… The war was over, and Memorial Day had been founded by African Americans in a ritual of remembrance and consecration.” The New York Tribune described the event as “a procession of friends and mourners as South Carolina and the United States never saw before,” per TIME.

The National Cemetery Administration today calls the Charleston Decoration Day commemoration an “enormous and historically significant program.”

Decades Of Celebrations And Shenanigans

The Overlooked Black History Of Memorial Day | Chicago Defender (2)

Following the Civil War, Black Americans made up the bulk of Memorial Day observers throughout the Reconstruction era, especially in the South. In 1898, President William McKinley allowed Confederate war dead into national cemeteries as a means of reconciliation between the North and South. According to History.com, Black critics regularly admonished people trying to revive Confederate causes on the holiday, including prominent figures like Frederick Douglass.

“There was a right side and a wrong side in the late war which no sentiment ought to cause us to forget, and while today we should have malice toward none and charity toward all, it is no part of our duty to confound right with wrong, or loyalty with treason,” Douglass told a crowd of New York Union veterans in 1877.

Going into the new century, Black battalions regularly marched in Memorial Day parades and celebrations across the nation. Some events weren’t without controversy. The National Park Service shared the story of a local Black Grand Army of the Republic being placed behind a white cadet brigade during the 1898 Memorial Day parade in Uniontown, Pennsylvania. Black veterans abandoned the parade in protest and led the procession the following year.

Suppressing The Truth

The Overlooked Black History Of Memorial Day | Chicago Defender (3)

While Blight aimed to shine a light on Black people’s contributions to Memorial Day celebrations, he also wanted to highlight the ways it was nearly erased from history. Race and Reunion detailed how white people often brushed over the facts or took credit for Black Charlestonians’ role in organizing the May 1865 event.

The historian argues white Charlestonians started suppressing nearly 50 years after the celebration happened. A 1937 book that incorrectly claimed James Redpath, the leader of freedmen’s education in the region, organized the commemoration all by himself. Redpath was only responsible for organizing the speeches. The publication also downplayed Black Americans’ actions by calling them “black hands which only knew that the dead they were honoring had raised them from a condition of servitude.”

As generations passed, the truth behind Charleston’s “Decoration Day” celebration was only preserved through a sparse piece of correspondence and local news coverage from both the Charleston Daily Courier and the New York Herald Tribune. The Martyrs of the Race Course was replaced by a park named after a Confederate general, and the graves were reinterred at a national cemetery in Beaufort, South Carolina in the 1880s, Blight wrote.

It wasn’t until Blight’s 2001 book that more Americans became aware of the rich Black history behind Memorial Day, paving the way for other sources to unearth buried information.

The Black Information Network is your source for Black News! Get the latest news 24/7 on The Black Information Network. Listen now on the iHeartRadio app or click HERE to tune in live.

Black Information Network

Black Information Network is the first and only 24/7 national and local all-news audio service dedicated to providing an objective, accurate and trusted source of continual news coverage with a Black voice and perspective. BIN is enabled by the resources, assets and financial support of iHeartMedia and the support of its Founding Partners: Bank of America, CVS Health, GEICO, Lowe’s, McDonald’s USA, Sony, 23andMe and Verizon. BIN is focused on service to the Black community and providing an information window for those outside the community to help foster communication, accountability and deeper understanding.

Black Information Network is distributed nationally through the iHeartRadio app and accessible via mobile, smart speakers, smart TVs and other connected platforms, and on dedicated all-news local broadcast AM/FM radio stations. BIN also provides the news service for iHeartMedia’s 106 Hip Hop, R&B and Gospel stations across the country. Please visit www.BINNews.com for more information.

See author's posts

The Overlooked Black History Of Memorial Day | Chicago Defender (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Gov. Deandrea McKenzie

Last Updated:

Views: 5914

Rating: 4.6 / 5 (46 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Gov. Deandrea McKenzie

Birthday: 2001-01-17

Address: Suite 769 2454 Marsha Coves, Debbieton, MS 95002

Phone: +813077629322

Job: Real-Estate Executive

Hobby: Archery, Metal detecting, Kitesurfing, Genealogy, Kitesurfing, Calligraphy, Roller skating

Introduction: My name is Gov. Deandrea McKenzie, I am a spotless, clean, glamorous, sparkling, adventurous, nice, brainy person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.