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The New York Public Library, Humanities and Social Sciences Library, General Research Division

Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, March 7, 1863

Native Guards

With the Union occupation of New Orleans in 1862, free Afro-Creole volunteers formed three regiments of Native Guards under Union commanding general Benjamin F. Butler. Roudanez's L'Union newspaper insisted that military service entitled the new Union soldiers to political equality. Their Haitian ancestors, the paper declared, had volunteered their services in the American Revolution in support of the principles proclaimed in the Declaration of Independence. An Afro-Creole of Haitian heritage, Captain Henry Louis Rey, exhorted free men of color to join the U.S. army and take up the "cause of the rights of man." Black New Orleanians flocked to the training camp daily to watch the Native Guards in their afternoon dress parades and drills.

Hide indexing information
Image ID: 1226079
Title: "Pickets of the First Louisiana 'Native Guards' guarding the New Orleans, Opelousas and Great Western Railroad. - From a sketch by our special artist." [Cover page].
Source: Frank Leslie's illustrated newspaper.
Published: March 7, 1863
Location: General Research Division, Humanities and Social Sciences Library
Subjects: African American soldiers
Leslie, Frank, -- 1821-1880
New Orleans (La.)
Newspapers -- New York (State) -- New York
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865

Keywords: L' Union
Louisiana
Men - United States
Native Guards
New Orleans
Rey, Henry Louis
United States - History - Civil War
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